- Information
From Haiti cadre school: ‘a tremendous experience’
- Information
- 08 September 2022 104 hits
The following letters are from participants at a Progressive Labor Party (PLP) cadre school in Haiti. (See other letters in this issue)
*
The PLP cadre school was designed to strengthen our ideas about communism and the struggle against the capitalist system. Through this weekend school and the topics we debated, I came to understand that world history has always been a “lutte de classe” (class struggle), that no matter what type of person you are, you belong to a class. And that we have to struggle in the interests of our class.
Consequently, I am a future communist whose goal is to unite people from the disadvantaged classes, to help them recognize their class and the roots of the situation they live in, and to join in the struggle to eradicate the corrupt system based on “exploitation of man by man.” We must plan a revolution to change society and replace it with a proletarian dictatorship. In this sense, workers and students will live the life that they have always hoped for and deserve, based on their contributions to the growth and development of a just society.
*
I was happy to participate in the workshop with PLP. I liked the way it worked, with sessions that we all prepared for, with some of us leading the discussions, and all of us learning from them. It helped us understand our own reality, especially the debates we had. It helped us understand better the source of the misery that we and our parents live day to day. I thank PLP for this work that will help us move forward, in our understanding and in our struggle.
*
The three-day cadre school was a tremendous experience. It allowed us to better understand many things that we sometimes minimize but that play a big role in the decadent situation we are in.
We live under an unequal (and inadequate for most people) system that exploits all the resources, human and otherwise. In the school, we debated many different ideas, leading to an understanding that anything that we want to achieve must be thought out first, and must have a basis in the real world. We understand that the brain is the engine of all thought, but these thoughts are not created automatically; the conditions we live under are responsible for how we think.
We talked about the development of classes, how the first human society was not based on class but on coexistence, learning how to tame nature. There were individual and collective interests, but the individual was not prioritized. That was the primitive form of communism. We discussed what it means to have class struggle, where we fight for the ideas necessary to make our class rule in our own interests. When we don’t fight for our class, if anything is “won” at all, it is merely reforms. And if all we fight for is to reform a corrupt, exploitative system, we still end up with a bourgeoisie exploiting the proletarians. But there are some people who understand this, and say no. I hope to become a committed fighter for the working class and to share what I have learned.
*
The PLP cadre school was really important for me, it helped me acquire new knowledge, it helped me understand the functioning of society, and it allowed me to think in a different way. It taught me how to fight to change this system today. The school taught me how to live collectively and how to support others in struggle. I think the school made me a new person with a new outlook on life.
*
During the PLP cadre school workshops, we had an opportunity to read and discuss with our colleagues all or parts of Historical Materialism, Road to Revolution III and IV, and Reform and Revolution. The readings allowed us to do a lot of reflection so that we could know how the world functions and why, how it was not always like this, and how it became like this.
It is essential that we know what we need to do and know how to arm ourselves, ideologically and materially. We learned that we need to prepare relentlessly, together, to fight the capitalist system that every day increases the misery of the working masses of people, here in Haiti and around the world, through poverty, racism, sexism, and war.
We spent a memorable weekend together, not only studying, but also sharing food, sports, and discussing many ideas of interest to us. I would like to thank the PLP comrades in Haiti and abroad who contributed their efforts to make this cadre school successful.
*
The cadre school session is a space where we learn to debate and to understand/respect everyone’s opinion. It was extremely important for us to participate in this workshop, it taught us to have confidence in ourselves when we read texts that contain new ideas. It taught us how to organize ourselves. I suggest that in the next cadre school, perhaps we can watch a film together and discuss its ideas. Overall it was a good experience.
Gutter racist school dismisses child for mutism
I am writing as a New York City school teacher on the eugenics and class warfare against students at my school. I teach a summer program that acts as admissions to our city’s “elite” public high schools. The program is only for students who are low income, non-English speakers, and/or live in the city’s shelter system. The Big Fascists (see glossary, page 6) use summer programs like this to produce the illusion that “elite” public schools are inclusive, diverse, and meant for working class students. I am here to attest to the fact that this is a lie! The school system uses the petty language and gesture of inclusion to continue genocidal practices aimed at our most vulnerable students.
