Marxists Internet Archive: Israel Amter

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Israel Amter

March 26, 1881 – November 24, 1954



Works:

1919: An Answer to Moses Oppenheimer: Letter to the Editor of the New York Call, April 25, 1919

1921: May Day of Revolution [UCP leaflet written by Israel Amter] [circa April 25, 1921]
1921: The Workers' League Campaign

1922: Unemployment No Longer Exists
1922: Letter to D. Ivon Jones, re: Negro Question (Discussion in Comintern Anglo-American Group Meeting 10th May 1922)
1922: The Police on Parade in New York, The Worker, May 27, 1922
1922: Theses on the Relations of No. 1 [the CPA] and 2 [the LPP] [with Abram Jarika]
1922: Official Hypocrisy, The Worker, October 21, 1922
1922: Force and Violence
1922: The Socialist Party and the Second and the Second and a Half Internationals, The Worker, October 29, 1922
1922: Fiasco of Fake Labor Party in New York, The Worker, December 9, 1922

1923: Sidelights on the Cleveland Conference [for Progressive Political Action], The Worker, January 6, 1923
1923: Soviet Russia: Safe or Unsafe?
1923: The Workers Party - A Communist Party, The Worker, January 20, 1923
1923: The Communist International Is Against Mass Emigration to Soviet Russia, The Worker, January 27, 1923
1923: American Workers and Russian Needs, The Worker, February 3, 1923
1923: Inviting Debs to Soviet Russia: Letter from Israel Amter in Moscow to the Presidium of the Comintern, March 9, 1923.
1923: Political Progress in the United States, International Press Correspondence, March 15, 1923
1923: Report to the Comintern on the United States, Up to March 20, 1923. [Selections]
1923: Proletarian Forces in the United States, International Press Correspondence, March 22, 1923
1923: Labor Party Movement in the United States, International Press Correspondence, April 5, 1923
1923: They Are Hungry in Berlin, Part I;, Part II, The Worker, April 7 and 14, 1923
1923: The Workers' Party of America, International Press Correspondence, April 19, 1923
1923: Communism on Trial in the U.S.A., International Press Correspondence, April 26, 1923
1923: Bukharin Makes Impressive Speech at 25th Anniversary Celebration of Russian Communist Party, The Worker, May 5, 1923
1923: Letter No. 13 to the Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party of America in New York from Israel Amter in Moscow, May 16, 1923.
1923: Profits, Mergers and Trust Busting in the U.S.A., International Press Correspondence, May 24, 1923
1923: The Way Russian Workers Do It, The Worker, May 26, 1923
1923: Growing Poverty in Germany, The Worker, June 2, 1923
1923: Oil, International Press Correspondence, June 7, 1923
1923: Speech at the 4th Day Session of the Third Enlarged Plenum, ECCI, [June 1923] International Press Correspondence, June 22, 1923
1923: Speech at the 6th Day Session of the Third Enlarged Plenum, ECCI, [June 1923] International Press Correspondence, July 12, 1923
1923: Speech at the 10th Day Session of the Third Enlarged Plenum, ECCI, [June 1923] International Press Correspondence, July 12, 1923
1923: Report on the 3rd Enlarged Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Communist International (Held in Moscow, June 12-23, 1923)
1923: The Fascisti in America, International Press Correspondence, June 14, 1923
1923: Pan Americanism - Two Conferences, International Press Correspondence, June 21, 1923
1923: Big Problems Facing Party in Russia Met, The Worker, June 23, 1923
1923: Russia Still Needs Our Help
1923: Report to the Comintern on the United States: From May 10 to July 25, 1923. [Selections]
1923: The Federated Farmer-Labour Party of the United States, The Communist International, Vol. 1, No. 28, 1923
1923: Letter No. 16 to the Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party of America in New York from Israel Amter in Moscow, June 26, 1923
1923: On Louis C. Fraina: An Excerpt from Israel Amter’s Letter No. 17 from Moscow to the Central Executive Committee, WPA, in New York. July 5, 1923.
1923: The Soviet Air Force, International Press Correspondence, July 26, 1923
1923: Twelve Hours a Day in American Industry, International Press Correspondence, August 2, 1923
1923: The Death of President Harding, International Press Correspondence, August 16, 1923
1923: The Defeat of England and America in the Ruhr, International Press Correspondence, September 6, 1923
1923: The American Labor Yearbook 1921-1922, International Press Correspondence, September 13, 1923
1923: Recognition of Soviet Russia as an Issue in the United States, International Press Correspondence, October 4, 1923
1923: "Shoot to Kill", International Press Correspondence, October 18, 1923
1923: Report to the Comintern on the United States: Up to October 20, 1923. [Selections]
1923: A Serious Task for World's Workers, The Worker, October 27, 1923
1923: The Black Victims of Imperialism
1923: The International of the Peasants and Farmers, International Press Correspondence, November 1, 1923
1923: Without Youth, No Revolution, The Young Worker, November 1923
1923: Opening the All-Russian Agricultural Exhibition
1923: America and the Recognition of Soviet Russa, International Press Correspondence, December 29, 1923

