Under Communism, humanity will be able to absorb all of the natural necessities of its existence - sex, birth, work, pain, joy, sadness and even death.

"Even in what they symbolize, these customs are nobler than ours. For example, these women who make themselves beautiful for the dead and not for the richest of the living, as in our mercantile society, this sewer in which we are immersed."

https://www.marxists.org/archive/bordiga/works/1961/janitzio.htm

#AmedeoBordiga #communism #marxism #bordigism #death #Mexico #diademuertos

In Janitzio Death is not Scary by Amadeo Bordiga 1961

"As it happened in Rome, with the wild hordes unconscious bearers of a distant but greater revolution, the curators of the greatest contributions of man, we wish for a powerful barbarian wave to come crashing through the gates of this bourgeois world.

But today, inside this gate, all forces, even if they oppose and fight each other, remain standing under the banner of civilization."

https://libcom.org/article/onwards-barbarians

#civilization #capitalism #communism #revolution #marxism #amadeobordiga #bordigism

Onwards, Barbarians!

Bordiga's 1951 commentary on Engels' 1884 "The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State". Within the text, Bordiga analyzes the spirit of so-called barbarism and proclaims that its characteristics are a welcome addition to socialism. Translated and edited by Radical Reprints, 2021.

libcom.org
Artículos de Amadeo Bordiga sobre fascismo y democracia, publicados en 1921 y 1922

Bordiga abordó el tema del fascismo en numerosos artículos, entre 1921 y 1926. El fascismo era el problema número uno que el PCd´I debía afrontar en su acción durante estos años. Ante todo, para co…

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