- Information
NYT strike uncovers a newspaper unfit for workers
- Information
- 05 January 2023 123 hits
New York City—For the first time in over 40 years, over 1,100 New York Times journalists and staff walked off the job in a one-day strike for a major labor dispute. more than 1,100 unionized Times employees walked off the job today in a 24-hour strike. The NYT Guild represents journalists, editors, advertising sales, business staff and security guards who have been without a new contract since March 2021 (NYT, 12/7). The workers struck against the biggest liberal mouthpiece for the main wing of the U.S. ruling class. As long as capitalism rules, media workers won’t control the narrative. For workers to own our labor, we need to smash this profit-based system. This capitalist rag is unfit for workers.
Good on paper? Trash in reality
NYT workers were joined by a delegation of striking UAW workers from HarperCollins who have been on strike against the publisher for three weeks, striking Guild members from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, who have been on strike for a month, as well as members of the National Writers Union, CWA, and Teamster truck drivers who refused to cross the picket lines. One of the main issues is the company’s racist performance rating system and the demand for a more integrated newsroom. In a study released last August, the union found that, “white Guild members were more likely to get the top ratings, while Black and Latin members were more likely to get the lowest two ratings” (NYT, 12/7). Another issue is a safe post-pandemic return-to-work policy.
After decades of cutting back on wages, pensions, and healthcare, the NYT is making bank in a media market that has been facing massive cutbacks. The Times made over $300 million in operating profits this year, offered shareholders a big stock buyback and gave big raises to their executives. Yet, Times Chief Executive Meredith Kopit Levien cries that it’s not “what it used to be” (AP News, 12/8). The company hired scabs and international workers to deliver its content.
As capitalism continues to devolve into crisis after crisis, more and more workers may gain class consciousness. The NYT institution is the epitome of liberal democratic ideals, promoting themselves as a beacon of truth in the chaos. Yet, it can't provide basic conditions for its workers? The company touts worker-friendly ideas, but the strike exposes the hollowness and hypocrisy of this capitalist institution. In essence, as long as media is owned by the profit-making class, media workers are just as expendable as every other worker.
Media, an industry of class struggle
The media industry has become a hotbed of class struggle, the result of massive consolidation and cutbacks. About 25 percent of all newsroom jobs were lost during the pandemic and about 2,000 local media outlets have closed, being replaced by huge conglomerates and even Artificial Intelligence producing some sports articles. These vast “news deserts” have added to the sea of misinformation
and have aided groups like QAnon and various fascist militias. The News Guild (TNG) and other unions have organized tens of thousands of media workers in the past few years and the number of strikes and job actions are increasing. Staff at Reuters and several Gannett papers are also preparing for strikes.
Can these mostly young “white-collar” workers, along with striking part-time faculty at the New School in NY and 48,000 graduate student workers in California, represent the beginning of sharpening class war? From railroad workers to Amazon and Starbucks workers, there is a stirring among the masses. In NYC, contracts are expiring among CUNY faculty, which is two-thirds adjuncts, and transit workers.
As the class struggle sharpens, Progressive Labor Party has the responsibility to turn class struggle into grounds for revolutionary communist ideas. PLP will have to be embedded in these workplaces and among these workers, to move workers past the Democratic Party treadmill of reform, and onto the path of communist revolution. Slowly but surely, this is taking place.
Racism in medicine has long history
New England Journal of Medicine, 9/8/22–On May 23, 1968, Howard Goldman, director of the New York Bureau of X-Ray Technology, acknowledged that x-ray technicians routinely exposed Black patients to doses of radiation that were higher than those [w]hite patients received…as x-ray technology developed in the early 20th century, false beliefs about biologic differences between Black and [w]hite people affected how doctors used this technology.
Ideas about racial differences in bone and skin thickness appeared in the 19th century and remained widespread throughout the 20th. Theodor Waitz’s 1863 Introduction to Anthropology asserted, for instance, that “The skeleton of the Negro is heavier, the bones thicker.” Such claims reflected both beliefs about behaviors attributed to Black people (e.g., violence) and the interests of White scientists and slave owners who justified slavery.