I saw first-hand the bosses pushing out special education students and other students who do not conform to capitalist “productivity,” “meritocracy,” and “excellence.” In particular, I developed a close relationship with a student ‘E’ who was thrown out by my school for being selectively mute. E stopped speaking to anyone but his mother as a result of a traumatizing pandemic year. Because he did not speak, I would write notes to E in order to communicate with him. I also routinely kept in contact with E’s mother who did not speak English and struggled to advocate for her son in school.
My school administration was not just entirely unhelpful to E, but actively worked to kick E out of school as soon as they learned that a student with disabilities was in my classroom. The justifications for kicking E out of school consisted of pure eugenics with one administrator shouting that “special needs students do not belong at our school.” Other administrators used patronizing liberal language to insist that E would be better served at any school but ours. No one attempted to accommodate or find resources to support E in his learning. If I were not able to translate, there was not even a translator around to speak with E’s mother.
Sadly, I failed in the end and was unable to reverse the decision to kick E out of school. But in the struggle, I learned a valuable lesson: teachers and students must come together to fight back against Big Fascists hypocrites. The Big Fascists use “inclusive” programs and language as cover for their crimes against children and our class—they are never to be trusted.
******
- Information
EDITORIAL: Taiwan: a killer trap for the working class
- Information
- 29 August 2022 99 hits
China’s bold response to the recent visit to Taiwan by Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives and third in line to the presidency, exposed the decline of the U.S. as a superpower, the rise of capitalist China, and a sharpening competition that will eventually lead to World War Three. Pelosi’s provocative trip had nothing to do with the defense of “democracy” or the promotion of “freedom.” In reality, despite disagreements over her tactics within the U.S. ruling class, it was a move to defend U.S. imperialist profits with a risky show of power. The workers of the world must have the clarity to turn inter-imperialist war for the division of the world into a revolutionary war for communism where the working class runs society.
The U.S. capitalist bosses know that China is the main threat to their imperialist dominance and the global military advantage they’ve held since World War II. But their actions in the face of China's growing influence, particularly in the Pacific, do not match their rhetoric. On the economic front, China has built the Belt and Road Initiative and the Comprehensive Regional Economic Association. On the technological front, it is in the forefront of artificial intelligence and quantum computing. Militarily, China has developed the world’s largest navy. Its expanded nuclear forces almost rival those of the U.S.; in hypersonic weapons and other new technologies, China is out front.
Where the current U.S. defense budget is flat, after inflation, China continues to raise its military spending by up to 10 percent each year (foreignaffairs.com, 8/10). President Xi Jiping has declared that China will become a “world-class power” capable of “fighting and winning wars” by 2049 (bbc.com, 7/28). As their recent military maneuvers demonstrated, they may be ready to move against Taiwan long before that point. Even before Pelosi’s trip escalated tensions, a U.S. admiral predicted that China might invade the island nation off its coast by 2027 (nbcnews.com, 3/10/21).
As the U.S. tries to counter China’s buildup with its Quad alliance with Japan, Australia, and India, imperialist war drums are beating loudly in the Pacific. It’s up to the workers of the world to reject all of these criminal bosses and respond with international working-class unity and communist revolution.
Taiwan: inter-imperialist flashpoint
Taiwan has been an anti-communist haven since 1949, when Chiang Kai-Shek and his nationalist band of murderers and thieves fled there after being smashed by Mao Zedong’s communist forces. The future of Taiwan is critical for both China and the U.S., the island’s two biggest trading partners. The Taiwan Strait, as the main shipping route for "goods from Asian factory hubs to markets in Europe, the US and all points in between" (bloomberg.com, 8/2), is a linchpin for global supply chains. Taiwan manufactures two thirds of the world’s computer chips and more than 90 percent of the world’s advanced semiconductors, essential components for both industry and modern militaries (bbc.com, 8/8; sputniknews.lat). In addition, if China takes control of Taiwan, it “could be freer to project power in the western Pacific region and could possibly even threaten U.S. military bases as far away as Guam and Hawaii” (bbc.com, 8/8).
