BeardTube
I found this website that is a leftist alternative to YouTube but has a separate community instead of just reuploading YouTube videos without ads or tracking like the websites in the Tankie Reply Bot.
A short, simple video that explains why countries need to start from China's path in 1949.
([Transcript.](https://mediaroots.org/?p=8708)) >Meddling in their democracy is putting it very mildly. [Washington] basically restructured their entire political economy, and then left it in a complete shambles. > >[…] > >I interviewed, with Alex Zaitchik, the head of the OSCE mission, which is the election observer mission, which is basically a Western European-led body. He was a British MP, and he straight up said the [1996] election was stolen. It was fraudulent and “the OSCE did everything to wash my report,” and so it was officially known as free and fair. There was fraud in every single Russian election. > >I mean it was fairly significant fraud by our standards, not hugely significant, let’s say, by some hardcore dictatorial standards, but certainly three, four, five percent was often stolen and the template was really set in the 1996 elections that got Boris Yeltsin from about a 3% [approval] rating.
Surprisingly not bad, as long as you ignore the racism from some of the anglos interviewees.
This is a weird one, but hear me out. All of the videos on this channel are about real-life occurrences, mostly man-made disasters including the structural collapse of buildings, ships, trains, and the devastating effects of industry. Most pertinently, every video focuses heavily on the victims, who are usually workers. Most videos end with a detailed account of policy changes that happened (or didn't happen) in order to prevent future disasters from occurring. He also makes it damn clear that it's usually the capitalists' fault, who shunt their responsibilities to keep their workers safe. It's less horror and more discussion of anti-worker policies, where legal protections for workers' safety come from, architectural science, and preserving the memory of historical accidents and catastrophes. Well worth a sub imo.
([Mirror.](https://yewtu.be/watch?v=Hcl3R-yARX8))
>Documentary film in three parts: The *Insurrection of the Bourgeoisie* (1975), *The Coup d'état* (1976), *Popular Power* (1979). It is a chronicle of the political tension in Chile in 1973 and of the violent counter revolution against the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende. It won the Grand Prix in 1975 and 1976 at the Grenoble International Film Festival. In 1996, Chile, *Obstinate Memory* was released and followed Guzmán back to Chile as he screened the 3-part documentary to Chileans who had never seen it before. ([Mirror of part one.](https://yewtu.be/watch?v=_69sNztBFSM) [Additional mirror.](https://archive.org/details/TheBattleOfChileTheInsurrectionOfTheBourgeoisie) [Mirror of part two.](https://archive.org/details/TheBattleOfChileTheCoupDEtat) [Mirror of part three.](https://archive.org/details/TheBattleOfChilePopularPower))
The following dispatch is an email that I received from Prof. Furr: >Dear friends: > >This interview of me by Ramiro Sebastián Fúnez took place a few months ago. But I did not get the link to it until two weeks ago. > >The introduction is pretty long -- about 6 minutes of A/V, and has a kind of "cult of Stalin" feel to it -- something I criticized in the talk (and Stalin also criticized). > >So, if you prefer, start about 5:59 or so, to get just the interview itself. > >https://youtu.be/vTfEq6qIleY > >(long link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTfEq6qIleY ) > >Do not hesitate to send me comments and criticisms. They help my work to improve. > >Feel free to forward it to any and all you know who might be interested. > >I hope you find it useful. > >Warm regards and solidarity, > >Grover Furr > >P.S. You can download a complete list of my published books at the following link: > >http://tinyurl.com/fourteenbks
([Mirror.](https://invidious.snopyta.org/watch?v=coOtyPBgxqs))
([Mirror.](https://invidious.snopyta.org/watch?v=nGm0u3UHDZM))
I am sharing this here for anybody who may be curious. The following message is from an e‐mail that Prof. Furr recently sent to me: >Dear friends: > >Mr. Tristan Pennell interviewed me on Tuesday, April 26 (2022) concerning my research on Joseph Stalin and the falsehoods and lies of Stalin-era scholarship. […] > >He posed five questions about Stalin and Stalin-era research. The interview is 2 hours in length. > >In case you'd prefer to listen to it in sections, I have marked the times where a new question and answer begins.. > >* * * * * * > >Here are the questions Mr. Pennell chose to ask me. > >Start (my answer begins at 1:35) - Stalin’s coming to power & the subsequent conspiracies/attempts to remove him with forgeries of Lenin’s writings > >10:58 - The reality of collectivization - how it was actually a real reform that led to a dramatic bettering of living conditions for the peasantry, food security for the country, and also allowed for rapid industrialization. > >22:29 - Trotsky being exiled, Yezhovshchina (mainly how it wasn’t Stalin’s “terror” but a plot to stir up discontent between the people & the party) and how the Stalin leadership eventually caught and crushed this plot. > >32:41 - The truth about the Purges and how it wasn’t Stalin removing his political opponents as the anti-communists say, but actual threats to the country. > >1:09:47 - The next topic is one I think is important, & that is the democratic legacy of Stalin. His anti-bureaucracy/pro-democracy movement, his work on the 1936 constitution & how even without having everything Stalin wanted, it still nonetheless was the most democratic constitution in the world. > >* * * * * * > >I would appreciate any criticisms or other comments you might care to make. Good, intelligent criticism can only help me improve my research.
video debunking class collaborative "representation" as a path towards real change
Video is about an hour long (around 58 minutes).
BeardTube
!beardtube@lemmygrad.mlBeardTube is a place for sharing videos from a revolutionary perspective. Politics, Economics, History, Philosophy, Science, Journalism, Culture, News, Critiques, and more are welcome here as long as submitted content is relevant and of high quality. Supporting established content creators and promoting new ones is encouraged to help spread class consciousness across the internet and beyond!