The support I've received in difficult times has been fantastic and it's put me back in a position to get back involved in work again and in an actual bed.
I have big plans this year and if anyone wishes to continue to support me you can here.
https://t.co/eVaWVZR1zE
Thank you for number 20 🏆
Whilst I'm glad the club made the right decision & sensibility prevailed. We will still all be forever grateful for what was achieved in the 2024/25 season.
All the best for the future at your new club.
Mental health is treated as an individual failure under capitalism. Burnout, anxiety, isolation and despair are presented as personal weaknesses instead of symptoms of a system in decay.
This article looks at the material roots of the growing mental health crisis and asks the question the media never will: what if the problem is the system itself?
https://t.co/FiNPuI7lGQ
This Saturday. 2pm. Film Screening. London. Entry is free. (Our demands most moderate are: we only want the Earth!). A beautiful film now rarely seen.
As part of our cultural events, we are inviting you to join us for the screening of "The Last Stage" (1948), a film essential for our understanding of both the historical events surrounding the Holocaust and for debunking any accusations of antisemitism we face.
There will be a short introduction to the film and refreshments will be available.
Everyone is welcome. Sat 30 May 2026.
We will be starting at 2 pm. Entrance from 1.30pm. 22 Dominion Rd. Southall UB2 5AA.
An easy 2-3 min walk from Southall Station.
Very true. Parties like the Workers Part of Britain, Green Party, Socialist Party etc are all left of imperialism. They have no interest in removing the capitalist system, but finding their place within it.
This is standard behaviour from the Met police: lie first. Cover it up later. Collude and conspire to prevent the truth getting out. Intimidate and harass the witnesses. Weaponise the state against the citizen. Crush the working class.
Capitalist Imperialism 101.
As communists, everything we do should push the class struggle forward. Nothing under capitalism is neutral, including social media.
These platforms are flooded with distractions, narcissism, fake outrage and petty drama which can keep workers and activists divided, angry and politically confused. The ruling class is currently much better at propaganda than we are. That’s why they dominate the media and especially the social media platforms.
Communists are not supposed to act like influencers chasing likes, followers or internet celebrity. We use these platforms to educate, organise, expose lies and build class consciousness. Every post should have a purpose.
Workers don’t need more online noise. They need accounts like ours that counter the ruling class propaganda.
This petty Cyclone account is correct. It was Marx that made the quote, but its childish behaviour attempts to use a simple mistake as a damning insight.
The account style and name is almost reminiscent of a teenagers MSN messenger account.
At one point "Cyclone" or the WPB would call the CPGB-ML a reading group because of importance put into study as well as activism. Now it speaks of poor study??
The terminally online and opportunistic 'groups' such as this will always be problematic because of the egotism that goes along with. Attacking the @CPGBML constantly or pathetic attempts to insult the Project shows its simple arrogant nature.
"To indulge in personal attacks, pick quarrels, vent personal spite or seek revenge instead of entering into an argument and struggling against incorrect views for the sake of unity or progress or getting the work done properly."
- Combat Liberalism
We would normally ignore petty silliness such as this, but sometimes it can be a point to learn from.
Once again from Combat Liberalism we must:
"To hear incorrect views without rebutting them and even to hear counter-revolutionary remarks without reporting them, but instead to take them calmly as if nothing had happened"
Sometimes a response is needed.
🚨 Understand Liverpool informed Alisson about their desire and plan to keep him for one more year.
Juventus offered Alisson a longer deal but #LFC insist to keep him.
Only player position could change stance but Liverpool clearly want him to stay.
🎥 https://t.co/GuNXQUye1y
Paul Embery is right to point out that Labour is once again revisiting the Brexit divide, but he misses the deeper issue. The ruling class fury over the referendum never ended because they never truly accepted the referendum result in the first place.
From the moment the vote happened there were immediate calls for a second referendum, demands to remain inside EU structures “temporarily”, legal challenges to slow or weaken the process, and constant attempts to reinterpret what Brexit was supposed to mean. Parliament repeatedly tried to block or dilute departure terms between 2017 and 2019, while major sections of business, finance, academia and the media openly campaigned for ignoring the democratic decision and creating even closer reintegration.
Boris Johnson's play acting as the protagonist with his table banging slogan of "Get Brexit Done" was always nonsense as was only following populist belief to win an election. His version of Brexit left Britain still tied to major areas of EU alignment through the Withdrawal Agreement and Northern Ireland Protocol. What was presented publicly as a clean break was, in reality, a negotiated compromise designed to limit disruption to capital and trade. Keeping Britain within EU parameters without the so-called damaging workers decision making.
Fast forward to modern day and now Prime Minister Keir Starmer simply speaks more openly about the direction sections of the ruling class have wanted all along: deeper regulatory alignment, closer institutional cooperation and gradual reintegration with the EU framework under the language of “pragmatism” and “stability”.