The belief that Black people have denser bones, more muscle, or thicker skin led radiologists and technicians to use higher radiation exposure during x-ray procedures. A physician in 1896 asserted that “black being perfectly opaque,” black skin would “offer some resistance to cathode rays.”...In the 1950s and 1960s, x-ray technologists were told to use higher radiation doses to penetrate Black bodies.
Palestinians look for leadership
Times of Israel, 12/15/22– 72 percent of Palestinians support the creation of additional armed groups in the West Bank akin to the Lion’s Den terror group that operates against Israel, according to a new poll…The Palestinian Authority (PA) Health Ministry has reported 167 Palestinian deaths as a result of Israeli gunfire in the West Bank this year. The IDF [Israeli Defense Forces] operation has mostly focused on the northern West Bank, where the Palestinian Authority is seen to have lost control amid the sprouting of armed groups such as the Nablus-based Lion’s Den.
A clear majority of respondents told PCPSR [Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research] that they support the formation of armed groups that don’t take orders from the PA and that are not part of the PA security forces, but numbers were higher in Gaza, where 84 percent of respondents backed the concept than in the West Bank, where 65 percent supported the idea. Israel has sought to work with the PA security forces to quash Lion’s Den and the PA has worked to convince members of the armed group to turn themselves in, rather than be hunted down and killed by the IDF.
Nobel Peace Prize winners vetted by CIA
Monthly Review, 12/27/22–The Nobel Prize Committee has five judges, appointed by the Norwegian parliament, who are tasked with choosing Nobel Prize winners. But people are starting to wonder if there is a 6th Nobel Prize judge, not appointed by the Norwegian parliament, but by the CIA, who is tasked with making sure that winners of the coveted Nobel Peace Prize advance the agenda of U.S. policymakers. Although the idea may seem far-fetched, this year’s winners all have connections to a CIA offshoot, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED). The NED was founded in the 1980s to promote propaganda and regime-change operations in the service of U.S. imperial interests. Allen Weinstein, the director of the research study that led to creation of the NED remarked in 1991: “A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.”
In class struggle: Unpacking "Violence"
I teach social studies to high school students and I have learned that before we teach historical content it is important to have a conversation with students about violence.
The very first unit that I taught covered the French Revolution, and when we discussed the Reign of Terror I asked my students whether or not they believed that these policies were justified. The majority of the class responded “no” emphatically citing the violence of the Jacobin government.
I realized then that school and media tend to give us a specific perception of violence that highlights interpersonal violence and neglects structural violence. Even property damage may be constituted as “violent” in our popular conception, but poverty, surveillance, policing, and austerity rarely are.
I asked my students what violence is and they gave me lots of examples. Fighting someone, hitting, punching, and shooting is violent. Even words can be violent, they pointed out. I tried to get them to come up with a definition of violence and they agreed that violence is the act of hurting people, but disagreed on whether violence has to be intentional or not. Can policies be violent? Yes, they agreed, they can. What about the existence of homelessness or deny- ing medical care to those without health insurance?
The questions led to lively debate and the class had mixed responses. Students do not need to agree with each other or me, but we should challenge them to think beyond liberal conceptions of violence that erase the state as an actor.
Oftentimes “violence” is ascribed to the reaction to poor conditions, but not to the people and policies that created poor conditions themselves. The police are not violent, but rioters are. The monarchy isn’t violent per se, but revolution aries definitely are. It is important to point out these hypocrisies to students and make sure that topics surrounding resistance and revolution are properly contextualized within the material conditions they occurred in.
I am about to teach about the Bolshevik Revolution and the Soviet Union (USSR), a topic that students are likely to have a lot of preconceptions about. I will need to return to this lesson on violence before I teach this topic, and I urge other teachers to broach this idea in class too!
★★★★★
Red Reads: 100-page impression...
With the intention of soon writing a full review I wanted to share first and strong impressions from the first 100 pages of Celeste Ng’s Our Missing Hearts.
