“Why I Joined PLP” Speech given at a May Day Dinner:
Today, I will be sharing with you all my journey in becoming a communist. The people that have been part of this journey are my partner, who introduced me to Marx and helped me rethink nationalism, and my friends who brought the party to me. But mostly I thank my mother, who is not here today.
When I was seven years old, my father abandoned us. As a result, my mother was left with the full responsibility of supporting our family. Unfortunately, as an undocumented immigrant, my mother faced job insecurity and we regularly had to move from apartment to apartment. Mom worked as hard as she could – we would always find her asleep with her work clothes still on. As the oldest of three children, I tried my best to help care for my siblings at home, but I felt inadequate. So at thirteen, I decided to find a job to help contribute financially.
For a thirteen-year-old living in South Central Los Angeles, the only available jobs paid under-the-table and involved menial labor. I started as an errand boy for a local street vendor, selling food in a street corner off MacArthur Park. After that, I sold factory surplus Mary Kay cosmetics door-to-door. In high school, I started working in a garment factory at night. Despite this, the money my mother and I earned was not always enough to feed the family.
Like most children, I grew up largely ignorant about the institutional barriers that have historically marginalized the working class folk of Los Angeles. As I grew older, however, I witnessed this capitalist system constantly bearing down on my family and community. The status quo left me frustrated and at times, hopeless. Despite this, however, I used my frustration to fuel my drive to take political action and empower my community.
When Obama’s presidential campaign geared up for reelection, I worked for Latinos for Obama as an Organizing Fellow. At that time, I truly believed that by working within the system I would be able to bring about change in my community. I did not realize that was far from the truth. As soon as the campaign was over there was complete disinvestment by the Democratic Party in South Los Angeles. Understanding how the Democratic Party operated from within I understood that the current political climate is based on benefiting capitalist interests while feeding false promises to the working class. Being this my first experience with traditional politics I felt frustrated. It was clear to me that this system was not built for the working class and that there was no difference between the Democratic or Republican Party.
It is my personal experience and my organizing with the Democratic Party that have brought me to this point in my political development. I became a communist because I believe that the real social, political, and economic change will come. With a revolutionary communist consciousness we must continue to organize for a working-class led revolution! Our best weapon for revolution is our unity, our organization, and our action.
The 1st of May is a date for commemoration around the world. It is a date in which the International Working Class expresses its outright denial of oppression and exploitation by this capitalist system and foreshadows our emancipation. Along side them, our Party will lift our banners to reaffirm our commitment to continually strive for a working class revolution in our country that will contribute to the triumph of an International Proletarian Revolution!
Viva la lucha de clase obrera! Viva la lucha de los trabajadores de todo el mundo! Solo la lucha de los pueblos rompera las cadenas de la dominacion y explotacion!
LOS ANGELES—Tens of thousands of workers took to the streets as part of the Resist LA May Day march. It was the most multiracial, multigenerational march the country has seen in a long time. More Black workers came out than they did for the Women’s March in January or the March for Science on April 22.
PLP had a small but lively contingent that led some militant chants like, “the workers united will never be defeated” and “La migra, la policia, la misma porqueria” (immigration cops, police, all the same crap). This chant connects the incarceration of mainly Black, Latin workers and youth to the incarceration of undocumented and migrant families. Whether we are citizens or undocumented, our common enemy is this capitalist state. PLP got out 250 CHALLENGEs along the nearly three-mile march. While turnout was not what it had been in past May Day/immigrants’ rights marches, due to fear of police and ICE repression, the energy was high and there is motivation to make it even bigger next year.
PLP MAY DAY DINNER
The PLP had a rousing dinner, with about 60 comrades and friends in attendance. Accompanied by guitar, djembe and ukuele, our group of teachers, students, health workers, church members, musicians and artistic workers enjoyed a multiracial evening of singing, speeches, interactive games and a video of the history of communist class struggle and the party’s role in it.
We also had lively discussion inspired by one of the games, which was called “pin the nail in the coffin,” of capitalism. The questions, “What have you heard about communism before coming here today either in school, on the news or from people you know?” and “What have you heard about communism here today?” prompted our discussion.
