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HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
1. What is American history?
\section{HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION}
\subsection{What is American history?}
In the 14th century, no one knew where the American continent was. In 1492, a merchant named Christophe Colombus went on a trade ship to India, but lost his way, but fortunately landed in the Americas. The people of that land are Indians, hunters and gatherers who do not know how to commerce and do business.
Since Colombus discovered the Americas, people from European countries have flooded there to do business. The whites wanted to make the Indians slaves, but they wouldn’t bow down, so they killed all the Indians and then forced the blacks in Africa to work for them. Every country has Europeans coming to America, but the largest number is British (3,000,000 people). So Britain took America as a colony.
2. Why did America stage their revolution?
\subsection{Why did America stage their revolution?}
The Americas are very rich with resources, copper, iron, coal, cotton, wheat, cattle, etc… everything is abundant. The British were greedy and wanted to collect all of it for themselves, so they set up 3 policies as follows:
1. All natural resources, America must supply to the British, cannot be sold to other countries.
2. Americans are not allowed to set up factories and trade associations.
3. Countries are not allowed to trade with America, only the British can trade.
Because of these 3 policies, plus heavy taxes, making the American economy very miserable. Therefore in the 1770, the American people were agitated and a movement "boycotting" against Britain.
3. What was the result of that movement?
\subsection{What was the result of that movement?}
The "boycott" movement lasted for up to 5 years. The British brought soldiers over, and arrested the leaders of the movement. Each time a leader is arrested, the further agitated the people. In 1775, when the British soldiers arrested more leaders, the people pulled together to resist, but the British soldiers killed 9 people at a result. This is the spark that ignited the powder keg, the people errupted in anger, live or die, they needed to expel the British Government.
A year later, on July 4, 1776, the revolution was achieved and the United States declared its independence, and it became a republic. Now America has 48 states and 110,000,000 inhabitants.
4. What does the American revolution mean to the Annam revolution?
A year later, on July 4, 1776, the revolution was achieved and the United States declared its independence, and it became a republic.
Now America has 48 states and 110,000,000 inhabitants.
\subsection{What does the American revolution mean to the Annam revolution?}
1. The French policy towards Annam is now worse than the British towards America, because the French have plundered all our people's wealth and barred our people from doing anything and everything; they forces our people to smoke opium and drink alcohol. The British only wanted American money, France was greedy for money and wanted to lose destroy our people, for us to lose our Annamese likeness. Yet the people of Annam have not from the United States example to state a revolution!
2. In the American declaration of independence, there is a saying that: “We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness—That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government” But now the US Government does not want anyone to talk about the revolution, or anyone to change the Government!
2. In the American declaration of independence, there is a saying that: “We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness—That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government”.
But now the US Government does not want anyone to talk about the revolution, or anyone to change the Government!
3. The US, although the revolution has been successful for more than 150 years, but the workers and peasants are still suffering, still worrying about staging a second one.
That's because the American revolution is the capitalist revolution, but the capitalist revolution is a revolution not yet there.
If we must sacrifice for the revolution, we should do it until the end, that is, after the revolution, the power should be given to the masses, not in the hands of a few. Only then will the people be happy without sacrificing many times.
\section{THE FRENCH REVOLUTION}
\subsection{Why did France have a revolutionary movement? }
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
1.Why did France have a revolutionary movement?
In the 18th century, the king was arrogant and decadent, the aristocrats and priests were rampant; Heavy taxes compunded the miserary to the people.
Partly, Canada and India, formerly French colonies, were now taken by Britain. On the other hand, educated men like Montesquieu (1755), Voltaire and Rousseau (1778) propagated liberal egalitarianism.
Partly, Canada and India, formerly French colonies, were now taken by Britain.
On the other hand, educated men like Montesquieu (1755), Voltaire and Rousseau (1778) propagated liberal egalitarianism.
Partly, the movement was affected by the English revolutionary movement (Where Sir Cromwell executed the English king and established a Republic in 1653) still new in the minds of people, and the recent American democratic movement (1776).
And especially because capital was hindered by the feudalists, while the people were oppressed by kings, nobles, and priesthoods. Therefore, the capitalist formed an alliance with students, farmers and workers to break feudalism.
2. When did the French Revolution begin?
\subsection{When did the French Revolution begin?}
When the king saw that the people were upset, he persecuted the propagandists and organizers. Witnessing this, the people were so angry that on July 14, 1789, they stormed Bastille. The king brought soldiers to guard the capital; The people organized revolutionary militias to fight back. In the end, the king retreated to the province of Versailles.
On October 5 of that year, the workers and women of Paris, went to Versailles to arrest the king for his crimes, and signed the declaration:
1. To abolish feudalism and liberate the serfs.
2. To nationalize properties of religious institutions.
3. To free people to make newspapers, organize, and so on.
4. To form a constitution, in which the king cannot be autocratic.
In 1792, because the king sought help from foreigners and communicated with the counter-revolutionaries, the people deposed the king and founded a republic. On January 21, 1973, the king and his wife were convicted of treason, and then executed.
3. How did other European countries react to the French revolution?
In 1792, because the king sought help from foreigners and communicated with the counter-revolutionaries, the people deposed the king and founded a republic.
On January 21, 1973, the king and his wife were convicted of treason, and then executed.
\subsection{How did other European countries react to the French revolution?}
People from all over the world were secretly overjoyed and in solidarity. But the monarchs and aristocrats of other countries were afraid that their people would imitate the French, so outside they joined forces in a coaltion to crush the revolution while helping the counter - revolutionaries inside France.
Although the French people had little food and lack of guns, it was only thanks to their courage to fight with their lives on the line that they suppressed the internal rebellion and destroyed the foreign coaltions. At that time, the soldiers were called "Sans-culottes” or soldiers without breeches, who are without hats, people without shoes, torn shirts and tassels, thin faces and hungry stomachs. But wherever the soldiers went, the foreign soldiers lost, because they were so daring to sacrifice, no one could fought back with equal fevor.
Then know: one revolutionary having guts is more than a thousand people with no will.
4. How many revolutions did the French have?
From 1792 to 1804 it was the 1st Republic. In 1804 counter-revolutionary Napoleon crowned himself emperor. In 1814, the countries defeated Napoleon and brought the old king line to the throne until 1848.
\subsection{How many revolutions did the French have?}
From 1792 to 1804 it was the 1st Republic. In 1804 counter-revolutionary Napoleon crowned himself emperor.
In 1814, the countries defeated Napoleon and brought the old king line to the throne until 1848.
In 1848 there was the second revolution.
In 1852, Napoleon's nephew became Emperor again.
In 1870, when he lost to Germany, Napoleon III fled, and France established the 3rd Republic.
5. What was the Paris Commune (Commune de Paris)?
\subsection{What was the Paris Commune (Commune de Paris)?}
In 1871, with the French king lost and fled, the Germans came to besiege the French capital, Paris. French capitalists sold off two provinces as offering to appease for peace with Germany. Because of the war, many people died and a lot of livelihood was lost. People lacking bread, workers losing jobs. On March 18, the Parisian workers revolted in a communist revolution (Communalism).
Because the workers were immature, poorly organized, and Germany helped the French capitalists fight the workers, so by the end of May, the revolution failed.
6. What was the purpose of the Commune?
\subsection{What was the purpose of the Commune?}
As soon as Paris was liberated, the Commune set up a People's Government and announced that the Commune would practice the following:
1. How many private enterprises are taken over as public property.
2. All children in the country, whether boys or girls, must go to school. Tuition fees must be given by the state.
3. People have the right to freely organize, make newspapers, open associations, go abroad, etc.
4. Any man or woman, anyone has the right to political, to vote and to stand for election.
5. The government is elected by the people, and the people have the right to change the government.
7. What was the outcome of the Commune?
\subsection{What was the outcome of the Commune?}
French capital at that time was like a house on fire on both sides. On one side, Germany started to encroach, on the other side, the revolution was arising before their eyes. French capitalists swear to rather suffer humiliation with Germany, than to reconcile with the revolution. Germany was also afraid of the revolution, so they wholeheartedly helped French capitalists in their fight. When the French had just surrendered, the Germans forced France to disband all their soldiers, keeping only 40,000 culottes. When the revolution emerged, Germany allowed the French capitalist to add 100,000 soldiers to suppress the revolution.
Seeing this, we can understand that: "Capital has no Fatherland".
Once the revolution is over, capital took revenge on the people by terror. It killed 30,000 people including men, women, elders and children. It exiled 28,000 people. It imprisoned 650 children, 850 women, 37,000 men.
8. What does the French revolution mean to the Annam revolution?
\subsection{What does the French revolution mean to the Annam revolution?}
a) In the three revolutions, 1789, 1848, 1870, all because the people had a lot of courage, but few intellectuals, so they got taken advantage of by the capitalists.
b) The Paris Commune failed because of its poor organization and lack of contact with the peasants.
c) Capitalism uses the words Liberté, égalité, fraternité to deceive the people and incite the people to overthrow feudalism. After the people overthrew feudalism, it replaced feudalism as the oppressor.
d) The French Revolution was like the American Revolution, that is to say, the revolution of capitalism, the revolution where the final goal had not been reached. They called themselves a republic and a democracy, but in fact, it exploits the workers and peasants inside and oppresses the colonies outside. The revolution has already occurred 4 times, but now French workers and peasants still have to plan the revolution again to escape the cycle of oppression. The revolution of Annam should remember these things.
9. What did the French Revolution set an example for?
\subsection{What did the French Revolution set an example for?}
The French Revolution taught us:
1. The workers and peasants are the root of the revolution, capital only support it at first, when it can no longer take advantage of the people, it is counter-revolutionary.
2. Revolution requires a very stable organization to succeed.
3. Women and children also took a large part of the revolution.
4. With a strong civilian population, any soldier or gun will not be able to supress.
5. The French Revolution sacrificed many people without fear. If we want to stage a Revolution, we shouldn't be afraid to make sacrifices.
\section{HISTORY OF RUSSIA REVOLUTION}
\subsection{Where did the Russian Revolution come from?}
HISTORY OF RUSSIA REVOLUTION
1. Where did the Russian Revolution come from?
Russia is a very large country, half located in Asia, half in Europe. More than 90 percent of Russians were peasants, less than ten were workers. In the past, the system was serfdom, meaning that much of the land and peasants were under the power of landlords. Landlords treated serfs like animals, only lived as the lords allowed, and died if they forced it. When they needed money, they sold their serfs like cattles. Peasants were not allowed to leave from one region to another.
By the first half of the 19th century, capital was marginally prosperous, they had just opened factories and needed workers. Because of this they mobilized to abolish serfdom and let peasants work for them. Only until 1861, the regime finally abolished serfdom.
The new capitalist and the landlords from this have since generated a great deal of animosity, and from there the worker - peasant revolutionary movement also sprang up.
2. Once the serfs were liberated, what then?
After being liberated, some people went to the cities to work, others stayed behind to work in the fields. Working in factories, they got get little pay, the hours were long, the people had to be slaves to capital. Staying in the fields, the farmlands were small, the cattles lacking, they had to endure explotation from the kulaks. Although the people were called free, they were actually slaves: the workers were miserable, and the peasants were not happier.
Revolutionaries formed a party to unite the peasants, but did not pay attention to the workers. In 1875, there was a revolutionary party called the "Narodniks" (the people’s party). In 1878 there was a new party called "Narodnaya Volya" (the people’s will). But those two parties, with little strength and members, were persecuted by the Government, turning them into fierce violence, only worried about assassinating the tsars and other state officials.
3. What were the results of those two parties?
\subsection{Once the serfs were liberated, what then?}
After being liberated, some people went to the cities to work, others stayed behind to work in the fields.
