:41:02
...wins a prize.
:41:07
Comrade Durruti...
:41:09
The readers of the New York
Herald would like to know...
:41:13
...if the anarchists...
:41:15
...act on government orders...
:41:17
...or if they are
in confrontation with it.
:41:22
Fascism must be
stamped out forever.
:41:24
If necessary,
in spite of the government.
:41:28
Perhaps, some day soon...
:41:30
...this government may need
the rebel forces...
:41:32
...to destroy the workers'
movement.
:41:36
We fight for the revolution.
We expect help from no one.
:41:40
We'll show you Russian Bolsheviks
how to make a revolution.
:41:43
There is dictatorship
in your country.
:41:46
There are colonels and generals
in the Red Army...
:41:49
...while my column has
no leaders and no subordinates.
:41:53
We all have equal rights.
We are all soldiers.
:41:56
I too am a simple soldier.
:41:58
The men in your column...
:42:00
...are accused of having
fallen into disorder.
:42:02
Chaos, some say.
:42:04
Professional soldiers have
trouble being respected.
:42:07
What do you say?
:42:09
The bourgeoisie always tend
to identify freedom with chaos.
:42:13
We have organized enthusiasm,
not obedience.
:42:17
Every man and woman...
:42:18
...is responsible to themselves
and to the rest.
:42:21
That is our strength.
:42:23
We, the workers, are destined
to inherit the earth.
:42:26
It will undoubtedly be
a very expensive triumph.
:42:30
You will rest
on a pile of ruins.
:42:33
We are not afraid of ruins.
:42:35
Workers built the palaces and
cities of Spain and America.
:42:39
We can do it again.
:42:40
The bourgeoisie can destroy
their world...
:42:43
...before abandoning
history's stage...
:42:46
...but we have a new world
in our hearts...
:42:49
...a world that is growing
every moment.
:42:52
It's growing while
I talk to you.