Many friends wrote down the lies that capitalism tells workers and those answers were nailed down on the coffin. These were ideas people wanted to struggle against: the racist, sexist, nationalist, fascist lies oppress the working class.
“To succeed, what features does such a Party need?” That conversation, which could have gone on for much longer, will continue as we work with our comrades and friends in the class struggle.
The PL video presented the Haymarket Affair, the Russian and Chinese Revolutions and the birth of Progressive Labor Party. It was a great way to show how historically that workers have true potential to change the world and how they’ve inspired many ‘til this day. It also brought up the importance of class struggle and how to increase the readership of CHALLENGE. The video ended with having people subscribe to the paper, join the Party, join a study group, and take action. The evening continued with a speech on the state of the world and a call to action. Organizing for a communist society means getting rid of capitalism, a political system that exploits and terrorizes workers worldwide and is leading the dominant imperialists toward a world war that they expect the workers to fight in. We say we will fight for communism! The international working class shall be the human race!
After Syrian President Bashar al-Assad attacked civilians with chemical weapons, Donald Trump bombed a government airbase in Syria with 59 Tomahawk missiles. The U.S. imperialist rulers struck in the name of “humanitarianism,” but their real cause is something else again: a desperate push to maintain U.S. dominance over the Middle East and its vast oil reserves.
Humanitarian Imperialism
In what world does it make sense to bomb the very people you are claiming to defend? The U.S. air strike killed nine civilians, including four children, and will result only in more war, more refugees, more death. The real outrage is that the capitalist bosses have free rein to kill us, the working class, in their wars over profits and power. There are already 11 million Syrian refugees, half the country’s former population. More are created every day. The criminal Trump has the nerve to profess compassion for Syrian workers while doing all he can to ban desperate Syrian refugees from entering the U.S.
Bombing Without a Plan
If Trump didn’t bomb Syria to defend workers there, why did he do it? Why provoke Russia just as Trump and Putin seemed to be building an alliance? The answer lies in geography. Syria is important because its territory is needed for a pipeline to supply the European Union with oil and natural gas.
In 2009, Assad rejected a deal with Qatar that would have run a similar pipeline from Qatar through Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey. Because of Qatar’s close relationship with U.S. capitalists, the pipeline would have meant billions in profits for U.S. bosses. It also would have threatened the capitalist interests of Russian bosses, the top supplier of natural gas to Europe.
After rejecting the proposal from Qatar, Assad made a $10 billion pipeline deal with Iran, a Russian ally, to supply Europe with gas. The deal was a blow to U.S. bosses, who are increasingly losing military, political, and economic control around the world to their main rivals in Russia and China. This is the real motive for U.S. involvement in Syria: a fight over imperialist spoils.
Workers in Syria have nothing to gain by the “targeted” U.S. attack on Assad’s airfield. U.S. workers must not be fooled by Trump’s fake tears and staged moral outrage over the chemical attack. In fact, Assad’s atrocity helped the U.S. bosses by giving them a pretext to clean up some of the messy infighting and political scandal impeding their ultimate goal: global war.
Syria Crisis Opportunity for U.S. Bosses
Trump’s show of force in Syria sends a message to U.S. allies and enemies alike. In recent years, allies have lost confidence in the U.S. as the world’s most powerful imperialist force. The U.S. military has been unable to win decisively since its debacle in Vietnam in the 1970s.,China’s growing economy offers more opportunities for trading partners than the weakening economy of the U.S. Russia has proven more decisive militarily, leading Turkey—a longtime strategic U.S. ally—to hedge its bets:,
This critical NATO ally [Turkey] has been allying itself with Russia, conducting joint exercises and, in a widely reported move, limiting its opposition to the Assad regime in exchange for being allowed to target Kurds inside Syria...Turkey recently threatened to forbid the United States from using its Incirlik airbase, which is the top staging ground for the war against ISIS (Foreign Affairs, 4/10).
To maintain their global profit flows, the U.S. bosses need a president who can follow orders. Trump campaigned as an independent “outsider,” but he’s now expected to be as loyal to the bosses’ agenda as Barack Obama and George W. Bush before him. The ongoing FBI investigation into ties between Russia and Trump’s campaign team is designed to pressure the new president into falling into line. So is the barrage of criticism from the capitalist media.
