Full text: https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/neither-lord-nor-subject
Pao Ching-yen (zh:鮑敬言) (also transliterated as Bao Jingyan) was a Chinese Taoist libertarian philosopher who lived 405-466 AD.
A successor of Laozi and Zhuang Zhou in the politically-ethically libertarian strain of Taoism, Pao Ching-yen was, according to Etienne Balazs “China’s first political anarchist.” He extended the arguments in the Zhuangzi to deeply critique State authority and power.
Anarchist Taoist emblem courtesy of kronik29, you can find more of their work here: https://www.deviantart.com/kronik29/art/Anarcho-taoist-Emblem-140709637
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 34 - A Bolshevik Trial
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 33 - Dark People
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 32 - Odessa, Life and Vision
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 31 - The Tcheka
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 30 - In Various Walks
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 29 - Kiev
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 28 - Fastov the Pogromed
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 27 - Further South
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 26 - Prison and Concentration Camp
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 25 - Nestor Makhno
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 24 - Yossif the Emigrant
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 23 - In Soviet Institutions
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 22 - First Days in Kharkov
The Bolshevik Myth Chapter 21 - Enroute to the Ukraina
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 20 - Other People
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 19 - The Spirit of Fanaticism
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 18 - The British Labor Mission
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 17 - The First of May
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 16 - Rest Homes for Workers
The Bolshevik Myth, Chapter 15 - Back in Petrograd
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