That's very hard to read. I hope some Freeper who is a good at transcrbing (I am not) will retype it.
I. The antiwar movements in the US are npredictable. They have been widely developed from Washington DC and New York to other states. At the beginning only a small number of people in the middle class, intellectuals, students, writers, artists, and religious people joined these movements, but now they have rallied a large number of people, including members of the Senate and House of Representatives, former ministers and ambassadors, ex-service men, repatriated soldiers, draftees, service men, and a portion of the working class. The majority of US workers are not politically aware because the US labor unions (supporting the government) only motivated them to struggle for their own interests.
The spontaneous antiwar movements in the US have recieved assistance and guidance from the friendly (VC/NVN) delegations at the Paris Peace Talks. Of the antiwar movements, the two most important ones are: The PCPJ (the Peoples Committee for Peace and Justice) and the NPAC (National Peace Action Committee). These two movements have gathered much stregnth and staged many demonstrations. The PCPJ is the most important. It retains relations with us through its activities, we see that the PCPJ has made progress in its newly adopted policy line with the following strategic alterations:
1. To gain success in struggles, it is necessary to stregnthen internal unity, contact other associations, other social classes, and influential personalities and take part in (US Congressional) elections (instead of boycotting them) to eliminate reactonary candidates and plant progressive people in the Senate and House of Representatives.
2.
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