====> .:ANH 2: Vô Đối!!!!:. <====

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t có một thắc mắc nho nhỏ thế này, tại sao lại gọi là chi porn??
tại đang xem bucket lớp mình thấy có hẳn 1 folder chi porn :))
 
Câu này hồi xưa trố cũng hỏi zoi` thì fai :))
folder í zo kều lập đấy :">
 
ơ kều trả lời hay nhể :))
cái hỏi thì ko trả lời
cái ko hỏi thì trả lời
:))
 
:-j thế thì mới gọi là kều

chi porn năm ngoài học địa 0407 nhưg mà ko apply đc nên đành quay về vào A2 [-x ham mê sex và các hoạt động xxx nên gọi là chi porn:))=))
 
hoặc có thể gọi chệch đi là chi pông
dự đoán là sau 1 2 năm nữa nổi tiếng ko kém maria ozawa =))
 
Con giời nào vừa đụng đến Maria Ozawa của lòng anh thế :x
Đùa thật ra con gái cứ có nét lai tây thì anh lại kô thích bằng thuần Á =P~
 
Chỉnh sửa lần cuối:
hàng ngoại mới tốt
chứ đồ nội với đồ tàu dùng chán lắm :-j
 
Thằng Trố nói xong câu kia cấm rút lại nhé :)) Sau này không lấy được vợ Việt đừng trách :>
Anh lại đang mang trong mình chủ nghĩa tiêu thụ hàng nội đây :x
 
ôi, bố mình dạo này tây lắm, trông mặt mũi dạo này cứ như thằg tây đen lai vs gái lào ý :))

Chuối mà lại đam mê ozawa àh :))
 
cái này cho triệt này
ko vào được YM,post tạm đây,bạn nào cần thì cứ lấy

Friedrich Engels (1820-1895), German revolutionary political economist and cofounder, with Karl Marx, of scientific socialism, now known as communism.Engels was born in Barmen (now Wuppertal). He came from a wealthy Protestant family. At an early age he was influenced by the works of the radical German poet Heinrich Heine and the German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and in 1839 he began writing on literary and philosophical topics for a number of publications. In 1842 Engels was converted to Communist beliefs by the German Socialist Moses Hess. In the same year he met Karl Marx.

In a Manchester, England, textile firm between 1842 and 1844, Engels came into contact with Chartism, the movement for extension of suffrage to workers. He contributed to the Northern Star and other publications and made a study of political economy. His experience and studies convinced him that politics and history could be explained only in terms of the economic development of society; he believed that the social evils of the time were the inevitable result of the institution of private property and could be eliminated only through a class struggle culminating in a Communist society. These conclusions were embodied in a historical study, Condition of the Working Class in England (1844), which established Engels's reputation as a revolutionary political economist.

In Paris, in 1844, Engels visited Marx, who had published works sympathetic to communism. The two men found that they had arrived independently at identical views and undertook to work together. Their many-sided collaboration continued until the death of Marx in 1883. It had two principal aspects: systematic exposition of the principles of communism, later known as Marxism; and the organization of an international Communist movement. Lesser aspects of their collaboration included journalistic writing for the New York Tribune and other publications.

Contributions to the theoretical exposition of communism made by Engels include the following major works: Herr Eugen Dühring's Revolution in Science (known popularly as Anti-Dühring,1878; trans. 1934), several chapters of which, published separately under the title Socialism: Utopian and Scientific (1892), have become one of the best-known basic expositions of socialism; Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884; trans. 1902); and Dialectics of Nature, written between 1872 and 1882 and published posthumously (1925; trans. 1940). Engels made what is considered his greatest single contribution to Marxism after the death of Marx by editing, from rough drafts and notes, the second and third volumes of Marx's Das Kapital.

In addition to contributing to the literature and theory of Marxism, Engels participated actively in building the revolutionary movement of his time. Following the outbreak of the revolution in 1848 in Germany, he and Marx went to Cologne, where they published a Communist newspaper.

After the defeat of the revolutions of 1848 in a number of European countries, Engels again became an employee in the textile mill in Manchester, and throughout the years became the chief financial support of Marx and his immediate family. Engels joined the firm that owned the mill in 1864, and retired five years later.

Engels moved to London in 1870 and, after becoming a member of the General Council of the International Workingmen's Association, or First International, began to relieve Marx of the work of directing the council's affairs. After the collapse of the First International in 1872, he maintained contact with revolutionists throughout the world. Engels took no direct part in the founding of the Second International in 1889, but his influence in shaping its programs and policies was considerable.
 
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