Today the U.S. promotes Taiwan as a beacon of "democracy" in a period when liberal democracy is failing left and right. In fact, Taiwan is a beacon of super-exploitation and rotten, anti-worker ideas. Its capitalist bosses have fostered a Taiwanese national identity to divide workers from their class sisters and brothers in China and throughout the world. The country’s prosperity has been built on apartheid--the racist treatment of 700,000 migrant workers from Southeast Asia, who labor in unsafe factories and are exploited and controlled by third-party labor brokers (thediplomat.com, 10/10/19).
Taiwan’s nationalist poison is a core part of the ideological arsenal to win workers to fight in the impending inter-imperialist war. The communist antidote is proletarian internationalism. Only a united, international working class can sweep away the imperialist, fascist forces.
U.S. imperialists in decline, China on the rise
The Chinese imperialists used Pelosi's trip to escalate their nationalist rhetoric about "One China" (elfinanciero.com.mx). Under the pretext of guarding its territorial security, the Chinese bosses moved their ships into Taiwanese waters and other areas of the South China Sea. Similar to the Russian bosses’ invasion of Ukraine, these imperialist attacks only promote nationalism. They do nothing good for the working class.
Inter-imperialist rivalry inevitably leads to war. This provocation of the U.S. imperialists is one more sign of their desperation to contain the rise of China and their inability to weaken China’s deepening alignment with Russia (jordana.com.mx, 8/17). Pelosi’s trip also signaled the corruption within the U.S. ruling class. Pelosi and her son, Paul Pelosi Jr., met secretly with one of Taiwan's largest computer chip manufacturers. It's probably no coincidence that Paul Jr. "has the second largest stake in a related Chinese company" (thegatewaypundit.com, 8/15).
The U.S. bosses realize that time favors the Chinese in the inevitable military confrontation. However, Biden’s off-script remark that the U.S. would defend Taiwan militarily against a Ukraine-style invasion revealed the lack of discipline within the dominant liberal wing of the U.S. ruling class. In this case, the U.S. bit off more than they could chew. China responded to Pelosi’s visit with unprecedented and aggressive military maneuvers around Taiwan, including a simulated invasion that might accelerate their war plans.
As the decayed U.S. ruling class selfishly grasps at every chance to protect its capital and prop up its sputtering stock market, the Chinese bosses are grappling with a banking crisis that has left hundreds of workers in Henan without savings. A Chinese mortgage crisis threatens the economic stability and future of the middle class. But even as the stability so doggedly pursued by Xi Jinping is in danger, he protects his power with promises to the workers that the Chinese Communist Party—a nest of corrupt capitalist bureaucrats and profiteers—will solve the crisis. But the Chinese bosses long ago reversed the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution and plunged the world into a dark night from which we are still struggling to emerge. They have nothing to offer the working class but exploitation, misery, and death. When workers turn the guns around, these bosses must be among the first to go.
The working class will end the dark night
Amid this escalation of inter-imperialist rivalry, workers in South Korea held massive protests against military exercises between South Korea and the U.S., demanding an end to the military alliance and the departure of U.S. troops. Liberal bosses will always turn to nationalism to mobilize workers to support their imperialist plans. Our Party must be present in these struggles to organize workers around communist and anti-racist ideas, and to inject internationalist class consciousness.
Amid rising racism, sexism, nationalism, and fascism, Progressive Labor Party stands as the future of the working class. We must sharpen the struggle to turn movements against imperialist war into movements for communist revolution. In the midst of the growing danger posed by rival capitalist gangs, we must maintain our unwavering trust in and dedication to our class. Our goal is to end this criminal system and build a communist world of social equality. Join us!
OAK LAWN, ILLINOIS, August 5—Over 50 multiracial workers and youth gathered in bold unity today in front of the local kkkop station to protest the racist beating of 17-year-old Arab student Hadi Abuatelah. Members of the international communist Progressive Labor Party (PLP) proudly joined the ranks of the angry fighters, advocating for communist revolution as the only solution to capitalist state terror.
On July 27, Hadi and friends were pulled over by the klan-in-blue because the car they were in allegedly “smelled like marijuana.” During the frisk that the youth were subjected to, Hadi took off on foot. Dashcam video as well as bystanders recorded three large Oak Lawn cops soon tackling him to the ground and viciously beating him with fists after he had already been subdued and handcuffed.
