Aimé Césaire (1913-2008) - "Genocide by Substitution"

How the Far-Right Stole Aimé Césaire’s Communist Concept of “Genocide by Substitution”! (19.10.2025)

The far-right is essentially intellectually (and morally) dead in the water, but the far-left is prevented from effectively organising and delivering the coup de grace by a hostile bourgeois judicial system. This being the case, the far-right, whilst demonising the far-left, often steals leftist ideas and distorts them for its own deluded purposes. One such idea even a common observer of the far-right will encounter is that of the “Great Replacement” – a conspiracy theory which falsely suggests that White Europeans are being stealthily replaced by the mass immigration of non-White peoples. Various dates are given to perpetuate a false sense of urgency designed to compel far-right supporters to physically attack, hurt, and disturb anyone they deem “foreign”. The far-right blames “the Jews” for this fantasy – but what if I told you this theory in fact has its roots in the Black (Communist) fight against the White colonisation of non-White countries led by Aimé Césaire? The Jews are in fact one of the victims of this colonial policy worldwide – with what Israel is doing in Gaza being the exception.

This photo taken on Oct. 13, 2025 shows a monument set up in memory of fights against Japanese invasion on the Yanliao shore of southeast China's Taiwan. (Xinhua/Qi Xianghui)

Taiwan: “Silent” Monuments Commemorate Chinese Resistance [1895-1945] to Imperial Japanese Occupation! (19.10.2025)

The Japanese encountered the largest scale resistance in the mountainous Changhua County in central Taiwan. In August 1895, thousands of local militia gathered alongside remnants of the Qing army to resist the Japanese on a local hill named Baguashan.

They were outnumbered five to one and poorly armed but fought relentlessly for days, killing over 1,000 Japanese soldiers, including a general, before being overwhelmed. Fewer than 50 survived.

One of the leaders, Xu Xiang, left behind words that still stir the heart: “If this land falls, Taiwan is lost. I will not live to see the motherland again.”