BolshevismLeninRadekRosa LuxemburgSocialismSocialist PartySovietWorking Class

THE CLAJ STRUGGLE THE CLASS STRUGGLE AUGUST, 1919 No. Devoted to International Socialism PUBLISHED BY The Socialist Publication Society, 15 Spruce St. New York City Issued Every Month 25 a Copy; 00 a Year Vol. III Editors: EUGENE DEBS, LOUIS FRAINA and LUDWIG LORE VOL. III AUGUST, 1919 No. Left or Right?
By LUDWIG LORE CONTENTS Pages Left or Right? By Ludwig Lore. 257 264 What Is Bolshevism? By Rosa Luxemburg. 265 268 Radicalism in California. By Max Bedacht. 268 271 The Development of Socialism from Science into Action. By Karl Radek.
272 295 Greetings from Soviet Russia. By Rutgers 295 300 Autunın Slush. By August Strindberg. 300 304 The By Max Eastman.
304 306 Russia and Germany. By Sachs. 306 318 On the Unhappy Peace. By Lenin. 348 352 Documents 319 333 The Soviet Government and Peace. Allied Propaganda. The Constitution of the Hungarian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic. The Last Appeal of the Hungarian Soviet Government to the Working Class of Hungary.
Editorials 334 352 The Conventions. The First Victim of the League of Nations. The Railroad Situation. The Negro Problem a Labor Problem. The Lusk Fishing Expedition. Socialist Germany and Peace.
In discussing the situation that prevails in the Socialist Party of the United States at the present time it is hardly accurate to refer to the two parties to the controversy as Left and Right, at least in the European sense of those terms. The American Socialist movement has had, in the crisis through which it has just passed, no large and decisive group that would correspond to the European Right Wing, to the Scheidemanns and Davids and Suedekums in Germany, to the Plekhanoffs and Breshkovskayas in Russia, to the Renaudel and Thomas in France, and the Hyndmans in England. The small group of bona fide social patriots that our movenient harbored have either left it voluntarily or have been expelled from membership in the Socialist Party. The few who remain are, so far as influence in the party is concerned, a negligible quantity.
The political sins of the American Right Wing have been sins of omission rather than of commission. Its great fault lay in its failure to act at a time when action meant life and growth to the party, in failing to crystallize the tremendous anti war sentiment that existed in the country at the time of our entrance into the European war into a great mass movement for political and economic liberation. It adopted a radical platform at the St. Louis convention, and failed, miserably, to live up to its tenets. It was theoretically in opposition to the war, and yet allowed Meyer London, again and again to vote in direct opposition to the avowed stand of the party when war measures came up in Congress 118 The Co Operative Press 15 Spruce St. New York