Working in factories, they got get little pay, the hours were long, the people had to be slaves to capital. Staying in the fields, the farmlands were small, the cattles lacking, they had to endure explotation from the kulaks. Although the people were called free, they were actually slaves: the workers were miserable, and the peasants were not happier.
Revolutionaries formed a party to unite the peasants, but did not pay attention to the workers.
In 1875, there was a revolutionary party called the "Narodniks" (the people’s party). In 1878 there was a new party called "Narodnaya Volya" (the people’s will).
But those two parties, with little strength and members, were persecuted by the Government, turning them into fierce violence, only worried about assassinating the tsars and other state officials.
\subsection{What were the results of those two parties?}
Assassinations were risky, and gained few results. Because killing one villain another would take their place, and you can’t kill them all? The revolution must unite the oppressed people to overthrow their oppressive class, not just by killing 5, 7 people, 2, 3 kings, 9, and 10 officilas alone. Although these two parties sacrificed many people and made many heroic assassinations, because they went on the wrong way of the revolution and did not have the people's power as a basis, so they were repressed by the Government until dissolution.
In 1883, Mr. Plekhanov founded the party "Emancipation of Labour". This party organized according to the way Marx taught, that is, to unite both peasants and workers to do both economic and political revolution.
4. How did this party conduct revolutionary activities?
\subsection{How did this party conduct revolutionary activities?}
This party took the workers as the core of the revolution, and the peasants supplemented it.
They worked in secret.
In Russia, there were too many police and secret agents, so Party organizations had to be set up abroad (London).
In 1894, Mr. Lenin joined the Party.
In 1898, the Party opened a congress once in the country, unfortunately it was discovered by the Government and many party members were arrested. Even with their arrests, the Party's manifesto was spread throughout the country, further heightening the revolutionary movement. Those who had escaped arrest continued very secretive propaganda and organizing. After a while, the name was changed to "Social Democratic Labour Party", then changed to "Communist Party".
In 1898, the Party opened a congress once in the country, unfortunately it was discovered by the Government and many party members were arrested. Even with their arrests, the Party's manifesto was spread throughout the country, further heightening the revolutionary movement. Those who had escaped arrest continued very secretive propaganda and organizing.
After a while, the name was changed to "Social Democratic Labour Party", then changed to "Communist Party".
In 1904 - 1905, Russia and Japan fought, taking advantage of the turmoil, the Party tried to mobilize the revolution.
5. How do you know that people are agitated for campaigning?
\subsection{How do you know that people are agitated for campaigning?}
a) Before fighting the Japanese, the Tsar tricked the capitalists into printing money, luring them with a prosperous economy if they won, and capital would gain great benefits. After the defeat, the capital lost a lot of money but gained nothing, so they resented the king.
b) The workers who already hated the Tsar, with the defeat, they were more oppressed, further cementing the resentment.
c) The peasants had hated the king since the begining, then they were consripted to the army to die, and with the heavier taxes, and their habhorrance for the Tsar was made worse.
These three classes had different goals, but the hatred for the Tsar is the same. The Party knew that, then mobilized the revolution to oust the Tsar.
6. At that time, how did the Tsar react?
\subsection{At that time, how did the Tsar react?}
Knowning that the workers were the most revolutionary, the Tsar set up a way to separate the capitalists, the peasants, and the workers. It instigated a religious leader to organize a trade union, both to distract the workers and arrest anyone who was enthusiastic for it.
On January 9, 1905, a religious (whose name was Gapon) marched the workers to the the Tsar’s pallace to petition. Because he forgotten to warn beforehand. The Tsar seeing the gathering crowd, fearful of riots, he then sent his soldiers to suppress, shooting and killing many people. Gapon fled abroad. The workers of other provinces heard the news, they went on strike and riot, and set up a workers' conference. The revolution fought against the Tsar and the government from January to October. The Tsar used his soldiers to suppress the revolution, while on the other hand, pretended to establish a parliament for the people's representatives to discuss the country's affairs.
7. Why did the 1905 revolution failed?
On January 9, 1905, a religious (whose name was Gapon) marched the workers to the the Tsar’s pallace to petition. Because he forgotten to warn beforehand. The Tsar seeing the gathering crowd, fearful of riots, he then sent his soldiers to suppress, shooting and killing many people. Gapon fled abroad. The workers of other provinces heard the news, they went on strike and riot, and set up a workers' conference.
The revolution fought against the Tsar and the government from January to October. The Tsar used his soldiers to suppress the revolution, while on the other hand, pretended to establish a parliament for the people's representatives to discuss the country's affairs.
\subsection{Why did the 1905 revolution failed?}
1. Because at first, the capitalists wanted to take advantage of workers to overthrow the Tsar; But when they saw that the workers were so enthusiastic, that they became afraid to see workers overthrown them and the Tsar, so the capitalists betrayed the workers and helped the Tsar.
2. Because workers and peasants did not agree with one another. When the workers emerged, the peasants did not immediately follow. The workers lost. Only by then the peasants emerged, giving the Tsar the chance to suppress both, one after the other.
3. The workers weren’t very experienced, and the organization wasn’t complete.
4. The soldiers have not been mobilized and the people's guns and weapons were too few.
8. The 1905 Revolution failed, were the workers and the Party discouraged?
\subsection{The 1905 Revolution failed, were the workers and the Party discouraged?}
No. Experiencing that failure, the Party researched and re-criticized, where did it go wrong, and why did it fail?
Knowing clearly the shortcomings to fix is half the battle. Just like forging a knife, only when cutting then you know where is sharp and where is blunt; then continue to sharpen the dull places, so that a new sharp knife is made. Thanks to the failed movements in 1905, the workers understood that: firstly, they had to be well organized, second, they had to contact the peasants, third, they had to mobilize soldiers, fourth, they couldn't believe in the moderates, and fifth, they knew capital and the tsar is the same league, if you want to expel the tsar, you must also expel the capital.
Knowing clearly the shortcomings to fix is half the battle. Just like forging a knife, only when cutting then you know where is sharp and where is blunt; then continue to sharpen the dull places, so that a new sharp knife is made.
Thanks to the failed movements in 1905, the workers understood that: firstly, they had to be well organized, second, they had to contact the peasants, third, they had to mobilize soldiers, fourth, they couldn't believe in the moderates, and fifth, they knew capital and the tsar is the same league, if you want to expel the tsar, you must also expel the capital.
The failed 1905 Revolution laid the foundation for the successful 1917 Revolution.
9. What was the historical context of the 1917 Revolution?
\subsection{What was the historical context of the 1917 Revolution?}
The Revolution of 1917 had the following reasonings:
1. During the European war, the British and French imperialists took advantage of the Russian Tsar to fight Germany. But the Russian Tsar was messy, spent a lot of money, killed a lot of soldiers, sure to be defeated by Germany. These imperialists were angered by this and helped capital to oust the Tsar.
2. Capitalists were outrage due to the Tsar only favoring the aristocrats by giving them military power, yet the aristocrats were incompetent, losing wherever they fought. And capital in Russia was mostly in league with English and French capital; if Russia lost to Germany, then not only Russian capital, but English and French capital were also in danger; and if they kept the Tsar, they would certainly face defeat. That’s why the capitalists also wanted to depose the Tsar.
3. Workers and peasants already treated the Tsar as if they were enemies.
4. The Trudoviks took advantage of that opportunity, they made use of these two groups to expel the Tsar for the Russian capitalists and the British and French imperialists. In turn, capitalists and imperialists supported these Trudoviks.
10. How had the Trudoviks control the government?
\subsection{How had the Trudoviks control the government?}
Using the pretence of the massive deaths of soldiers, the starving and miserable people , the unemployed workers, the government in disarray; The Trudoviks proclaimed that if people now was to drive the Tsar away, the land would go to the peasants, the factories would go to the workers, the people would get government power, and the war would end in peace.
Unexpectedly, in February, when the Tsar was chased away, the Trudoviks and the capitalists took over the government, how many promises they had made were quickly forgotten. They kept taking soldiers to fight the war; the land remained in the hands of the landlords, the factories remained in the hands of the rich; Workers and peasants were also not allowed to participate in the Government.
11. Why didn't the Communist Party take action?
\subsection{Why didn't the Communist Party take action?}
When the revolution kicked out the king, the Communist Party was still the vanguard of the people. But at that time the party members were still few, and the opportunities had not yet come, so they did not seize the government.
The revolution ended in February. From February to April, many people still thought that the new provisional government had not yet implemented the policiess that benefit the people, because there was no time for them to do so.
In April, Mr. Lenin and many comrades from abroad returned. From April to November, the new provisional government had further revealed its anti-revolutionary nature on a day by day basis. As for the communist party members, they went to propagate to the people, saying: "There, you see! The first revolution are the masters and servants of capitalism and imperialism, they are no better than the Tsar...", making Everyone resented the provisional government, while part of them were involved in the peasantry, workers, soldiers, and secret organizations to practice revolutionary communism.
12. When did the communist revolution succeed?
At the end of October, there are organizations everywhere, everyone wants to act. But Mr. Lenin said: “Wait! Wait a few more days for everyone to oppose the Government, then we will act out our plans." On November 5, the Government opened an association to promulgate new laws, which benefited capital but harmed workers and farmers. Mr. Lenin told Party members that the 6th day of the election was too early, because the people did not know all these policies, and if they did not know the policies, they would not be agited at the provisional government very much. On the 8th, the election was too late because at that time, the Government would know that the people were resentful and take strict precautions. Sure enough, on the 7th of the Communist Party's revolutionary order, the workers rushed to surround the Government, and the peasants rushed to chase the landlords. The government sent soldiers to break them up, but those soldiers then followed the workers and turned to fight the Government.
\subsection{When did the communist revolution succeed?}
At the end of October, there are organizations everywhere, everyone wants to act. But Mr. Lenin said: “Wait! Wait a few more days for everyone to oppose the Government, then we will act out our plans." On November 5, the Government opened an association to promulgate new laws, which benefited capital but harmed workers and farmers. Mr. Lenin told Party members that the 6th day of the election was too early, because the people did not know all these policies, and if they did not know the policies, they would not be agited at the provisional government very much. On the 8th, the election was too late because at that time, the Government would know that the people were resentful and take strict precautions.
Sure enough, on the 7th of the Communist Party's revolutionary order, the workers rushed to surround the Government, and the peasants rushed to chase the landlords. The government sent soldiers to break them up, but those soldiers then followed the workers and turned to fight the Government.
From that day on, the initial government fled, the Communist Party took power, organized a government of workers, peasants and soldiers, distributed land to the peasants, assigned factories to workers, did not force the people to die for the capitalists and imperialism powers, trying to organize a new economy to practice egalitarianism.
13. How does the Russian Revolution relate to the Annamese Revolution?
In today's world, only the Russian revolution has succeeded, and it has succeeded to the final destination. That is, for the people enjoy the true happiness of freedom, true equality, not the false freedom and equality like the not the false freedom and equality of the imperialist empires that the French often brags about in Annam. Not only has the Russian Revolution already driven out the kings, capitalists, and landlords, it continues to work hard for the workers and peasants of other countries and oppressed peoples of the colonies to stage revolutions overthrowing all imperialism and capitalism from the world. .
The Russian Revolution teaches us that in order for the revolution to succeed, the people (the workers and peasants) must be the base, the party must be strong, the party must be persistent, the sacrifices must be made, and the unity must be achieved. In short, we must follow Marxism and Leninism.
\subsection{How does the Russian Revolution relate to the Annamese Revolution?}
In today's world, only the Russian revolution has succeeded, and it has succeeded to the final destination. That is, for the people enjoy the true happiness of freedom, true equality, not the false freedom and equality like the not the false freedom and equality of the imperialist empires that the French often brags about in Annam. Not only has the Russian Revolution already driven out the kings, capitalists, and landlords, it continues to work hard for the workers and peasants of other countries and oppressed peoples of the colonies to stage revolutions overthrowing all imperialism and capitalism from the world.
