Oct 4 - Sheffield, - 70 Years since the start of WWII
70 Years since the start of WWII
World War II was the bloodiest and most tragic event in world history. Up to 70 million people lost their lives during the six year conflict. It witnessed unimaginable barbarism, including above all the mass murder of 6 million European Jews by the Nazis. The war ended with the dropping of the atomic bomb on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Countless articles and programmes have been made commemorating these events, yet few offer even an attempted explanation of how and why the world was dragged into such a bloody catastrophe, just two decades after the so-called “war to end all wars”.
The International Students for Social Equality will explain that this was not a war of democracy versus fascism, but an imperialist war waged by the capitalist great powers—“democratic” and fascist alike—for the division of the world and its resources in the interests of profit.
We will explain how and why Hitler was able to come to power, due to the political betrayals of the German Social Democrats and the Stalinist Communist Parties internationally—and how this, along with the beheading of the Spanish revolution in 1936-37, paved the way to war. We will explain why Hitler won the support of big business as a bulwark against the threat of a workers’ revolution.
Crucially, the ISSE will address the lessons of the war for today, amidst the eruption of the deepest economic and financial crisis since the Great Depression that is once again fueling a drive towards colonial-style conquest by all the major powers. We will explain why the independent political mobilization of the working class remains the only means of opposing the renewed dangers of an economic and military catastrophe for the peoples of the world.
Dundee
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Dundee
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Sheffield
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Sheffield
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San DiegoCalifornia
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ManchesterLancashire
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Brighton
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Glasgow
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BerkeleyCalifornia
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SydneyNew South Wales
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Colombo
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MontrealQuebec
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MelbourneVictoria
The United States plans to send another 30,000 and 40,000 troops to Afghanistan, with Britain contributing 500 more. There are 9,000 UK personnel in Afghanistan, while the US has 65,000. With 124,000 personnel still in Iraq, this combined total is in excess of the 186,000 involved in conflict under President Bush.
The war has already claimed the lives of almost 1,400 coalition forces and Afghans numbering in the multiple thousands. The election of Barack Obama was hailed as a fresh chance for peace. Instead Washington's war drive has escalated. In Britain, all the major parties are committed to the conflict. Far from being aimed at democratic “regime change” and combating the terrorist threat, the war seeks to secure control of vital oil and gas resources in the Middle East, Caspian Basin and Afghanistan itself--estimated to hold reserves of nearly 1.6 billion barrels of oil and 15.7 trillion cubic feet gas. This imperialist war of conquest must end, but how can this be done given the abject failure of the anti-war movement?
The International Students for Social Equality proposes a new and socialist movement against war. Come and discuss this strategy at our meetings.