The important thing many liberals still fail to grasp is that the 2016 referendum was one of the few genuinely democratic acts carried out by ordinary people in modern British politics. Millions of working class people ignored parliament, the banks, multinational corporations, most of the media and 90% of academia and voted against the consensus they had been presented with for decades.
That does not mean Brexit itself was a major win in the class struggle or even that leaving the EU while remaining under British capitalism was ever going to magically transform workers’ lives. But the vote mattered because it represented a rejection of an economic and political direction imposed from above.
The EU itself is not some enlightened liberal paradise as it is constantly portrayed. It is a capitalist trading bloc built around the free movement of capital, labour and goods. Its institutions exist to defend markets, competition rules and financial stability for the capitalist classes. When democratic decisions threaten those interests, democracy allowed by the imperialists is quickly proven to be a sham, as Greece discovered after voting against austerity in 2015 only to be forced back into line by European financial institutions, plunging many Greeks into destitution.
That is why this argument never disappeared after 2016. Large sections of the establishment viewed Brexit not simply as an economic mistake, but as a dangerous political precedent. It showed that ordinary people, when given a direct vote outside normal parliamentary management, could reject the consensus of the political class altogether.
What we are seeing under Starmer is not a sudden change of direction, but finance capitals continuation of a long process to gradually reverse aspects of that rebellion while presenting it as sensible governance.
Interestingly, Kemi touches on a very important point here, whether she realises it or not.
Nationalisation under capitalism just means handing workers from one employer to another. The same political class that claims it will “run services for the public” is tied to the same system of profit, exploitation and private interests. Many of them are landlords, shareholders or directly connected to big business themselves.
If we are serious about nationalising industry and public services in the interests of ordinary people, then the problem is bigger than ownership alone. The capitalist system itself has to go.
Workers must have direct control over production and society. That means removing the ruling class from power and taking control for ourselves.
Is that what Kemi meant do you think?
Afghan revolutionary soldiers and militiamen parade after the victory of the April 1978 Revolution, which brought the Democratic Party of Afghanistan to power.
Welling up looking at pics from last year🥲One of the best days of our lives, following an unbelievable & unforgettable few weeks of celebrations. This club can pick us up & knock us down but we’ll always be there & we’ll always bounce back!
We love you Liverpool, we do! ❤️
21 years since #istanbul. Anyone who was there knows nothing will ever beat that day&night. Like being on your highest high then lowest low. Then winning the lottery. Then being lost in foreign streets, not knowing what to do or say. A Lifetime Memory. A Glorious Moment in time.
For the first time in British history, direct actionists are facing being sentenced as terrorists. In August 2024, 6 ordinary people entered the site of Israel's biggest arms manufacturer and destroyed the brutal weapons that were to be used in Gaza. After almost two years in prison, four of them were convicted of criminal damage in May 2026. The jury didn't know that the judge was secretly using a terrorism connection on the case.
On Friday June 12th, four of them found “guilty” by this kangaroo court, will face their sentencing. It will take place at Woolwich Crown Court. We call on supporters across the country to mobilise outside the court and demand the terrorism link is dropped. The trial was a stitch-up at the behest of Zionist influence: from "missing" evidence, to the judge refusing defendants the right to defend themselves, and the prohibition of words and phrases that would highlight Palestine as the point of it all.
Direct action is not terrorism
Saving lives is not terrorism.
Free the Filton 25.
Book your travel. Bring banners, drums, people and energy!
Another season over & more goodbyes to great servants of the club who will never be forgotten.
Players leaving is inevitable, the way we're playing is not. We've lost the manager, & players, who have presided over recent success. Lets hope our recent form is just a speed bump.
When the subject of grooming gangs comes up you'll see, on Facebook pages and the like, comments about Pakistanis/Muslims/Migrants then a response along the lines of “there are white grooming gangs too” like the recently jailed Scottish gang.
Neither of these kinds of comments are helpful. I’ve even read a post “we have enough paedos without importing more”
Enough paedos? One paedo is too many!
One thing all these degenerate beasts have in common, apart from being equally despicable, is the boys and girls they target.
They are mostly poor kids, from broken homes or the broken care system. They are vulnerable, easy targets whose abusers get away with it so long because the victims are seen as worthless by the state.
Deprived communities, unemployment, drugs, selfishness and a lack of cohesion in society are conditions that allow these horrific things to happen.
All things which are not just caused, but silently encouraged, by the capitalist system. If horrific crimes weren’t committed against these children, there wouldn’t be as much public outcry. There would be fewer voices saying save our kids from poverty, starvation and addiction. The sensationalism in the media, used to pitt workers against each other, and stir up racial hatred, is the reason for campaigns to save the children.
If the state wasn't using this sensationalism for there own benefit there would be voices blaming them for any other kind of misery in th
eir lives.
We need to save our kids, not just from sexual exploitation, but from all exploitation that’s rife in a capitalist society.
Socialism will save our kids.