Word: imperialists
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...outlet for radical social thinking from Third World theologians. After Peru's Father Gustavo Gutiérrez produced his influential A Theology of Liberation in 1971, Orbis issued the English-language edition. Gutiérrez's most recent essay for Orbis blesses the class struggle and condemns "imperialist" corporations and "reformist" strategies of social change that forestall the revolution...
...bomb-pocked G.D.R. in 1948 with his mother Alma, half brother Stefan and stepfather Bodo Uhse, a highly acclaimed Socialist writer, Agee begins to observe with a foreigner's freshness. He remembers the early Iron Curtain: a chicken-wire fence in an old couple's garden, preventing imperialist rabbits of the British Zone from devouring the Voik's lettuce. He recalls the angst of a zealous Red poet when Khrushchev denounced Stalin: "In a fit of self-loathing he wished to be a lumberjack in some remote country like Norway. Very shortly after that, he was introduced...
...elsewhere. Why should we fan anti-Soviet paranoia by implying that only they commit "brazen and brutal" aggression, as in Afghanistan. In recent years the U.S. has intervened militarily in the Dominican Republic and in Viet Nam to impose governments favorable to us. We do not need a renewed imperialist image but a people-loving image...
...leave this enclave of wealthy white privilege. Here lies the reactionary hypocrisy of the Harvard administration: Marxists are "outside agitators" and "security risks" while real criminals like Brzezinski and Harold Brown--nuclear-armed cold-warriors who are genuine "security risks"--are welcome guests and paid to mouth their imperialist propaganda at Harvard. The Harvard administration may well despise the SYL for being communists, but the SYL will not tolerate harassment for the slanderous allegation that we are "criminals," "terrorists" or "security risks...
Despite their rhetoric, many Third World leaders recognize that the "imperialist" West is far better able than the "progressive" East bloc to help in their economic development. As decolonialization, like colonialism before it, fades in Third World memories, economic development may gradually replace armed struggle as the order of the day. Even Fidel Castro last year warned his proteges, the Sandinistas of Nicaragua, to beware of Cuba's mistake of mortgaging the country's economy to the U.S.S.R. in exchange for an ideological blessing, military aid and political support...