Hadi was taken to the hospital (under custody) where he was diagnosed with a brain bleed, a fractured pelvis, and a broken nose (CBS Chicago, 8/1). The kkkops as well as their racist defenders in the bosses’ media and in the community have wasted no time attacking his character in the aftermath, smearing him as a “thug” and claiming that he resisted arrest and was in possession of a handgun.
As the bosses’ racist and sexist attacks worsen against the international working class, we need to constantly ask ourselves what true justice for workers looks like. Seeing a few killer cops jailed and legal settlements may bring some solace, but this alone cannot stem the tide of capitalist violence. For that, we need the worker-run society of communism. As we fight for Hadi and so many other victims of this profit system, we call on all workers to join the fight for revolution!
Young workers refuse to back down from racism
This evening’s action doubled as an antiracist rally as well as a press conference. A handful of different reform groups attended the program, including an anti-violence mass organization where a number of PL’ers have been active for years.
Walking up to the front of the police station was like walking into a militarized zone. The kkkops had blocked off all entrances with city vehicles and other roadblocks, no doubt in response to another mass rally that took place a few days after the racist assault. Helicopters could be heard circling above, and we could feel the stares and hear the taunts from counter-protestors and racist “back the blue” types nearby.
But the leadership provided, mostly by young Arab women, refused to be intimidated. This area of the south suburbs of Chicago is home to many workers originally from occupied Palestine. They are no strangers to fighting back. Many correctly drew the connections from facing down racist forces here to battling against racist zionist forces and their U.S. imperialist backers in the Middle East.
At different points during the rally, the racist counter-protestors tried to interrupt speeches and chants with their own filthy messages attacking Hadi and us antiracists. Instead of backing down, Hadi supporters chanted and spoke even louder into the microphones, turning the speakers to directly face the racist scum and drown them out.
In barely an hour, we were able to get out dozens of copies of CHALLENGE, while having good political conversations with new and old contacts. Our communist messages of multiracial unity and fightback definitely struck a chord!
Liberal bosses will never serve workers
Throughout the course of the rally, three main demands were brought to the forefront. First and foremost is that all criminal charges against Hadi be dropped immediately (he has been charged with one felony and two misdemeanors; his family has filed a counter-lawsuit). Second is that the kkkops responsible for brutalizing Hadi be fired. Lastly, is that Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx press charges against the cops.
Although the bogus and racist charges against Hadi definitely need to be dropped and it’s always gratifying to see cops get the axe, we must be wary of trusting in liberal bosses like the Black “progressive” Kim Foxx to achieve justice. PLP has held from the beginning that it is the liberal Big Fascist (see Glossary, page 6) bosses who in fact present the greater threat to the working class, even over the open racists like Donald Trump and those who back him. These Big Fascists are able to use identity politics and the promise of minor reforms to disarm workers politically while they ratchet up attacks on us, often to a scale that exceeds what the Small Fascist types like Trump can achieve.
We cannot forget that it was Kim Foxx who refused to prosecute killer kop Eric Stillman after he snuffed out the life of another teen, 13-year-old Adam Toledo in March 2021 (Block Club Chicago, 3/15). Both the courts and the cops ultimately serve the needs ofW capitalism, and work in tandem to attack and divide working people while protecting private property. There’s a reason why in PLP we chant: “The kops, the kourts, the ku klux klan – all are a part of the bosses’ plan!”
Communism will smash the bosses
We will never forget what racist kops did to Hadi, nor the sum total of violence that this racist capitalist system has rained upon workers from its beginning. The bosses may hold power now, but the growth of communist-led multiracial fightback will one day spell their end. Join PLP and help bring that day here sooner.
- Information
Workers History: Harriet Tubman & John Brown, models of multiracial unity
- Information
- 29 August 2022 138 hits
The following article can be used in history and other humanities classes. This model of multiracial unity is a good foundation to set the tone for the school year.
This coming October 17 marks the 163nd an- niversary of the raid on Harpers Ferry. It was a revolutionary revolt showing the need for militant, antiracist, multiracial, revolutionary struggle! The fight against racist terror continues with the re- bellions sparked by police murders this summer. As workers recognize the power of unity, the cops crack down harder on protests.
