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(1 of 3 in initial sequence of episodes)

Today's the first of a new series examining the legacy of Trotskyism through a parapolitical lens, and to kick it off, we examine the life of Leon Trotsky. I'm joined by Comrade Chad to discuss Trotsky's early life and career through the Bolshevik revolution. Particularly of note are the activities of Trotsky's uncles, his revolutionary activities in France, and his interesting residency in New York City. 

Premium Episode 53 Songs:

Lev Bronstein by the Redskins

If I Were a Rich Man - Fiddler on the Roof

Bring It Down by the Redskins

Reds Strike the Blues by the Redskins

Chad’s sources:

Books:

Leon Trotsky's Collaboration with Germany & Japan

New Evidence of Trotsky's Conspiracy

Trotsky's 'Amalgams'

- Grover Furr

Stalin: The History and Critique of a Black Legend

- Domenico Losurdo

Lenin Collected Works Volumes 18-25, 35-38

- Lenin

My Life

The Revolution Betrayed

Programme of Peace

1905

- Leon Trotsky

articles:

LEON TROTSKY'S ADVENTURE IN AMERICAN RADICAL POLITICS. 1935-7 Author(s): M. S. VENKATARAMANI Source: International Review of Social History , 1964, Vol. 9, No. 1 (1964), pp. 1-46 Published by: Cambridge University Press

Trotsky, War Communism, and the Origin of the NEP Author(s): Thomas Remington Source: Studies in Comparative Communism, Vol. 10, No. 1/2 (Spring/Summer 1977), pp. 44-67

Trotsky in Mexico: Toward a History of His Informal Contacts with the U.S. Government, 1937-1940 William Chase Published as “Trotskii v Mekcike. K istorii ero neglasnykh kontaktov s pravitel'stvom SShA (1937-1940)” ("Trotsky in Mexico: Toward a History of His Informal Contacts with the U.S. Government, 1937-1940"), Otechestvenna

FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE IN THE USSR:

Jeffrey Burds The Soviet War against ‘Fifth Columnists’: The Case of Chechnya, 1942–4

THE GREAT TERROR: Polish-Japanese Connections Author(s): HIROAKI KUROMIYA and ANDRZEJ PEPŁOŃSKI Source: Cahiers du Monde russe , Octobre-décembre 2009, Vol. 50, No. 4 (Octobredécembre 2009), pp. 647-670

Trotskyism in Shanghai, 1929-1932: The Politics of Iconoclasm Author(s): Richard C. Kagan Source: Studies in Comparative Communism, Vol. 10, No. 1/2 (Spring/Summer 1977), pp. 87-108

Chen Duxiu and Leon Trotsky: New Light on Their Relationship Author(s): Peter Kuhfus Source: The China Quarterly , Jun., 1985, No. 102 (Jun., 1985), pp. 253-276

Jimmy’s sources:

cited specifically:

Wall Street and the Russian Revolution 1905 - 1925 by Richard Spence (particularly good)

Near and Distant Neighbors by Jonathan Haslam

An Impeccable Spy by Owen Matthews

the Arms of Krupp by William Manchester

Europe Central by William T. Vollmann

generally:

Grover Furr

Stalin: The History and Critique of a Black Legend by Domenico Losurdo

Stephen Kotkin's biographies of Stalin

Merch:

https://programmed-to-chill.myshopify.com/

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Comments

Anonymous

I’m a little less than an hour into this episode. While I dig it so far (like all of the podcast) I was disappointed to see Grover Furr listed as a repeated source. As a Maoist, I know that Trotsky was a putz and Trotskyism has never led to anything remotely resembling a revolution or significant revolutionary activity. As something of a historian, however, I find what I’ve read of Furr’s work to be sketchy at best, mainly in the way he uses sources and constructs his arguments. As best as I can tell, there aren’t any credible scholars or experts on Soviet history who hold him in high regard. Of course, there’s something to be said about anti-communist prejudice and institutional pressure in academia, but even more nuanced historians of the Stalin era like J. Getty don’t vouch for Furr.

Rafał Gałczyński

Read Preparata Conjuring Hitler. He basically implies the same. Moreover, there is a question of Lenin and his millieu being financed by the German intelligence and being transported at a crucial point to Petersburg by train secured and sealed by the Germans. Ironically, the German officer responsible for that operation was killed by NKWD in Lubianka around 1947. His name was Walter Nicolai. The money for the Bolsheviks was moved through shell companies set up in Denmark by Parvus and Yakov Hanecki/Fürstenberg. There is a book about it on Scribd called The Northern Underground. It is also worth looking into Parvus biography published in the sixties. It is really really interesting. Yet, there is relatively little information about his stay in Turkey. Curiously, the creator of the Thule Society Rudolf von Sebottendorf was in Turkey at the same time. They both were somehow involved in the networks connected with the Young Turks movement, but I doubt they ever met.