The Russian Revolution teaches us that in order for the revolution to succeed, the people (the workers and peasants) must be the base, the party must be strong, the party must be persistent, the sacrifices must be made, and the unity must be achieved. In short, we must follow Marxism and Leninism.

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INTERNATIONALISM
1. What is Internationalism?
\section{INTERNATIONALISM}
\subsection{What is Internationalism?}
Internationalism means that people in the world, of any country, of any people, having the same goal, working together to achieve that goal. Just as imperialists communicate with each other, to supress the weak (France contacted Spain and Japan to take Annam, etc.), capitals communicate with each other to exploit workers (British, American, and French capitalists contacted German capitalists to oppress German workers). Therefore workers from different countries contacted each other to fight against capital (such as the Industrial Workers of the World). We must also contact all the revolutionary parties in the world to fight capitalism and imperialism (such as the Third International).
2. What is the Third International?
If you want to know what the Third International is, you must first know the First and Second International. From the 18th century onwards, capital was very prosperous, oppressing workers very harshly. When workers are oppressed, in their rebellious character was to oppose such injustices, through organizing trade unions and staging violent strikes. But most provincial workers only knowing their own, and every national workers only knew of their own country, because of this their overall strength was not very significant.
\subsection{What is the Third International?}
If you want to know what the Third International is, you must first know the First and Second International.
From the 18th century onwards, capital was very prosperous, oppressing workers very harshly. When workers are oppressed, in their rebellious character was to oppose such injustices, through organizing trade unions and staging violent strikes. But most provincial workers only knowing their own, and every national workers only knew of their own country, because of this their overall strength was not very significant.
In 1840, German workers founded an association called The League of The Just. The slogan of that association is "All men are brothers". That slogan, though very good, is not true; Since the imperialists and counter-revolutionary capitalists are enemies of the people, how can they be called brothers?
In 1847, the association was revised into the: "Communist League" - Mr. Marx and Engels joined that association. Thanks to the two men to correct the program, and the association's slogans to: overthrow of the bourgeoisie - establishment of the rule of the proletariat - the construction of a communist world.
3. Were these two associations the First and Second International?
\subsection{Were these two associations the First and Second International?}
No. Although there were German and French workers in the two associations, they were few, and their strength was still weak, so they couldn't do anything. They were just an expression that workers from all over the world had to help each other and bridged towards the First International.
In 1862 in the British Capital (London) opened the Great London Exposition; Capitalist countries sent workers over to examine the new industrial machines. The workers again met the Russian, German, French and other revolutionaries taking refuge there. The two sides discussed the establishment of a world revolutionary society. In 1864, (February 28) they established as the First International.
4. What had the First International done?
In 1862 in the British Capital (London) opened the Great London Exposition; Capitalist countries sent workers over to examine the new industrial machines. The workers again met the Russian, German, French and other revolutionaries taking refuge there. The two sides discussed the establishment of a world revolutionary society.
In 1864, (February 28) they established as the First International.
\subsection{What had the First International done?}
Even though there were many leaders of workers from all over the country, this association, but because:
1. People were few,
2. The unions in the countries were still weak,
3. No consensus had been reached, so it only propagated communism but has not done any significant actions.
The disagreement was due to the three opposing ideologies:
1. Proudhonism (France);
2. Bakuninism (Russia);
3. Marxism (Germany) (see the section on revolutionary ideology).
After the failure of the Paris Commune, many members were killed or arrested, so the association gradually disintegrated, until 1874 it was disbanded.
Although the First International has only stood for 10 years, the slogan "Working men of all countries, unite!" and the revolutionary spirit is still alive to this day. Although not able to do many things, but the merits of teaching the workers in the world of revolution was massive.
5. When was the Second International established?
\subsection{When was the Second International established?}
The First International has ended, just as capital had flourished, worker activism had also prospered. During those 15 years (from 1874 to 1889) in many countries, many new labor parties were established, and each party understood that the workers of different countries could not cease helping each other.
In 1889, representatives of the labor parties met in Paris to form the Second International. From its inception, to the days of the European War, the congress was held nine times of discussions and decrees:
In 1889, representatives of the labor parties met in Paris to form the Second International.
From its inception, to the days of the European War, the congress was held nine times of discussions and decrees:
1. Every country must form a labor party;
2. Every year on May 1, the world's workers go on strike and petition;
3. All workers in the world strive to work only 8 hours a day;
4. Opposition to imperialism;
5. Labor parties must not negotiate with capital;
6. Party members are not allowed to work with capital;
7. If the imperialists have a war, the workers of all countries will go on strike and find a way to take over the government. The 7th issue was discussed in all 9 times the congress was held.
6. Why does the Second International often talk about war?
\subsection{Why does the Second International often talk about war?}
Because at that time, capital had turned into imperialism. And imperialism, either often fought each other to gain colonies, or conquering weak countries as colonies. Like:
In 1894, Japan fought against China;
1895, England fought against Egypt;
1896, France fought against Madagascar;
1898, America fought with Spain to take over the Philippines;
1900, Britain fought with South Africa;
1904, Russia against Japan;
1912, the Balkans fought, and so on.
The workers saw this and knew that the imperialists of the world would come ahead to a Great War. So they tried to seek precautions. Unexpectedly, in 1914, when the countries fought, most of the members of the Second International helped imperialism, and the labor parties of every country advised the people to go to war.
7. When was the Third International established?
\subsection{When was the Third International established?}
Because the activists in the Second International were anti-revolutionary and turned out to be hunting hounds for capitalism and imperialism, it was revealed to be counter-revolutionary; Truly revolutionary people like Mr. Lenin, Mr. Karl Liebknecht, Rosa Luxemburg, etc., consider that International as good as dead and they must establish another International. In 1915 and 1916, the revolutionaries gathered in Switzerland about to establish the Third International, to follow the First International in spirit and stage revolutionary communism.
In 1917, Russia successfully staged their communist revolution. In 1919, the Third International was established in the Russian capital, Moscow (on March 6th). In the opening of the first congress, there were communist party delegates from 24 countries attending the meeting.
In 1917, Russia successfully staged their communist revolution.
In 1919, the Third International was established in the Russian capital, Moscow (on March 6th). In the opening of the first congress, there were communist party delegates from 24 countries attending the meeting.
The Declaration of the Third International clearly states that:
1. By any means, the destruction of capitalism must not be reformist as the Second International;
2. By any means, the power must be in the hands of workers and peasants.
8. Since its founding (early 1927), how many times has the Third International been held?
\subsection{Since its founding (early 1927), how many times has the Third International been held?}
In 1920, the 2nd Congress was held, with 31 countries attending. The opportunistic leaders of the Second International saw that this association was strong and wanted to intervene to "jump on the bandwagon", so the Congress set out a very strict organization; Only anyone admitted under the 21 new rules can enter. (See the end of this section).
In 1921, the 3rd Congress. From the time of the Third International, the workers of different countries divided into two factions, the communist faction (the Third International) and the reformist faction (the Second International). Therefore, the combine strength of both decreases; Therefore, the Congress decided that when struggling with capital, the two factions must work together and not be divided.
In 1922, the 4th Congress. On the eve of the revolutionary movement cementing in many countries, capitalism was on the verge of death, they founded the Fascist Paries fiercely opposed to revolutions. The congress decides how to treat that party. In 1924, the 5th Congress, up to 61 countries attended. Because many people mistakenly believe that capital will return to its prosperity like before the European war. The Congress clearly testified that prosperity was false prosperity; In fact, capital in the world is close to an end, and the revolutionary workers and peasants must be ready to take action.
9. How is the Third International organized?
In 1922, the 4th Congress. On the eve of the revolutionary movement cementing in many countries, capitalism was on the verge of death, they founded the Fascist Paries fiercely opposed to revolutions. The congress decides how to treat that party.
In 1924, the 5th Congress, up to 61 countries attended. Because many people mistakenly believe that capital will return to its prosperity like before the European war. The Congress clearly testified that prosperity was false prosperity; In fact, capital in the world is close to an end, and the revolutionary workers and peasants must be ready to take action.
\subsection{How is the Third International organized?}
a) Every year or every few years, the congress is held once. The Congress has the power to judge all the affairs of the parties in the countries.
b) The Congress appoints a 24 - member Central Committe. This association represents the general assembly. Parties in all countries must follow the orders of the Central Committee.
c) There is the Youth Ministry, to see about youth mobilization; Women's ministry, to see the women's advocacy; The Asian - Eastern ministry, to see about the revolution of the colonies in Asia and the East. Propaganda, organization, relief, etc., all have their own ministries.
d) The Third International is a world Communist Party. The parties of all countries are like branches, all must follow the common plans and rules. All the parties cannot do without orders and plans from the Third International.
10. What are the similarities between the First International and the Third International? What is different?
\subsection{What are the similarities between the First International and the Third International? What is different?}
The First International is different from the Third International.
a) The First International was small, The Third International was big;
b) The First International only discussed theory, the Third International practiced;
c) The First International was not unified, the Third International commanded all communist parties in all countries to follow;
d) The First International only said: "Working men of all countries, unite!"; The Third International added, "Workers and oppressed peoples of all countries, unite!". The First International did not force its members to help the colonists in fightingf imperialism like the Third International.
That is because the circumstances of the two Internationals are different. For instance the First International said little on national oppression, because at that time imperialism was not very developed. As well as, the Third International, being born later, has more experience than the First International.
When it comes to revolutionary ideology, making the world egalitarian, the two Internationals are still the same. Only that the First International could not achieve those goals, but the Third International probably will, thanks to this revolutionary Russia has succeeded to serve as the foundation for the world revolution.
11. What is the difference between the Second International and the Third International?
\subsection{What is the difference between the Second International and the Third International?}
The previous Second International was still revolutionary, but because lacking strict disciplines, the organization was not effective, allowing the reformists to interfere too much; later turning them to counter-revolutionary. These two Internationals differ in the following:
The Third International advocated the destruction of capital for a world revolution. The Second International advocated a concession with capital.
The Third International helped the colonists fight imperialism. The Second International helped imperialism suppress the colonists (Governor - General Varenne was a member of the Second International).
The Third International teaches the world's proletariat - whatever race, profession, religion - to unite for revolution. The Second International instigated the people of one country against the people of another, one profession against another.
12. How does the Third International relate to the revolution of Annam?
The Third International advocated the destruction of capital for a world revolution.
The Second International advocated a concession with capital.
The Third International helped the colonists fight imperialism.
The Second International helped imperialism suppress the colonists (Governor - General Varenne was a member of the Second International).
The Third International teaches the world's proletariat - whatever race, profession, religion - to unite for revolution.
The Second International instigated the people of one country against the people of another, one profession against another.
\subsection{How does the Third International relate to the revolution of Annam?}
See in the organization of the Third International, there is a separate ministry, dedicated to researching and helping the revolution in Asia - Far East.
See the slogan of the Third International, not only that "workers" but also included the sentence "... and the oppressed people of all countries, unite!".
See the rule of the Third International in 21 articles, the 8th says: "Communist parties, especially the French Communist Party... must do their best to help the colonial people to stage revolutions".
While France was fighting Morocco and Syria, the French Communist Party sacrificed dozens of Party members who were arrested, imprisoned, and fined more than 1 million silver francs for helping those two countries.
See the Russian revolution helping the parties of China, Turkey, Persia, Mongolia. Again, the plan on the colonial question was made by Lenin himself. Seeing these things is enough to know that if Annam wants to succeed in its own revolution, it must follow the Third International.
See the Russian revolution helping the parties of China, Turkey, Persia, Mongolia.
Again, the plan on the colonial question was made by Lenin himself.
