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The Revolutionary Logic of the General Strike

Wilfrid H. Crook

American Political Science Review, 1934, vol. 28, issue 4, 655-663

Abstract: Spanish and Cuban events during the past three years, and the recent labor disputes on the Pacific coast, have once again brought the general strike into the limelight. The abdication of King Alphonso and the flight of President Machado showed the potentialities of a successful general strike when labor faces the revolutionary logic of that weapon. The San Francisco débacle proved the futility of that method when labor refuses to admit its revolutionary implications.

Date: 1934
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