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Of Elites, Imperial Nostalgia, and Denialism

Europe Boards the Bandwagon of (Self)-Destruction


01/03/2026

It is difficult not to feel a sense of vertigo—tinged with a certain disgust—at the speed with which grim news multiplies week after week. Especially regarding international policies emanating from the West. Once again, a brief chronicle of imperial USA decline unfolds amid preparations for a potential war against Iran, with European allies. The empire will die while it destroys other people’s lives, and it is not short of loyal followers.

Recent events show how old colonialism reinvents itself. Remarks delivered by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Munich Security Conference to the upper ranks of Europe’s Atlanticist elite illustrated this.. I Rubio blamed immigrants for Europe’s decline and called for joint reindustrialization between Europe and the United States. He also evoked, with unmistakable imperial nostalgia, the colonial era when the West expanded across the globe, bringing “prosperity” and “civilization” to the so-called barbarian world. After 1945, he argued, a weakened postwar Europe was struck by atheistic communists and decolonial movements. Now, Rubio concluded, this decline must be confronted “together.” In his speech, Rubio said: „This is the path that President Trump and the United States has embarked upon. It is the path we ask you here in Europe to join us on. It is a path we have walked together before and hope to walk together again. For five centuries, before the end of the Second World War, the West had been expanding — its missionaries, its pilgrims, its soldiers, its explorers pouring out from its shores to cross oceans, settle new continents, build vast empires extending out across the globe

His message amounted to a call for the regroupment of former postcolonial powers and a declaration of confrontation against those unwilling to align with imperial policy/ This was a pointed signal to the Global South and to blocs such as the BRICS. The speech was saturated with imperial longing, and it was met with applause from an audience of compliant European elites.

Geopolitical commentator Ben Norton wrote on “X”:

What the US empire is doing now with Gaza, Venezuela, and Cuba is what awaits most of humanity, and European elites applaud enthusiastically.

With such leaders at the helm, and with an indifferent, intimidated, and complacent population, little can be expected from Europe. In Germany, shameless political support for the genocide in Gaza continues, even as politicians tour a territory reduced to ruins. Meanwhile, prominent artists. prefer silence. This was the case with the German director Wim Wenders, who, during a press conference at the Berlin International Film Festival, was confronted with a question about the genocide in Gaza. Wenders replied that the festival was „not political,” contradicting himself from years earlier. His response provoked the Indian writer Arundhati Roy to cancel her visit to the festival in protest at his remarks.

Meanwhile, Germany deepens its ties with Israel.Inside Germany the repression of pro-Palestinian protest persists, through repressive measures that have been declared unconstitutional in both Germany and England. At the same time, the political class  has sought to deny the genocide in Gaza, as noted by the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention. This is particularly troubling in a country where Holocaust denial is punishable by law.

Added to this is the pressure exerted by governments allied with Israel(France, the United Kingdom, and Germany)which call for the resignation of the courageous UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese. She is a leading voice documenting the genocide in Gaza, but has been slandered by the circulation of a manipulated video. These governments attacked Albanese with a troubling hypocrisy and a lack of intellectual honesty, as they did not attempt to verify the material’s authenticity. In this climate, truth itself has been discarded. What we are witnessing is, quite simply, a war.As Yanis Varoufakis recently wrote:

Today, Francesca Albanese’s detractors, those who seek to shield Israel from her well-documented, factual, legitimate criticism by getting her fired or by forcing her resignation from her position of UN Special Rapporteur – these people do not understand one thing:

Francesca will NEVER stop! She will continue to expose Israel’s crimes whether she is the UN’s Special Rapporteur or not. My message to them is simple: Francesca Albanese may be even more successful in shining light on Israel’s genocide if you strip her of her UN role. Beware what you wish for!”

As the genocide in Gaza continues and Israel prepares the de facto annexation of the West Bank in violation of international law once again, yet another spectacle of horror arises from the Epstein files. It turned out that the much-maligned “conspiracy theorists” were right to  point out the profound moral decay of global capitalist elites. Beyond the moral outrage provoked by the actions of this bunch of unscrupulous torturers, murderers, and pedophiles, I suspect that the exposure of these cruelty-laden archives also contributes to the normalization of violence against the vulnerable. Is this not one of the central messages of Trump and his supremacist allies? Hatred and contempt for the weak—be they immigrants, Latinos, Black people, homosexuals, or anyone who does not fit into the racist imaginary of MAGA politics.

Thus, I invite readers to interpret this “scandal” differently: Epstein and his vast network of Zionist pedophiles are not merely another sign of elite corruption and impunity. Rather they expose the staggering violence that underlies this economic and political system, its structural foundation. Given the level of dehumanization and destruction of human lives in Gaza, this should not come as a surprise. Cruelty advances. The Epstein files simply reaffirm what we already know—that power and money go hand in hand. The relationship between the system and these figures is not incidental. These are neither the system’s “black sheep” nor exceptions to the rule; they are expressions of the system itself. Indeed, the system is a machine for producing such monsters. Epstein, Trump, politicians, aristocrats, scientists, and Mossad intelligence agents—all those who appear within that network—embodied the violence of this order; they are its defenders, its products, and its guardians. Should we really be surprised by imperial violence against Venezuela, attempts to starve Cuba, renewed aggression against Iran, or the near-total destruction of the Gaza Strip?

It seems that the so‑called “culture war,” as the far right likes to call it, has now reached the boundaries of geopolitics and international relations. What now prevails is raw, unadulterated imperial violence, with the clear complicity of its European lackeys. Munich provided us with another example of this will to death and nihilism at the heart of the European elites.

Meanwhile, those annoying elements who dare to denounce this violence—the genocide in Gaza, the criminal blockade of Cuba, the kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro, the imminent war against Iran—are declared the new enemies. Enemies of the wonderful Western civilization, the so‑called “cradle” of democracy and the free market. Because of the wickedness of those Others—whether Arabs, Chinese, critics, communists, anti‑imperialists, decolonialists, etc.—the empire and its lackeys will be forced to resort to violence for their own preservation, both inwardly and outwardly.This is not only an expression of imperial nostalgia but also a desire to restore an old colonial order in which the West rules again. We on the other side cannot expect to be treated well by people with great power and few scruples. Rubio’s speech shows us with striking clarity that the coloniality of power—as a particular system of domination characterized by Aníbal Quijano—is more alive than ever. Europe is nostalgic for its dissipated imperial power, far from resisting this decadent narrative. Indeed Europe seems willing to climb aboard the wagon of (self‑)destruction that these riders of the apocalypse are prepared to inflict on the world.

