NEW YORK CITY, January 16 — The worldwide capitalist system is facing an economic crisis that the bosses are trying to solve on the backs of workers. Here, this means high unemployment, hospital and school closings and attacks against many of the few remaining good-paying jobs. Therefore, it’s significant that 8,800 school bus drivers and matrons are striking against cutbacks by New York’s ruling class.
Billionaire Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Walcott pretend to care about students, but their lies shine through, given that they’ve slashed the budget for public schools. Furthermore, Bloomberg has overseen attacks on city workers, higher transit fares and less funding for hospitals — all of which means that the entire working class will suffer. Meanwhile the city spared no expense in getting Wall Street back up and running after hurricane Sandy. In this context, it’s a great thing that bus drivers and matrons are standing strong.
This strike should be viewed as a good thing for students. When workers stand up and resist, we are teaching young people about the importance of not accepting capitalism’s injustices. A school bus strike has not occurred in NYC since 1979. When workers don’t resort to strikes, it only encourages the bosses to take more from us. Only when we strike do we force them to recognize our importance, that it’s we workers who produce all value. And we remind ourselves and the next generation of our potential power.
It is no mere coincidence that the city government’s attempt to open up city contracts affects mainly black and Latino workers and students. Capitalism’s racist nature means that in times of crisis it is black and Latino workers who suffer the most. In employment, health care and education, racism acts to super-exploit a section of the working class. Bloomberg & Co.’s attempts to undermine bus driver/matron job security will make school bus companies places with higher turnover and unsafe conditions. The bosses hope this will then weaken unions and reduce wages.
Unfortunately, even if this strike forces the bosses to concede the workers’ current demands, more fights lie ahead. No matter what gains unions and social movements achieve under capitalism, the bosses will always use their state power to take them back. This is because their system is inherently unstable and competitive. When the economy crashes, workers are expected to pay the price. The constant competition among the bosses in the U.S., China and Europe leads to wars worldwide over oil, markets and other resources. This then spells more cutbacks for publically funded workers here. This is the future that capitalism offers workers of the world: war and poverty.
That is why the Progressive Labor Party fights for communism. We want to build a world free of the bosses and their exploitation. We want to smash racism, the main tool of the bosses to maintain their power. As we encourage all New Yorkers to stand in solidarity with the striking bus workers, we invite you to join us.
CHICAGO, January 3 — Racist police terror is a tool of the bosses to keep workers under control. Cops only serve and protect the capitalist class. On December 15, the Chicago kkkops shot and murdered 23-year-old Jamaal Moore. After crashing Jamaal’s car, the cops shot the young man twice in the back — all while the entire community watched in horror.
CPD (Chicago Police Department) claims he was involved with an armed robbery. Yet Jamaal was unarmed. His “gun” turned out to be a flashlight. The police murdered Jamaal in cold blood because capitalism does not value the lives of workers. These racist cops will continue to get away with murder until we smash capitalism and establish a communist society run by and for the working class.
This racist murder did not go unanswered; a rebellion ensued as residents threw bottles, bricks, rocks and whatever they could lay their hands on. They smashed police car windows and forced the cops to retreat. After Jamaal was murdered, the community made a memorial at the scene, which the CPD have torn down multiple times. One plan of action is to rebuild the memorial and add to it during our weekly rallies.
In response to Jamaal’s murder, PLP has been holding weekly rallies and CHALLENGE sales on the corner where Jamaal was gunned down. We have met dozens of workers who witnessed the police killing and are furious at the constant harassment and mistreatment they face from these racist police. We are in contact with workers who are eager to organize for a better world because they recognize that this system has nothing but misery to offer. One young worker said, “We are like prey out here.” We are organizing these workers to continue the fight-back that they started and advance the struggle with the communist idea to take state power away from the bosses who use the police to brutalize and murder our class. We recognize that police murders occur not only in the black and Latino neighborhoods of Chicago but also worldwide. In 2012 alone, thousands of families have been victimized by these racist killings, including:
Manuel Diaz (Anaheim, CA)
Stephon Watts (Calumet City, IL)
Reynaldo Cuevas (Bronx, NY)
Shantel Davis (Brooklyn, NY)
Damael D’Haiti (Port-au-Price, Haiti)
Ramarley Graham (Bronx, NY)
These crimes by the police must end, but the racist court system will never bring us the justice we need. We must give everyone, not just the few, a chance at a better life. Only through struggle and communist revolution will this change.
