Profit system treats children as dispensable
Several Progressive Labor Party (PLP) comrades joined a coalition of housing groups on November 3 to protest child homelessness in NYC. More than 104,000 public school children in NYC are homeless, 55,000 of whom are without shelter.
As we gathered in a primary schoolyard we saw a teacher explaining to her students why we were there. Young people led the rally and one speaker reported that while she’s not homeless herself she was protesting in solidarity with her peers who are homeless. Black, Latin, Asian and white united as we marched in the community chanting, “Tenants united will never be defeated,” “Tax the rich, house the poor,” and “What do we want? Housing! If we don’t get it, shut it down!”
PL’ers connected with old and new friends distributing 18 CHALLENGEs as we emphasized the militant housing fight back in Chicago on the front page. A comrade sent a comment to the members of the housing group she’s in saying the march was good, but we need to put antiracism up front. The majority of homeless children and adults in NYC are Black and Latin. She received two thumbs up responses.
PL’ers have been involved in a community organization for many years. We raise PLP’s ideas, have recruited new members and organized an ongoing study group. Recently comrades have been distributing fight homelessness leaflets and CHALLENGE in the streets of our community of concentration.
As we stand up and fight back inside the community organization we want to continue the Party’s presence in the street. Let’s seize the opportunities to lead class struggle and boldly win the working class to revolutionary communist ideas!
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Inspired by struggle against identity politics
Though retired for a few years now, recently I’ve been helping to organize for Progressive Labor Party on college campuses. So I’ve attended the yearly college conference for the last several years. They were all very positive, but this year’s conference was amazing. I was not just encouraged; I was inspired. And it was the new, young leaders that were so very impressive. By young I mean some that were in the Party for a year or two, while others were on the verge of joining.
During the opening session a comrade raised the issue of identity politics. A veteran comrade made the case against identity politics, but the issue was really left sort of hanging in the air. But not for long. It came up in several workshops with some new members being supportive of identity politics. And these were fighters who believed in multiracial unity and had been in struggles against racism from their college campus to Haiti. These were young working class fighters and organizers trying to learn and be stronger antiracists and communists.
But what really impressed and inspired me was the response of two young Black women leaders. In one workshop they patiently tore apart identity politics. They explained how it was a recent, higher education invention and how it divided the working class. How there was no such thing as white privilege; it was racism. How these divisive ideas originated and are being promoted on college campuses and did not have that great an influence in working class communities. I was so impressed with the quiet confidence, knowledge and sharpness of these young Black women leaders.
I briefly spoke to one of these women after the workshops and congratulated her on her leadership role. She mumbled a thank you and then added, but I think I spoke too much. That immediate self-criticism impressed me even more. The future of our Party is in good hands.
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Who should dictate: capitalists or workers?
At a Senior Center discussion group about abortion, I said communists were the first society that legalized abortion. A woman replied, “But communism is a dictatorship”, so I asked the following.
Who dictates…
If women get life saving or needed abortions?
If women and children suffer poverty, homelessness, poor health and starvation?
If women suffer sexism, especially cultural oppression that promotes inequality?
If women are forced to support and die in endless profit wars?
I replied that today it’s the worldwide capitalist class dictatorship’s greed for profits and privileges that determines and promotes sexist, divisive inequality and oppression within the working class.
Women in Iran and worldwide don’t need to just cut their hair; they need to cut their connections to their capitalist dictatorships and create their own communist society that can dictate their right to equality, abortions, education, housing, jobs and an end to sexism, racism, profits, classes, nationalism, endless capitalist wars and religious persecution.
I’ve had these discussions before with the workers thinking about it and the discussions will continue.
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Workers still fighting covid and capitalism
Capitalists have weaponized this disease against workers, using it to cull the less “productive” workers–the elderly and the ill, especially Black communities in the U.S. and Black and Brown countries worldwide. This is genocide and marks the growing tide of fascism. In the wake of the 1918 Influenza pandemic, Nazis rose to power in part by targeting the disabled and ill.
Meanwhile, capitalists continue to reap obscene profits off the pandemic, creating a global wave of inflation that has wreaked havoc on low income workers. The Big Fascists like Joe Biden and Goldman Sachs parrot concern while overseeing draconian economic measures to create mass unemployment and poverty worldwide in the name of fighting inflation. The imperialist U.S. and Russian bosses have started a war that threatens our entire planet with nuclear apocalypse when all workers want is peace to be able to recover from the pandemic.