Starmer’s by-election disaster shows opportunities for Right and Left

The Green victory in Gorton and Denton should be celebrated, but when will we see a real Left challenge?


28/02/2026

On 26th February, 2026, Sir Keir Starmer’s British Labour Party experienced an electoral debacle. In a by-election in Gorton and Denton, a constituency in Manchester where just 1½ years previously, Labour won 50.8%, they halved their vote, coming third in a constituency which they had held since 1931. Labour was beaten by both the Green Party and the far-right Reform. 

The Greens received 40.7% of the vote in the constituency—four times better than their previous by-election result. Party leader Zack Polanski told BBC Breakfast that Gorton and Denton was only his party’s 127th target seat. That is, if they could win here, there were 126 constituencies where they had a higher chance of winning.

Labour were not the only losers. Both the Conservative and Liberal Parties each got less than 2% of the vote and lost their deposits (in British electoral law, if you receive less than 5% of the votes, you have to pay all your own electoral costs). This was only the second time ever that the Conservatives have lost their deposit in a by-election.

This was also only the second by-election where neither establishment party—Labour and the Conservatives—appeared in the top two. The first occasion—when George Galloway won in Rochdale in 2024—only happened because Labour disowned and withdrew their support from their own candidate.

How did we get here?

The Gorton and Denton by-election took place because sitting MP Andrew Gwynne retired on “health grounds”. Gwynne had sent offensive messages in a WhatsApp group, in which he said he hoped that a 72-year old woman who did not support him would die. He was also accused of making racist comments about Black MP Diane Abbott and said that the name of American psychologist, Marshall Rosenberg, “sounds too militaristic and too Jewish.”

Labour had an obvious candidate in Andy Burnham, the current mayor of Manchester who is looking to return to parliament. Burnham is currently very popular, although his politics are at best Soft Left. Starmer and his allies bureaucratically prevented Burnham from standing because they feared that Burnham would try to replace Starmer as party leader. Labour Party rules say that only MPs are allowed to become leader.

Starmer himself was receiving historically low popularity ratings. By January 2026, his unpopularity rating was 75%. Starmer’s net favourability rating of -57 is the joint-lowest recorded for any prime minister other than Liz Truss. Truss was prime minister for just 49 days.

Starmer’s response to his unpopularity has been to tack to the right. In a speech in May 2025, he said that Britain risked “becoming an island of strangers.” These words echoed a notorious speech by racist politician Enoch Powell. Starmer and his advisors were either deliberately stoking racism or woefully ignorant.

As Labour’s campaign stumbled on, they went from crisis to crisis. Less than a week before the by-election, Peter Mandelson—Starmer’s political ally and the man he proposed as US ambassador—was arrested on suspicion of misconduct because of his connections with Jeffrey Epstein. Starmer had already been forced to get rid of both Mandelson and chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

Starmer’s loyal support for Israel was also damaging his credibility. On 13th February, the high court ruled that  the government’s decision to label Palestine Action as a terrorist group (and thus as great a danger as Islamic State) was disproportionate and unlawful. Rather than accepting the court’s ruling, Starmer’s Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood  immediately announced that she would be challenging the decision

The Threat of Reform

It is just 19 months since the Conservatives were routed at a general election in which the numbers voting Tory halved from 14 million to 7 million. Both mainstream parties are deeply unpopular. This would be the perfect time for an insurgent left wing campaign. Unfortunately, the main beneficiaries so far of the Centre not holding are Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform Party.

Reform is funded by shipping magnates, climate change deniers, and investors in fossil fuel. Its website claims: “Net Zero is pushing up bills, damaging British industries like steel, and making us less secure”. The alternative it offers is the oxymoronic “clean nuclear energy.” 

Despite recent revelations that Farage conducted “deeply offensive, racist and antisemitic behaviour” at school, including “giving Nazi salutes and goose-stepping”, Reform still tops the polls at 26%, with both Labour and the Conservatives languishing at 18%. Although Gorton and Denton was over 400 on their hit list (that is, there were more than 400 constituencies that they were more likely to win), it looked like Reform had a very good chance of winning.

After the Green’s election victory, Farage raised concerns about “family voting” in Muslim areas—a racist assumption which questions the importance of Muslim votes. We have not heard similar concerns about Christian families who send their children to private schools and all vote for the right.

Matt Goodwin, Reform’s candidate in Gorton and Denton, is a nasty piece of work. He was endorsed by the Fascist “Tommy Robinson.” After racist riots ended with people trying to burn down a hotel containing asylum seekers, Goodwin called this an understandable reaction to “mass immigration”. 

Goodwin has also claimed that people born in the UK are not necessarily British, and suggested that women who don’t have children should pay more tax. His campaign manager Adam Mitula was suspended after saying “I wouldn’t touch a Jewish woman”, and denying the Holocaust. But what was he doing as campaign manager in the first place? 

The Green Surge

Since Zack Polanski became Green leader less than 6 months ago, party membership has nearly tripled to 175,000. There are now more members of the Green Party than of either the Conservative or Liberal parties.

Green candidate Hannah Spencer, a former plumber, wrote before the election: “I’m fighting for lower bills, for neighbourhoods scarred by austerity and underinvestment, and to stop the privatisation of the NHS.” In her victory speech, she added: “I’ve made clear my position and my commitment to working-class communities—the community that I am from.” 

The speech also took on her racist opponents, saying “I can’t and won’t accept this victory tonight, without calling out politicians and divisive figures who constantly scapegoat and blame our communities for all the problems in society. My Muslim friends and neighbours are just like me—human.” Spencer spoke at the launch meeting of Women Against the Far Right, and she also released campaign videos in Urdu. She has the potential to provide an important link between parliament and social movements.

