George Jackson, Blood in My Eye (London, 1972), p. 150.
2.
Sunday Mirror (20 October 1974).
3.
Ibid.
4.
Ibid.
5.
Jackson, op.cit., p. 155.
6.
Angela Davis, If They Come in the Morning (London, 1971), p. 153.
7.
Ibid, p. 191.
8.
Jackson, op.cit., p. 150.
9.
Ibid, p. 152.
10.
Davis, op.cit. p. 153.
11.
In Britain, we find the same limited notions of the fascist opposition in a recent analysis of the growth of the extreme right in Britain. The authors see the crushing of 'these small but growing fascist forces' as the struggle of 'the democratic forces' to prevent 'the erosion of even elementary democratic rights'. See A Well-Oiled Nazi Machine (London, 1974), p.16. See also, Roger Protz in Time Out (25-31 October 1974): 'Fascism ... can come to power only by ruthlessly exterminating parliamentary democracy and all forms of opposition' (p. 9).
12.
See Massimo Cacciari , 'Sul problema dell'organizzazione — Germania 1917-21', Introduction to G. Lukacs, Kommunismus 1920-21 ( Padova, 1972).
13.
Jackson, op.cit., p. 149.
14.
Ibid, p. 184.
15.
Stuart Holland , The State as Entrepreneur ( London, 1972), p. 1.