The new novel, released in 2022, has been met with much mainstream fan fare.
Self-described as a novel about the “…unbreakable love between a mother and child in a society consumed by fear…” Ng’s book takes place in a dystopian U.S. amidst what can only be described as liberal-fascist (see glossary, page 6) late-stage fascism.
The characters exist in a “fictional” version of the U.S. that is ruled by the “fictional” PACT.
PACT is defined as “…more than a law…a promise we make to each other: a promise to protect our American ideals and values…” and is responsible for disappearing anyone who revolts, rebels, or challenges the ideals of PACT.
Based on an early impression I suspect this book is written and championed as a warning cry should democracy not be protected, a rationalization for lesser evil politics.
But what the readers and maybe even the author can’t quite see is this is a road map, a foretelling of what’s to come BECAUSE of lesser-evil politics (see editorial, page 2).
Progressive Labor Party has warned that this is where the road to voting leads.
Is Our Missing Hearts actually the world Big Fascists have dreamed up?
Stay tuned as this red reads on.
★★★★★
New Year, more communism
New Year’s Day, New York and New Jersey Progressive Labor Party members and friends gathered to share uplifting experiences. Reflecting on the year and hopeful for the future, conversations on what it means to be committed to communism, politics and the Party challenged me to think of how I am embodying the politics and struggles beyond events to a more holistic practice in every aspect of my life. Games, music, laughter, and the spirit of hope and the wholesomeness of children’s joy filled the afternoon and night.
Thank you PLP for providing a space for such radical joy and community.
★★★★★
- Information
Haiti: Imperialist-created hellhole or hotbed of fightback?
- Information
- 15 December 2022 119 hits
The call by the U.S. President Joe Biden and the United Nations for a multinational invasion of Haiti is motivated in part by their racist dread of yet another refugee crisis. If you ever needed an example of how capitalism is hell on earth, look at what the bosses have done to our class in Haiti. Yet even as capitalist institutions failed at every turn, workers organized a general strike. The masses, led by Progressive Labor Party, (see page 4), will lead the way out of this hellhole.
Working-class lives are expendable for all bosses. For the working class, trading in local gangs for the biggest gangster of them all—U.S. imperialism—is a losing strategy. There is just one choice that can fundamentally change conditions for our class and rid the world of profit and exploitation. The only solution is a communist revolution to smash capitalism and build a new society on the bedrock of need and commitment.
Capitalism in the raw
In July 2021, the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, a U.S.-backed stooge, ignited a wave of unrest and terror from organized gangs that now control 60 percent of the country (Foreign Affairs, 12/1/22). The resulting chaos has led to deadly waves of hunger, rape, and extortion, and the lethal return of cholera, an absolutely preventable disease that is spread by contaminated water.
The unelected U.S.-backed prime minister, Ariel Henry, has asked for international military forces to intervene in Haiti to bring “order” to a society in upheaval. Henry had recently cut fuel subsidies and doubled the price of gasoline, which is now in short supply. Haiti’s ruling class has discarded the mask of liberal democracy and is calling on U.S. imperialism to install fascist discipline and protect the local bosses’ riches—and their despicable lives.
Local bosses back gangs
When the state lacks legitimacy, organized crime becomes a dominant political force. Gangs are essentially capitalists without state power or the “rule of law” that regulates the bosses’ vicious competition. Haiti’s power vacuum is being filled by former cop Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier’s gang “G9 Family and Allies,” which controls access to the essential Varreux fuel terminal. For a country that runs on diesel generators, a blockade of the main fuel port means that schools and hospitals cannot function (The Daily Podcast, 12/8/22).
The G9 Alliance uses murder and sexist violence against women workers as systemic tools of terror (New York Post, 10/15/22). The gang is demanding amnesty, cabinet seats, and Henry’s resignation. They are “financed by Haiti’s tiny clique of import-export oligarchs” (Foreign Policy, 10/31/22), which is nothing new. Working hand in hand with French and U.S. imperialists, these local bosses have played a critical role in Haiti’s impoverishment over the past two centuries. What may appear to be anarchy among rival gangs is in reality an internal fight among bosses against a backdrop of a divided and weakening U.S. ruling class.