Labour’s reactionary response to the Green surge was, sadly, to be expected. Before the election, an anonymous Labour MP said: “The worst outcome for us would be a win for the Greens, or any result which shows us finishing behind them. That could herald the kind of split in the left which we saw in the right at the last election and which gave us a landslide victory.”

Labour’s Negative Campaigning

In the absence of policies which benefitted the local community, Labour’s election campaign focussed on attacking Reform, and—increasingly—the Greens. In the last few days of the campaign, Labour hysterically attacked the Greens’ drugs policy, falsely, and regularly, portraying decriminalisation as being the same as legalisation (it is not). 

Policing minister Sarah Jones claimed: “Playgrounds would become ‘crack dens’ if Greens were in power”. Starmer himself said: “the Green Party’s policy isn’t just irresponsible, it’s reprehensible, legalising cocaine, heroin, ketamine and the date rape drug, GHB, a drug which we know is used to spike drinks for women.”

These were not the only Labour lies. On the evening before the election, Labour put out a leaflet saying “Tactical Choice says Vote Labour. Based on a new prediction made in the last 24 hours we are recommending voting Labour.” No organisation called Tactical Choice exists.

Labour’s Facebook page continued this defamation. As it became clear that the Greens were leading in the polls, Labour persistently argued that only they could stop Reform. They posted a series of bar charts of expected results in which the Green prognosis (higher than both Labour and Reform) was absent. 

Actions have consequences. There will be future elections in which Labour may well be the party most likely to beat Reform. But voters will remember the lies of Gorton and Denton where Labour’s fear of anything remotely left of centre ended with them trying to sabotage the only campaign likely to beat the Right.

Where was the Left?

While all this was going on, Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana’s Your Party was electing a new executive. This led to rancourous infighting between different slates supporting Corbyn and Sultana. I experienced the worst of this on 61.8% – Supporting Corbyn’s Mandate, another Facebook page which was set up when Corbyn was Labour leader, and often echoed the factional sectarianism found on the Labour page.

On the page, to which only admins could post, there was a worrying number of posts attacking Zarah Sultana and her Grassroots Left slate (sample quotes: “Zarah Sultana does not support or respect Jeremy Corbyn!”, “Revolutionary socialists aka Grassroots left, never miss an opportunity to data harvest”, “Zarah’s disgraceful record!”). In contrast, posts attacking Labour and Reform were largely absent.

Responding to such red-baiting and ad hominem attacks is like wrestling a pig; you both get dirty and only the pig likes it. But one thing needs saying here. One repeated attack against Sultana was that she prematurely announced the founding of a new left party. If Corbyn and allies had not dithered for so many years, it could have been a Your Party candidate who was cleaning up in Gorton and Denton.

Voting for the new executive was supposed to heal these divisions, and yet a couple of days after both elections, a “veteran socialist” and supporter of Corbyn told the Guardian: “Zarah alienated many people in Muslim communities by saying things like there was no place for social conservatives in the party, and we need to rebuild that trust.”

The response from a friend in the UK to this article was “YP is fucked”. The worst way to respond to a radical and insurgent Green electoral victory is by courting social conservatism, or by repeating the slightly racist suggestion that “Muslim communities” are socially conservative. This focus on electoral respectability risks condemning Your Party to electoral and political oblivion.

What next?

Keir Starmer is likely to hang on as Labour leader, if only because there are council elections in May, and the party needs a scapegoat to take the blame for Labour’s almost certain disastrous performance. After that, the party lacks any credible alternative to Starmer. Time will tell whether Labour has damaged itself irreparably, but we should shed no tears at the death of a neoliberal imperialist project.

The immediate beneficiaries of Gorton and Denton are the Greens, long seen as a fringe party. The current Green programme is much more radical than anything offered by Labour. Hannah Spencer’s result is a victory for radical socialist ideas above hate and division. We should all celebrate. And yet, we should remember the experience of the Greens in government. 

In Brighton, the Green-led council proposed £4,000 pay cuts, leading to a week-long bin strike. In Germany, where the Greens have come closer to power, they have been much worse, participating in neoliberal governments and providing warmongering foreign ministers like Joschka Fischer and Annalena Baerbock.

Meanwhile, Reform continues to build. It is a sign of how broken British politics are that a nasty, racist party could gain over 10,000 votes in a constituency where 44% of the population identify as coming from a ethnic minority background. That does not mean that there are over 10,000 racists in that part of Manchester, but a lot of people are demanding serious change. 

Two days before the election, a man was arrested for carrying an axe into a Manchester mosque. The threat posed by Reform is not just seen in election results, but in giving confidence to violent racists. If the Left is unable to offer credible answers, the Right will exploit the situation.

I hope that Your Party gets its act together and offers a serious challenge to the neoliberal consensus and the far-right danger. Where this means working with the Greens, so be it, but it requires a clear socialist identity, which is not worried about shocking social conservatives. Above all, the Left must combine parliamentary campaigns with a fight on the streets, starting with the demonstration against the far right in London on 28th March.

Hands that built a movement

Review of ‘From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor’ by Andrew Stone Higgins

The cover of "From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor."

From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor: A Collective History of the International Socialists, edited by Andrew Stone Higgins, is a love letter to revolutionary patience, to principled militancy, and to a tradition of socialism that refused both bureaucratic tyranny and liberal accommodation. It is also something rarer: a collective memoir that does not lapse into nostalgia, but instead insists on relevance. Through testimony, reflection, and political self-criticism, the book reconstructs the world of the Independent Socialist Clubs and the International Socialists as a living laboratory of “socialism from below,” a current that shaped far more of the American left than its modest numbers would suggest.

The volume’s emotional core is commitment. Again and again, readers encounter organizers who believed that ideas mattered only insofar as they were tested in struggle: on campus, in factories, in unions, in high schools, in feminist collectives, and in anti-racist campaigns. This was a socialism that rejected shortcuts. No saviors, no enlightened elites, no substitution of armed spectacle for mass organizing. Power had to be built patiently, democratically, collectively.

