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Students and Profs Rally Against State University Cuts, Racism
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- 27 March 2013 70 hits
CHICAGO, March 24 — Chicago State University (CSU) President Watson must go, but students and faculty have different reasons from the Board of Trustees who want to fire him. A March 8 rally at the student union building, organized by faculty members who are building unity with students and campus workers, rang with chants of “Watson Must Go.” They condemned his disregard of the needs of CSU’s mostly-black student body and its workers and his tight control and clamp-down on all forms of dissent.
Several responded immediately when invited to speak on the open mike at the rally. A few students complained about things like broken classroom computers, parking lot potholes, and high fees in the dorm, but others called for unity and fighting back. A cafeteria worker spoke about their year-long struggle for a union contract. A professor, and PL’er attacked Watson’s hiring of his friends to fill teaching positions while ignoring faculty recommendations to hire a better-qualified black adjunct, who is also a CSU alumna.
Following the rally many of us went to a nearby meeting of the CSU Board of Trustees. Board President Gary Rozier, who is black and was appointed by Governor Quinn, wants to replace Watson, who is also black, for reasons not yet clear. Their battle over Watson’s exit has been playing in the press for days and is still undecided.
PLP supported the rally with a leaflet explaining that the Watson-Rozier battle is a racist attack on students, workers, and faculty, and that their fight is not our fight. While they have their squabble, the rest of us are suffering state budget cutbacks. Monetary Award Program (MAP) grants have been cut by 12.5% and Governor Quinn has announced more higher education cutbacks in his new budget proposal. In addition, the state currently owes CSU $23 million in aid.
But this has not stopped Quinn from awarding tax breaks to his capitalist masters at Sears, Motorola, and The Mercantile Exchange. Our job in PLP is to explain to students, workers and faculty how capitalism inevitably makes these crises, and to win them to fight for communism. On the other hand Watson and Rozier, a senior VP at Ariel Investments, believe in capitalism and in educating students to meekly accept the tyranny of the capitalists.
Under capitalism, education serves the system and its ideology. Students’ needs rank far behind the need of U.S. imperialism to control the world’s energy resources. Obama and the Congress will pay for a new drone base in Niger, to spy on Chinese uranium mining interests, but not for jobs. Sequestration is expected to eliminate 750,000 jobs nationwide and to cut the U.S. Education Department budget $70 million, or 4.6 percent.
Progressive Labor Party fights for communism, which will enhance every worker’s contribution to society with cradle-to-grave education. Under communism all students and workers will be educated to scientifically analyze society and to exercise leadership in preserving the rule of the working class. We will learn cooperation, working for each other, instead of competing for the few crumbs allowed by capitalism. PLP believes in fighting, for working-class power through revolution for communism. JOIN US!
CHICAGO —Capitalism is not interested in creating a society of people who can think critically and work for the well-being of the working class.
Capitalism wants to create poorly educated wage slaves to accept low-paying jobs with no benefits. It wants to send both men and now even young women to fight and die in imperialist oil wars and that kill our working-class brothers and sisters and make profits for the bosses.
Capitalist education wants to turn children into test takers and not thinkers because capitalism doesn’t need thinkers.
Capitalism simply needs workers to do menial work that requires little thought. As long as the bosses control society the education system, will never be beneficial for the working class. This is capitalism’s vision of education working the way it’s supposed to work. For the capitalist!
These points along with many others regarding the education system were raised on February 13 during a debate at Chicago State University. The debate was titled “Public Education: The New Battle For Civil Rights.” A room was filled with students, teachers, union members, community residents, and members of Progressive Labor Party, two of whom were on the panel.
The debate was supposed to be on whether charter schools or public schools are better options for our children. PLP does not fight for reform but for revolution, so from the beginning the Party members on the panel pointed out that as long as we live under capitalism, education will never serve the working class.
PL’ers pointed out the racism behind the school system. A majority of Chicago Public School students are black (43%) or Latinos (44%). Every day these children are crammed into overcrowded rundown schools with hardly any resources. A majority of the schools that are scheduled to close are on the South Side where a majority of black and Latino students live.
In schools marked for closure, a majority of the teachers in these schools are black. The point was also made of other factors that capitalism burdens us with. Many of these students live in poverty, which means poor health care, children going to school hungry, and children bringing problems from home with them into the classroom. The panelists on both sides agreed that these are obstacles which our children face and something should be done about it.