The attack on Assad’s airfield gave Trump an opportunity to show the U.S. ruling class that he can be their disciplined servant--to “change the perception of disarray in his administration” (New York Times, 4/7). The bosses won’t be satisfied with one limited attack on a Syrian air base. The Council on Foreign Relations, a leading main-wing capitalist think tank, criticized Trump for not going far enough—and for lacking a bigger plan for war.
Opportunities for Fightback
Although Trump appears to be responding to the bosses’ pressure, big problems remain for U.S. capitalism. As U.S. bosses get more desperate to retain control over Middle East oil and other resources, they will become even more vicious and make more mistakes. As members and friends of Progressive Labor Party, it is our job to use their weaknesses against them.
We must harness the rage we feel every time we see children terrorized in Syria, every time we see a Black or Latin worker murdered mercilessly by the police, every time we see families separated by heartless deportations. We must channel our working-class anger into organizing for a communist world. As the working class struggles through this dark night, we cannot lose confidence in our ability to win a world where drone strikes, famine, and police murder are distant memories. Progressive Labor Party fights for a communism, a system based on egalitarianism. That means destroying racism, sexism, nationalism, and the entire profit system. Communist revolution is the only way to destroy capitalism and all its horrors.
It’s clear that the capitalists have no loyalty to the working class, or even to each other as they fight over profits. All that unites them is their exploitation and oppression of the working class. The calamity in Syria is proof that they are willing to destroy anything and anyone standing in their way.
This May Day, we must unite under the red flag of the international working class. We must carry on the struggle of courageous working-class fighters to defend and liberate our class, once and for all!
Protesters at local airport try to stop the deportation of immigrant workersCHICAGO, IL April 5—Two buses transporting undocumented workers pulled up at the airport, and the crowd grew restless. A strong multiracial crowd of 50 from community groups protested the racist deportations taking place at a local airport.
Stop the Bus, Stop the Planes
Clergy, attempting to pray away our problems, initially dominated the rally. While some protest leaders tried to distract us with speeches, a group of workers made their way into the street to block the buses. The buses then dashed toward another entrance of the airport. Progressive Labor Party members and friends called for a march on the buses, and led the rally to confront the buses.
As we approached, we realized the kkkops were not prepared. A militant worker opened an unlocked gate and we went onto the tarmac. We were no longer about stopping the buses; we wanted to stop the planes. A group of workers militantly began to do so when some local clergy, openly “agreeing” with the police, called for protesters to come back.
This created mass confusion, which eventually led to people getting off the tarmac. Although the attempt to stop the airplanes was derailed by misleading clergy, it showed workers potential willingness to take bold action to defend the working class.
A member of PLP called out out the true enemy of working class people, capitalism, and said that Trump was actually continuing the policies of Obama. He also connected mass incarceration with mass deportations, since both Black and Latin workers are all super exploited by capitalism. Many people agreed, took
Challenge newspaper, and gave contact information.
Airport Serving its Racist Purpose
This airport is used to deport Black and Latin undocumented workers in the entire Chicagoland area. It was built decades ago, but under a 1995 contract it was never to conduct commercial flights. Its sole purpose has been the deportations of undocumented workers. For the past eleven years, every Friday morning, Homeland Security and ICE have used this airport to carry out the racist, capitalist deportation policies.
This rally was the result of a multiracial, multi-gender group that has begun organizing to halt these racist deportations. PL has been immersed in this, struggling to call for more militant actions and also to draw the connections between racist mass deportations and mass incarceration. We must understand that the fate of undocumented workers is our fate as well; no workers are safe under capitalism.
No Sanctuary under Capitalism
In a capitalist society where the rulers are bent on accumulating profit over everything else, the international working-class faces continual misery from poverty and miseducation to wars and refugee camps. Workers are used only for their ability to make money for the bosses who will trade their lives for just one more dollar. The discussions about establishing sanctuary and welcoming cities and campuses must include discussions about attacking the root of the problem, capitalism. And that means talking about revolution and communism.