Higgins’s introduction alone is worth the book. It situates the International Socialists (IS) within the lineage of anti-Stalinist Marxism, tracing roots through Hal Draper, Anne Draper, and Stan Weir, veterans of the Workers Party and Independent Socialist League who preserved revolutionary democracy through McCarthyism’s long night. Higgins shows how the IS fused Old Left rigor with New Left insurgency, rejecting both Cold War liberalism and authoritarian communism. The result was a distinctive political culture: intellectually demanding, fiercely democratic, strategically serious, and oriented toward the multiracial working class. He also names weaknesses without flinching: slow early expansion, cultural barriers to working-class recruitment, and limits in building durable multiracial leadership. The tone is neither defensive nor dismissive. It is honest, and that honesty strengthens the project.

The first chapter, Mike Parker’s “The Student Movement and Beyond,” grounds the story in the radicalizing currents of the early 1960s. His journey from the Student Peace Union into revolutionary socialism captures how antiwar activism, civil rights struggle, and class analysis converged for a generation. Parker makes clear that socialism did not arrive as a doctrine but as a lived realization: that war, racism, and exploitation shared systemic roots.

Thomas Harrison’s remembrance of the Berkeley Independent Socialist Club brings the Free Speech Movement to life as more than a spontaneous eruption. It becomes a strategically contested terrain where disciplined organizers helped shape a mass uprising without dominating it. Marilyn Morehead’s chapter on organizing with the Black Panthers deepens this theme, showing how the IS built a rare, principled Black-white alliance rooted in mutual respect rather than romanticization. These pages quietly demolish the myth that the white left of the era could only oscillate between paternalism and performative militancy.

Nelson Lichtenstein’s “Making History in Berkeley” widens the lens, locating the IS within broader transformations of campus radicalism, while David McCullough’s “To the Working Class” signals the crucial turn away from student exceptionalism. The revolution, the IS insisted, would not be made by radicalized undergraduates alone but also by organized workers.

Lois Weiner’s chapter on building the Third Camp at UC Berkeley clarifies what made the IS politically distinctive: rejection of both US imperialism and authoritarian “socialist” states. In an era intoxicated with romanticized revolutions abroad, this was an unpopular but principled stance. Kim Moody’s account of the Independent Socialist Clubs on the East Coast and Gabe Gabrielsky’s narrative of building from the bottom up in New Jersey, New York, and DC show the painstaking labor of constructing an organization from scratch.

Nancy Holmstrom’s “ISC/IS, from the Margins” and Sam Friedman’s reflections on being revolutionary across cities capture the emotional and political costs of sustained organizing. These chapters remind readers that movement-building is not glamorous. It is exhausting, conflict-ridden, and often lonely.

Joel Geier’s “My Life with the IS” functions as both memoir and strategic meditation, tracing decades of activism shaped by discipline and collective learning. David Finkel’s reflections on the period from 1969 to 1986 chart the turn toward industrial organizing and the brutal encounter with deindustrialization and neoliberal rollback.

The middle of the book is where the IS’s heart beats loudest: the factory floor. Dan La Botz’s account as a socialist in the Teamsters union, Wendy Thompson’s feminist organizing at Chevy Gear and Axle, Mark Levitan’s plunge into industrial labor, and Candace Cohn’s experience as a steelworker collectively form a powerful narrative of rank-and-file insurgency. These chapters embody the rank-and-file strategy not as abstract theory but as lived risk. People uprooted their lives, took dangerous jobs, endured repression, and stayed because they believed workers could transform society themselves.

Gay Semel’s chapter on creating a paper for working people highlights the importance the IS placed on communication and political education. Movement newspapers were not propaganda sheets but forums for debate, strategy, and collective voice.

The later chapters expand the story’s social breadth. Anne Mackie’s “Breaking into Brown” and Barbara Winslow’s account of revolutionary feminism on both sides of the Atlantic show how deeply the IS engaged with women’s liberation as integral to class struggle, rather than as a side issue. Sheila Jordan’s journey into the organized revolutionary left continues this theme of politicization through lived injustice.

Michael Z. Letwin and Larry Bradshaw’s chapters on high school radicalism are among the book’s quiet revelations. They show how the IS invested in youth not as mascots but as organizers, cultivating political seriousness early. Kim Anno, Arnita Dobbins, Tonya English, and Kyle Hopkins then bring the Red Tide youth organization fully into view: multiracial, working-class, anti-racist, rooted in communities rather than campuses. Their stories of organizing against racism, police repression, and injustice in the Midwest pulse with urgency and creativity.

Together, the chapters form a mosaic of a political tradition that believed movements could be built, not merely awaited.

What emerges is the IS as a school of revolutionary practice. Members studied history not for reverence but for lessons. They debated fiercely but acted collectively. They rejected the fantasy of instant rupture in favor of sustained organizing. And they insisted that democracy was not a future reward but a present method.

The book is rightly celebratory. The IS helped seed Labor Notes, Teamsters for a Democratic Union, and traditions of rank-and-file unionism that still shape US labor struggles today. Long after the organization itself dissolved, its political DNA survived in shop-floor insurgencies, reform caucuses, and democratic socialist currents.

Yet the weaknesses matter, and the volume does not hide them. The early failure to engage the influential Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) systematically limited the IS’s reach at the height of the student movement. Its intense intellectual culture could alienate working-class recruits. Despite principled anti-racism and real breakthroughs like the Panthers alliance and Red Tide, building lasting multiracial leadership remained uneven. And the industrial strategy, while courageous and often effective locally, could not overcome the structural tsunami of deindustrialization and neoliberal counteroffensives.

These are not indictments. They are historical problems future organizers must confront with new tools.

One area future scholarship might deepen is the emotional economy of long-term organizing: burnout, internal conflict, and the personal toll of militant lives. Another is comparative analysis with other left currents of the period, especially those that chose armed struggle or electoral accommodation, to more sharply illuminate what the IS gained and lost through its strategic choices.

Still, the book’s central lesson stands tall: revolutionary politics is not performance. It is infrastructure.

For today’s American left, which sometimes drowns alternately in social media activism and electoral obsession, the IS legacy offers a bracing correction. It reminds us that movements are built through patient workplace organizing, political education, durable institutions, and alliances rooted in shared struggle rather than symbolic unity. It also warns against romantic shortcuts, be it insurrectionary fantasies or faith in reformist saviors.

The IS understood something still radical in US politics: that socialism must be democratic to its core, internationalist in outlook, anti-racist in practice, feminist in substance, and rooted in the working class as a living, diverse force.