When will we learn that capitalism can NEVER solve our problems? It only brings workers misery and death. Communism is the only practical solution at this point in human history. Let’s never forget the genocide that these filthy capitalists have waged against the working class as we rise up and put the bosses in their graves!
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U.K. Rishi Sunak, face of fascism for a system in crisis
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- 03 November 2022 101 hits
Amid runaway inflation and surging worker fightback, Britain's chaotic ruling-class merry-go-round has turned--for the moment--to filthy-rich Rishi Sunak, the UK's third prime minister in six weeks. Britain's instability reflects the international crisis of capitalism: a looming worldwide recession/depression, the implosion of the old U.S.-led liberal world order, the bosses' escalating attacks on the international working class, and the global volatility that will lead U.S. rulers—Democrats and Republicans alike—to full-blown fascism and world war with China and Russia.
Britain, once the reliable junior partner for U.S. imperialism from Iraq to Ukraine, is a political train wreck. Following clown-car opportunist Boris Johnson and the dead-on-arrival Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak's job is to try to discipline the hopelessly divided British bosses as he assaults workers with spending cuts. The son of Indian immigrants, Sunak will lead the Conservative Party's racist campaign to scapegoat immigrants for the profit system's failures. He’s the latest example of the deadly illusion of identity politics. Workers must not be fooled!
In Britain, hundreds of thousands of workers, led by critical railway workers, are fighting back in “one of the most significant waves of industrial unrest the United Kingdom has seen since the ‘winter of discontent’ in the late 1970s” (msn.com, 9/1). The Progressive Labor Party's task is to win these workers to the historic struggle for communist revolution, the only solution to fascism and inter-imperialist war.
The bosses’ boss
A practicing Hindu, born to affluent immigrant parents, Sunak received an elite ruling-class education, married into one of India's richest families (Infosys), and trained at Goldman Sachs before stealing another fortune as a hedge funder and venture capitalist. He made a swift rise through Parliament by supporting his Conservative Party’s lethal principles: "free" markets, deregulation, privatization of health care and other social services, mass poverty, the shredding of the social safety net, and widening racist inequalities.
For Sunak and the finance capitalists he serves, the goal is to restore Margaret Thatcher's austerity regime of the 1980s, a brutal attack that decimated the working class. Under Thatcher, the proportion of workers below the poverty line more than tripled, from 13 percent to 43 percent. Child poverty more than doubled. Meanwhile, the rich saw their tax rates cut in half, from 83 percent to 40 percent (Guardian, 2013). With inflation now exceeding 10 percent and the British pound in free fall, Sunak's job will be to balance the books through the death and despair of our class sisters and brothers.
The austerity regimes of Sunak’s more recent Conservative predecessors, David Cameron (2010-2016) and Theresa May (2016-2019), created the massive economic pain that paved the way for Brexit, Britain’s departure from the European Union, which has only aggravated the country’s crisis. With unemployment, housing, and disability benefits gutted, millions of workers’ lives were destroyed. As an aging population required more care, the National Health System was hollowed out to the verge of collapse. Tuition at many universities tripled as tax cuts helped the rich (Harvard Business Review, August 2019).
Smash the bosses’ racist attacks
In line with a long and disgraceful British tradition, Sunak's government will rely on racism to divide workers, scapegoat immigrants, and regain lost profits with more super-exploitation. The racist British legacy of imperialism and colonialism spans over four centuries and five continents. British imperialists pillaged and plundered their way from South Asia to Africa to the Americas and the Caribbean.
In particular, Britain is notorious for its virulent anti-Asian racism. After World War II, it deported hundreds of Chinese seamen who’d been recruited for the war effort, deeming them an “undesirable element” in British society. During the COVID pandemic, vicious attacks against Asians rose by 300 percent (Al Jazeera, April 2021). For nearly two centuries, Britain’s colonial bosses said they couldn't leave India because the people there could not rule themselves. Now, out of desperation for their failing system, they have turned to the son of Indian immigrants to bail them out.
As Boris Johnson's chancellor of the exchequer, Sunak backed the racist scheme to return refugees and asylum seekers to Rwanda. He has reappointed hard-right racist Home Secretary Suella Braverman, another child of South Asian immigrants, who spearheaded the Rwanda plan. In a sick statement, Braverman declared, “I would love to have a front page of The Telegraph with a plane taking off to Rwanda, that’s my dream, it’s my obsession (thenational.scot, 10/1). This disgusting callousness shows what’s in store for the working class, and why communist internationalism is vital for smashing racism.