Seeing these things is enough to know that if Annam wants to succeed in its own revolution, it must follow the Third International.

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COMMUNIST WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL
1. Why was Communist Women's International founded?
\section{COMMUNIST WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL}
\subsection{Why was Communist Women's International founded?}
Mr. Marx said: “Anybody who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without the feminine ferment. Social progress can be measured exactly by the social position of the “fair sex”.”
Mr. Lenin said: “If we do not draw women into public activity, into the militia, into political life; if we do not tear women away from the deadening atmosphere of household and kitchen; then it is impossible to secure real freedom, it is impossible even to build democracy, let alone socialism.” [I can’t find any quote that follow the strict meaning so this is the closest, the original full sentence in Vietnamese is: “A true revolutionary vanguard party must draw household women into political activities, only in that way will the revolution succeed.”]
Mr. Lenin said: “If we do not draw women into public activity, into the militia, into political life; if we do not tear women away from the deadening atmosphere of household and kitchen; then it is impossible to secure real freedom, it is impossible even to build democracy, let alone socialism.”\footnote{I can’t find any quote that follow the strict meaning so this is the closest, the original full sentence in Vietnamese is: “A true revolutionary vanguard party must draw household women into political activities, only in that way will the revolution succeed.”}
Those words are not just fluffy puffed up words.
There has never been a time in the history of revolutions where women and girls did not participate. The French Revolutionary Army had people like the student Charlotte Corday pulling out a knife and killing the Jacobin that abused his power, like Louise Michel, who came out to help organize the Paris Commune. During the Russian Revolution, women volunteered to join the army; statistically, the women's revolutionary guard divisions had 1,854 casualties. Now, one of the reasons why the Russian revolution was so successful in such a rapid pace, standing so tall, was because the women giving their all in that effort. Therefore, in order for the world revolution to succeed, it is necessary to mobilize the working women from all over the world.
Therefore the Communist Women's International was born.
2. What is the history behind the Communist Women's International?
\subsection{What is the history behind the Communist Women's International?}
In 1910, Mrs. Clara Zetkin (German communist) proposed in the Second International Congress that: Every year on March 8, we should make a commenmorative day called "International Women's Day". After that one date was changed to a week. The slogan for that week was: "Asking for women's suffrage".
In 1917, on February 23, women in the Russian capital surfaced "Bring us bread for our children!" and demanding "Bring back our husbands!" (because the husband had to go to war). This violence was the spark that fueled the Russian revolution. On March 8, 1920, the Third International sent Madame Zetkin to organize the Communist Women's International. The slogan is: "Working women must unite with the Third International for the world revolution".
In 1917, on February 23, women in the Russian capital surfaced "Bring us bread for our children!" and demanding "Bring back our husbands!" (because the husband had to go to war). This violence was the spark that fueled the Russian revolution.
On March 8, 1920, the Third International sent Madame Zetkin to organize the Communist Women's International. The slogan is: "Working women must unite with the Third International for the world revolution".
In 1923, Russian women celebrated "March 8" and opened 66 childcare homes, 36 childcare centers, 18 foster homes, 22 hospitals and nursing homes, 15 maternity wards, and 15 communal kitchens for 10,000 people; 27 cooperatives employing 1,300 working women, 11 parks and homes for the sick.
3. How is Communist Women's International organized?
The rules and program are roughly the same as the Third International. But this section only specializes in education, organization and training of women and girls, and helps in educating children of workers and peasants. Each communist party must have a section representing of women, directly under the command of the Communist Women's International. All women party members must follow the international’ directives, no matter how hard or dangerous the mission, they must do it. For example: Party member A is not a worker, but when the International told her to apply for a job in a factory in order to mobilize women there, she would have to quit her old job and go to work in that factory.
In short, the rules are very strict, the actions are united, and the work is also very difficult. Because most women in our country still have conservative ideas. However, because everyone is wholehearted in the mission, the work progresses quickly. Thanks to Communist Women's International , newly formed communist parties like the one in Java had the number of women party members increasing day by day. The An Nam revolution must also have the participation of women to succeed, and any Annam woman who wants revolution must follow the guidance of Communist Women's International.
\subsection{How is Communist Women's International organized?}
The rules and program are roughly the same as the Third International. But this section only specializes in education, organization and training of women and girls, and helps in educating children of workers and peasants.
Each communist party must have a section representing of women, directly under the command of the Communist Women's International. All women party members must follow the international’ directives, no matter how hard or dangerous the mission, they must do it. For example: Party member A is not a worker, but when the International told her to apply for a job in a factory in order to mobilize women there, she would have to quit her old job and go to work in that factory.
In short, the rules are very strict, the actions are united, and the work is also very difficult. Because most women in our country still have conservative ideas. However, because everyone is wholehearted in the mission, the work progresses quickly. Thanks to Communist Women's International , newly formed communist parties like the one in Java had the number of women party members increasing day by day.
The An Nam revolution must also have the participation of women to succeed, and any Annam woman who wants revolution must follow the guidance of Communist Women's International.
\subsection{RED INTERNATIONAL OF LABOR UNIONS}
\subsection{What is the history of International Worker Labor Unions?}
RED INTERNATIONAL OF LABOR UNIONS
1. What is the history of International Worker Labor Unions?
First, we must know through the history of workers' movement, then we will talk about the history of the Red International of Labor Unions.
The history of worker movement is divided into 3 periods:
a) Before the European war, b) During the European war, c) After the European war.
a) Before the European War: There were about 16 million organized workers in Europe and the United States and an association called the "International Secretariat of National Trade Union Centres". But those 16 million people did not join the "International Secretariat of National Trade Union Centres". because the organized workers were divided into many factions:
1. British and American trade unions only care about improving workers’ lives, but no mentioning of overthrowing capital.
2. Anarchist unions of Latin countries, did not want to form political parties.
3. The reformist factions only advocated for trade unions support of the political parties, but it should merge with the political party.
4. Neutralism holds that workers are not the basis of revolutions.
5. Communists, with the policy of overthrowing capital and that workers is the revolutionary foundation, there must be a political party to lead the trade union to do the revolution.
Because of their muddled purpose and inconsistent directions, the Secretariat had no force.
b) When Europe was at war: This association followed the Second International, mean all country's union supporting the capitalist of their country. Not to mention, even with “international” in their name, the association only represented European and American workers, while Asian, African and Australian workers weren’t members.
c) After the European war: Partly, because of the workers suffering, and the success of the Russian revolutionary, labor unions grew bigger and bigger. For example: From 1913 In 1919
England grew from only 4,000,000 people to 8,000,000
France grew from only 1,000,000 people to 2,500,000
b) When Europe was at war: This association followed the Second International, mean all country's union supporting the capitalist of their country.
Not to mention, even with “international” in their name, the association only represented European and American workers, while Asian, African and Australian workers weren’t members.
c) After the European war: Partly, because of the workers suffering, and the success of the Russian revolutionary, labor unions grew bigger and bigger. For example:
From 1913 In 1919
England grew from only 4,000,000 people to 8,000,000
France grew from only 1,000,000 people to 2,500,000
All countries: from 15,000,000 people to 50,000,000 people
Associations in Asia - East also established trade unions at a rapid pace (In China, Japan, India, Java, Philippines, etc.).
2. What was the result of that movement?
\subsection{What was the result of that movement?}
Capitalists of all countries saw that the workers were prosperous, this struck fear into them, and they sought to calm them down. In 1919, there was a congress in the US capital, to solve the problems of workers in the world. In that association there are representatives of Governments, capitalists, and national labor unions.
But it only had the Second International to represent the workers. The countries where prosperous workers have won the 8 hours workday (such as Britain and France), the Government delegate of those countries asked the other countries to also use 8 hours as a common practice (for fear that the capital of the other country would outcompete their capital). it as well.
After capitalists had formed the League of Nations, they also established their own international labor union, called the International Labour Organization, with 12 representatives for governments, 6 representatives for capitalits, and 6 representatives for workers. They even boldy accept the strike breakers and scabs to be the workers' representatives!
3. When the capitalists did this, what did workers in other countries act in response?
Workers had 31 international unions. 29 of them were trade international unions, that is, any profession having its own international; One of the internationals is called the Amsterdam International or “yellow” International and the other opposing it is the Red International.
\subsection{When the capitalists did this, what did workers in other countries act in response?}
Workers had 31 international unions.
29 of them were trade international unions, that is, any profession having its own international; One of the internationals is called the Amsterdam International or “yellow” International and the other opposing it is the Red International.
The international trade unions has a long history, with about 20,000,000 members. Among those 29 internationals, the iron industry is the biggest (3,000,000 people); the second is the coal industry (2,500,000 people); third are factory workers (2,300,000 people), etc.
During the European war, those internationals were also dissolved, after the war they were reformed, but because of the opportunists were in power, their work was ineffectual. Like in 1921, 1,000,000 British coal miners went on strike, because the US, German and other coal miners did not help they were defeated. In 1922, 500,000 American coal miners went on strike, but also because no one was willing to help they also failed. In short, these “internationals” were in name only.
4. Why is the Amsterdam International called “yellow”?
\subsection{Why is the Amsterdam International called “yellow”?}
Because that International was established in Amsterdam (capital of Holland). In the new language, counter-revolutiony is called yellow color; and revolutiony is called red.
In 1919, the Union representatives of the Secretariat convened in Amsterdam to form this international. At the beginning, the membership was widespead, but after many unions joined "Red" International, now there are only 23 associations left, with 14,400,000 members.
This international followed reformists of the Second International to make peace with capital, and did many counter-revolutionary acts such as:
1. Approving the Treaty of Versailles of the imperialists, forcing Germany to pay 400,000,000 dong in reparations.
2. When Germany could not bear it, the US set up a plan (called the Dawes plan) to make Germany pay 132,000,000,000 dong. The plan made German workers and peasants into essentially slaves. Yet the Amsterdam International also agreed.
3. Barring the Russian labor unions from joining.
4. They vehemently opposed communists, yet they treat the fascists with peace.
5. Why is it called the Red International of Labor Unions?
\subsection{Why is it called the Red International of Labor Unions?}
The yellow International made peace with capital, so the revolutionary workers sought to establish another international.
In July of 1920, a few British, Italian, French, Spanish and Russian workers set up a propaganda agency. In 1921, there were many unions leaving the other side to their side. On July 3rd of that year, the Red International of Labor Unions was established. The Red International followed the Third International, determined to continue class struggle. Now there 47 countries' unions have joined, with 11,750,000 members.
In July of 1920, a few British, Italian, French, Spanish and Russian workers set up a propaganda agency. In 1921, there were many unions leaving the other side to their side. On July 3rd of that year, the Red International of Labor Unions was established.
The Red International followed the Third International, determined to continue class struggle.
Now there 47 countries' unions have joined, with 11,750,000 members.
In May 1925, the Asia-East side had these labor unions:
China: 450,000 members;
Java: 35,000 members;
Japan: 32,000 members;
Goryeo: 5,000 members;
Mongolia: 5,000 members;
Turkey: 20,000 members;
Annam: 000.
6. How does this red international relate to the revolution of Annam?
In the yellow International, there are no Asian - Eastern associations, while in the Red International, there are 8 colonial associations. When the Javanese and Indian workers went on strike, the Red International did their best to help, while the Yellow International did not even pay attention. In China, Shanghai workers went on strike for more than three months, Hong Kong went on strike for more than a year and a half, the Red International helped with their fundings, sent delegates to encourage, and called for the unions of other countries to help. On the other hand, the yellow International only printed a few leaflets and then kept silent.
\subsection{How does this red international relate to the revolution of Annam?}
In the yellow International, there are no Asian - Eastern associations, while in the Red International, there are 8 colonial associations.
When the Javanese and Indian workers went on strike, the Red International did their best to help, while the Yellow International did not even pay attention.
