Peoples Democracy newsletter

Peoples Democracy newsletter

Once More on Minerals and Imperialism

THE Industrial Revolution which inaugurated industrial capitalism in the world had occurred in Britain in cotton textiles; but neither Britain nor other North European countries could grow any raw cotton at all. The very coming into being of industrial capitalism in short was dependent upon the metropolis obtaining a steady supply of raw materials from wherever they happened to be produced. This situation has not changed one iota in all these years.

SFI Resists Saffronisation of Kerala Campuses

KERALA has long stood as a frontrunner in Indian higher education. National quality assessment agencies like the NAAC (National Assessment and Accreditation Council) and the NIRF (National Institutional Ranking Framework) have consistently affirmed the state's achievements, with Kerala's universities reaching significant milestones and gaining national recognition.Three of Kerala’s universities – along with NIT Kozhikode – have earned placements in the prestigious “overall” category, which evaluates institutions across the country.

Rural India Rises in a Massive July 9 Strike

ON July 9, 2025, as the urban proletariat launched a powerful strike, the villages of India also echoed with the sound of resistance. In a historic show of unity and determination, agricultural workers, rural labourers, peasants, and other toiling masses across the country rose in a massive rural strike. The rural proletariat responded forcefully, turning the day into a historic moment of collective assertion. The strike was called by a joint platform of Central Trade Unions and independent sectoral federations.

Migration and the Politics of Othering

FOR some time now, shock waves have been raging across the country. The issue at hand concerns the large number of Bengali-speaking migrant workers being labelled as Bangladeshis. The combination of being Bengali-speaking and Muslim is perceived as a “lethal” marker, almost automatically branding one as “illegal Bangladeshi infiltrator.”This is, of course, a false narrative. It is the same premise that underpinned the drafting of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has been at the forefront of this campaign.

Karnataka: Channarayapatna Farmers' Victory: A Historic Struggle against Land Acquisition

THE farmers’ struggle against forced land acquisition in the 13 villages of Channarayapatna Hobli, Devanahalli Taluk, in Bangalore Rural district, has ended in victory after 1,198 days of continuous protest since April 4, 2022.On July 15, 2025, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah met with leaders from the Channarayapatna Anti-Land Acquisition Struggle Committee and Samyukta Horata Karnataka, and agreed to drop the forced acquisition of 1,777 acres of farmland.The acquisition was being carried out under the Karnataka Industrial Areas Development (KIAD) Act of 1966.

July 9 General Strike: A Magnificent Success: Toiling Masses Rise to Resist Neoliberal Onslaught

THE General Strike on July 9 gave a glimpse of the anger of the workers and the toiling people against their worsening conditions imposed by the neoliberal policies aggressively pursued by the NDA government led by Modi. The call for the General Strike given by the joint platform of central trade unions and independent sectoral federations received magnificent response from the working class and support from the mass of the common people.

Communist Wins Chile’s Left Primary, Faces Right in November Election

JEANETTE Jara (born 1974) prevailed in the presidential primary of the four major left political forces held on June 29, 2025. With 60 per cent of the vote, Jara defeated Carolina Toha of the Democratic Socialist Party (28 per cent), Gonzalo Winter of the Frente Amplio or Broad Front (9 per cent), and Jaime Mulet of the FRVS, a merger of the greens and the progressives (2 per cent).

Rise of the West: New Light on Indigenous Agriculture In North America & the American Genocide

A RECENT paper in Science addresses an intriguing question: Did North America have settled agriculture before the arrival of Europeans? Or were the people in North America still in the hunter-gatherer stage, unlike Mesoamericans, who had advanced civilisations, such as the Mayans, Aztecs, and the Incas? The answer is that it did have significant agriculture, which "disappeared" only after their encounters with the invading Europeans settling in their lands.

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