PLP is helping to lead fight-backs against the police and the rich masters they serve. Racist terror is an integral part of capitalism; it is how the bosses keep us workers divided, scared, and submissive. Exploitation, racism and sexism are intrinsic to capitalism. In a communist society those things would be illegal and punishable. PLP is organizing workers to destroy this system to replace it with a communist society.
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Algeria: ‘We’re fed up!’ Workers’ Wildcat Shuts Postal System
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- 17 January 2013 71 hits
ALGIERS, January 11 — Ninety-five percent of Algeria’s postal workers are defying the government and continuing their illegal wildcat strike for the twelfth straight day. They’re demanding the firing of both the general director of Algérie Poste and the general secretary of the official trade union, an affiliate of the General Union of Algerian Workers (UGTA).
The strikers are demanding payment of a 30% wage hike due since January 1, 2008; payment of overtime hours worked in 2011; respect for all the demands won in their June 2011 strike; payment of the 2011 bonus; a wage raise and an investigation of Mohamed Laid Mahloul’s mismanagement, particularly of the promotions granted since he became general director. Eighty percent of the 30,000 postal workers say they’ve not received promotions due them.
The postal strike could seriously affect the functioning of the nation. Over two million retirees receive their retirement checks through the postal service. Some 13 million people of the country’s 34 million bank at the postal offices.
On January 10, post offices remained closed, without even minimum service. Strikers ignored repeated calls by the UGTA, the only union the government recognizes, to return to work. Promises by the minister for the postal service to carry out the January 7 agreement between the government and the UGTA fell on deaf ears.
“We’re fed up with ‘we’re going to do this, we’re going to do that.’ It’s been going on for years, and today, we want something concrete and not press releases,” a striker shouted at a January 10 rally outside the Grande Poste, an Algiers landmark.
A strikers’ committee is supposed to meet with ministry officials on January 12 but the minister won’t be there. “No, he doesn’t have the time,” the workers said. “He prefers to go to the Club des pins [the exclusive, tightly guarded Algiers luxury beachfront].”
People who believed the false information about the strike’s effect broadcast by national and local radio stations were frustrated at finding the Ain Defla city post office closed, but they expressed their solidarity with the strikers and held the government responsible. One person shouted: “They should give the workers their rights and stop penalizing the users!”
On January 9, hundreds of postal workers from every corner of Algeria demonstrated in front of the Grande Poste, chanting “We are workers, we are not thieves!” Workers were continuing their sit-in. Strikers were waving signs and engaging in lively discussion with the public.
“By manipulating the media and public opinion, they’re setting the citizens against us,” a 40-year-old postal worker said indignantly. “Management makes us seem irresponsible and lazy!”
The postal ministry and the UGTA keep saying the conflict is “settled, that “major advances have been chalked up” and that demands will be met, but the strikers view these as empty promises since government ministers are implicated in widespread corruption while enjoying total immunity. That’s why postal workers insist that the corrupt general director of Algérie Poste and the corrupt general secretary of the postworkers’ union resign.
The strikers refuse to be bought off with the January 7 agreement that granted the 2011 bonus, promotions due them and a $382 “encouragement” bonus if the workers returned. They have been lied to time after time.
The militancy and defiance of the government by the wildcatting strikers is to be applauded. Their walkout and resulting shutdown of the postal service only proves that without the working class capitalism cannot function. But since the capitalists hold state power, any reforms the strikers do win are subject to be taken away, whether through higher taxes, layoffs or privatization or any of the myriad of ways the bosses can manipulate their system.
As long as the profit system exists, workers will find themselves in a continuous struggle to keep their heads above water. Only the complete destruction of this hellish system and creation of a worker-controlled society — communism — will free the working class from this exploitative treadmill.
Late Bulletin, January 13 — Strikers ended their 13-day strike, winning their retroactive pay hike, providing for promotions based on the work they actually perform, integration of the annual bonus into the union contract and provision for early retirement on substantial pensions.
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Haiti: Mass Protests for Workers’ Demands Defy Police Attacks
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- 17 January 2013 75 hits
PORT-AU-PRINCE, December 12 — Students, teachers, and other members of the working class here continue their struggles against violence, injustice, insecurity, unemployment, cholera, occupation, and the outrageous wasting of government funds. They are organizing sit-ins, press conferences and marches to wrest a response from the rulers. The teachers continue to mobilize for better working conditions and a salary that meets their basic needs. Sometimes all these forces meet together — an idea of how it will be when workers everywhere are united under a single flag for revolution.