1924: Not for America Alone [on the Daily Worker], Daily Worker Supplement, January 26, 1924
1924: America and the Recognition of Soviet Russa, International Press Correspondence, February 7, 1924
1924: Third Convention of the Workers Party of America, International Press Correspondence, February 28, 1924
1924: America and the Rehabilitation of Europe, Communist International, No. 30, 1924
1924: The World-Wide Significance of International Red Relief, International Press Correspondence, March 13, 1924
1924: Oil in American Politics, International Press Correspondence, March 27, 1924
1924: Remembering That We Are Communists, April 15, 1924
1924: Two Anecdotes, The Young Worker May 15, 1924
1924: Where Does La Follette Stand?, Daily Worker May 23, 1924
1924: Support the International Red Aid, Daily Worker June 11, 1924
1924: The American Communists and La Follette, International Press Correspondence, June 12, 1924
1924: Class Lines among the American Negroes, International Press Correspondence, June 19, 1924
1924: The Day of Social-Democracy, Daily Worker June 20, 1924
1924: Speech at the 14th Session of the Fifth World Congress of the Communist International, International Press Correspondence, July 24, 1924
1924: Confidence in American Party, Says Zinoviev. Rebukes Amter on American Question, Daily Worker July 23, 1924
1924: Speech at the 22nd Session of the Fifth World Congress of the Communist International, [on the Negro Question] International Press Correspondence, July 26, 1924
1924: Speech at the 25nd Session of the Fifth World Congress of the Communist International, [on the agrarian problem] International Press Correspondence, August 5, 1924
1924: First World Conference of International Red Relief, International Press Correspondence, July 31, 1924
1924: Big Anti-War Meetings in Kiev, Russia, Daily Worker August 29, 1924
1924: Famine Reports in Soviet Russia, Daily Worker October 8, 1924
1924: The Elections in the United States, International Press Correspondence, October 9, 1924
1924: German Entry to League Stirs Diplomatic Pot, Daily Worker October 14, 1924
1924: The Decline of Capitalism and the Rise of Sovietism, Daily Worker November 17, 1924
1924: Do the Elections Promise Prosperity?, Daily Worker November 20, 1924
1924: The Communist International and the Farmer-Labor Party, Daily Worker December 15, 1924
1924: Do the American Elections Promise Prosperity?, International Press Correspondence, December 18, 1924