Most members of our coalition believe in doing good works to help the most vulnerable people in this system. However, there is some unwillingness to relate these reforms to the long-term struggle for revolution. Some say that we need to establish safe or welcoming spaces for immigrants first, then make the links to capitalism and its’ profiteering wars. But it’s a long struggle and we must strengthen the working class for the many battles on the way to a communist revolution. Capitalism divides us by race and sex with the super exploitation of Black, Latin, immigrant and women workers. We fight to unite the working class to get rid of capitalism once and for all.
Only Communism Can Smash Fascists
Members of the PLP must be immersed in all these reformist class struggles. That’s how we learn to fight for a better world. But these reforms will not end the economic, political and social terror that capitalism inflicts on our everyday lives. Capitalism will not collapse on its’ own and become something better.
The only way to ensure a world free from murderous police and mass deportations is to uproot the entire profit system. Only by organizing an international revolution, led by a disciplined Progressive Labor Party can we build a communist society that the working class deserves. For a world without deportations, join the fight with PLP.
Newark, NJ, April 13—A multiracial group of some 30 people rallied here today at the Federal Building to oppose the Trump budget cuts and demand increased funding in certain programs that are on the chopping block. Chants of “No cuts, no way; we’re fighting back today” and “The war-makers say cut back, we say fight back” echoed through the streets. Scores of cars and many New Jersey transit bus drivers honked their horns enthusiastically in solidarity with our cause. The rally was organized by the War Against Poverty Coalition (WAPC) and endorsed by a number of other Newark-based groups. PLP joined and showed the continual stream of such policies clearly indicates the need for millions of organized workers to overthrow this system and establish a worker-run communist system in its place.
Trump’s budget eliminates the Home Energy Assistance (HEA) programs. HEA checks keep low wage and unemployed workers’ heat on in the winter, and their air conditioning on in the summer. Many other so-called discretionary programs are being eliminated as well, such as the Legal Services Corporation, which funds lawyers and other legal workers who represent low income people in evictions, foreclosures, benefits denials, domestic violence, veterans’ issues, etc. Other programs are being severely cut, including money authorized through the Violence Against Women law, Community Development block grants, and Section 8 vouchers to help low-income workers pay for housing.
Since Black and Latin employed and unemployed workers, and particularly single women, will be hit the hardest, these cuts are racist and sexist. But white workers, including many who voted for Trump, will suffer too – as is true of all racist and sexist policies. The Trump budget is crystal clear that the $54 billion cuts from “discretionary” funds will go straight into the war budget, which soaks up more than half the federal budget and will increase under Trump. This issue looms large, as the U.S. bosses’ military just announced their use of “the mother of all bombs” against ISIS in Afghanistan that day; they just bombed a Syrian airfield; and a U.S. “armada” is steaming toward the Korean peninsula to threaten the North Korean bosses with obliteration.
One speaker at the rally asked if the capitalist system, which can’t provide basic necessities for women who live in homeless shelters and forces low wage workers to rely on Food Stamps, deserves to exist. Another pointed out that while the bosses spend tens of millions a day in their imperialist wars for profit, they freeze and starve our families at home. That speaker pointed out how the hypocritical liberal media suddenly began praising fascist Trump’s actions as “presidential” when he rejected his own campaign rhetoric and ordered the Navy to launch missiles on Syria. A third speaker talked about how her grandson had been profiled by the cops, as she linked police brutality, war, and poverty to the whole racist profit system.
The 1960s saw widespread rebellions and an upsurge in workers’ struggles. Funding for many of the programs being cut now was won from the U.S. bosses’ government in that era. But like other reforms, they were used by the capitalist system to blunt mass anger against racism, sexism, poverty, and imperialist war, and lend a false appearance of justice for all. Now, in a period of diminished fight-back, these reforms are being taken back. Today, the winds of war are blowing harder. Whatever Trump said to get elected, the rulers of U.S. imperialism are moving ever closer to a military confrontation with rival Russian and Chinese bosses. Increased oppression of the working class is the inevitable consequence of a growing war budget.
PLP fights for communist revolution to eliminate capitalism – the root cause of both imperialist conflict and the increasing impoverishment of the working class. Today’s rally showed that, slowly but surely, the passivity of our class is beginning to change. The first small shoots of the class understanding and revolutionary anger that it will take to overthrow this bloody, profit-driven system are beginning to sprout. As we move on to May Day, let’s heat up the struggle and speed up that revolutionary process!