Page:Raymond Augustine McGowan - Bolshevism in Russia and America (1920).pdf/25

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Bolshevism in Russia and America
25

Bolshevik Russia, by its disregard of property rights, its subjection of religion, and the profligacy of its marriage laws, has offended grievously against the moral law. Bolshevik Russia has confiscated property at its convenience. It has placed the practice of religion at the discretion of men who hate religion, fear it, and despise it as superstition. And finally, Bolshevik Russia has blasted away the foundations of marriage, family, and the home; if has dealt a death blow at social and individual we1fare.

The chief books on Bolshevism in Russia used in this pamphlet are the following:

Ten Days That Shook the World, by John Reed. New York: Boni and Liveright.

Bolshevik Russia, by Etienne Autonelli. New York: Alfred Knopf.

The Constitution of Soviet Russia and other documents, published in The Nation, New York City.

Russia in 1919, by Arthur Ransome. New York: B. W. Huebsch,

Articles by Lincoln Eyre in the New York World.

The Soviets at Work, by N. Lenin. Rand School Book Co.

The Proletarian Revolution in Russia, by N. Lenin and Leon Trotzky. Edited by Louis C. Fraina. New York: The Communist Press.

Bolshevism, by John Spargo. New York: Harper and Brothers.