1925: They Are Making It Unanimous, Daily Worker, January 3, 1925
1925: Open Letter to Comrade Foster, Daily Worker, January 5, 1925
1925: The Membership Meeting in New York, Daily Worker, January 6, 1925
1925: Loreism in the Workers Party, Daily Worker, January 7, 1925
1925: Uniting the Farmers of the World for Victory Against Capitalism, Daily Worker, January 12, 1925
1925: When Lenin Was Buried, Daily Worker, January 19, 1925
1925: Krupskaja, Daily Worker, January 20, 1925
1925: In the Villages When Lenin Died, Daily Worker, January 22, 1925
1925: Discussion in the American Party, International Press Correspondence, January 22, 1925
1925: Was Lenin a Russian?, Daily Worker, February 1, 1925
1925: Mr. Abramovitch Comes to Town, International Press Correspondence, February 11, 1925
1925: The Paris Commune and the Russian Revolution, Daily Worker, March 10, 1925
1925: American Capitalism's Attempt to Corrupt the Negro Worker, International Press Correspondence, April 29, 1925
1925: "All Men Are Born Free and Equal", Daily Worker, July 11, 1925
1925: Comrade Lassen Hungarian Red Fighter Dies, Daily Worker, July 21, 1925
1925: Some of the Advantages, Daily Worker, August 20, 1925
1925: Cleveland Membership Meeting for C.E.C., Daily Worker, October 9, 1925
1925: What Will We Gain from Reorganization?, Daily Worker, November 4, 1925
1925: Dawes Plan Will Cut Steel Workers' Wages; Only Left Wing Program Can Aid Them, Daily Worker, November 25, 1925
1925: Workers' Clubs, Daily Worker, December 10, 1925
1925: Professors To Be Ousted from Ohio University, Daily Worker, December 29, 1925

1926: What Our Daily Worker Campaign Means, Daily Worker, January 20, 1926
1926: Fingerprint All Workers, Is Ohio Senator's Goal, Daily Worker, January 30, 1926
1926: Is Our Trade Union Work Important?, Daily Worker, February 25, 1926
1926: The Negro Workers and "Equal Rights and Justice" Under Capitalism, Daily Worker, March 2, 1926
1926: The Campaign Against the Foreign Born, Daily Worker, March 4, 1926
1926: The Fight Against the Soft Coal Miners Begins, Daily Worker, March 23, 1926
1926: Steel Workers! Organize to Fight Tighe, Tool of Bosses! Do Not Let Amalgamated Association Be Split!, Daily Worker, April 3, 1926
1926: Shop Bulletins - The Nerves of Shop Nuclei, Daily Worker, April 13, 1926
1926: Communism Becoming an Issue in Cleveland, Daily Worker, April 17, 1926
1926: May Day in the Rubber Industry, Daily Worker, May 1, 1926
1926: How Shall We Gain Members for the Party?, Daily Worker, July 10, 1926
1926: What Is Coming in the Rubber Industry?, Daily Worker, July 15, 1926
1926: Coal Miners Face Open Shop War, Daily Worker, August 18, 1926
1926: Cleveland Painters Fight the Open Shop; Building Employers United But Unionists Are Divided, Daily Worker, August 23, 1926
1926: Socialist-Labor Party Stands with Socialists in Cleveland Against United Labor Ticket, Daily Worker, September 1, 1926
1926: What the Daily Worker Means, Daily Worker, October 3, 1926
1926: Rubber Barons Run Close Race with Ford in Exploiting Men to Supply Tires for Flivvers, Daily Worker, October 8, 1926
1926: The Rubber Industry - Infant Prodigy, Workers Monthly, November 1926
1926: The Situation of the Rubber Workers, Workers Monthly, December 1926

1927: How Near Are We to War?, Daily Worker, February 10, 1927
1927: Thousands Mourn Ruthenberg at the Memorial Meeting in Chicago, Daily Worker, March 7, 1927

1928: The Ohio Governor's Appeal, Daily Worker, January 24, 1928
1928: The Daily Worker and the Membership Drive, Daily Worker, February 11, 1928
1928: Milk Bottle in One Hand; Rifle in the Other, Daily Worker, February 25, 1928
1928: What is the Natural Sentiment for a Labor Party?, Daily Worker, April 25, 1928
1928: Imperialist Powers Preparing for War, Daily Worker, May 12, 1928
1928: Imperialist Powers Prepare for War on the U.S.S.R., Daily Worker, May 15, 1928
1928: The Election Drive Is a Party Test, Daily Worker, July 10, 1928
1928: "Peaceful" Manifestations of American Imperialism, Daily Worker, July 23, 1928
1928: Canton Steel Strike Significant Part I; Part II, Daily Worker, August 30, 31, 1928
1928: How "Socialist" Party Has "Developed", Daily Worker, August 31, 1928
1928: Even Maurer Means Nothing, Daily Worker, September 9, 1928
1928: "Peace" in the Ohio Coal Fields, Daily Worker, September 20, 1928
1928: Putting Ohio Ticket on Ballot, Daily Worker, October 13, 1928
1928: What the Canton Steel Strike Means, Labor Unity, October 1928
1928: Some Mayors I Have Met in United States, Daily Worker, November 14, 1928