In China, Shanghai workers went on strike for more than three months, Hong Kong went on strike for more than a year and a half, the Red International helped with their fundings, sent delegates to encourage, and called for the unions of other countries to help. On the other hand, the yellow International only printed a few leaflets and then kept silent.
If the Annamese workers knew how to organize, the Red International would wholeheartedly help in staging the revolution. But if you want people to help you, you have to help yourself first.
YOUNG COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL
1. What is Young Communist International?
\subsection{YOUNG COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL}
\subsection{What is Young Communist International?}
Formerly all socialist parties had a youth wing. When these parties combined to form the Second International, they also organize an international youth society. During the European war, most of the Second International made peace with capital, and many young people also imitated this agreement.
The young revolutionaries who left those associations were like Lenin and the real revolutionaries that left the Second International. In November of 1919, the young revolutionaries of 14 European countries gathered in the German capital (Berlin) to establish the Young Communist International.
The young revolutionaries who left those associations were like Lenin and the real revolutionaries that left the Second International.
In November of 1919, the young revolutionaries of 14 European countries gathered in the German capital (Berlin) to establish the Young Communist International.
In 1921, there were young people from 43 countries following in.
In 1922 there were 60 countries, with 760,000 members.
In 1924 there were more than 1,000,000 ( not counting the Russian youths).
2. How is it organized?
Roughly the same way as the Third International. Youths from different countries open congresses and appoint representatives; The representatives of the international have the right to command, and the youth of all countries must necessarily follow the plans and orders of that representative. Anyone approximately 16 to 20 years old can join the Association.
\subsection{How is it organized?}
Roughly the same way as the Third International. Youths from different countries open congresses and appoint representatives; The representatives of the international have the right to command, and the youth of all countries must necessarily follow the plans and orders of that representative.
Anyone approximately 16 to 20 years old can join the Association.
Before the Association let them in, they have to prove themselves, workers and soldiers will take 6 months, students will take a year to work before they can join.
The purpose of Young Communist International is:
1. World revolution;
2. Fostering talents to contribute to the Communist Party;
3. Exercising in economics and politics, communicating with the youths;
4. Propaganda, organize and train young workers, farmers, students and soldiers;
5. Opposing superstition and advocating for education.
3. How do they work?
Some are public, as in Russia, in other countries some are operating semi-secretly, as in European countries and America. In other places it is secret like in Goryeo, Java, etc.
Propaganda and organization are according to different circumstances. Sending people to infiltrate the army, or work as workers, or do farmwork, or go to school to propagate and recruit comrades. When few comrades are found, a new branch needed to be set up. Other than that, it is possible to set up a study groups, a football associations, or hobby association to select comrades and propagate. In short, they did everything they could to get close to the people.
4. How does the Young Communist International work with the Communist Party?
\subsection{How do they work?}
Some are public, as in Russia, in other countries some are operating semi-secretly, as in European countries and America. In other places it is secret like in Goryeo, Java, etc.
Propaganda and organization are according to different circumstances. Sending people to infiltrate the army, or work as workers, or do farmwork, or go to school to propagate and recruit comrades. When few comrades are found, a new branch needed to be set up. Other than that, it is possible to set up a study groups, a football associations, or hobby association to select comrades and propagate.
In short, they did everything they could to get close to the people.
\subsection{How does the Young Communist International work with the Communist Party?}
Those two organizations treat each other in a democratic way, meaning, whenever the party has something to discuss, there is a youth delegate to attend the meeting. When youth international have something discuss, the party has delegates to attend the meeting. In political directions, young people follow the party's leadership, but young people are independent for working praxis. If the party and the youth have disagreements, it is arbitrated by the two internationals.
Communist youth worked very hard and sacrificed evrything for the revolution.
In 1921, the German Youth had only 27,000 people and the US had only 4 branches. But by 1922, Germany had 70,000 people and the US had 150 branches.
When French soldiers were stationed in Germany, for propagandizing against imperialism in the army, 120 young French men were imprisoned. When the French attacked Morocco, because of the same actins, more than 3,000 French youths were arrested.
The student strikes in China, the campaigns in Goryeo, the strike in the UK, etc., Communist Youth all led the charge. Today, every country has communist youth organs. But not Annam!
The student strikes in China, the campaigns in Goryeo, the strike in the UK, etc., Communist Youth all led the charge.
Today, every country has communist youth organs.
But not Annam!
WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF
1. What is the Workers International Relief?
\subsection{WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF}
\subsection{What is the Workers International Relief?}
In 1921, Russia suffered a great drought, and many people starved to death. The imperialists took advantage of that opportunity. One side wanted to incite the Russians people to rebel, while the other side wanted to send in troops to crush Russia's revolution. To do so, they brought warships to blockade the Russian sea, preventing ships from carrying food to sell to the Russian people.
Kind-hearted people like Mr. Nansen (a very famous scientist in Norway, who flew across the North Pole), and labor unions organized relief societies to collect money, food, and clothes to send to the Russian people. But because the organization was scattered, so the strength was lacking.
The Third International and the Red International of Labor Unions (newly organized) initiated an International Help Association, to gather all relief relief efforts. The Second International and the yellow International Workers vehemently refused to enter, and set up a separate relief association. Against this obstacle, the Workers International Relief was established. From the end of 1921 to 1922, this International raised more than 5,000,000 silver coins and 40,000,000 kilos of food for the Russian people.
2. When Russia was not hungry any more, what did this international do?
The Third International and the Red International of Labor Unions (newly organized) initiated an International Help Association, to gather all relief relief efforts. The Second International and the yellow International Workers vehemently refused to enter, and set up a separate relief association.
Against this obstacle, the Workers International Relief was established. From the end of 1921 to 1922, this International raised more than 5,000,000 silver coins and 40,000,000 kilos of food for the Russian people.
\subsection{When Russia was not hungry any more, what did this international do?}
When Russia was no longer hungry, this International continued to work forever more. Wherever there is a disaster in any country, this International would try its best to help. Like in 1923, Ireland lost its harvest, tens of thousands of people had no food, no clothes to wear. Thanks to the International help, they did not starve to death.
In 1924, German workers went on strike with more than 60,000 people. This international set up a communal kitchens for free, every day more than 25,000 workers came to eat. As well as establishing a hospital to help sick strikers; building foster homes for children of workers, set up caravans to bring German children to the labor unions of neightbor countries for education only returned them when the strike was near. The year Japan had an earthquake, China got flooded, this International also brought food, clothing and building materials to help. In short, anywhere that is disaster stricken, this International will help.
3. Where does the international relief get money?
In 1924, German workers went on strike with more than 60,000 people. This international set up a communal kitchens for free, every day more than 25,000 workers came to eat. As well as establishing a hospital to help sick strikers; building foster homes for children of workers, set up caravans to bring German children to the labor unions of neightbor countries for education only returned them when the strike was near.
The year Japan had an earthquake, China got flooded, this International also brought food, clothing and building materials to help.
In short, anywhere that is disaster stricken, this International will help.
\subsection{Where does the international relief get money?}
This international is not like a association that distributes and gives charities from capitalists. The purpose of this International is for "the workers and peasants in the world are brothers, when the brothers of one country are in trouble, the brothers of the other country must help", so where they are needed, the members do their best to gather contributions, where there are peace, members must contribute the fees. The membership fee depends on the class of people such as workers who make more money would give more, farmers with less money would give less. But everyone has to contribute.
Because the International has branches across all 5 continents, and the membership are very large, especially in Russia, so just the membership fees alone is quite a lot.
The international community brings that money to produce profits, such as opening a agricultural business, working film theaters, opening a trading house, fishing guilds, etc. Most of these activities are in Russia. Only one fishing guild in Astrakhan harvested 4-5 million kilos of fish a year.
All the money sold is used to help the world.
4. What is the use of this international for our revolution?
\subsection{What is the use of this international for our revolution?}
Like Annam encountered disasters with the dyke system collapse recently, or during the great droughts and floods. If the International knew, it would help. However:
1. It is because our people have not yet known of them to cry out for help;
2. The French fear of the International making our people know how to be in solidarity among the proletariat of the world;
3. The French is afraid of revolutionary propaganda, so it tries with all their might to hide from our people that there is such an association in the world and prevents the International from reaching Annam.
Whatever the French hates, it is all beneficial to Annam. As for the revolution, this International also helped a lot. It seems that when the Russian people were starving, thanks to this International, there was no resentment against the Revolutionary Government. Thanks to this International, Japanese workers can quickly restore their labor unions. German workers, thanks to this International, can continue to struggle, and so on. Because of this, the International will be of great benefit to Annam's revolution.
Whatever the French hates, it is all beneficial to Annam.
As for the revolution, this International also helped a lot. It seems that when the Russian people were starving, thanks to this International, there was no resentment against the Revolutionary Government. Thanks to this International, Japanese workers can quickly restore their labor unions. German workers, thanks to this International, can continue to struggle, and so on. Because of this, the International will be of great benefit to Annam's revolution.
INTERNATIONAL RED AID
1. What is the International Red Aid?
\subsection{INTERNATIONAL RED AID}
\subsection{What is the International Red Aid?}
While the International relief helps people in accidents, and also helps political exiles. International Red Aid specializes in helping political exiles only.
Now it's the time to fight; The proletariat struggles with capital, the oppressed people struggles with imperialism. Capitalism and imperialism are on one side, the proletariat and the oppressed people on the other. Those two factions are like two armies fighting each other. The revolutionary army followed the flag of the Third International. The counter-revolutionary army followed the flag of the rich. In a fight, people being arrested, being injured, being killed are unavoidable. The International Red Aid is like a hospital to care for the wounded, to help those who were arrested, to take care of their elderly and weak parents, their wives and children of those who died in the battle for the revolution.
2. When was the International Red Aid established?
\subsection{When was the International Red Aid established?}
In 1923, the Third International opened a congress, the association "exiled for life" and the association of "old communists" proposed, and the Third International approved the establishment of the International Red Aid. First set up the Headquarters in Russia. Now every country has a branch. (But not yet in Annam).
Russia now has 50,000 branches and 9 million members. All the workers and many peasants had joined that association, either individually, or as a whole. All communists and young communists must join that association. When it was established, the first three months they had raised 300,000 dong. Four months later, they raised 4,000,000 dong. In Guangdong province, China has only established a cell for 6 months and already has 250,000 members. Seeing that, we can understand that this International is developing very quickly.
3. How does this international aid in the struggle?
Russia now has 50,000 branches and 9 million members. All the workers and many peasants had joined that association, either individually, or as a whole. All communists and young communists must join that association.
When it was established, the first three months they had raised 300,000 dong. Four months later, they raised 4,000,000 dong. In Guangdong province, China has only established a cell for 6 months and already has 250,000 members.
Seeing that, we can understand that this International is developing very quickly.
\subsection{How does this international aid in the struggle?}
When revolutionaries are either exiled out, or arrested, or imprisoned, or killed, the International helps in:
1. Politics;
2. Economy;
3. Material;
4. Morale.
a) Political help: If someone is arrested or imprisoned, the International will direct for the local party cells to start marches and protests in solidarity. Just like recently, two Italian revolutionaries were arrested in the US, about to be sentenced to death, not only did the American workers protested, but in any country that has US embassies, the workers opened the weekly congresses and declared: “If the Government kills those two, the American workers will go on strike, and the world's workers will boycott America.” When the US saw that, they did not dare to touch them.
b) Economical help: Whenever revolutionaries are imprisoned, they often eats and drinks under terrible conditions, while their wives and children are at home, with no one to take care of. The International send money to buy food in prison and help family members more or less to avoid poverty. In this way, the captives are relieved from suffering. Or International can pay to hire a lawyer to appeal against the sentence. Or send clothes and books.
c) Help morale wise: Either send people or send letters to visit.
