Against the Current, No. 47, November/December 1993
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Moscow: The Fire This Time
— The Editors -
Israel-PLO Accords: Peace or Apartheid?
— David Finkel -
Clinton's Failing Health Plan
— Milton Fisk - Statement from Russian Democratic Intellectuals
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"Order Reigns in Moscow"
— Justin Schwartz -
Bloody Moscow, October 1993
— Susan Weissman -
Whose Coup? Whose Democracy?
— David Finkel -
Russia: A Bureaucracy That Can't Die
— Kit Adam Wainer -
The Jogering of Nicaragua
— John Vandermeer -
Nicaraguan Feminists: "No Political Daddy Needed"
— Midge Quandt -
Gendering Socialism
— Ann Ferguson -
Background: Malaysia in Brief
— Carol McAllister -
Malaysia: Women's Work & Resistance
— Carol McAllister -
The Rebel Girl: Mirror, Mirror on the Wall....
— Catherine Sameh - Reviews
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Jazz Vs. New York's Caberet Laws
— Michael Steven Smith -
Random Shots: Pixilated Political Paradoxes
— R.F. Kampfer -
U.S. Cuba: Defeating the Blockade
— John Daniel -
Europe & Freedom: A Response
— Loren Goldner -
A Popular Regime, Not Stalinism
— Marc Viglielmo -
Samuel Farber Responds
— Samuel Farber
IN THE SPACE of less than two weeks, the coup d’etat that began on September 21 has reached its logical conclusion. The fresh shoots of Russian democracy have been drowned in the blood of the guilty and innocent alike.
The responsibility for this rests with the president’s entire political course to date–a course which has brought about the deepening of the general crisis in the country.
Yeltsin could no longer implement his policies of “shock without therapy” through democratic methods and in the presence of an opposition.
For the introduction of a dictatorship, a pretext was needed. Using the amoral union of Rutskoi’s supporters with extremist and fascist forces appealing to people’s dark instincts, the authorities provoked violence.
Making a comprehensive evaluation and political analysis of these developments remains a task for the future, but it is already clear that they have opened the way for dictatorship. Subsequent events, including arrests and beatings of people who for the most part had not taken part in acts of violence; the closure of opposition publishing-houses and the de facto imposition of political censorship; the threat of a “witch-hunt”; and moves to abolish the Constitutional Court and soviets at all levels are all incompatible with democracy.
We are seeing the emergence of a real danger both of the disintegration of the country, and of a centralized “democratic” dictatorship resting on structures of coercion—district commanders—at the local level Despite regional differences in the way the social and political situation has developed, the following statements can confidently be made:
—Political and civil liberties have been trampled on, and this will continue to be the case;
—Local soviets and those regional administrative authorities that have not supported the president will be crushed;
—Entrepreneurial, trade union, social and political bodies that have opposed the president will be subject to persecution.
In these circumstances, one of the most important ways in which the first shoots of Russian democracy and freedom can be preserved is if all those who find the prospect of totalitarian rule unacceptable join in a broad, non-violent opposition bloc around the following tasks:
—The defense of internationally recognized human rights, in particular; the rights to free speech, freedom of conscience, and free assembly;
—The defense of civil, political, social and economic liberties;
—The defense of trade union, professional, social and political organizations against arbitrary acts by the authorities;
—The defense of the rule of law, of democracy, of federalism and of national equality;
—The defense of the rights of opposition forces to act within the bounds of the constitution.
We are not attempting to impose particular structures on the suggested bloc, and we are not suggesting particular people as its leaders. But we urge strongly that the process of unifying all those to whom the free and democratic future of Russia is genuinely dear should begin forthwith.
We are ready to work with adherents of any ideology who are in fundamental agreement with our aims.
We reject a “democracy” based on mass repression.
We reject bonapartism that employs democratic rhetoric in the place of democracy.
VG. Arslanov, Doctor of Fine Arts; A.V. Buzgalin, Doctor of Economic Sciences; Professor N.S. Zlobin, Doctor of Philosophical Sciences; Professor VA. Kelle, Doctor of Philosophical Sciences Professor A.I. Kol¬ganov, Doctor of Economic Sciences; V.! Loglnov, Doc¬tor of Economic Sciences; Professor Iu.V. Nazarov, Merited Artist of the Russian Federation; D.E. Furman, Doctor of Historical Sciences
November-December 1993, ATC 47