The southern enslaving class was terrified by the Harpers Ferry raiders’ militant, multiracial unity, a real-life rebuke of their racist stereotyp- ing. One of the raiders’ five Black freedom fight- ers, Osborne Anderson, described the atmosphere before-hand:
“I have been permitted to realize to its furthest, fullest extent, the moral, mental, physical, social harmony of an Anti-Slavery family, carrying out to the letter the principle of the Anti-slavery cause. In John Brown’s house, and in John Brown’s presence, men from widely different parts of the continent met and united into one company, wherein no hateful prejudice dared intrude its ugly self — no ghost of a distinction found space to enter.”
From childhood, Brown vowed to fight slavery
This trust among white and Black fighters did not happen overnight. John Brown’s father was a conductor on the Underground Railroad in Ohio. At 12, Brown met a fugitive enslaved boy and saw the suffering slavery had inflicted
on him, influencing Brown forever.
He believed Black and white work-
ers were completely equal. He put
this knowledge into action daily.
As an adult, Brown moved his family to a farm in North Elba, N.Y. near a Black community of former enslaved workers. Black sisters and brothers were regularly invited to the house for dinner with Brown’s family. He addressed them as “Mr.” or “Mrs.,” sharply contrasting with the era’s racist mores (true even among many slavery opponents).
Preparing for the raid, Brown turned to both Black and white abolitionists. In April 1858, while gathering money, arms and volunteers in Canada, he visited Harriet Tubman. She was well-known to the Black fugitive slave community there, having personally guided many to freedom. Tubman sup- ported his plans, urging him to set July 4, 1858, for the raid and promising to bring volunteers. They agreed to communicate through their mutual friend Frederick Douglass, reaching out to Black abolitionist and former enslaved workers.
Tubman single-handedly freed 300 enslaved workers
Tubman’s own experiences made her and Brown allies. Born around 1820 to enslaved par- ents on a Maryland plantation, Tubman performed house and field work, was subjected to physical abuse and tearfully saw many of her nine siblings sold away from the family. In her teens, Tubman suffered a broken skull from brutal plantation life. Her “owner” tried selling her as “damaged goods.” Instead she fled, walking for several weeks, mostly at night, the 90 miles to Philadelphia via the Un- derground Railroad. She returned shortly after- wards, guiding her family out of slavery to Canada. And that was just the beginning.
Over the following 11 years, with a bounty on her head, Tubman made approximately 13 trips south and guided an estimated 300 enslaved work- ers to freedom in Canada. This resolute, daring revolutionary declared, “I never ran my train off the tracks and I never lost a passenger.”Tubman warmly endorsed Brown’s armed struggles in Kan- sas against the pro-slavery gangs. Brown, in turn, knew Tubman’s courage, militancy, and knowledge of the land and Underground Railroad network, and felt Tubman would be invaluable in executing their plans to free the enslaved by any means nec- essary. He always addressed her as “General Tub- man.” Both believed in direct action and armed violence to end slavery.
Tubman became ill and could not bring her forces to Harpers Ferry, but her work inspired the rest of the raiders. Tubman’s example, like that of Osborne Anderson and the other Black raiders, discredited the image of Black people as passive victims, terrifying the southern enslavers and poli- ticians, and inspired the abolitionist movement.
Black rebels petrified slave-owners
To those today who say workers won’t fight oppression, the stubborn facts of history show struggle is universal. The slave-owners, although talking of “docile” Black workers, knew this well. They were petrified of potential Black rebels and of “outside agitators.” They patrolled all night with dogs and guns to intimidate their enslaved work- ers and to keep Yankees and abolitionist literature away from them.
Today the “outside agitators” are Progressive Labor Party (PLP) communists, fighting to abolish racist capitalism. The bosses assure us that the im- poverished working class is too ground down, too alienated to fight back collectively, saying workers hate communism. Yet they organize cops, plant security, the Minutemen, Black nationalists and sellout union “leaders” to try to keep communists out, and instantly fire them when they’re discov- ered in a factory. Why are they afraid if the working class is supposed to be so passive?