This book is not a blueprint. Conditions have changed. But it is a treasure chest of experience, strategy, and courage.

For a new generation seeking to rebuild a fighting left amid precarity, climate crisis, resurgent authoritarianism, and hollowed-out labor institutions, From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor offers something priceless: proof that disciplined, principled, mass-oriented socialism once flourished in the belly of American capitalism, and can again.

The task now is not to replicate the IS, but to study it seriously, absorb its lessons, correct its limits, and carry forward its best tradition: a socialism built by ordinary people, for ordinary people, in extraordinary struggle.

If dedication alone could make a revolution, as Higgins writes, the IS would have won long ago. But dedication paired with strategy, democracy, and rooted organizing can still change history. This book helps show how.

“Nazis were on the move with baseball bats”

An interview with an antifascist from Brandenburg on the Baseballschlägerjahre and Nazi violence

This article is the second piece in the series Neo-Nazis and Anti-Fascism in Germany since the 1990s. The rest of the series can be found here.

TLB: Let’s start with who you are and a bit of background about yourself.

I grew up in the 1990s in Brandenburg, which was a relevant time for things related to Nazis and antifascism. Those were the so-called Baseballschlägerjahre [baseball bat years], which are known because there were so many organised Nazis. They were extremely present, and there were many attacks. I was politicised through this because I had issues with them already when I was quite young—also because I came from a left-wing family.

There was always the feeling that they were much stronger and bigger than us; they had bull necks and did martial arts, while we were thin, small punks. But I had luck in my school. I know people who were the only left-wing person in their schools. Their whole school was full of Nazis.

TLB: Why were there so many Nazis in the East?

I always find it important to look at the complexity. For one, there was always this narrative that the DDR was an antifascist state. We were created it as a state to prevent fascism, but most of the people in the DDR were still Nazis, even if the state had de-nazified better than the West. In the DDR, the leadership was all gone, but the smaller people were left. Many of them had right-wing positions, but simply couldn’t say them out loud.

There were already Nazi groups at the end of the DDR, but the state decided not to make it public because, officially, we had no Nazis. So they decided to hide it. Likewise, actual Antifas were not supported by the state, even if there was an antifascist self-understanding. But after the Wende [German reunification], there was a lot of unemployment and fear because so much had changed. Then it really came out. It really exploded. It was like a valve that opened up.

TLB: So people were already right-wing but hidden, and then were able to be openly right-wing?

But also right-wingers from the West who went to the DDR explicitly to mobilise; that was really present in the 90s. There were different structural issues that allowed Nazis to so effectively organise and militarise. There were also a lot of different militant groups who would do trainings in the forests. So when you went to pick mushrooms, you could accidentally wander into a paramilitary training.

There were also a lot of small right-wing parties that were created, such as REPs (Die Republikaner) and DVU (Deutsche Volksunion), who tried to get voters in the East. These were mainly West German parties that went into the East thinking it was a good moment because all the workers had lost their jobs. Christian Worch from Hamburg, for example, came up with the plan in the 90s and 2000s to take over youth clubs and make them into places for young nationalists. In the small city where I grew up, there were [Rudolf] Hess posters in the youth clubs. They really recruited people there and politicised them.

At the same time, everything that was left-wing seemed to be behind us somehow. It had not worked out, and because of that could not work. That made things for us on the left really difficult. You couldn’t get far with socialism because, at the time, people said they had tried that already and it hadn’t worked. They didn’t want to have it again.

TLB: Is that why you moved to Berlin?

Many moved away at the time who were left-wing, also generally out of East Germany. I have my own theory that all the cool people went away, and those who stayed were either Nazis themselves or those that had no problem with them or protected them.

And there were also many people who said the Neo-Nazi was perfectly nice: ‘He’s the son of my friend and they’re all good kids. And sometimes when they drink too much, sure, then they say dumb stuff. But they’re not monsters.’ And we always heard things like, ‘It’s your own fault, when you’re running around with green hair like a punk’ or ‘Exactly, that’s what you get when you run your mouth’. But it was these kids who murdered people.

TLB: Is this what you were referring to earlier as the Baseballschlägerjahre?

Nazis were on the move with baseball bats. There were actually a lot of attacks, and many murders. This was exactly the time of my youth, when I grew up. I myself had a lot of experiences of Nazi violence, and so entered antifascist formations pretty quickly because it was necessary for survival. 

Many of these murders were also only recognised as political many years later. There was the question of whether it was enough to be a political murder when it was Nazis who murdered someone who was homeless. Did they have to have said something which made it clear that it was right-wing extremism?

And when you look at the sentences that these people got, it was always super minimal because they were so young. Many of them were minors—17 or something—and they killed people who didn’t fit into their world view.

TLB: What happened to all of these people? Where are they today?

Now they’re grown up and have their own kids. This is the generation that makes the AfD so strong. Many of the AfD people in Brandenburg have backgrounds in militant Nazi groups, such as Andreas Kalbitz. Really wild militant Nazi connections, including groups that were banned. 

TLB: And they’re using the fact that the East is more racist? 

In Brandenburg and East Germany, everyday racism is stronger. Especially since the AfD has pushed it, which allows people to be more aggressive. So this daily context, where people will literally be spat on in supermarkets or public transit, or get a pig’s head in front of their door, has reached a wild level of aggression. It’s no longer hidden and has only gotten stronger in the last years.

There’s always this projection that the East is so much whiter than the West, and because people are white working class, you can use racism, especially when people have so little contact with different perspectives from different countries.

But I would say that all white people profit from racism, whether from the West or the East. There is a specific racism in East Germany, which is influenced by the DDR and its upheaval. But there’s also a specific racism in West Germany, which functions through denied belonging and access to resources, and it is not less bad, I would say.

TLB: So when you moved, did you see a difference between the people you grew up with and the antifa scene in Berlin?

For a long time there was a joke we would say about the West Germans: that they were Antifas, but they never had to fight with Nazis. And from an East German perspective, that’s so funny, because every day we would have to deal with that on multiple levels, in a really extreme survival street-fighting mode. So we made fun of it, as East German Antifas at the time. We had problems all the time. The housing project where I lived was regularly attacked. Today, it’s the same again. In Cottbus, for example, there have been multiple arson attacks on a housing project there, also on so-called asylum applicants housing. Es geht jetzt wieder los [It’s starting up again].

