John Spargo
John Spargo was a British political writer who, later in life, became an expert in the history and crafts of Vermont. At first Spargo was active in the Socialist Party of America. A Methodist preacher he tried to meld the Protestant Social Gospel with Marxist socialism in Marxian Socialism and Religion: A Study of the Relation of the Marxian Theories to the Fundamental Principles of Religion (1915). He also founded a settlement house in Yonkers, N.Y. Spargo moved steadily to the right after 1917 when he supported American intervention in World War I. With AFL leader Samuel Gompers he organized the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy in 1917. Spargo helped draft the Colby Note that formalised the Wilson administration's anti-communist policies. He strongly denounced the Bolshevik Revolution in Bolshevism: The Enemy of Political and Industrial Democracy (1919). He opposed the foreign policy of the New Deal, especially its recognition of the USSR in 1933. He supported the House Un-American Activities Committee in the late 1930s and Senator Joseph McCarthy in the early 1950s. He endorsed Barry Goldwater In the 1964 Elections.
"The Greatest Failure in All History" / A Critical Examination of the Actual Workings of Bolshevism in Russia
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Bolshevism: The Enemy of Political and Industrial Democracy
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Socialism: A Summary and Interpretation of Socialist Principles
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The Bitter Cry of the Children
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The Common Sense of Socialism / A Series of Letters Addressed to Jonathan Edwards, of Pittsburg
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The Jew and American Ideals
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The Marx He Knew
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