Today, uniting to fight the mutual class enemy is one of the main ways people of different back- grounds are able to overcome the “natural” seg- regation capitalist society promotes. Brown and Tubman demonstrated that racist and nationalist ideas cannot be overcome primarily inside one’s head. It requires material change in the way one lives. Among the Black and militant white aboli- tionists, multiracial unity developed over years of working together, getting to know each other while struggling over their differences.
Today, U.S. capitalism has created its own contradiction. Workers still often live in neighbor- hoods separated by “race” but many are integrated within their workplaces and schools. The bosses try to divide us there as well, with racist job clas- sifications and different types of bourgeois culture to keep workers apart (e.g., soul “versus” country music). Nevertheless, workers rub shoulders every day. Class-conscious workers in PLP must devel- op these acquaintances into friendships and un- breakable bonds in struggle.
Class struggle trumps racism
As in Tubman and Brown’s time, racism perme- ates society. But rebellions and strikes reveal mul- tiracial unity and struggle against the bosses. At the Smithfield Ham Factory in Tarheel, NC, for ex- ample, a 15-year unionization fight witnessed in- tense intimidation from the bosses to scare work- ers from signing union cards. But by organizing support from grocery workers from far and wide, Smithfield workers felt part of a larger community. When the bosses got immigration agents to raid the plant, targeting Latin workers for deportation, the workers saw through this divisive trick and, in November 2006, 500 marched out in a two-day strike protesting this raid, forcing the company to rehire all the fired immigrant workers!
In 2008 in the Bronx, NY, the Stella D’Oro work- ers went on strike for 11 months. These immigrant workers from across the world, men and women, overcame differences and stuck together. Not one worker crossed the picket line! PLP had organized friends, comrades, teachers and students onto the picket lines, bringing solidarity and communist leadership. PLP members steadfastly stood in solidarity with the strikers via donations, rallies and marches, and supported their fight against plant closure. The fight against police brutality is a protracted class war still being waged today. It is the same war left unfinished by Tubman and Brown. This summer PLP joined the militant anti- racist fightback against the kkkops, who in less than a year’s time, stole the lives of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Jacob Blake, and countless others The multiracial character of these protests are glimmers of the revolutionary potential of the working class.
John Brown’s raid and Harriet Tubman’s cour- age in freeing 300 slaves along the Underground Railroad teach us many lessons that hold valuable to the for antiracists. First, Militancy was foremost in their thinking. Tubman declared she would never return to being a slave, that she would rather die fighting. Brown, after fighting in Kansas, real- ized that only bloodshed could end slavery. Many workers agreed with them, especially after the 1857 Dred Scott decision legalizing slavery nation-wide.
The second is that Multiracial unity is essential in any fight. Black workers escaping from enslave- ment received needed help from white abolition- ists to reach the North. Thousands of workers,
Black and white, helped escaping slaves along their journeys and defended them when attacked by slave-catchers. These workers attended public meetings, donated money, passed word to their friends and helped harbor fugitive slaves.
PLP does similar things today. We discuss po- litical struggles and the vital need for multiracial unity against the racist system with friends, cow- orkers and neighbors. We urge them to join in militant antiracist demonstrations, build a multi- racial base with fellow workers or donate to CHAL- LENGE. Every time someone we know does one of these simple acts, they’re making a political com- mitment in the fight against racism, capitalism and imperialism, just as thousands of anti-slavery porters did against slavery — taking small steps to serve and defend those who had escaped slavery as well as those who fought it directly.
Join PLP
We invite all workers, soldiers and students who participate in these struggles to join Progressive Labor Party.
Today’s supporters of antiracist struggle un- derstand — just as did the thousands backing Brown and Tubman 161 years ago — that revolu- tionaries like the raiders then and PLP now are the honest, reliable leaders in struggle. When direct action is required, they know to whom to turn. CHALLENGE constantly reports workers being won to militancy and multiracial unity in struggles against the racist bosses, hailing those joining our ranks. Step by step, the communist movement will grow and lead the working class to revolution and a new world based on members of our class mu- tually meeting each other’s needs, without racist bosses and their profit system.