TLB: What difference did that make when working with people?

In Berlin there was always this Brandenburg thing, that Berliners would come out for a demo or so. That’s still true today—for example with CSDs [Pride celebrations]. We get a ton of Berliners for a demo, and then it really goes off in a small city, and then they all go back to the city and all the lefties or queer people are left alone and get it extra in the face from Nazis for the next months.

And the punks in Brandenburg were so happy that people had come and supported them. But at the same time, they had very different lived realities, and that can sometimes backfire. For example, when people aren’t asked what they actually need, or when people just do their own thing with the idea of helping the poor people there instead of really seeing them.

Even until today, I have this feeling that I abandoned people in Brandenburg because in Berlin there’s always this feeling that it doesn’t matter if I’m here or not. There are so many politically engaged people here, and then in Brandenburg every single person really matters. And what is also really different here compared to small cities, is how much you can live in a political bubble. You can speak only with people who have the exact same opinion as you. In so many other contexts, if someone isn’t right-wing and happens to be in the same place, then you have to organise together. I find these are actually cool skills, and I often miss this in Berlin.

TLB: What kind of work did you do back then in Brandenburg?

I did political education work, which always felt meaningful. We went to schools and talked about things like the elimination of the right to asylum. People had absurd ideas of what people who came here received: free nice cars and thousands of Marks. We would come and say no actually people have to do this and that process, and in the end don’t even get their own room. They end up sharing a room and only having nine square meters. But in schools they had no idea what the actual situation was. And this was incredibly important because if they didn’t get this information from us, who knows where they got it from.

When the AfD comes and they’re the only ones who talk to them, then they get their information from the AfD. This is what is absurd about the party: they make it out as if they’re helping people, but really they’re just making hate. But that doesn’t matter when they’re the only ones who go there and listen to people. I think if the left did this, it would also work. We saw something similar with Sahra Wagenknecht.

TLB: So it sounds like you think there’s hope to change this situation.

That’s why I was totally ready to do this interview because I find it so important to pass knowledge on. Also to explain what is unique to this history, and for people with international perspectives to better understand how Nazi structures are organised there, and what strategies work against them and which don’t. This process needs the voices of the people from there, and it’s also so important to work with the people there.

TLB: Are there things that do or don’t work?

What I mentioned earlier: these skills of working with people, talking with them in a language they understand. I would say I also have a working-class background and come from Brandenburg. When I talk with these people they still consider me a Berliner, but I can often still create a bond with them.

But going there for a demo, using concepts that we all know and are correct and important, but absolutely no one there knows and which are totally irrelevant for their lives… People need to do other things. What people from Berlin are doing is not working—just going there to ‘help people’.

I think something like the Haustürgesprächen [door knocking] Die Linke does would be more effective. We need left-wing ideas and structures there, and to do public politics a little differently. Die Linke is doing cool things on a local level, but people are still voting for AfD. It’s totally absurd, and is only half related to how much people can really do.

TLB: What would you say to the people who want to, or are going to do this work in the East?

It’s difficult to say. It’s important to know that there are privileges from West Germans, ways in which the West German perspective is privileged even in things like the women’s movement. The East is often forgotten in these narratives.

There’s also very little analysis from East Germans themselves, partially because there’s such an extreme class gap in relation to knowledge production. Even in East Germany itself, I think about 2% or so of professors are East German; the rest are mostly West German. There is still very little research on East Germany from East Germans themselves. 

TLB: And I have to ask you, what is up with the anti-Deutsch? What’s going on there?

I also had a lot of contact with anti-Deutsch ideas. For a time I also identified myself with them. It had a lot of legitimacy in Germany, I would say. It came out of the context of the Wende, when German flags were flying everywhere. 

There’s the Möllemann story for example; he was an FDP politician who made antisemitic statements about how we should stop paying these reparations for [Jewish] forced labourers. Then, he went on to criticise Israel. At the same time there was huge growth in German nationalism, including the football world cup where there were so many German flags; also through the fall of the wall. All these flags were really a shock for the anti-fascist left, including how the world cup really broke the dam, allowing for this master narrative that now Germany is finally reunited. Now, we can be proud of our own nation and forget our own past and celebrate Germany again. This is the context that the anti-Deutsch movement came out of.

In the East, the break with the socialist narrative and the fall of all the anti-imperialist and Eastern Bloc states also forced a break with a certain idea of being left. Anti-Deutsch then provided a new identification for many people against nationalism and antisemitism. And then there was the Israel thing, where I think a lot of people simply had no idea about it. A lot was placed under the antisemitism label, including critique of Israel. At the same time, people were publishing whole books about the topic. While most Antifas had no or little contact with Jews, many of the perspectives that did exist were zionist.

For me it was also true, that I had someone very close to me who is Jewish and anti-zionist, and we had long debates about why anti-zionism is not antisemitic. I knew nothing about the history of groups like the Jewish Bund, or the long Jewish anti-zionist tradition, and these things were not discussed at all in left-wing contexts.

But by now I find it to be a really untenable position. After several years of genocide, it’s not serious to say that Israel can’t be criticised or deserves full solidarity. That Gaza has been bombed to rubble with German support has made that impossible; no one can seriously say it was only self-defense. I find it creepy that left people are still doing this—and it’s primarily white Germans. But most people I know who were anti-Deutsch have developed beyond that. There’s also been critiques of the racism—especially anti-Muslim racism—that was fostered under this label.

TLB: And have you tried to talk to the other people who haven’t changed their views?

I’ve had the impression that people would rather draw back and cut contact than discuss it. But I’ve also had long conversations about it with some people, including some friends who partially changed their views. There’s such a strong defensiveness, and I would say it’s a white defensiveness. White dominance and German defensiveness are very much tied together into a paternalistic spirit for the left. The idea that we know better and won’t listen to those who are most affected, for me, is not so much anti-Deutsch but rather incredibly German.

TLB: Do you have any wishes for how things should go in the future, for the leftist movement in general?