1. Prisoners now know that although they sacrificed for the masses but the people did not forget them, then while in prison, they did not feel depressed and can recover further.
2. People know that although they have to be imprisoned in one place, the revolutionary work is still developing, and there are still people who do it for them.
4. Should Annam revolution follow this International?
\subsection{Should Annam revolution follow this International?}
Undoubtedly. The Annam revolution was also a part of the world revolution. Whoever does revolution in the world is a comrade of the people of Annam.
As comrades, we must go through thick and thin together. What's more, when the people of Annam are struggling with French imperialism, there will surely be many revolutionaries in the future who will have to sacrifice, suffer, and need help from our brothers in the world.
As comrades, we must go through thick and thin together. What's more, when the people of Annam are struggling with French imperialism, there will surely be many revolutionaries in the future who will have to sacrifice, suffer, and need help from our brothers in the world.

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HOW TO ORGANIZE LABOR UNIONS
1. What does a labor union do?
\section{HOW TO ORGANIZE LABOR UNIONS}
\subsection{What does a labor union do?}
Organizing the union is first to let the workers go together to have solidarity; second is to study together; third is to improve workers livelihoods; fourth is to protect the rights of workers; fifth is to help the people of the nation, and further help the world.
Solidarity among workers doesn’t mean when A has a wake, then person B comes to eat; or when person B has religious ceremonies and invite person C to drink wine. But a back and forth to teach each other the right thing, to exchange knowledge and experience. Studying is not only exchanging books and newspapers to read; but also have to discuss how to struggle against capitalism and imperialism ([ This sentence is understood as follows: Research is not only reading from books and newspapers, but also discussing how to fight capitalists and imperialists.]).
Modifying the way of life such as establishing a cooperative, opening a study association, a game association for workers, and so on. Preserving rights is when the association is already powerful, and demands more wages, less working hours, and so on. Helping the people of nations and the world is to bring together workers for a revolution to make everyone equal and free like Russian workers have been doing since 1917.
2. How to organize a labor union?
Solidarity among workers doesn’t mean when A has a wake, then person B comes to eat; or when person B has religious ceremonies and invite person C to drink wine. But a back and forth to teach each other the right thing, to exchange knowledge and experience. Studying is not only exchanging books and newspapers to read; but also have to discuss how to struggle against capitalism and imperialism\footnote{This sentence is understood as follows: Research is not only reading from books and newspapers, but also discussing how to fight capitalists and imperialists.}.
Modifying the way of life such as establishing a cooperative, opening a study association, a game association for workers, and so on.
Preserving rights is when the association is already powerful, and demands more wages, less working hours, and so on.
Helping the people of nations and the world is to bring together workers for a revolution to make everyone equal and free like Russian workers have been doing since 1917.
\subsection{How to organize a labor union?}
There are two ways of organizing, the oganizing by trade and organizing by production.
Trade organizing whoever does the same trade, then join that certain trade union. Like a tailor joins a tailor’s guild, a blacksmith joins a blacksmithing guild.
Organizing by production is no matter your profession. As long as you work at the same place, you will join the union of that production. Such as in railways, the coal burners, the car painters, the ticket dispensers, the roadkeepers, the train conductors; all enter a railway union. The organization by production is stronger, because it is more unified. For example, when the railways wants to strike, if the union is the production organized, then all members have to strike, further threatening capitalists. If the association through trades, then sometimes the coal burners go on strike but not but the train conductors, or the the ticket dispensers go on strike but the station workers do not, then the effectiveness of a strike is weakened.
3. Can a worker join two labor unions?
No. If the association is a trade union then only those of the same profession can enter; Those who have already joined the production union are not allowed to join the trade association. For example: The railway have been organized according to production, with all railway workers ([ Workers in the railway industry]) have already joined that union. In the same land there was another union of carpenters, then carpenters in the railway union ([ The sentence is also understood as: The Hanoi Railway Association has entered the General Railway Union can also enter another General Union.]) are not allowed to join. In the same profession or production, it is not allowed to establish two different associations.
However, one union is allowed to enter two federated general unions. For example, the Hanoi Railway Association has joined the Annam Railway Association and can join the general union. In short, a union is allowed to enter many general guilds, but each person can only join one. If this limit needed to be strictly, less it will cause confusion.
4. What is the difference between a trade union and a political party?
Organizing by production is no matter your profession. As long as you work at the same place, you will join the union of that production. Such as in railways, the coal burners, the car painters, the ticket dispensers, the roadkeepers, the train conductors; all enter a railway union.
The organization by production is stronger, because it is more unified. For example, when the railways wants to strike, if the union is the production organized, then all members have to strike, further threatening capitalists. If the association through trades, then sometimes the coal burners go on strike but not but the train conductors, or the the ticket dispensers go on strike but the station workers do not, then the effectiveness of a strike is weakened.
\subsection{Can a worker join two labor unions?}
No. If the association is a trade union then only those of the same profession can enter; Those who have already joined the production union are not allowed to join the trade association. For example: The railway have been organized according to production, with all railway workers\footnote{Workers in the railway industry} have already joined that union. In the same land there was another union of carpenters, then carpenters in the railway union\footnote{The sentence is also understood as: The Hanoi Railway Association has entered the General Railway Union can also enter another General Union.} are not allowed to join.
In the same profession or production, it is not allowed to establish two different associations.
However, one union is allowed to enter two federated general unions. For example, the Hanoi Railway Association has joined the Annam Railway Association and can join the general union.
In short, a union is allowed to enter many general guilds, but each person can only join one. If this limit needed to be strictly, less it will cause confusion.
\subsection{What is the difference between a trade union and a political party?}
The union focuses more on the economic side. The party focuses more on the political side. Anyone who is a worker can join the union, even if they believe in Buddhism, Christianity, communism, anarchism, whatever they believe, as long as they follow the rules of the unions.
% FIXME: there is a footnote in the original text here
In the Party, any person who does any job, a worker or a peasant, a student or a merchant, as long as he believes in the party’s guiding ideology and obeys the party charter, can enter.
Those who join both the party and the association, in politics, are led by the party, and in the economy, by the union. All Party members must join the union to propagate the party's ideology. But not all union members can join the party.
5. What is the structure of a union?
\subsection{What is the structure of a union?}
The system follows horizontal or vertical organization.
Horizontal is for instance each province where there are blacksmiths union, tailors union, carpenters union, masonry union, and so on, all of which are organized into the general union; With every trade union treated as equals.
Vertical is for instance in each district, there is a tailor's association, then the unions of 4, 5 district organize together into a provincial tailor's union, and all tailor unions in several provinces organize into a nationwide tailor's association. It is vertical, that is, from bottom to top.
With both horizontal and vertical organizations, then according to which orders of the horizontal general union or the vertical general union to follow? If the relationship is about production, then follow the vertical order. If the relationship is regional, then follow the horizontal order.
6. What should be avoided in order for the unions to endure?
\subsection{What should be avoided in order for the unions to endure?}
Once you’re in the union:
1. The regionalism should be removed, that is, do not distinguish between this person being Midlands, the other being Southern, the other being Northern. And it should not be divided into the Annamites, the Chinese or the people of any country. Having the same profession, under a trade union all members are brothers, therefore all must see each other as one family.
2. Men and women must be equal.
3. Don't be a narcissist because of your abilities (1) you are smarter, your salary is higher, but that doesn’t mean you can despise people for being clumsy or earn less money than you.
4. Don't rely on your seniority to rule over others.
5. Don't let the capitalists join the unions.
7. How to organize for further consolidation?
\subsection{How to organize for further consolidation?}
The union is the workers' organization to fight capitalism and imperialism, so the organization must be strict, the command must be swift, and the work must be discreet. To do that, it must be organized like an army.
Soldiers have teams. Workers must have sub-groups ([ Sub-groups can be also understood as cells] and branches. Example: There are 5 textile factories in the province, each factory must have a branch. Each branch is divided into several sub-groups; each branch must elect 3 or 5 people as committee members (most should elect people who have worked in the factories for a long time, who are more experienced) and each sub-group must elect a leader. Each sub-group cannot exceed 10 people. The sub-group follows the orders of the branch, the branch follow the directions of the provincial union, the provincial unions act according to the National Congress of Unions (1). With such an order, it would be easy for the general union to have several hundred thousand following commands, and to act in unison.
8. What does the sub-group do?
Soldiers have teams.
Workers must have sub-groups\rfootnote{Sub-groups can be also understood as cells} and branches.
Example: There are 5 textile factories in the province, each factory must have a branch. Each branch is divided into several sub-groups; each branch must elect 3 or 5 people as committee members (most should elect people who have worked in the factories for a long time, who are more experienced) and each sub-group must elect a leader. Each sub-group cannot exceed 10 people.
The sub-group follows the orders of the branch, the branch follow the directions of the provincial union, the provincial unions act according to the National Congress of Unions (1). With such an order, it would be easy for the general union to have several hundred thousand following commands, and to act in unison.
\subsection{What does the sub-group do?}
The tree needs strong roots, likewise the union needs to have many new solid sub-groups. Each sub-group must:
1. Train and critique members;
2. To carry out the assigned tasks ofrom the union;
3. Discussing the union business;
4. Investigate the situation down in the factory floors;
5. Recommend to what the union should do;
6. Collecting membership fees;
7. Report their deeds to the branch, then let the branch report to the province, and so on.
It is difficult for the branch to start operations and consider all opions. Small sub-groups, working close together, knowing each other well, so it is easier to review, train, work and opperate easier and faster. This is why sub-groups are so useful. Besides, if the government bans the trade union, but the sub-group is well organized, the union can keep making progress and keep working underground. That's why people call the sub-group the root of all unions.
9. What's the order in the union?
\subsection{What's the order in the union?}
Sub-group report to the branch.
If there are many factories in the province, 4 or 5 cell branches organize a set of representative committee (4, 5 factories each elect 1 or 2 people).
The branch report to the province.
Provincial union report to the National union.
That is the order of organization. As for the authority, for all members to attend the congress, meaning, all members are openly discuss the meeting. If there are too many members and it's not convenient to all attend a congress, a few people will elected as representatives to attend the the congress, they are the congress delegations. Whatever the congress decides on, the members of the association must execute. When the congress is over, the executive authority goes to the elected central committee.
Delegates to the provincial congress open once a month. Delegates to the national congress, once a year.
Delegating roles should be given to the average workers, not those who are already in office ([ In office: Person with important position in the union. It should be understood here that it is not possible to elect people with positions in the feudal colonial government apparatus.]) in the union. At the opening of the meeting, the delegates must report the status and opinions of the workers (that is not their own), propose and discuss union actions. After the union congress, they have to go back and report the congress results to the workers.
10. If something issues arise, how to solve it?
From the sub-group to the congress, all following democratic centralism. That is, if there is any issues that arise, everyone can and must discuss it. When the discussion is over, a vote is held, whichever opinion has more followers is chosen. That is democracy. After casting lots for their candidate, the candidates are assigned to the members of a committee, then all members must follow the orders of committee. That is centralism. Those who do not obey, the members of the committee have the right to punish their insubordination. If there is an abrupt situation that cannot be voted in time, the committee shall have the right to handle it and then report it back to the rest of the organization. When encountering very urgent matters, the members of the association are allowed to delegate authority to one person, this person has arbitrary authority, who then ([ When the work is done]) report to the association.
11. Why do members have to pay membership fees?
There are costs associated with operating unions, such as rent, pen and ink, etc., which is the regular fee, which all members have to bear. There are also the irregular fees, such as savings during a strike or helping other associations strike, or helping members of the association who have lost their jobs, or doing public works, and so on. If the association doesn't have the money, it can't do it. Therefore, members must "contribute winds to the storm". When the guild has excess money, it is advisable to do these things:
Delegating roles should be given to the average workers, not those who are already in office\footnote{In office: Person with important position in the union. It should be understood here that it is not possible to elect people with positions in the feudal colonial government apparatus.} in the union. At the opening of the meeting, the delegates must report the status and opinions of the workers (that is not their own), propose and discuss union actions. After the union congress, they have to go back and report the congress results to the workers.
