Author Topic: The Communist Origins of the Antifa Extremist Group  (Read 76 times)

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Offline Fishrrman

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https://www.theepochtimes.com/opinion/the-communist-origins-of-the-antifa-extremist-group-3-post-5916901

The Communist Origins of the Antifa Extremist Group
by Joshua Phillipp
9/18/25


Members of the far-left Antifa extremist organization give a clenched fist salute on Sept. 1, 1928.
The group's original intent was to bring out a communist dictatorship in Germany.


The extremist anarchist-communist group Antifa is in the headlines because President Donald Trump announced he will be designating it as a terrorist organization.

The organization was initially part of the Soviet Union’s front operations to bring about communist dictatorship in Germany, and it worked to label all rival parties as “fascist.”

The organization can be traced to the “united front” of the Soviet Union’s Communist International (Comintern) during the Third World Congress in Moscow in June and July 1921, according to the German booklet “80 Years of Anti-Fascist Action” by Bernd Langer, published by the Association for the Promotion of Anti-Fascist Culture. Langer is a former member of the Autonome Antifa, formerly one of Germany’s largest Antifa organizations, which disbanded in 2004.

The Soviet Union was among the world’s most violent dictatorships, killing an estimated 20 million people, according to “The Black Book of Communism,” published by Harvard University Press. The Soviet regime is second only to the Chinese Communist Party under Mao Zedong, which killed an estimated 65 million people.

The idea of the united front strategy was to bring together left-wing organizations in order to incite communist revolution. The Soviets believed that, following Russia’s revolution in 1917, communism would next spread to Germany, since Germany had the second-largest communist party, the KPD (Communist Party of Germany).

It was at the Fourth World Congress of the Comintern in 1922 that the plan took shape. Moscow formed the slogan “To the Masses” for its united front strategy and sought to join together the various communist and workers’ parties of Germany under a single ideological banner that it controlled.

“The ‘unified front’ thus did not mean an equal cooperation between different organizations, but the dominance of the workers’ movement by the communists,” Langer writes.

Benito Mussolini, a Marxist and socialist who had been expelled from Italy’s Socialist Party in 1914 for his support for World War I, later founded the fascist movement as his own political party. He took power through his “March on Rome” in October 1922.

In Germany, Adolf Hitler became head of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party) in 1921 and mounted a coup attempt in 1923.

The KPD decided to use the banner of anti-fascism to form a movement. Langer notes, though, that to the KPD, the ideas of “fascism” and “anti-fascism” were “undifferentiated,” and the term “fascism” served merely as rhetoric meant to support their aggressive opposition.


The Unity Congress of Antifa, held at the Philharmonic Opera House in Berlin,
on July 10, 1932. The congress was organized by the Communist Party of Germany
as a rallying point to defeat the Social Democratic Party and the Nazi Party. Antifa
labeled both parties as "fascist," which was a political label they used for all rival parties.


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Online Smokin Joe

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Re: The Communist Origins of the Antifa Extremist Group
« Reply #1 on: Today at 12:31:52 pm »
Worth reading. :patriot:
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis