Artificial Intelligence

On August 15, 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska. Alaska was once a Russian colony that was purchased by the U.S. in 1867 and became a state in 1959.

The anti-imperialist YouTuber Brian Berletic expressed concern that the Trump administration might attempt to kidnap Putin. This did not seem so far-fetched in light of the Israeli-U.S. attack on Iran aimed at decapitating Iran’s political and military leadership. This occurred as they were supposed to engage in negotiations to normalize relations. Unlike Iran, Russia has nuclear weapons and the ability to deliver them to the U.S. mainland, making any kidnap attempt unlikely, and Putin returned home safely.

Trump has refused to walk away from the Russo-Ukrainian war, and there were no breakthroughs in ending it. The war started with the 2014 U.S.-organized right-wing coup to overthrow the popularly elected Ukrainian government of Viktor Yanukovych. Coup leaders, called the Euromaidan movement, were supported by a coalition of pro-U.S. imperialist liberals and Ukrainian fascists who provided the muscle power.

Read more …

The Super-Crisis and the Rise of the U.S. World Empire

The severity of the 1929-32/33 super-crisis in a particular country can be measured by the decline in the country’s index of industrial production from peak to trough.

Figures compiled by the League of Nations — the forerunner of the United Nations — for the super-crisis years divide countries into seven groups according to each country’s decline in industrial production. The countries in group one experienced the least decline — less than 10 percent — equivalent to an “ordinary” recession. Those in group seven experienced between 60 and 70 percent declines from peak to trough — economic disaster. 

Among the major imperialist countries, rising Japan, then rapidly expanding its share of the world market, was in group one, along with Greece and New Zealand. Britain was in group two, which experienced a 10 to 20 percent decline in industrial production. Germany was in the sixth group, which experienced 50 to 60 percent declines, a position it shared with Canada and Czechoslovakia, then the most industrialized country in Eastern Europe. The United States was in group seven—declines in industrial production from peak to trough of 60 to 70 percent, an “honor” shared only with Poland. 

The extreme severity of the crisis in Germany is not surprising. Germany was the biggest loser in the war, stripped of all its colonies and a significant part of its European territories. In addition, due in part to the disastrous hyperinflation of 1923, the German credit system was highly dependent on money market conditions in the United States. When credit froze up, first because of the industrial and stock market boom of 1928-29, then the Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930, and finally the massive U.S. banking and credit collapse of 1931-32, it is not surprising that effective demand, industrial production, and employment contracted with extreme violence in Germany. 

But what about the United States? After all, the United States was the big winner — perhaps the only winner — in World War I. It had the largest gold reserves in the world. Yet its economy collapsed more than that of any other major imperialist power. 

Indeed, the U.S. economic collapse didn’t have the disastrous political consequences that Germany’s slightly lesser economic collapse had. Germany had suffered the terrible effects of the blockade of 1914-1918, the shock of the lost war, the abortive revolution of 1918, and the hyperinflation of 1923. The super-crisis of 1929-32 was only the final blow that pushed Germany into the fascist nightmare of the Third Reich. 

But this doesn’t change the fact that in a purely economic sense, the super-crisis of 1929-33 was more extreme in the United States than in any other large capitalist country in the world. Why was this? The reason lies in the extraordinary growth of the U.S. economy in the decades preceding the super-crisis. 

Read more …

History of Gold Production from the ‘Gold Rush’ to 1914

The World Gold Council estimates that in the years 1840 to 1844, some 146 metric tons of gold were produced worldwide. Between 1855 and 1859, estimated gold production rose to 1,011 metric tons. This is an increase of 590 percent in 15 years. In terms of percentages, this is by far the greatest increase in gold production for which reasonable data on world gold production is available. 

The reason for this amazing increase was the discovery of gold in California in 1848 and Australia in 1851. It was this mass of newly mined and refined gold that fueled the expansion of the world market — what Marx called a new 16th century — that, among other things, drowned the hopes of Marx and Engels for a revolution that would bring the working class to power in Europe during the 1850s. Instead, the massive expansion of the market caused by the gold discoveries led to a powerful surge in the development of industry on a capitalist basis.