PL’ers described how charter schools make a bad situation even worse. Charter schools are a capitalist’s dream. They’re schools run by corporations that implement the agenda they choose to implement. These schools can practice selective enrollment, which leaves all the children with problems in public schools.
Charter schools also attack the teachers. They are turning teaching from a career into a temporary job. They are not unionized and hire young teachers for a few years and then toss them out when they’re no longer wanted. A few audience members noted their experience in a charter school, its strict discipline and the fascist environment.
The audience approved many of these points made by the PL’ers. Everyone in the audience agreed that something has to be done to change our education system as well as overcome the obstacles people face under capitalism. Everyone in the room got copies of Party flyers and many CHALLENGES were taken by guests. Even after the debate ended, many people stood around for another hour to talk with PL’ers. We are hoping to hold more discussions like this on the Chicago State campus to win students, teachers, and workers to PLP to help build for the fight for communism so workers can one day have the education system that serves them best. Join us on May Day!
NEW YORK CITY — In early February, while the sky was bleak and the air cold, some 60 workers and youth assembled to participate in the development of working-class culture. The work of the last three years culminated in the gathering of six seminal groups to explore creating different forms of working-class art — video, script writing, acting, music, poster design and poetry.
An initial plenary session discussed basic ideas over breakfast after which people moved to their chosen areas of interest. Expectations pervaded. Most of the six leaders wondered if this first exploratory session could create groups from which some working-class communist forms could be developed.
Of course, working-class art in its many forms have already been produced during the period when working-class influence was ascending and when our class was under threat. Communists have always fought to try to galvanize art, much as sometimes they’re galvanized by the singing of the working-class communist anthem, “The Internationale.”
Both the leaders and the groups’ members had undergone uneven development in their cultural interests and experiences, leading to some struggle for basic understanding. Actually, the video that was made during the day of the different sessions seemed to draw all the groups together. The video group interviewed individuals about what they were creating.
There were people from many different working-class backgrounds. Multi-racial interaction and work led to growing relationships and a very professional attitude for what was being created that day. In one class, a baby sat on her mother’s lap, seeming to take part in the workshop with mama. This was fun for the group and helped create a family feeling. Several workshop participants now want to organize others to produce communist culture.
Poetry and Hip-Hop plumbed political commitment and revolutionary culture in the life of working people. As one young man said, “Working-class culture is powerful.”
The poster art session compared a poster for a capitalist product and one for Bolshevik ideas with their own creation depicting demonstrations and life. The layout was produced collectively which excited the participants.
One question asked by the creators of the video was, “What music or culture inspired you?” In the music session, a large group worked on old songs and a new song which is currently evolving.
At the end of the afternoon all groups gathered together with each one performing or displaying a small piece of what they had been creating and learning. It was a wonderful kaleidoscope of words, songs, pictures and acting. The result almost left one breathless. Creating working-class art always has a future, but now we’re part of that. See working-class culture this May Day!
OAKLAND, CA — The ruling class, through its politicians and the collaboration of union leaders in California, has moved to steal billions from the working class by decimating the future of retired workers. Governor Jerry Brown, with the assistance of Democrats who control both houses of the legislature, has passed the Public Employees Pension Reform Act (PEPRA). It could go into effect at AC Transit as early as July 1, when our contract expires.
This “reform” hurts new hires immediately. While current workers don’t face changes yet, after 2018 all of our pensions will be affected. First, PEPRA mandates that all new workers pay a minimum of half their pension costs or 6.75% of wages. That’s a wage cut of $3,000 to $5,000 a year. AC Transit workers took lower wages in the past to maintain their benefits.
Second, it bases pensions on 40 hours per week, while the average work-week of a bus driver is actually closer to 50 hours, due to split shifts and long hours in the seat. Lastly, it reduces the compensation schedule at the end by as much as 35 percent. At 55 years old, a current pension is 2 percent per year of the average of your top three years times years worked. Under PEPRA, it’s 1.3 percent. With all the changes, the pension could be reduced by almost half. Since AC has no cost-of-living allowance in its pension it means a meager pension, will be worth even less in years to come.
While Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) Local 192 called a special meeting of over 300 members to “fight” this attack, its strategy mainly revolves around relying on lawyers to argue that PEPRA violates federal law, or on legislation from the same state Democratic politicians to exempt transit workers. It refused to organize any mass protest at a recent Board of Directors’ meeting, which voted to adopt PEPRA.
Further, there has been no coordination among other transit unions — especially at BART, the regional subway system — whose contract also expires July 1. At the same time, AC Transit bosses plan to raise fares again on July 1st, as much as 33 percent for monthly passes for youth, seniors and disabled riders.
PLP has put out the only information about the attack. Our Transit CHALLENGE focused on the message “It’s up to us, the working class!” No law, no savior politicians and no “special exemptions” will rescue us! Unity across the whole Bay Area and a fight for the whole working class is our strategy. We have engaged transit workers to join with community groups to reach out to youth to fight these outrageous higher fares and service cuts.
The membership of ATU Local 192 also passed a resolution to demand Justice for Alan Blueford, an 18-year-old high school student murdered by Oakland cops last May. The resolution flies in the face of a mass media campaign to make youth violence and crime in Oakland a “State of Emergency” with the implication that “effective community police” is the solution. The media campaign does not address continual racist police actions (four officers were involved in the shooting on the weekend of 03\01\13 in the Bay area) and massive racist unemployment among black and Latin youth.
This resolution is a small step to making a fight for the whole working class, tied to immediate issues that face our membership. Transit workers attended the March 5 rally to stop racist police terror and demand prosecution of cop Masso who shot the unarmed Blueford. The Governor, the Legislature, the cops, and the media are all part of the bosses’ system of capitalism and its state apparatus whose laws enforce profit-making by exploiting the working class. The months ahead will offer us many opportunities to struggle over the need for a communist society without exploitation and racist terror.
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France: Strikers Paralyze Peugeot, Put Brakes on Plant Closure
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- 27 March 2013 85 hits
AULNAY-SOUS-BOIS, FRANCE, March 9 — Over 2,800 striking auto workers have paralyzed the Peugeot plant in this Paris suburb since January 16. They’re protesting company plans to close the factory next year, which will eliminate 8,000 jobs. On March 8, nearly 200 strikers occupied the Paris offices of the bosses’ metal trades association.
“We are workers, we aren’t vandals, the bosses are the vandals,” chanted the workers in the hall of the seat of the metal trades bosses.
“We’re not coming out until our demands have been heard,” one union steward told Reuters. “We want a permanent job for everyone and early retirement for those 55 and over.”
An agreement signed by several union officials was rejected by the rank and file. “We are determined,” declared Mohammed Diver, a worker at the plant. “We want a guarantee of employment.”
The bosses have hired two rent-a-cop strike-breaking outfits to intimidate the workers. They have also threatened to fire some of the strike leaders. Meanwhile,the Peugeot bosses who claim they must close the plant and wipe out 8,000 jobs because they can’t make a profit from this plant are paying themselves handsomely. Peugeot’s CEO tripled his salary in 2010 to to $4.2 million; two directors doubled their’s to $1.62 million; and a director stationed in Asia raked in $1.75 million — altogether a total of nearly $10 million a a year for just four bosses!
The Peugot workers are also supporting the struggles of other workers, including those at Renault who are experiencing the same problems. On january 28, they stood in soldiairty in front of the French Natonal Assembly in a united demonstration with workers from Goodyear, Air France, Virgin and Sanofi.
However, the CGT union has undercut the workers’ position by accusing the government of “mak[ing] itself management’s accomplice” for refusing to name a mediator. No doubt the government is in bed with the bosses, but mediators will not win the workers’ demands. Only the power of the rank and file to shut off the bosses’ profits can have any chance of achieving that objective. Instead of depending on mediation, the workers must try to spread the strike across the metal trades industry since all workers will be suffering under the austerity program being promoted by the Socialist government.
The Peugeot bosses claim they must dump the workforce because they can’t make a profit from this plant. But this just exposes the need for the working class to exterminate capitalism, a system based on exploitation for the profit of the few sucked out of the labor of the masses that produce everything of value. Only a revolutionary party composed of millions of workers can accomplish that goal.
The Peugeot strikers are asking for financial support, donations to be sent to:
Association de soutien aux salaries
de l’automobile du 93
19-21 rue Jacques Duclos
93600 Aulnay-sous-Bois, France