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Bulletins and News Discussion from June 30th to July 6th, 2025 - Alas, Poor Boric - COTW: Chile

Image is sourced from this People's Dispatch article, depicting communists attending the 2023 funeral of Communist Party President Guillermo Teillier, who was tortured for years under Pinochet's regime and helped rebuild the Communist Party while under a fascist dictatorship.


We had the Six Day War in 1967, we had the Nineteen Day War (Yom Kippur) in 1973, and now we've had the Twelve Day War. I wonder how many more very short wars will plague the region until Palestine is freed?

However, moving on from Western Asia from a little while, we have some interesting news from Chile - the former labor minister and communist, Jeannette Jara, has won the primary election for the left-wing bloc in a landslide (~60% of the vote), as the current President, Gabriel Boric, is term-limited. Her achievements include a minimum wage increase and a reduction of the work week to 40 hours.

In November, Jara will face down the contenders from other parties, including José Antonio Kast, who is analogous to Brazil's Bolsonaro. Unfortunately, Jara is now the lead figure of a party that has been taking quite a few Ls under Boric's leadership. Ostensibly a Democratic Socialist, he ruled as - you guessed it - a neoliberal, bending the knee to the US and EU. He not only failed to overthrow the Pinochet-era constitution, he actually allowed the right-wing to turn the proposed new constitution into something worse, and had to settle for campaigning against the new one and keeping the old one. And he had very little solidarity with other left-leaning leaders on the continent, like Maduro, Lula, Petro, or Castillo.

With this in mind, I cannot help but look at Argentina's very recent history and feel a little dread - but if anybody can save Chile at this point, it can only be a communist.


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1.3K comments
  • 504,000 people attended the concert of ustashe nazi sympathiser Thompson in Zagreb, Croatia. 13% of the entire country.

    • Rejecting or otherwise abandoning communism always leads to nazism. No exceptions.

    • We’re gonna need a bigger pit

      • We're going to need a war. How else do you deal with this many? Only option I see is grinding them out through the frontlines of some god forsaken war.

    • Could be just cope, but the word is, it was nowhere near 500k. That might be the number of tickets they sold, but not that many showed up, in fact, many were selling their tickets prior to concert for half price. What is certain is, that many came from Croatian diaspora and neighbouring extremely reactionary Herzegovina. There will certainly be a lot of talk about these numbers in Croatian media in the coming days.

      The capital city of Zagreb, downtown in particular, is one of the more leftist places in Croatia. Zagreb is currently run by the ex-activist libs, who immediately capitulated to organizers who insisted on one fascist grandiose concert (ofc) instead of several smaller ones.

      So call it cope, but I seriously doubt it was "13% of country", since infamously Nazi Croatian diaspora almost certainly came in huge numbers.

    • Here's machine translated and excellent article from a Marxist Croatian politician on a very popular Croatian lib portal, who had some actual success in politics, about the songs that were sung on this concert...

      AFTER calling for a ban on Marko Perković Thompson's concert at the Zagreb Hippodrome, Workers' Front president and former parliamentarian Katarina Peović took to Facebook to list Thompson's songs that she finds objectionable.

      Below we present her announcement:

      "Is it true that Thompson promotes national, religious and racial intolerance?"

      'Say, my brother'

      Does anything more need to be said about Thompson than to remember his song 'Say, my brother' which he sings with Škora in which there is a line 'but God forbid, so that they need us, the thick fog will descend again' which is a reference to the Ustasha song ‘Spustila se gusta magla iznad Zagreba’ which reads 'it was not the thick fog above Zagreb, but the brave army of Poglavnik’?

      The song to which Thompson refers celebrates Ante Pavelić 'Poglavnik' ('Poglavnik gave them the name of the brave Ustaše'), the battle for Kupres ('a thick fog descended above Kupres') in which many partisans died in 1942, and celebrates the Ustasha Rafael Boban and the Black Legion ('the leader was the knight Boban, a real Ustaša', 'Poglavnik gave them the name of the Black Legija') whose units beat prisoners with clubs, stuck needles under their nails, ordered them to lick the floor and salt, were killed, robbed. Thompson celebrates the regime that had a children's concentration camps.

      'Pukni puško'

      Thompson's song 'Pukni puško' from 1998 is a dedication to the Ustasha anthem and vigil 'Puška puca' which reads 'The gun shoots and the cannon roars, thunders like thunder, Now the Ustasha soldier is fighting for the Croatian home'.

      'Spicy grass on a spicy wound'

      'Spicy grass on a spicy wound' is a 1995 song by Poglavnik Ante Pavelić, the motto under which the Ustasha were founded, ultranationalists in World War II responsible for genocide against Jews, Serbs, Roma and Croats who were their political opponents [aka communists].

      'Jasenovac and Gradiška Stara'

      Around 2003, Thompson was [unofficially] recorded singing the slaughter song 'Jasenovac and Gradiška Stara' in front of an audience. The song reads 'Jasenovac and Gradiška Stara is the house of Maks's butchers'! ["Maks Luburic" was Ustaše official who headed the system of concentration camps. This is an especially sickening song as it literally describes in detail slaughter of Serbs and revels in it.]

      'Geni kameni'

      The song celebrates the Ustashas and denies the anti-fascist struggle. The lyrics in the song read 'The 45th was bad, It scattered us across the world. And now a new vine is growing, The swallows have returned home'. The song also contains the racist line '...blue blood, white face, new children are being born...'.

      'Bojna Čavoglave'

      'Bojna Čavoglave' greets with the Ustasha salute 'For the homeland ready' which the HOS members themselves associated with the Ustashas and the Ustasha movement.

      'Lijepa li si'

      'Lijepa li si' from 1998 is a memory of the borders from Croatia that it had during NDH. Thompson dedicates it to Herceg-Bosna, Mati Boban, the creator of Herceg-Bosna – an artificial state that sought to establish a Croatian territorial unit in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which was an attempt at Croatian separatism ended with the Dayton Agreement and the establishment of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, under international pressure.

      'Pictures of Bleiburg'

      The song from 2025 equates the Ustashas with the Croatian army and the entire people, even though the majority of the Croatian people joined the Partisans and were on the winning side in World War II.

      'My Ivana'

      The song from 2017 is a dedication to the Ustasha units in the Battle of Kupres in 1942, in which many Partisans who defended the homeland and fought against Nazi collaborators were killed. The lyrics read 'That damned fate took Ivana away from us, took her from Kupres, near the white world. Only one strong desire remained, to sing the song of the hero of Kupres.'"

    • Clearly Tito didn't go hard enough, there was plenty of room remaining when they closed off the pits.

    • vaporize europe

1329 comments