\subsection{If something issues arise, how to solve it?}
From the sub-group to the congress, all following democratic centralism. That is, if there is any issues that arise, everyone can and must discuss it. When the discussion is over, a vote is held, whichever opinion has more followers is chosen. That is democracy. After casting lots for their candidate, the candidates are assigned to the members of a committee, then all members must follow the orders of committee. That is centralism. Those who do not obey, the members of the committee have the right to punish their insubordination.
If there is an abrupt situation that cannot be voted in time, the committee shall have the right to handle it and then report it back to the rest of the organization.
When encountering very urgent matters, the members of the association are allowed to delegate authority to one person, this person has arbitrary authority, who then\footnote{When the work is done} report to the association.
\subsection{Why do members have to pay membership fees?}
There are costs associated with operating unions, such as rent, pen and ink, etc., which is the regular fee, which all members have to bear. There are also the irregular fees, such as savings during a strike or helping other associations strike, or helping members of the association who have lost their jobs, or doing public works, and so on. If the association doesn't have the money, it can't do it. Therefore, members must "contribute winds to the storm".
When the guild has excess money, it is advisable to do these things:
1. Setting up schools for workers;
2. Setting up schools for workers' children and grandchildren;
3. Set up public libraries;
4. Establishing a hospital for workers;
5. Set up communal sleeping houses, bathrooms, theaters;
6. Open cooperatives;
7. Organization of arms groups ([ Here it can be understood as a worker’s self-defense team.]), youth wings ([ An organization of teenagers and children]), and so on.
Act according to the situation, do not let capitalism and imperialism pay attention. The union funds must be very transparent, for all members to know. Membership fees should not be too heavy; must follow the workers’ wage
12. How to organize in secret?
When the general union is made public, the sub-groups must still stay in secret. When it impossible to go public, we have to act under the names of cooperative, school, or club, etc., to hide in plain sight. In China, in Japan, there are many places where workers set up teahouses as cover, outside they sell confections and water, while inside they work in secret. The workers came in to drink and eat, as well as discuss work; So the spies and infiltrators can't do anything. There are places that uses religious gatherings or festivals, etc. To act as a facde for the unions.
When it's newly built or where there are few workers, strategies must be quickly improvised, not necessarily in the usual way. In general, the organization of the organizations must be unified, secretive, and strict, in order for the union to be stable.
7. Organization of arms groups\footnote{Here it can be understood as a worker’s self-defense team.}, youth wings\footnote{An organization of teenagers and children}, and so on. Act according to the situation, do not let capitalism and imperialism pay attention. The union funds must be very transparent, for all members to know. Membership fees should not be too heavy; must follow the workers’ wage.
\subsection{How to organize in secret?}
When the general union is made public, the sub-groups must still stay in secret. When it impossible to go public, we have to act under the names of cooperative, school, or club, etc., to hide in plain sight. In China, in Japan, there are many places where workers set up teahouses as cover, outside they sell confections and water, while inside they work in secret. The workers came in to drink and eat, as well as discuss work; So the spies and infiltrators can't do anything. There are places that uses religious gatherings or festivals, etc. to act as a façade for the unions.
When it's newly built or where there are few workers, strategies must be quickly improvised, not necessarily in the usual way.
In general, the organization of the organizations must be unified, secretive, and strict, in order for the union to be stable.
\section{ORGANIZATION OF PEASANTS}
\subsection{Why organize peasants?}
ORGANIZATION OF PEASANTS
1. Why organize peasants?
Our country's economy is not yet developed, out of 100 people, 90 are farmers. But our peasants are very miserable, there is no job to work, the land is not enough to plow, so much so that there is not enough food to eat, no clothes to wear.
Consider the central region, all 5,730,000 people but only about 148,015 samples ([ A traditional Vietnamese measurement of area, 1 sample = 5000 m² = 0.5 acre.]) of fields. Before 1926, Western plantations occupied 62,000 samples. From 1926 onwards, 175 plantation owning Westerners occupied it all:
Consider the central region, all 5,730,000 people but only about 148,015 samples\rfootnote{A traditional Vietnamese measurement of area, $1\,\textrm{sample} = 5000\,\textrm{m}^2 = {1\over 2}\,\textrm{hectares} = 1{1\over 4}\,\textrm{acres}$.} of fields.
Before 1926, Western plantations occupied 62,000 samples. From 1926 onwards, 175 plantation owning Westerners occupied it all:
1,982 samples in Thanh Hoa,
35,426 samples in Nghe An,
17,076 samples in Nha Trang,
13,474 samples in Phan Thiet,
92,000 samples in Kon Tum,
67,000 samples in Dong Nai.
With this arrangement our people will have no more fields to plow!
2. How do Western plantations occupy the fields?
They use many methods of aquisitions. As in June 1922 ([ This number in the original is blurred out.]), 20 Westerners joined together to ask the French Government for 3,000(2) samples each in the six provinces. All of them combine have 60,000 samples. In it, 19 western land owners will sell them all to the most wealthy of them all.
\subsection{How do Western plantations occupy the fields?}
They use many methods of aquisitions. As in June 1922\footnote{This number in the original is blurred out.}, 20 Westerners joined together to ask the French Government for 3,000(2) samples each in the six provinces. All of them combine have 60,000 samples. In it, 19 western land owners will sell them all to the most wealthy of them all.
In August 1926, the Eastern - French bank asked for 30,000 samples, on which there were 6 Annam villages. When the bankers owned, he evict our villagers from their land.
Cochinchina was completely occupied by Western plantations with 150,000 acres of good fields in their hands.
Part of the plantation is exploited by the French, the other occupied by the church. The priests waited for the year when the crop failed, loaning money to the peasants. They forced the people to bring the land deeds to them as collateral and collect interests. Because the interests were too high, the peasants could not pay with the next harvest, so the priests could then confiscate the fields ([ A form of expropriation of the field to deduct from the loan amount.]) and took them as church fields.
3. How does the French government treat ([ In policies.]) the farmers of An Nam?
Part of the plantation is exploited by the French, the other occupied by the church. The priests waited for the year when the crop failed, loaning money to the peasants. They forced the people to bring the land deeds to them as collateral and collect interests. Because the interests were too high, the peasants could not pay with the next harvest, so the priests could then confiscate the fields\footnote{A form of expropriation of the field to deduct from the loan amount.} and took them as church fields.
\subsection{How does the French government treat\footnote{In policies.} the farmers of An Nam?}
Western capitalists and religious churches have occupied most of the land, and if peasants can keep any piece land, they will be taxed heavily by the French Government, increasing by the year. From every good sample of field every yearly harvest yield 25 dong, the French it take away 2.5 dong of tax, that is, 10 parts they took 1.
If you calculate all the money to rent for cattle, buy manure, hire a job, and pay for food and drink, each acre per year costs about 30 dong. All in all, the peasants lost 5 dong, but the colonial government still squeezed out ([ Forcing mandatory pay]) to get 2 and a half dong. Not only that, our people planted the rice but could not eat it. In the tax season, it is sold to pay taxes. Knowing this, the colonials will buy it cheaply so that it can be transported to other countries and sold every year. The more they carry away, the worse the rice stock, the more people starved.
4. What should be done now?
If you calculate all the money to rent for cattle, buy manure, hire a job, and pay for food and drink, each acre per year costs about 30 dong. All in all, the peasants lost 5 dong, but the colonial government still squeezed out\footnote{Forcing mandatory pay} to get 2 and a half dong.
Not only that, our people planted the rice but could not eat it. In the tax season, it is sold to pay taxes. Knowing this, the colonials will buy it cheaply so that it can be transported to other countries and sold every year. The more they carry away, the worse the rice stock, the more people starved.
\subsection{What should be done now?}
The hardships of An Nam peasants are:
1. The field is occupied by the French, not enough to plow.
2. The rice is taken by them as well, not enough to eat.
3. Do more, get less, heavy taxes.
4. More floods, more droughts, more broken dykes, and more crop failures.
5. Destitutions to the point of famines, the point of selling his wife and children, or enslaving themselves like the African people they transported to the New World.
6. Oppressive politics (What political rights do we have?), oppressive culture (How many literate peasants do we have? How many schools in the village?).
If the farmers of Annam want to escape that bitter cycle, they must organize themselves and find a way to liberate themselves.
5. How to organize farmers?
\subsection{How to organize farmers?}
The organization is roughly as follows:
1. Any man or woman, from smallholder farmers to hired ploughmen, 18 years of age or older, may enter. (Those who are great landowners, secret agents, religious leaders, drunkards, gamblers, and drug addicts ([ Addiction to opium]) are not allowed to join the association.)
1. Any man or woman, from smallholder farmers to hired ploughmen, 18 years of age or older, may enter. (Those who are great landowners, secret agents, religious leaders, drunkards, gamblers, and drug addicts\footnote{Addiction to opium} are not allowed to join the association.)
2. Those who enter must volunteer to keep the rules of the association, and must be introduced by former members.
3. A village that has 3 volunteers joining the association can organize a village branch. If 3 villages have an association, they will organize a general branch, 3 general meetings will organize a district association, 3 districts with an association will organize a provincial association, If 3 provinces have an association, they will organize a national association.
4. The way to open the association, organize the working ministries, elect, propose, settle and report is the same as the union.
6. Peasants' association should set a sub-group or not?
\subsection{Peasants' association should set a sub-group or not?}
The peasantry in the village are not as crowded as the workers in the factories, so the village level associations replaces the sub-groups; The trustee in the committee can substitute for the leader.
The member on one side directs the members to work, the other side executes orders from the superior. One party reports the congress to the members, the other party reports the member's work to the congress.
Members must:
1. Find new members;
2. Investigate the way of doing business and affairs in the village;
3. Initiating cooperatives;
4. Do your best to expand education, such as setting up schools, organizing libraries, etc.;
5. Advise farmers to ban alcohol, drugs and gambling;
6. Set up the relief guilds, and so on.
In short, learn to do things that are useful to the farmers, beneficial to the community (closest meaning is “the race”).
7. If there is no sub-group, how can one work in secret?
\subsection{If there is no sub-group, how can one work in secret?}
This is discussing the day to day activities which perhaps can be in public. If it's time to keep a secret, then:
1. One must return to the sub-group method;
2. One must use other aliases, for instance call it the thatcher’s guild, the fishing guild, the communal rice guild, and so on as covers. In An Nam village, there are already many guilds like that. If you want to organize farmers, you should take advantage of those existing guilds according to the circumstances. It's good to make it so that outsiders don't notice your true activities.
When the association is stable and the members are large, it is advisable to form specialized departments ([ Made of experienced people.]) such as:
When the association is stable and the members are large, it is advisable to form specialized departments\footnote{Made of experienced people.} such as:
Sports department;
Plowing reforms department ([ Farming Improvement department.
]);
Plowing reforms department\footnote{Farming Improvement department.};
Hired ploughmen department (to plow for hire, with no farms or cattle of their own);
Small owning peasants department;
Artisans department (villagers who do not plow the fields, or plow on a semi regular basis, they must also join the peasant association);
Youth department, women's department, education department, and so on.
