In order to understand the crisis of the imperialist world system in the twenty-first century,” MR editors write in this month’s “Notes from the Editors,” “it is crucial to see this in terms of the present as history, that is, as an outgrowth of a centuries-long historical process.” Following this thread from the long sixteenth century through to the present day, the editors dissect the material conditions leading the emergence to a new and decidedly anti-imperialist revolutionary subject. | more…
Jayati Ghosh illuminates how capitalism has exacerbated inequality not only due to market forces, but as a result of how wealthy countries and firms based within them have tilted the scales toward themselves, disenfranchising the rest of the world in the process. This pervasive economic inequality, Ghosh concludes, undermines the idea and practice of true democracy. | more…
This article will be released in full online September 8, 2025.
In this interview, published here for the first time in English, Abdaljawad Omar (aka Abboud Hamayel) and Pascual Liguori discuss Western media attempts to force upon Palestinians narratives of either victimhood or savagery. These portrayals, however, only obscure the threat Palestinian resistance poses not just to Zionism, but to the colonial project globally. | more…
This article will be released in full online September 15, 2025.
In 2003, Haitian president Jean-Betrand Aristide publicly called for France to pay reparations to Haiti—and less than a year later, was whisked away from the island via U.S. military aircraft. Steve Cushion sheds light on the colonial and neocolonial relationships that have imposed crushing debt on Haiti and its people, and their continuing implications for Haiti’s development. | more…
This article will be released in full online September 22, 2025.
Andy Merrifield explores Nikolai Gogol’s short story “The Nose,” a satirical tale featuring a puffed-up government official who finds himself suddenly and nose-less. As the official pursues his formerly attached schnozz through the streets of St. Petersburg, Gogol bestows upon readers a twisted parable revealing the pettiness and indolence pervading the corridors of power. | more…
This article will be released in full online September 29, 2025.
Joel Wendland-Liu reviews Armed Struggle?, Gerald Horne’s exploration of the state violence and repression that were successfully employed to demolish the Black Panther Party and its influence throughout the 1960s and ’70s. Though Horne’s recounting, Wendland-Liu writes, we can take powerful lessons about the roles of race and class in the militant drive toward liberation. | more…
This article will be released in full online September 29, 2025.
“Assume a ship under the command of a mad captain headed for certain shipwreck. What would freedom mean to the people on board?” asked MR cofounder Paul M. Sweezy in this previously unpublished discussion piece. “There can hardly be any doubt about the answer…the essence of freedom for the people on the ship is the ability to control their collective fate.” | more…