1929: Special Significance in May Day This Year for American Workers, Daily Worker, May 1, 1929
1929: A Letter from the Cleveland District Organizer on the Comintern Address, Daily Worker, May 30, 1929
1929: What Does the Comintern Address Mean?, Daily Worker, June 26, 1929
1929: The Daily Worker Must and Can Be Saved!, Daily Worker, July 13, 1929
1929: Trade Union Unity Congress, Daily Worker, August 20, 1929
1929: Building a Communist Party, Daily Worker, September 9, 1929
1929: On the Ohio Front, Labor Defender, December 1929
1929: "Walk-Out Has Employers' Sanction", Daily Worker, December 19, 1929
1929: The Crisis Grows Sharper, Daily Worker, December 30, 1929

1930: Three Smashing Defeats for the Opportunist Renegades, Daily Worker, January 6, 1930
1930: The New Dues System, Daily Worker, January 10, 1930
1930: New York Workers in Big Struggles, Daily Worker, January 11, 1930
1930: A Leninist Line in New York Struggles, Daily Worker, January 18, 1930
1930: How They Lie!, Daily Worker, January 28, 1930
1930: The Fascists Mobilizing Against the Communists, Daily Worker, February 18, 1930
1930: Acute Danger of Armed Attack on the Soviet Union, Daily Worker, February 20, 1930
1930: Jobless Have Only Rights They Fight For, Daily Worker, March 6, 1930
1930: Working Class Education to Train Organizers, Daily Worker, April 12, 1930
1930: What Must Be Done?, [written in Tombs Prison] Daily Worker, April 16, 1930
1930: Working Class Leaders the Need of the Hour, [written in Tombs Prison] Daily Worker, April 19, 1930
1930: Fascist Hoover's Conception of Leadership Part I; Part II; Part III, [written in Tombs Prison] Daily Worker, April 22, 23, 24, 1930
1930: Jailed Leader Calls for Mass Circulation Drive, [written in Prison] Daily Worker, April 28, 1930
1930: "Take Note for May Day," Writes I. Amter from Prison, [written in Prison] Daily Worker, April 29, 1930
1930: Building the Trade Union Unity League, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, May 6, 1930
1930: They Ask "Real" Justice, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, May 10, 1930
1930: The So-Called "Left" Social-Fascists, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, May 15, 1930
1930: A Letter from Prison, Daily Worker, May 26, 1930
1930: Not Only Self-Criticism But Also Self-Correction!, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, June 2, 1930
1930: They Will Investigate the Communist Party, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, June 13, 1930
1930: New Fake Solution of Negro Problems, Daily Worker, June 20, 1930
1930: "Peace Increases Throughout the World", [written in Jail] Daily Worker, June 24, 1930
1930: Charity and Unemployed, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, June 27, 1930
1930: Our Propaganda in the Election Campaign, [written in Jail] Daily Worker, July 4, 1930
1930: American Engineers Form "Shock Brigade" in U.S.S.R., [written in Jail] Daily Worker, July 8, 1930
1930: August 1- Day of Workers' Struggle Against War, Daily Worker, August 1, 1930
1930: A New Wave of Terror Against the American Negroes, International Press Correspondence, August 14, 1930
1930: A $600,000,000 Budget for New York, Daily Worker, August 27, 1930
1930: Negro Workers, Know Your Party!, Daily Worker, August 29, 1930
1930: Jobless Facing Winter!, Labor Defender, September 1930
1930: Workers' Savings Gone, Daily Worker, September 3, 1930
1930: So They "Study" Unemployment and War Danger, Daily Worker, September 5, 1930
1930: Negroes in the Soviet Union and in U.S.A., Daily Worker, September 11, 1930
1930: What Has Millionaire Hilquit to Do with Socialism?, Daily Worker, September 15, 1930
1930: Support the "Working Woman", Daily Worker, September 18, 1930
1930: "Socialist" Unemployment Insurance is Strikebreaking, Daily Worker, September 20, 1930
1930: Why is the Socialist Platform Silent on Wage-Cutting?, Daily Worker, September 22, 1930
1930: Socialists Support Fascist A.F. of L. Policies and Methods, Daily Worker, September 30, 1930
1930: Women with Babies in Their Arms Ask for Shelter; Many Jobless Committing Suicide, Daily Worker, October 2, 1930
1930: "Socialist" Platform Stand for "Good" Injunctions, Daily Worker, October 3, 1930
1930: The "Socialist" Platform Wants More Prisons, Daily Worker, October 7, 1930
1930: "Socialist" Party Throttles Youth and Women Demands, Daily Worker, October 15, 1930
1930: "Socialist" Party TBetrays Poor Farmers and Farm Workers, Daily Worker, October 21, 1930
1930: Chinese Soviets Where Canton Did Not Succeed, Daily Worker, November 17, 1930
1930: Acute Danger of Imperialist War, Daily Worker, November 18, 1930
1930: Hoover Asks for Peace, Daily Worker, November 20, 1930
1930: Comrade I. Amter, District 2, New York Appeals for $30,000 Daily Worker Fund, Daily Worker, December 20, 1930