8. Even with the peasant associations, have the peasants recovered from the above mentioned hardships?
\subsection{Even with the peasant associations, have the peasants recovered from the above mentioned hardships?}
Freedom and equality can only be gained through revolutions, the peasant association is a revolutionary foundation of our people. If the workers and the peasants can build solid organizations, then join forces for the revolution, they will be free from these hardships. Although not revolutionary right away, being organized is still beneficial. Like every year the French forces our people to smoke 150 thousand kilos of opium, taking 15 million dong in profit. And they made us buy 173,000,000 liters of liquor, taking 1 billion francs in profit. Not only that they made huge profits, they also poison our people. If the peasants organized and advised each other not to drink alcohol and not to smoke opium, they would have saved our people from destitutions, while preventing those billion francs and 15 millions of dongs to the French.
The French is able to oppress us because we do not love each other, because we are ignorant. When these associations are set up, first there is solidarity, then we can have opportunities to study. If we can begin the the cultural "revolution" and the economic "revolution", the political "revolution" is not far away.
COOPERATIVE
1. History
The cooperatives for the most part ([ In fact the first cooperative is an English one]) were born in England. In 1761, the weavers joined together to form a cooperative for "fostering high standards in the weaving craft and collective purchase at a fair price for the community". In 1777, another cooperative was established. After that, many more cooperatives were established, none lasted.
\section{COOPERATIVE}
\subsection{History}
The cooperatives for the most part\footnote{In fact the first cooperative is an English one} were born in England. In 1761, the weavers joined together to form a cooperative for "fostering high standards in the weaving craft and collective purchase at a fair price for the community". In 1777, another cooperative was established. After that, many more cooperatives were established, none lasted.
In 1864, a new cooperative was established with only 999 dong of capital. By 1923, this association had 5,673,245 dong in capital and 47,777,000 dong from trade and travel profits, 14 ships, 5,000 samples of tea gardens, 6 deputies serving in the House of Representatives, and 4,580,623 member.
The cooperatives are now largest in Russia, the second to the UK (consumer cooperatives[ Enterprise owned by consumers]), the third to France (producer cooperatives[ Enterprise owned by producers]), the fourth to Denmark (farmer cooperative), the fifth to Germany (cooperative banks[ Otherwise known as credit cooperatives]).
The cooperatives are now largest in Russia, the second to the UK (consumer cooperatives\footnote{Enterprise owned by consumers}), the third to France (producer cooperatives\footnote{Enterprise owned by producers}), the fourth to Denmark (farmer cooperative), the fifth to Germany (cooperative banks\footnote{Otherwise known as credit cooperatives}).
In Japan, there was a cooperative that had only 1,840 dong when it was first established, after 8 years it had 370,000 dong.
2. Purpose
\subsection{Purpose}
Although the way to do it is slightly different, the purpose is the same in every country. For that purpose, in the manifesto of the British cooperative had said: "The aim is to make the class proletariat brothers. Brothers work for each other, depend on each other. Stop competition. Let those who plant trees eat the fruits they made; whoever wants to eat the fruit, let them go in and plant the trees."
In the world of robber barrons and imperialist ([ Age of exploitations]), they spared no methods of exploitations, they take the people's money as tools to oppress the people, they have fatten themselves with the people’s labor, liken to "giving us a taste of our own medicine". Because of this Cooperatives are first beneficial to the people, then reduce the exploitation power of capitalists and imperialists.
3. Reasoning
In the world of robber barrons and imperialist\footnote{Age of exploitations}, they spared no methods of exploitations, they take the people's money as tools to oppress the people, they have fatten themselves with the people’s labor, liken to "giving us a taste of our own medicine". Because of this Cooperatives are first beneficial to the people, then reduce the exploitation power of capitalists and imperialists.
\subsection{Reasoning}
An Nam proverb has the following sentences: "United we stand, divided we fall" and "One tree doesn’t amount to much, many trees group together to form a high mountain". The philosophy of all cooperatives lies in these idioms.
If we stand alone, our strength is small, and no work can be done. For example, if each person build a pillar and wall on their own, even a tent would not get built, let alone a house. Grouping those pillars, those walls, and that combined strength, they can together build a mansion for all to live. That is cooperation.
For example 10 people want to eat rice, each person has a separate pot, cooks in a separate kitchen, then eats separately; After eating, everyone cleans up their own, then it is a waste of firewood, water, effort and time. Cooperative is "putting all rice in the same pot" to save effort and resource, while being a community.
4. How many kinds of cooperatives are there?
\subsection{How many kinds of cooperatives are there?}
Cooperatives have 4 main forms:
1. Monetary cooperative ([ Credit cooperative as above]);
1. Monetary cooperative\footnote{Credit cooperative as above};
2. Consumer cooperative;
3. Retailer cooperatives;
4. Producer cooperatives.
Before specifying what such cooperation is, we must know that:
a) The cooperative is different from the trader’s guild, the profits gained from the guild is for individual members, while the cooperative profits is for the common benefit.
b) Cooperatives are meant to help each other, but they are not like charities. Because those associations spend but don’t earn, and help anyone but have the intention of philanthropy, the cooperative spends and makes benefiting only its members equally. A true "revolutionary" way motive is where you can hepl while ready to receive help yourself ([ Mutual help])
5. Monetary Cooperative
b) Cooperatives are meant to help each other, but they are not like charities. Because those associations spend but don’t earn, and help anyone but have the intention of philanthropy, the cooperative spends and makes benefiting only its members equally. A true "revolutionary" way motive is where you can hepl while ready to receive help yourself\footnote{Mutual help}.
\subsection{Monetary Cooperative}
Or better known as the people's bank; From the peasants and the workers combined investment:
1. Any member who lacks capital for business (loaning for living costs is prohibited) can come and loan at a light interest rate;
2. If a member has a surplus, they can deposit at this cooperative to gain a profit. People are poor, so those who have enough to contribute is sparse, while loaners are numerous, so how can a cooperative bank be established? To do this, three things must be done:
a) Capital - If each person put in a dong, with 1,000 people gain 1,000 dong. That 1,000 capital, if efficently used might as well equal to 10,000 dong.
b) Circulation - If each person holds their share, that 1,000 will also be wittle away. If you give it out as loans, first month you give A a loan of 100 dong for 6 months; second month you loan to B 100 and so on, the more you move and circulate it, the more interests gained, the more people you help.
c) Credit - Making a name for the cooperative generate trusts ([ The more credit you create]), making transactions easier in the long run. So, even with the limited capital, it can be efficent.
6. Consumer cooperative
Not every households can have enough tools for production, necessitating purchasing. Buying a lot ([ Bulk purchases]) is cheaper with better quality. While on the other hand retail is expensive with only modess quality. But where do workers and peasants get the money to make wholesale purchase? Even if you can afford it, but a household can’t possibly consume it all. Continuing the suffering losses.
c) Credit - Making a name for the cooperative generate trusts\footnote{The more credit you create}, making transactions easier in the long run. So, even with the limited capital, it can be efficent.
\subsection{Consumer cooperative}
Not every households can have enough tools for production, necessitating purchasing. Buying a lot\footnote{Bulk purchases} is cheaper with better quality. While on the other hand retail is expensive with only modess quality. But where do workers and peasants get the money to make wholesale purchase? Even if you can afford it, but a household can’t possibly consume it all. Continuing the suffering losses.
If many households pool their money together, buy wholesale and share, it will be cheap, the product will be in a superior quality without wasting time.
Example: Each barrel of kerosene (cost 3 dong, get 50 liters) Traders would dillute it into 53 liters. Each household buy a liter and pay a dime, the oil spoiled, so it burn out fast. All in all traders can profit by:
1 steel barrel 0đ20
1 steel barrel 0đ20
23 liters of dilluted oil 2đ30
Summing up in 2đ50
53 houses at a loss: 2đ50 and 53 hours.
If those 53 houses pooled together to send one person to buy a barrel, it would have saved 2d50, and the time that goes with it. Use those 53 hours to do something more productive work.
7. Cooperative retailing
\subsection{Cooperative retailing}
Buy in bulk is cheaper, while wholesale is expensive. Likewise the more expensive the less you buy, the cheaper it is selling. That is common knowledge. But poor people don't have much to sell. Besides, when they sell their produce on the market no matter the price they has to be sold, else you need storage. Part is the risk of wasting valuable efforts, part is the risk of taxations, part is the risk of spoilage. The merchants can take advantage of this to buy at lower prices.
For example: 53 houses with 53 baskets of rice, hiring 53 people to sell, must pay 53 times the tax; Merchants know this so they can bargain for lower prices by 53 cents (one cent per basket). In hot weather, 53 people have to drink 53 cents of water on delivery, and so on. Losing so much more money.
Imagine those 53 households sell using cooperatives, how much profit can be made!
8. Production Cooperative
This cooperation is to help each other in manufacturing. For example: Each peasant owns one cattle for their household, each must employ a cowherd, must build a corral ([ Cattle pen]), how messy is that? Not to mention the households without cattle for field work, they have to rent it from others. Each household has to buy their own plows, harrows, hoes, sickles, etc., so when they innevitably breaks while you can’t afford replacement you would have to make dues. Rather than this, we can just buy these together and pay according to personal usage, wouldn’t that be better?
\subsection{Production Cooperative}
This cooperation is to help each other in manufacturing. For example: Each peasant owns one cattle for their household, each must employ a cowherd, must build a corral\footnote{Cattle pen}, how messy is that? Not to mention the households without cattle for field work, they have to rent it from others. Each household has to buy their own plows, harrows, hoes, sickles, etc., so when they innevitably breaks while you can’t afford replacement you would have to make dues. Rather than this, we can just buy these together and pay according to personal usage, wouldn’t that be better?
The same for cotton farming; with no whipping board, no spinning equipment, the cotton must be sold cheap and raw. If you contribute to a cooperative and buy enough things to process it, the work can be reduced while gaining much more.
In short, cooperatives are very beneficial, so people frequently set them up in different countries. Tthe merchants are rich, from their exploitations of workers. Cooperative is protection against the excess of capitalist merchants.
9. How merchants make their profits?
\subsection{How merchants make their profits?}
The trader makes a profit because the producers and consumers, the buyers and the sellers are separated by distance, so they had to use the merchants as middlemen, giving them profits on both ends. For example: In the North is a country that grows tea, in the South is a tea drinker. But the North people do not bring tea to the South to sell, nor the people of the South go to the North to buy.
Some tea planetrs has to sell to A, the village tea supplier; who sell it back to B, the region tea supplier, taking a cut of profits. B sell it to city C in the province, taking another cut. C sell to D a Hanoi company, profiting three times. Company D sell to Company E Saigon, profiting four times. Company E sold again to wholesalers F in the provinces, making a profit five times. Trader F sells wholesale to the G city in another province, making a profit six times. G retails to H, makes a profit seven times. H retail for drinkers, profiting eight times.
So the tea maker loses, the tea drinker also loses. If there is a cooperative, we can avoid those things.
10. How to organize cooperatives?
\subsection{How to organize cooperatives?}
Not every village has to set up a cooperative. Nor does every village have to set up multiple cooperatives. Nor can there be one cooperative, preventing the establishment of another. It just depends on the circumstances where any cooperative can be established, and sometimes two cooperatives - buying and selling - can also be established together.
If many places have established the same form of cooperative, then those cooperatives should contact each other, multiplying purchasing power. Or when two cooperatives are of different forms, then they should also be linked into chains, like a consumer cooperative and a retailer cooperative.
Cooperatives only benefit members, only members have the right to operate, but in technical aspects such as calculating, quality inspections, machinery operations, etc., are allowed to hire outsiders.
Having joined the association, anyone who contributes more or less, before and after, everyone is equal.

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road2revolution.tex

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\title{The Road to Revolution}
\author{Ho Chi Minh, 19?? \linebreak Translated by VietAnon \linebreak Typeset by \LaTeX\,Anon}
\date{\today}
@ -20,6 +27,10 @@
\maketitle
\input{chap1}
\input{chap2}
\input{chap3}
\input{chap4}
\input{chap6}
\end{document}

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