Like Deporter-in-Chief Barack Obama and Top Cop Kamala Harris, Sunak has only one loyalty: to the capitalist bosses. Identity politics is a fatal trap. Workers have nothing in common with bosses who happen to look like them. They have only one true identity: as members of the international working class.
Liberals are the main danger
After the latest Tory debacle, it’s only a matter of time before the so-called Labour Party returns to power–more bad news for the working class. Like the Democratic Party in the U.S., British liberal bosses are the main danger. On the surface, they may seem to care about workers. But behind their mask of compassion lies a group of bosses who are eager to sacrifice workers to protect their dirty profits. Time and again, the Labour Party has proven itself to be a disgraceful, racist, sexist, anti-immigrant, war-mongering cesspool.
In 2003, former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair (1997-2007) joined George W. Bush in fabricating the weapons of mass destruction myth to justify the U.S./UK invasion of Iraq. Under Blair’s leadership, Britain’s prison population doubled despite a decline in crime. Countless workers struggling with the diseases of capitalism, including drug and mental health issues, were funneled into prison (Independent, July 2009). Now leading in the polls by more than 30 percent, Labour has been accused of ignoring reports of sexism and anti-Muslim and anti-Black racism by senior party members (Guardian, 10/2). These hypocritical liberals are poised to intensify Britain’s attacks on immigrant workers: “Labour’s pitch is not for open borders, but to make laws smarter and police the borders better” (New York Times, 10/26).
No capitalist politicians can serve our class interests. There is no “lesser evil” among the rapacious, murderous bosses. Only one party stands with and for the international working class: the revolutionary communist Progressive Labor Party. Workers must unite to overthrow the profit system that enslaves us. Join PLP! We have nothing to lose but our chains!J
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CUNY Fightback: Students, workers turn up the heat
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- 03 November 2022 93 hits
BRONX, November 2–“Take a hand warmer. You’ll need it” Last week a dozen students and educational workers rallied in front of Bronx Community College due to of lack heat in the entire campus. We gave out hundreds of hand warmers and fliers calling on students, staff, and faculty to challenge racist austerity policies at City College of New York (CUNY) and to join our group that is building a strike movement. This rally was held just a week after we demonstrated a few miles south, at Hostos Community College, where the student cafeteria has been closed for over two years, vending machines and elevators are constantly out of order, and the outdoor spaces have been closed to students. The righteous anger of students and workers at the racist conditions that we’re forced to endure was on display, as people eagerly respond to our fightback message. As we fight for better student and worker conditions on campus we are also calling for communist revolution - a revolution that puts the needs of the international working class first.
What does racist austerity look like?
This fall, members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP) have been active with students and other education workers at Hostos Community College. We have helped to launch a mass petition campaign demanding the immediate reopening of the cafeteria and hiring of unionized cafeteria workers. This campaign, initiated by students, has gained much momentum as hundreds have stopped to sign and talk with us. Of course, everyone asks the same question- “What can we do about it?” Our answer is two-fold: We must fight to open the cafeteria, to get heat back on campus and to stand up to the college administration in whatever way we can. But we must also recognize that these fights aren’t enough and that students at CUNY and worldwide will only get the education that our class needs once we have destroyed capitalism and replaced it with communism. Communism means a society that is run for and by workers, and where there will always be free, quality, life-long education for all workers. Having CHALLENGE present at these rallies has helped us get this vital message across.
As we head into winter, students will have to head outside to buy food. Hostos is in the South Bronx, one of the poorest neighborhoods in the country and in the middle of a true “food desert” with only fast food available. We point out that the CUNY bosses have whittled many campuses to the bare bones, including closing cafeterias in almost half of the 25 campuses across New York City. This is part of a strategy that includes early cancellation of classes and offering fewer and fewer services to students.
New student leadership emerging
“I feel like I’ve been waiting for this my whole life” was the comment made by one new student who has stepped up to help lead and organize these fightbacks.
Students are seeing very clearly that these fightbacks must be led by students in order to have the best impact.
In the past month, new students have come forward to help organize petitioning, make signs, write speeches, and even help with a social justice history trip. We plan to win more students to join the Party. These struggles are a training ground for these students. As students combat racist and sexist inequality on campus they accumulate the knowledge and experience they need,alongside our class siblings, to eventually build and run the communist world they deserve.
What do communist ideas look like in the struggle?