An emancipatory view of society is important to develop. Capitalism is dying, and we need left movements which can properly respond to these important changes. This includes creating the knowledge, so that the same mistakes aren’t made again. But at the same time, with the rise of authoritarianism, we are seeing so much mutual aid work and different care-networks. We also see with the anti-ICE protests, how much solidarity is growing every day.

And this is really the only way that we can survive these crises, including the climate crisis, etc. For me then it’s important that we all think about how we can destroy these violent systems, the dominance and repression that comes from society. We don’t need these anymore, like a snake that is shedding its own skin.

Meeting anarchists at war

Second part of the report on our solidarity trip to Ukraine

You can read the first part of this report here

Our next stop is in Lviv, where Shelter from the Lviv Vegan Kitchen opens his doors to us.

Shelter is a vegan activist, food relief enthusiast and volunteer army combatant. Right after the beginning of the full-scale invasion, he joined a territorial defense unit, but after a couple of months, he returned to Lviv to become a vital part of Lviv Vegan Kitchen collective. At the same time, Shelter is now serving on rotation basis in a voluntary artillery unit. One reason to join a voluntary unit was also to have bigger freedom of choice where to go and what to do.

In wartime, people find their own ways to help — their own spaces where they can feel they’re contributing something. For the crew behind Lviv Vegan Kitchen, that space is food. The collective formed in the early days of the full-scale invasion in 2022, when thousands of refugees were fleeing west. They decided to cook for them, funding everything entirely through donations.

Until June 2024, the kitchen served up to 500 hot meals a day to internally displaced people. When donations ran dry, that part of their work had to stop — but the collective didn’t. They realized there was another gap to fill: food for vegans on the frontline. Military rations provided by government are not vegan and in case there is a kitchen in the unit, meat or cheese are being mixed in the dishes so there is no vegan option.

So the kitchen started to cook, bake and send packages to the front – falafel, seitan, syrniki (Ukrainian curd pancakes), cookies, and other durable vegan meals that can survive long journeys and rough conditions. They even came up with their own protein bar recipe, which, according to soldiers, is a huge hit.

We visit their storage space. It’s DIY, improvised, and full of heart: shelves stacked with carefully labeled bags and boxes, a chest full of vacuum-packed seitan and falafel. Everything run with surprising order and precision. Here, Shelter prepares the packages with vegan ready-made food but also fills zip bags with basic spices, makes sets of instant soups and tomato paste, weighs out yeast flakes and soy granules; so soldiers have everything to prepare themselves a decent vegan meal. To receive a package from Lviv Vegan Kitchen, they only need to fill out an online form — and somewhere along the supply line, one of Shelter’s packages will find its way to them.

Learn more about Lviv Vegan Kitchen: www.lvivvegankitchen.com

You can support them with donations here: telegra.ph/How-to-donate–YAk-zadonatiti-06-13

On the long drive to Kyiv, we download mobile apps that send alerts about air raids. Not long into the drive, our phones start buzzing and wailing one after another. Air raid alert for Kyiv. Air raid alert for Sumy region. The app politely advises us to “find the nearest shelter and stay calm.” 

By the time we roll into Kyiv, the city of nearly three million feels strangely calm. Public transport stops at 10 p.m., metro stations close soon after, and by midnight the curfew empties the streets.

The next day, we meet two members of the Student Union Priama Diia, which translates as Direct Action. One has long curly hair tied back in a ponytail and wears a sweater that reads NO PHOTO. The other, with a shaved head and dangling earrings, smiles as they wave us over at the metro station. Across the street, we see a factory, which is bombed on a regular basis, without glass in the windows.

As we walk together through the neighborhood, we pass another burnt-out building. But around it, life moves on — people heading to work, carrying groceries, chatting at market stalls. In spite of the ongoing war, Kyiv is very much alive.

We arrive at a self-organized space inside the art university. The room feels full of care — they invite us to sit on DIY sofas made from wooden pallets, covered with a colorful crocheted blanket, next to a small bookshelf stacked with zines and books. Abstract geometric paintings hang on the walls, and smaller pieces are displayed on minimalist shelves. It feels like a living room gallery or a social center.

The student union Priama Diia has been around since the early nineties, passing through several generations of activists, ceasing to exist just to be reborn after some years. The two members tell us how, in 2023 — a few months after the start of the full-scale invasion — they began rebuilding the union from just three people. They saw how urgently students needed a voice, especially in the time of war. Now there are around 300 members across different cities in Ukraine.

Their work ranges from fighting scholarship cuts and dormitory evictions to confronting psychological abuse and power imbalances from teachers. They push to make education fair and accessible — “for the benefit of students, not the deep pockets of the one percent,” as they put it. They organize events, protests, and publish zines about how students live and find strength for activism during the war. 

For the union, education isn’t a privilege or a commodity. It should be free and accessible for all. It should be anti-capitalist. They see the student struggle as part of the wider labor movement — not just a fight for better study conditions, but part of the broader struggle for human liberation.

You can learn more about Direct Action Student Union here: www.priama-diia.org

In the afternoon, we meet several activists in the office of Solidarity Collectives. Above us hang anarcho-feminist and antifascist flags; on a shelf a painted portrait of the Russian anarchist Dmitry Petrov who died in 2023 in Bachmut fighting Russian imperialism; on the floor, a few paintings by the Ukrainian anarchist artist David Chichkan, who was killed in 2025 at the frontline. One shows three soldiers with anarcho-feminist and anarcho-syndicalist flags on their uniforms — small emblems on their chests and sleeves. Behind them stretch white clouds across a blue sky, and within the clouds, a faint portrait of Nestor Makhno, as if the sky is mirroring an inspiration of the current struggles. 

Then we meet Mykola from Solidarity Collectives — yellow curls, small silver earrings across the earlobe, a retro jogging jacket that would fit right into Berlin, and black cargo pants. He looks tired, smoking hand-rolled tobacco.

The collective consists of anti-authoritarians who came together when Russia’s full-scale invasion began. They support anti-authoritarian comrades fighting on the frontline and those affected by the war — providing humanitarian aid, building FPV drones, and support animal rescue.

