L’Internationale :france-cool:
The Paris Commune was established on 18 March 1871, but its roots can be traced right back to 1848, when a wave of democratic revolution originating in France washed across the European continent
In France, the democratic revolution was defeated in a matter of months, ending with the bloody suppression of a workers’ revolt protesting against the closure of the national workshops in June 1848. Despite this, the street fighting of this period laid the foundations for the establishment of an autonomous French workers’ movement, which operated independently of the centrist bourgeois political parties—a key prerequisite for the formation of the 72-day-long “Republic of Workers” in 1871.
Following the defeat of the uprising, however, a military dictatorship initially asserted control, before handing the reins to Napoleon III a few months later. East of the Rhine, in a fragmented Germany, monarchic powers were also able to put down revolutionary efforts and defeat the democracy movement. The latter’s demand for German national unity was subsequently co-opted “from above”, redefined and positioned as a project designed to suit the Prussian-led response. The policies pursued by the Prussian crown were geared towards preserving monarchic power while also seeking to unify Germany, this would led to the Franco-Prussian War.
During the Franco-Prussian war the then Emperor Napoleon III was capture during the Battle of Sedan. This sudden defeat sealed the fate of the Second French Empire, but did not signify the end of the war, with the Prussian troops marching onwards towards Paris with the aim of capturing it.
Following the defeat at the Battle of Sedan, the Third Republic was proclaimed in Paris, despite a complete lack of democratic legitimacy. Although the empire’s political and military failures meant it had been discredited, the Republic did not act to remove the monarchy. According to Marx, the measures taken by the government were evidence that they had “inherited from the empire not only ruins, but also its dread of the working class”.
By the beginning of October 1870, Paris was under total siege, beset on all sides by Prussian forces, and attempts to break the siege line with troops from the provinces had also failed. At the end of January 1871, Jules Favre, minister of foreign affairs for the Provisional Government of National Defence, signed an armistice with the newly formed German Empire
The armistice treaty stipulated that only a freshly elected National Assembly would have the power to ratify an eventual peace treaty. The assembly first met on 12 February in Bordeaux—far removed from the nation’s capital, which remained in a state of total siege by German troops.
In Paris, both the choice of location for the National Assembly as well as the make-up of the new government were viewed as betrayals of those who had spent months defending the capital against the siege.
In order to defend Paris against the German troops, in September 1870 the Thiers-led government had reorganized the National Guard and enlisted unemployed men into its regiments. This led to a change in the military’s demographic character; National Guard soldiers deposed their officers, elected new commanders from within their own ranks, and also established their own governing body, the Central Committee of the National Guard.
Having failed to capture the cannons and surprised by the workers’ resolve, Thiers decided to decamp the capital and head to Versailles, accompanied by his government and loyalist army regiments. That they were able to flee the city with ease was due to the fact that the National Guard battalions—anticipating a renewed attack by government forces—had barricaded themselves in their neighbourhood strongholds or otherwise directed their movements to avoid a confrontation.
As the sun set over Paris that evening, power in the French capital essentially resided on the streets. Given this situation, the National Guard’s Central Committee decided to cobble together a provisional government. The majority of the Parisian population first learnt of the shift that had occurred in their city the following morning, when the Central Committee occupied the Hôtel de Ville, raised a red flag, and addressed the city’s residents with their first proclamation:
You charged us with organizing the defence of Paris and of your rights.
We are conscious of having fulfilled this mission: aided by your generous courage and your admirable calm, we have chased out the government that betrayed us.
At this time our mandate has expired, and we yield it, for we don’t claim to be taking the place of those who a revolutionary wind has just overthrown.
So prepare and carry out your communal elections, and as a reward give us the only one we ever wished for: seeing you establish the true republic.
In the meanwhile, in the name of the people we will remain at the Hôtel-de-Ville.
The provisional government’s first official act was publishing a call for elections to determine the make-up of the Commune Council. The revolution of the previous day had laid the foundations for a French republic that would permanently “mark the end of the era of invasions and civil war”. Additionally, the Central Committee saw itself as the force that had defended Paris and one which would now return control of the city to its residents through the council elections.
The election took place less than ten days later, on 26 March; just two days later, the Paris Commune officially came into being. Given the urgency of organizing an election within such a short timeframe, there was scant discussion about the Commune’s actual political programme in those first few days. For this reason—according to Prosper Lissagaray, himself a Communard—votes were primarily cast based on name recognition. Consequently, the Commune Council ended up comprising a colourful mixture of Jacobins, socialists, anarchists, Romantics, and representatives of the bourgeoise opposition to Napoleon III. This meant that the Commune included powerful factions that took their political inspiration from the concepts of the bourgeoise French Revolution of 1789 right alongside proto-socialists, anarchists, and Marxists. This diversity of political positions was reflective of the century of class struggle that had preceded the founding of the Commune.
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The Great French Revolution 1789–1793 :kropotkin-shining:
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The story of the Paris Commune (1871) by viki1999 :france-cool:
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The Women Incendiaries of the Paris Commune :feminism:
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Insurgent Communards: The Road to Revolution :red-fist:
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Logged back into this site to say I’ve been seeing a really cute guy the past few weeks and it’s going well so far