PLP members are always learning how to participate and help lead reform struggles while advancing communist politics. We have a study group that is meeting with students from different campuses around the Northeast, biweekly CHALLENGE rallies in the Bronx and an upcoming conference we are building for. We are challenging identity politics and are clear that having a Latin or Black administrator doesn’t mean they will be more responsive to our students.
Identity politics and reforms are not the end goal - it is communist revolution. Join PLP!
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Robeson, Davis, and Du Bois knew: To fight racism, fight capitalism
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- 03 November 2022 135 hits
The principled stance taken by three of the greatest Black communist leaders of the 20th century — Paul Robeson, Benjamin Davis and William E. B. Du Bois, showed through their practice that to fight racism you have to fight the bosses. They understood that racism was created by capitalism to both divide and weaken the working class as well as to net the bosses hundreds of billions in super-profits from the lower pay forced on Black and Latin workers.
These three leaders of the working class fought in different spheres and in different ways. Robeson became a world-famous actor and singer who used his fame and position to support anti-racist struggles and workers on strike. He also helped to popularize the Soviet Union, at that time led by communists. Robeson traveled the world and in practice built international working-class unity.
Benjamin Davis graduated from Harvard Law School and defended Angelo Herndon, a Black communist organizer in Georgia who was on trial for organizing Black and white workers to fight for relief payments in Jim Crow Georgia in 1932. Davis went on to become a communist community organizer in Harlem who was elected to the New York City Council as an open communist.
W.E.B. Du Bois took on the bosses across many fields as a writer, sociologist and political organizer. Du Bois used the bosses’ publications and academia to attack capitalism, fight against pseudo-scientific racism and fight for workers' power. His organizing led him to finally join the Communist Party (CP).
Black workers’ leadership, key to communist revolution
Robeson, Davis and Du Bois showed the strength and power of Black leadership in the fight for workers power. They were communists and represented both the strengths and weaknesses of the communist movement in the period of the 1920s through the reversal of workers’ power in the Soviet Union in 1953. The communist movement was the leading force in the fight against racism around the world. It also made serious errors, such as participating in the bosses’ elections, as Ben Davis did, that ultimately weakened the communist movement and led to its temporary collapse.The CP built illusions that capitalist controlled democracy could serve the working class. Despite the weaknesses of the old movement, all three understood you can’t fight racism by following the bosses. Robeson, Davis and Du Bois never kowtowed to the big bosses. In the face of tremendous attacks they fought the racist rulers throughout their entire lives.
Robeson felt free of racism in Soviet Union
Robeson stood up for the communist-led Soviet Union during the height of Cold War anti-communist frenzy. U.S. rulers seized Robeson’s passport, fearing his revolutionary influence around the world; hauled him before HUAC (House Un-American Activities Committee), cajoled Black “leaders” and the popular major league baseball player Jackie Robinson to condemn him (although Robinson later said he had made a mistake) and took away Robeson’s internationally acclaimed acting and singing career.
Throughout all these attacks Robeson never once flinched. He was maligned for vowing that Black people in the U.S. would never fight an imperialist war against the socialist Soviet Union (USSR), declaring that the USSR was the first place he had ever felt free of racism. Robeson was awarded and accepted the Stalin Peace Prize. Now, when he is long dead, the rulers and their lackeys try to “honor” him in order to allow some of his greatness to rub off on them, conveniently “forgetting” on whose side Robeson stood.
Davis, communist jailed for fighting U.S. imperiaism
Communist leader Benjamin Davis, beloved by Black and white workers alike in the 1930s and 1940s, was elected to the New York City Council from Harlem on the Communist Party ticket, garnering more votes than any other Councilman of his day. He was a leading fighter to end Metropolitan Life’s ban on Black tenants in their huge tax-supported housing development, Stuyvesant Town. He was indicted and jailed by the Cold War government of Harry Truman for his communist beliefs and support of the worldwide fight against U.S. imperialism.
He continued the fight against the racist U.S. rulers to his dying day.
Du Bois joins Communist Party “the logic of my life”
Finally, there was the great, world-respected William E. B. Dubois, a founder of the NAACP over a century ago, who, after more than 60 years of fighting racism, joined the Communist Party in 1961. Du Bois declared that becoming a communist was “the logic of my life.”
Du Bois was a leader in the fight against racism across intellectual fields and in the mass movement. He brought a class line on racism to the NAACP’s newspaper Crisis, which under Du Bois’ editorship grew to have a circulation of over 100,000. Du Bois took on the battle against the eugenicists and popularized the understanding that race is a social construct without any scientific basis and was created by capitalism to divide the working class.