Since November 13, date of the 10,000-strong demonstration, high-schoolers, teachers, professors, workers and other social organizations have taken to the streets to denounce the system and demand better living conditions. College students have organized many mass activities to keep up the struggle against the bourgeois government, uniting in a general assembly of several campuses to mobilize more forces and build a university-wide base. They are linking up with workers’ and other organizations to plan joint organized actions, like several street demonstrations here.
The government constantly attacks the demonstrators. The police and United Nations occupying force MINUSTAH troops fire on and tear-gas the crowds. There are new victims, killed by bullets. Plainclothes agents in state vehicles fire on students and demonstrators. Student and other demonstrators respond to these attacks with their usual shout, “We are not afraid!” Students have been arrested on false pretenses. They are all accused of being window-smashing vandals, and yet they are arrested on the streets where they live or in places where there have been no such incidents. Students, teachers, PL’ers and professors then organize and free these arrested students. The unity of the working class is always a powerful weapon against the injustice of the ruling class and its state.
Among other things, students and others are taking up a struggle against the authorities in Mirebalais [town in the Central Plateau, near the base of the MINUSTAH soldiers who brought cholera to Haiti in October 2010]. The troops hung flags of the European Union in a location which used to bear the name Avenue of the Martyrs because it was the place where the European colonialists sold and killed slaves. Now the authorities want to change its name to Avenue of Europe and fill it with flags of the EU.
The students bought Haitian flags and replaced and burned all the EU flags, defacing the name which these authorities had inscribed on the wall of the entrance. To intimidate them, the government sent police armed with tear gas and heavy weapons. A score of them resisted every attempt at violence by these officers of crime. Eight of them were brutally arrested. Under pressure from other students and PL’ers who supported their struggle, they were released one day later.
This struggle shows how the imperialists seek at all costs to make us forget the past. Yet the real alternative to imperialist flags, past and present, is not the nationalist flags of the capitalist present but the internationalist red flag of the communist future. What workers in Haiti and all around the world need is a society run for the benefit of all, not for the profits of a few.
December 5th was marked by two demonstrations, one by students and the other by laid-off public-sector workers who for years have been leading a fierce struggle to demand justice. These two marches met and joined forces, taking the road to a higher class unity. The struggle continues.
The leaders of the three unions at Downstate won’t lead that fight. They aren´t interested in fighting the bosses. They prefer to be on their side and they pin their hopes on making deals with politicians. One of the unions, CSEA, even agreed to a contract that gave no raise for 2011 or 2012, and only a “bonus” for 2013. It took away nine days pay while imposing higher deductions for health care. Despite that deal, there have been 400 layoff letters, and 600 more are on the way. So much for relying on the politicians.
But we, the workers, have recent examples, such as the Chicago teachers’ strike, where workers, students, parents and the community united to grow the capacity and potential of the workers. At Downstate we have to place ourselves on red alert, and stand up and fight against the layoffs and the passivity of the unions. The fight can give us what the boss wants to take away.
The U.S. capitalists are trying to squeeze from workers the cost of the bosses’ battle with other imperialists for “top-dog” status in the world. But that doesn’t mean they are broke. They are happy to spend money on themselves. They say there´s no money to maintain the hospital, but they’ve given out contracts for new buildings. The administrators’ salaries used to reach $500,000 a year — but now they’ve gone up to over $700,000! There´s money. We the workers, provide the state with taxes. We pay for everything, including their wars. When politicians make deals to make each other rich, that is our money, too. We are paying the money that could maintain our hospital and our jobs — but it is being used against us. The bosses never have been, and never will be interested in solving our problems. Let’s remember that all the benefits we have are a product of our fight; nothing has been given to us by the bosses.
But to change all this, we must do more. We have held protests with the community, students and patients. Hundreds have signed up for a protest in Albany January 8th. But we need more: A permanent campaign, with weekly protests in the entrances of the hospital and around it, forums, talks and preparation for a strike to stop the closing.
In the long run, the working class needs much more. Capitalists don´t care about our health. PLP fights for class consciousness, for workers understanding and acting as a class against our enemy, the bosses. We must organize workers to once and for all destroy this system of misery, and to build a new society, run by workers, which will make healthcare a priority. JOIN US!