U.S. impotence
Since the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, the U.S. has treated the Caribbean and Latin America as its “backyard.” But with the relative decline of U.S. imperialism, China’s capitalist bosses have made inroads in the region, investing over $10 billion in Caribbean countries since 2005.
The U.S. bosses’ weakness is exposed by their inability to respond by rallying its allies and its own military leaders into putting boots on the ground in Haiti. “The U.S. doesn’t want its own troops included” in the multinational force (New York Times, 11/29/22). It hasn’t been able to persuade Mexico, Brazil, Canada, or France to lead the assault. At this point, U.S. imperialists are uncertain if they can pull off an Afghanistan-style invasion.
One sure thing to come is an exodus of more refugees from Haiti to the U.S., where the state-sanctioned thugs of the U.S. Border Patrol will greet them with more racist terror, just as they did in June. Biden expanded temporary protected status for 110,000 workers from Haiti to stay for 18 months—a drop in the bucket for people who have lost everything to the instability and callousness of the profit system. It’s up to our class to welcome and organize refugees of capitalism.
Humanitarianism = imperialism
Beginning in 1791, enslaved Black workers in Haiti led the first successful revolution to abolish slavery, striking fear in the hearts of rulers around the world. Imperialists have been bleeding workers in Haiti ever since. Imperialist extortion of Haiti by the U.S. and France explains why Haiti suffers the worst poverty and inequality in the Western Hemisphere.
History shows us there is no such thing as "humanitarian intervention" in an imperialist system. The U.S., its allies, and the UN have been invading Haiti for more than 200 years, causing ever greater super-exploitation, impoverishment, and instability for workers (see box). The working class in Haiti is rightly feared by the bosses. The politicians and the gang leaders know that once they’re forced to remove their boots from the neck of the working class, their days will be numbered.
Workers have no borders
Progressive Labor Party must fight to turn this hellhole into a hotbed of revolutionary communist fightback To eliminate gangsters on the street and in the halls of government, we need communism.
Organize across borders! An attack on one is an attack on all. We must build international working-class solidarity through our mass organizations. Borders were created by the capitalists to define which workers were theirs to exploit. Working people have no nation!
“I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers…I was a racketeer; a gangster for capitalism.”
— U.S. Maj. General Smedley Butler
The current crisis in Haiti is the consequence of more than 200 years of gangsterism by the U.S. and other capitalist powers.
- 1915-1934: Following the assassination of President Jean Vilbrun Guillaume Sam, the U.S. invaded and seized control over Haitian finances in the name of “stability” for U.S. interests (Foreign Affairs, 12/1/22). Then it violently suppressed uprisings against the U.S. occupation.
- 1994: After decades of U.S. money, weapons, and troops to support the brutal, anti-communist Duvalier gang—which massacred as many as 60,000 people —President Bill Clinton sent 20,000 troops to Haiti under “Operation Uphold Democracy.”
- 2004:Partnering with France, Canada, and Chile, the U.S. invaded Haiti to escort President Jean-Bertrand Aristide out after the CIA orchestrated a coup to oust him (Guardian, 3/13/22). The troops remained until they were replaced by the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), which became infamous for mass rape (Al Jazeera, 10/6/22). This 13-year occupation also brought a siege of cholera that killed 10,000 people and sickened more than 850,000 (AP News, 10/18/22).
THIS is what the capitalist bosses mean by “order” and “stability.” The working class in Haiti has fought back at every step. They fought enslavers, imperialists, super-exploitative industry bosses, the cholera-spreading MINUSTAH, and the Tonton Macoute death squads. Haiti is a harbinger of the rulers’ decay, an example of what’s to come as the worldwide crisis of capitalism deepens and intensifies. There are no certainties in this world, except one: Our class will continue to fight.