Du Bois defended the Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin against anti-communist attacks during the McCarthy period. Like Robeson, Du Bois was world renowned. He wrote regularly for Foreign Affairs magazine and was a staunch critic of liberalism as perpetrating capitalist racism. Like Robeson and Davis, he was hounded by the ruling class, banned from traveling, unable to find work. Like them, he never backed down.
Today, Progressive Labor Party is here because of people like Robeson, Davis and Du Bois and millions of other workers who have fought the bosses and united the working class. We look to the lessons learned from their practice. We are focused on the fight against racism as key to uniting the working class. We see that the way to respond to the bosses’ attacks is to fight even harder. We know that we must stay focused on the fight for workers' power , and that’s a communist world.
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Don’t vote, revolt! LA workers reject elections, embrace confidence in working class
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- 03 November 2022 105 hits
LOS ANGELES, November 2–Antiracist fighters have united across Los Angeles County for weeks to stand up against anti-Black and anti-indigenous racism. A recently revealed leaked audio tape exposed a top labor leader and three members of the LA city council, including the first Latin woman president of the council, Nury Martinez, using vile, racist language. They were discussing how to redistrict LA so that the voter population best benefits them. This redistricting also intentionally disadvantages their fellow Black council people. They are modeling themselves off of the big imperialist powers as they carve up the city for their gain. As the Democrats struggle to maintain the appearance of liberalism, calls for the council members’ resignations have gone up the chain as high as President Joe Biden. While most workers fighting for their resignation will simply put their faith in the next up-and-coming Democrat, members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP) are struggling with our base to understand racism as the bedrock of capitalism. Our calls for “Don’t Vote - Revolt'' have to be even sharper when the liberals expose themselves as they do time and time again.
PLP offers a way for workers to overthrow capitalism
It is against this backdrop that PLP hosted our quarterly forum. One of our previous forums on imperialist war was in the works for weeks and was coincidentally scheduled for just two weeks after the launch of the invasion of Ukraine by Russian bosses. Similarly, this forum was already being planned to fall a week after the audio tapes surfaced. Comrades in LA are not psychic though. We just know the enduring characteristics of capitalism - war, racism, police brutality, etc. will never stop wreaking havoc on our class. The system constantly exposes itself as long as we are there to take advantage of the opportunities.
Almost 25 comrades and base members gathered to look at the long history of mass movements in the U.S. - the abolition of slavery, anti-Jim Crow fights, the Civil Rights movement, and the recent antiracist movement reignited during the summer of 2020. The engaging presentation declared all of these time periods as potential tipping points that never tipped due to the reliance on working within the system and electoral politics. Attendees connected with the Audre Lorde quote, “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.” That framework led to a discussion of the tools PLP has to offer our class - organizing on the job, in mass organizations, and in the military to build the Party in the fight to overthrow capitalism and replace it with a system of communism.
Elections trap workers in nightmare of capitalism
All participants agreed whole-heartedly that elections could never bring about the change they want to see in the world. One young Black high school student noted she’s “been looking for like-minded people like us who really want to change the world.”She wants to attend all future PLP events! Another highlight was the attendance of a family in the anti-police brutality movement we work in here. We have known them for a while and discussed Party ideas and shared our literature, but this was the family’s first time coming to an event hosted by the Party. The husband, wife, and their teenage daughter were very engaged and said they learned a lot.
This was not a stand alone forum. In addition to connecting to the LA city council “scandal,” it served as a precursor to an upcoming action. District Attorney George Gascon has been heralded in LA as progressive and for the people. Even after 30 years as an LAPD officer and chief, and no prosecutions of police officers during another eight years as DA in the Bay Area, politicians and organizers alike have uplifted him to be the savior of the working class from police violence. Many families we work with believe his words that he will reopen cases and trust that he will prosecute police moving forward even though there has been little movement on his part for the first year and a half in office. Many are convinced by his excuses - that he wants to do more, but he is underfunded and under attack from the right.
The Party, working in unison for almost three years with the Flores family, has finally been able to break through some of that support. Our next action, which everyone at the forum was invited to attend, will be a march to Gascon’s house. This is a big step in breaking the illusions that people can rely on the system to bring about the justice they seek for their loved ones. The next article will give updates on this action. Until then, we will continue to wage the day to day struggles in building for the time when the next tipping point will actually tip. For a lasting change for the working class, that tipping point must lead to a communist revolution, which will end racist police terror, overthrow the bosses’ dictatorship, and put a PLP-led working class in command of society.