Mykola tells us about the endless rotation of volunteers, a too small group of active people, how everyone is tired. At the start of the invasion, he worked in humanitarian aid, driving to bombed-out villages in the east to bring materials and help displaced people rebuild their homes. One day, he returned to find those same houses reduced to rubble again, their inhabitants once more forced to flee. The futility of Sisyphus work hit him hard. Now, he builds drones for anti-authoritarian soldiers at the front.

You can learn more about Solidarity Collectives here: www.solidaritycollectives.org/en

What connects all the collectives we meet today is a deep exhaustion. After nearly four years of war, burnout has become one of their biggest challenges. There’s always another crisis, another person who needs help. No time to rest after their work and activism. Yet through all the fatigue, they remain kind and patient — their smiles sometimes delayed, but genuine when they arrive.

Suddenly, a power outage. These happen often now and are increasing due to the Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Sometimes they’re planned, sometimes not. Local energy suppliers or the municipality provide tables of planned outages on their websites or Telegram channels, so people can get prepared.

For the night following our meeting at Solidarity Collective’s office, a massive air attack is expected. Telegram channels fill with warnings. Locals seem unfazed: “Air alerts happen every day,” they say, “you can’t live in a shelter forever.”

Around 1 a.m., one of the comrades wakes us. We quietly gather our things, step into the cold, and head to a nearby garage serving as a makeshift shelter. We spread our mats behind parked SUVs, slip into our sleeping bags, and listen to the sirens and the distant rumbling of air defense. Or is it someone snoring, and we’re making it up? A family with small dogs passes by, carrying their own camping things. We spend the night there.

By morning, we learn it was one of the biggest aerial attacks since the start of the war — over 700 projectiles, among them drones, cruise missiles, and decoys raining across the country. We open a picture of visualized attacks through this night, and the whole map of Ukraine flares: Strike UAVs “Geran-2/Harpyia,” cruise, ballistic, and air-launched ballistic missiles — “Kh-101, Iskander-K, Kalibr,” “Iskander-M,” and “Kinzhal”, decoy drones identified as “Gerbera.”

Some of us look up the military terms online, still unsure what they are and what they mean. The official statements say Russia is targeting energy infrastructure and “military objects,” but factories, homes, and civilians are hit just the same.

In the evening, we take the metro to Podil, a vibrant neighborhood in Kyiv. Someone needs a bathroom, and a comrade tells us you can ask anywhere in Ukraine for water or a toilet — no one will refuse or demand payment. Climbing a hill where local activists planted a tree in memory of Dima Petrov, an anarchist killed in this war, it’s already dark, and we stumble through the night until we find the tree. From the top, Kyiv unfolds before us — huge and glowing. You can see the left bank too, and the bright spinning lights of the Ferris wheel. Then, an air alert siren cuts through the air. Phones buzz with notifications. Someone checks the attack map, but a comrade from Kyiv reassures us: “They don’t target places like this. Don’t worry.”

We head downhill. Podil feels a bit like Dresden’s Neustadt — backyard raves, student bars, late-night shops, gay clubs, beautiful facades. The people look great, confident; even here, some wear puppy masks. A few streets further, it feels like an industrial zone.

We wanted to see how young people live here. Someone asks Iryna from Feminist Lodge what the clubs in Kyiv are like. She smiles, writes down a few names, and says: “They’re good, but the best raves are in Kharkiv. People there party differently. They’re so close to death that they’re more alive.”

Suddenly, another power outage occurs. The neighborhood goes dark. Convenience stores and bars turn on their generators. It’s loud, dark, and smells of gasoline — but life goes on.

On the following evening, our group meets Kateryna who runs an anarchist library that currently exists only online. We meet at her former flat where the books are stored right now. She can’t live here anymore as the neighborhood keeps getting attacked from the air. “It’s too stressful,” she remarks.

Kateryna greets us in her small kitchen with tea, waffles, and jelly fruit. She has long curly hair and speaks Ukrainian, but switches to Russian to make it easier for us to understand. She shows us how they digitalized the collection. She is happy that even soldiers on the front borrow books from the library. “It gives me hope,” she says, “when they write that the books help them pass the time and feel less alone.”

She shows us her former bedroom: a mattress on the floor, pushed as far from the window as possible. The window is not existing anymore, the frame is taped over with plastic and duct tape; the glass is completely eradicated due to the shelling. Across from the mattress, a bookshelf holds anarchist and feminist books; Emma Goldman’s face looks out from her memoirs, translated into Russian just a few years ago. Kateryna digs out some local feminist zines.

 The anarchist library in Kyiv is existing since 2013, in 2017, Kateryna started to take care of it, it got the name Vilna Dumka (“Free Thought”) and found a place in an anarchist bar. It also held bar nights, workshops, and other public events, but had to close down due to the high rent. As the public place is not available anymore, people can lend books online. On her phone, Kateryna scrolls through their online catalogue — around 300 titles, from classical anarchist theory to activist memoirs, feminist texts, and writings on ecology, animal liberation, migration, and labor struggles.The goal of the library is to make theory and practice of anarchism available to anyone who wants to learn more about the ideas of freedom, equality, and the struggle for human rights, especially today, when people in Ukraine are fighting for their freedom and independence.

You can find out more about Vilna Dumka here: vdbooks.org

On the way to our accommodation, we pass people wearing eccentric make-up. Some women wear cat ears, others wear goth white and black drawings on their faces. Someone in a white wedding dress with a white veil over their face, strides by a line of tanks on the roadside in Kyiv. It’s Halloween.

After the weekend on a humanitarian trip in Pavlograd and Sumy, we meet on Monday in an antifascist gym where we hold a discussion — sitting in a circle on the training mats, boxing bags hanging behind us, a green Antifascist Action flag with the Rojava symbol above, a queer flag to the side. We talk with local activists about solidarity work, about how Ukrainian refugees are treated in Germany, about their legal status, and about the problem of “toxic antimilitarism” among some Western leftists, who refuse to support those resisting Russian imperialism. Someone mentions the Berlin book fair that excluded Eastern European comrades who do solidarity work — a small example of a bigger issue.

This gym where we’re sitting is self-organized. They offer boxing and calisthenics training, and host political events when they can. Many of their trainers are now fighting at the front. 

On the following day, we drive back through Poland to Germany. Somewhere on the highway, the internet signal disappears — like slipping into a dark hole.

We changed the names of people to protect them.