1931: Workers Center Must Be Built Up!, Daily Worker, January 1, 1931
1931: Fighting Functionaries - the Need of the Hour, Daily Worker, January 5, 1931
1931: Have the Units of the Party Made the Turn?, Daily Worker, January 7, 1931
1931: Starvation, War Danger, Intervention in U.S.S.R., Daily Worker, January 19, 1931
1931: Two Fake Insurance Bills Before N.Y. Legislature, Daily Worker, January 22, 1931
1931: Liebknecht, Luxemburg - Working Class Leaders, Daily Worker, January 23, 1931
1931: Urge Mass Support for Hunger March Tag Days Sat. and Sun., Daily Worker, January 30, 1931
1931: Strike Lessons to be Learned, Daily Worker, February 10, 1931
1931: Negro Women in Industry, Daily Worker, March 4, 1931
1931: Significance of the Yokinen Trial, Daily Worker, March 9, 1931
1931: The Wobbly Solution for Unemployment, Daily Worker, April 14, 1931
1931: Daily Worker - Best May Day Organizer, Daily Worker, April 18, 1931
1931: Hunger Marches Part I; Part II, Daily Worker, April 16, 21, 1931
1931: May Day in New York, Daily Worker, May 1, 1931
1931: Racketeering - A Capitalist Government Institution Part I; Part II; Part III; Part IV, Daily Worker, April 27, May 7, 8, 11, 1931
1931: Party Life: Don't Abuse the Worker Who Doesn't Agree with You!, Daily Worker, May 21, 1931
1931: The Daily Worker Must be Saved - Raise the $35,000!, Daily Worker, May 27, 1931
1931: National Youth Day - Next Step to the Spartakiad, Daily Worker, May 27, 1931
1931: Party Life: Build Where You Work, Daily Worker, June 5, 1931
1931: Rabbi Waldman and the Pope's Encyclical, Daily Worker, June 22, 1931
1931: Party Life: Revolutionary Competition, Daily Worker, June 23, 1931
1931: To Mass Work Among the Young Workers, Daily Worker, July 6, 1931
1931: "Purely a Money Dispute", Daily Worker, July 13, 1931
1931: Allentown Lines Up for the Fight Against the U.T.W. Misleaders, Daily Worker, July 22, 1931
1931: Workers Solidarity Against Collaboration with Bosses, Daily Worker, August 22, 1931
1931: Better Preparation of the Party for Strike Struggles, Daily Worker, October 2, 1931
1931: The Citizens Union Endorses the Socialists, Daily Worker, October 16, 1931
1931: Spread "The Liberator", Daily Worker, October 22, 1931
1931: Workers Against Bosses! For Unemployment Insurance! Against Wage Cuts, Bosses' War!, Daily Worker, November 3, 1931
1931: Hunger March Will Expose Capitalist Fakery, Daily Worker, November 5, 1931
1931: Amter Calls for Big Hunger March to Hit Woll's Attack, Daily Worker, November 27, 1931
1931: The Workers Want the Daily, Daily Worker, December 26, 1931