Short, cute, twink, fluffy brown hair…
Also asexual, and we seem to want the same things. Think we’re headed for a relationship in a month or so.
Aww i posted my message in the old one. LOOK AT MY FLOWERS

Oh hell yeah those are good flowers

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No current struggle session discussion here on the new general megathread, i will ban you from the comm and remove your comment, have a good day/night :meow-coffee
I can’t believe OpenAI just shut Sora down. It seems like a massive admission of weakness from a company entirely sustained by hype.
I am gonna
and touch grass for the weekend. See you on the other side.No kings w/ PSL was good. People weren’t afraid of the word ‘socialism’. Lots of radical signs alongside the brunch libs. Lots of anti-war interest from people who lack organization. The people are seeking leadership and democrats have left a void for communists to gain ground
“Life ain’t all sunshine and rainbows” mfs when they find beauty in the rain and snow

Ive never had a papaya, wtf. Recommend obscure fruit. I gotta complete the fruit pokedex.
The drone footage of US soldiers getting owned is gonna be so humiliating and devastating.
After watching One Battle After Another: I don’t want to be fully dismissive, but is a lot of the discourse based around not understanding themes if they’re not conveyed through someone directly talking to the camera about what the director thinks? There’s not even really very much ambiguity, the villains are basically comic-book evil and the revolutionaries are very cleary sympathetic-yet-flawed. The fact that the fascists in the movie are Actual Race Purity National Socialists kind of means that the revolutionaries are an objectively necessary force in-universe, so who gives a shit if the movie pokes fun at them a little? What the fuck was anyone actually mad about other than the cringe Jungle Pussy scene which was like 3 minutes and had no greater importance to the rest of the movie
Fighting a war only on the weekends is genuinely so strange, I feel like that got hypernormalized in rapid time.
I got off work and came home to the sober living house, and found out the house director dropped off his cat to live with us because the people who were previously taking care of the cat were moving to California. This is the best news I’ve gotten in months, I fucking love cats, he’s such a sweet baby. We were taking care of someone’s dog when her owner was in rehab, but I’m dog neutral. She was a sweet dog with a great personality and very well trained, but after my childhood dog died I’ve never connected with another dog. Cats though? I love my cats. When I was with my ex, we had 3 cats. When I got hooked on fentanyl benzos and Ambien, I only stayed hooked for about 2-3 months because I felt so bad about being a bad step parent and cat parent. When I was going through those withdrawals, the only things I’d get out of bed for was to clean my cat’s litter boxes and feed them (the step kiddo was with his grandparents when I did this, otherwise I would have gotten out of bed for him too). I remember leaving my abusive ex at one point and I’d sneak back into the house while she was at work to clean their litter boxes and give them treats. Eventually I ended up getting back with her unfortunately, but those cats cared about me when it felt like nobody else would.
This is very new, previous policy was absolutely no pets at the sober living house. But after the president had a very close friend go to rehab, he loosened up on the policy for his friend’s dog. There was a street cat in our neighborhood that bonded itself to me and kept on trying to come into our house and I felt so bad not being able to accept that cat into my home. They wanted to be my baby so bad, and I wanted to love that cat so bad. I still feed the neighborhood cats with the canned tuna I get from food pantries when I have it. The other neighbors feed them as well though, so I guess I can start giving that canned tuna to my new baby.

Finally got the gas leak fixed in the sober living house, that was a horrible fucking week. I was sleeping on the front lawn for a few days.














