Как и прежде уже облака манили меня уйти с ними в чужие страны, когда они высоко проплывали над моей головой, так и теперь я часто нахожусь в опасности, ч..
Фогт (сдержанно кланяясь, суховатым тоном). Господин редактор... Вероятно, по делу? Ховстад. Отчасти. По поводу одной статьи в газету. Фогт...
3, 91, 94, 115, 116, 118, 119, 123, 146, 166 Лукан 64, 79, 81–83, 88, 155 Людовик VII 161 Люцина 148 Люцифер 18, 151 Макиавелли 18 Манлий 64 Манфред 180 Мария 14, 91..
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«Похождения бравого солдата Швейка. Часть 4»![]() Желаем Вам приятного чтения (Страниц: 48) Также вы можете получить: |
Тем временем:
... In the
years before the Revolution it was Shliapnikov who
ran the whole Communist Party in Russia - not
Lenin, who was an emigre. In 1921, he headed the
Workers' Opposition which was charging the
Communist leadership with betraying the workers'
interests, with crushing and oppressing the
proletariat and transforming itself into a
bureaucracy.
Shliapnikov disappeared from sight. He was
arrested somewhat later and since he firmly stood
his ground he was shot in prison and his name is
perhaps unknown to most people here today. But I
remind you: before the Revolution the head of the
Communist Party of Russia was Shliapnikov - not
Lenin.
Since that time, the working class has never
been able to stand up for its rights, and in
distinction from all the western countries our
working class only receives what they hand out to
it. It only gets handouts. It cannot defend its
simplest, everyday interests, and the least strike
for pay or for better living conditions is viewed
as counter-revolutionary. Thanks to the closed
nature of the Soviet system, you have probably
never heard of the textile strikes in 1930 in
Ivanovo, or of the 1961 worker unrest in Murom and
Alexandrovo, or of the major workers' uprising in
Novocherkassk in 1962 - this in the time of
Khrushchev, after the thaw.
This story will shortly be published in
detail in your country in Gulag Archipelago,
volume 3. It is a story of how workers went in a
peaceful demonstration to the Party City Committee,
carrying portraits of Lenin, to request a change
in economic conditions. They fired at them with
machine guns and dispersed the crowds with tanks.
No family dared even to collect its wounded and
dead, but all were taken away in secret by the
authorities.
Precisely to those present here I don't have
to explain that in our country, since the
Revolution, there's never been such a thing as a
free trade union...