Read more …

The Long Semi-Cycles of Ernest Mandel

We have seen that most economic historians and economists, both bourgeois and Marxist, agree that the concrete history of the capitalist mode of production shows alternating periods of rapid expansion lasting for several decades, followed by periods of much slower growth or semi-stagnation of varying lengths. There has been much dispute about whether these alternations represent cyclical forces operating from within the capitalist economy or are caused by changes of a non-cyclical nature in the “external environment.”

Read more …

Class War at Home, Imperialist War Abroad

Last month, June 2025, saw the twelve-day U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. On July 4, U.S. Independence Day, Donald Trump signed his “Big Beautiful Bill.” The bill means class war at home, and the twelve-day war against Iran points to more imperialist war abroad. This month, we examine the class war at home and the capitalist war economy.

Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill is a massive attack on the working class, science, art, education, and human culture in general. We could write volumes about this wretched thing, but we will zero in on the attack on the working class. The spearhead is the attack on the Medicaid program. To grasp its importance, it helps to understand Marx’s theory of wage labor and surplus value.

Read more …

Henryk Grossman and Long Cycles

Henryk Grossman was born to Jewish parents in 1881 in what is now Krakow, Poland. (1) The Austrian-Hungarian Empire ruled Krakow at the time. As a high school student, he became politically active and joined the Social Democratic Party of Galicia. The Social Democratic Party of Galicia was dominated by followers of Józef Piłsudski (1867-1935), the future nationalist dictator of Poland. Galicia is a geographic region spanning what is now southeastern Poland and western Ukraine. It is not the community in Spain of the same name.

In 1905, Grossman was part of a split of Jewish workers from the Social Democratic Party of Galicia, which formed the Jewish Socialist Party of Galicia.

After the Russian Revolution, he joined the newly formed Polish Communist Party, which sought to unite both the Polish and Jewish workers of Poland in a united revolutionary party of the working class.

Read more …

MAGA

On June 13, 2025, Israel attacked Iran. It is clear that the Trump regime knew it was coming and approved of it. Then, on June 22, the U.S. directly attacked the peaceful Iranian nuclear energy program with bunker-busting bombs. On June 25, the U.S. and the Zionist entity announced they were halting the bombing attacks for the time being, and Iran then halted its counterattacks against the Zionist entity, ending what is being called “the twelve-day war” for now. Next month, we will examine the consequences of the twelve-day war.

Last month, I noted that the tariff war shows we are entering a period similar to that between August 1914 and August 1945. The U.S.-Israeli twelve-day war against Iran confirms it. Significantly, Israel has threatened to launch such a war many times over the last 30 years, claiming it was concerned Iran was developing nuclear bombs. This is even though there is no indication Iran was interested in developing a nuclear bomb — Iran’s clergy-run regime has declared many times that nuclear weapons are sinful and forbidden by the Muslim religion and God.

Read more …

One or Two or Many Cycles?

In the chapters on the “ideal” industrial cycle, I assumed that there is one capitalist economic cycle, what Marx called the industrial cycle. Furthermore, I assumed that all the contradictions of capitalist production accumulated during this cycle of about ten years are then discharged in a single crisis at the end of the cycle. If actual industrial cycles corresponded to the “ideal cycle” I described, each cycle would have a crisis, a depression, a phase of average prosperity, and a boom of more or less equal length.

Even if there were a tendency for the length of the various stages to change over time, this would be a secular process, not a cyclical one. Concrete industrial cycles differ from each other. These differences are not a matter of theory but a matter of empirical fact. Are the sometimes drastic differences observed among individual concrete cycles due to accidental forces, secular forces, or cyclical tendencies at work?

In addition to the possible existence of a long cycle, many economists have claimed that a short cycle of about 40 to 48 months exists. A complete theory of crises and capitalist economic cycles also has to account for the existence of this cycle.

To my knowledge, at least five different economic cycles within the capitalist economy have been proposed at one time or another. Perhaps readers have heard of even more.

Read more …