Long live the redactionists!
Hello comrades.
We have much in common; look at my blog – an appropriate
socialist red – just like yours.
I am a trifle disappointed that the comments per above are
closed as soon as they were open: sadly I was not quick enough to lodge any
salient comments.
Indeed – your wonderful censors redacted the
original comments: even though it is an improvement on the airbrushing of Uncle
Joe’s era – it still strikes me as inelegant.
It took me ages [one minute] to find your email
address. Why not openly publish it?
You could airbrush / redact comments that are inimical to the
interest of the communist clique.
I am confident that your comments on the conference could
have rivalled Comrade Castro’s 10 hour speeches.
But it worries me that the enemies of the proletariat will
think that freedom of speech of our comrades are a mere sop to what Lenin
unkindly called USEFUL IDIOTS!
You have to anticipate this, comrade – and defend our noble
NKVD.
That evokes a disparate idea....
Those were the times, comrades. No one would have dared to
implicitly criticise you for writing about a conference that will not be till
FEBRUARY! Why – even Kosygin / Brezhnev would have airbrushed implied critics
from this world.
LINK:
LINK:
Now you have to put up with people not even bothering to read
your redactions. Castro would have reasonably pointed out that all responses
should have been published – and he would have made sure that they were
appropriate.
I guess your resources are limited.
Sigh!
UP THE WORKERS – LONG LIVE THE PROLETARIAT!!
Geoff Seidner
East St Kilda 3183
Melbourne Australia
Email of Socialist Unity
ON THE CRISIS IN THE SWP
7 January, 2013 SWP CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT – DISPUT...
Definition of SOP
1
chiefly dialect : a piece of food dipped or steeped in a liquid
2
: a conciliatory or propitiatory bribe, gift, or gesture
Examples of SOP
- <as a sop to the teachers' union for supporting his reelection campaign, the mayor promised to push for the abolition of the residency requirement>
Origin of SOP
Middle English soppe, from Old English sopp; akin to Old English sÅ«pan to swallow — more at sup
First Known Use: before 12th century
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