WASHINGTON DC, November 20 – 50 people including members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP) marched in front of DC’s Black, liberal Mayor Muriel Bowser’s home today to protest Bowser ending the DC eviction moratorium. The moratorium, put in place during the Covid-19 pandemic, prevented landlords from evicting tenants, a protection of basic human needs that is only necessary under a capitalist society that prioritizes profit and rent over safety.
The federal eviction moratorium was struck down by the Supreme Court on August 27 and the local DC one ended on July 25. The ending of the moratorium put workers in DC who are behind on their rent payments into crisis as landlords are now able to evict them. The number of people who can’t pay rent has skyrocketed as the Covid-19 pandemic continues to rage and expose capitalism in crisis. The DC housing fund for tenant relief ran out so quickly that the “Stay DC” application for rental relief closed on October 27 even as workers continue to lose their jobs and struggle to make rent (Washington Post, 10/14).
Having a place to live is a necessity, but like all the other needs of the working class, for the capitalists, housing is only about making profits. As long as we live under capitalism our needs will never be met. Under capitalism housing, healthcare, food, everything our class needs are only vehicles for profit. No money, no home is capitalism’s mantra. Our needs will be met when we run society for the working class. Only communism, where resources are provided to each according to need, can do that.
DC politicians serve the developers
Federal funds are not expected to be distributed for tenant relief until March 2022, so the most vulnerable of us are in danger of being evicted at any moment. To add insult to injury, Mayor Bowser just launched her yearly “Home for the Holidays” campaign, which seeks to find homes for homeless individuals, while at the same time doing nothing to stop the current wave of evictions. She is just throwing scraps to DC residents to maintain good PR, exposing her racist hypocrisy.
The rally was lively with chants, pro-tenant-themed carols, and speeches. The rally demanded that Mayor Bowser fund temporary rental relief programs such as Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP) and reinstate the local eviction moratorium. The very idea of guaranteed housing for the DC working class terrifies Bowser and the bosses because that would eat into the profits made by her allies among developers and landlords. Capitalism requires maximum profits, so such goals are “off the table” for the bosses. Black and Latin workers especially are facing evictions and Bowser’s actions will sharpen this racist attack on our class. By sharing CHALLENGE and having conversations with other protesters, PL’ers brought the message that full, decent housing for the working class can only be achieved through a communist revolution in which workers themselves guarantee that basic needs like housing are available to all.
Fighting against evictions and fighting for communism
At the event, community leaders and members discussed how horribly the DC bosses treat the working class. One speaker, who is currently homeless, observed that DC was already terrible at housing individuals before the pandemic. In fact, he said that when he submitted his application for DC housing assistance in 2007, he wasn’t contacted by officials until 2019. Eight months later, he was told that he didn’t actually qualify.
Another speaker, who came in solidarity, lamented that rent-control doesn’t exist for seniors and that she sees numerous people—mainly Black, Latin and Asian—in the tent cities popping up around DC. She rightly observed that this is only happening because of capitalism.
Capitalist society, led by the profit-motive, cruelly leaves the elderly and the poor to fend for themselves for shelter each night, even though there are more than 15 million vacant homes across the U.S. (Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Q3 2021). This serves several purposes: 1) it keeps housing prices higher when housing isn’t distributed based on need and 2) it keeps wages lower when workers are scared they could become homeless.
While the rally primarily sought reforms to make our current society more livable, the only way to permanently end homelessness is to smash capitalism with a communist revolution.
A workers’ state, led by an international, worker-led communist Party would guarantee housing to all workers. Shelter would be distributed based on need rather than based on whatever enriches the bosses the most. Join the PLP and help us work towards this future!
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CUNY: ‘New Deal’ is for imperialist war preparations
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- 18 December 2021 118 hits
QUEENS, December 11 — More than 700 students, faculty, and staff at the City University of New York (CUNY) marched from LaGuardia Community College to the CUNY School of Law today in protest against racist budget cuts, tuition increases, and chronic underfunding. The march was called by the Professional Staff Congress (PSC), union misleaders whose reformist action is stopping short at demands for a “New Deal for CUNY.” Tensions within the march were palpable as misleaders fought for liberal reforms, while many students and marchers, including members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP), chanted loudly for militancy and an overthrow of an education system that continues to put the needs of its working class students last.
Yes, we must join our class brothers and sisters in the streets and fight for these small demands, but we must also never lose sight that ultimately racist capitalism can never be reformed. Only communism can give us the education system the international working class deserves.
PSC’s “New Deal” lists free tuition; increased faculty-to-student ratios; and more funding for student mental health counselors and academic advisors, as some of its demands. While there is nothing inherently wrong with each of these requests, PLP remains clear that these asks will never truly be provided at a university that is run for and by capitalist bosses.
Members and friends of the revolutionary communist PLP sharpened the struggle at the march, highlighting the “New Deal’s” contradictions by distributing leaflets, copies of CHALLENGE, and connecting with coworkers to expose the toxic liberalism of the PSC misleaders and Democratic Party.
Liberals’ ”New Deal”= same old racist sham
The PSC misleadership put on a lukewarm show of performative rebellion with tired speeches alongside a rogues’ gallery of politicians. Among the fake-leftist guest speakers were New York State Attorney General Letitia James and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, two Black Democratic misleaders that have been put into power to dampen the revolutionary spirit of young Black and Latin workers.
Some among CUNY’s 525,000 mostly Black and immigrant students and 29,000 PSC members were deceived into supporting these politicians as alternatives to worsening racist and sexist capitalist crises. But beneath the empty speeches the “New Deal” is nothing more than protection for the same racist capitalist system that has spurred us to take these streets in the first place.
Free tuition, the centerpiece of the “New Deal,” might have been a bolder proposal decades ago when tuition was first imposed in 1976. But no matter how many PSC misleaders’ speeches try to spin it, free tuition is an utterly limited demand and does nothing to attack the capitalist cause of racist educational inequality in the first place.
Today, 66 percent of CUNY students already attend tuition-free through financial aid and scholarships but are saddled with expenses that double the cost of tuition or more. It’s these supplemental fees that hold back and hinder opportunities for Black and immigrant students but fall to the
wayside as liberals congratulate themselves under the guise of charity (Vox, 2/13/20).
In addition to free tuition, university-wide full healthcare, childcare, housing, food stipends, textbooks, transit fares, tutoring, and work-study programs, irrespective of immigration status, should be among the PSC’s MINIMUM demands for students and faculty. These incremental needs, all of which rack up a hefty price tag, aren’t even considered in the proposed and short sighted deal.
Fake leftist politicians like James and Williams know all this. But the government, courts and kkkops serve the capitalist state, not the working class. Wall Street bankers and lawyers fill CUNY’s Board of Trustees not by accident, but because the role of universities under capitalism is to reproduce and protect this racist system.
Rank-and-file leadership of communists and antiracist fighters in the PSC membership must organize alongside students for strikes against CUNY, racism and imperialism, and turn our campuses into “schools for communism” as the old communist movement did nearly a century ago.
1930s: Red-led students, faculty fought like hell
In the 1930s capitalism was under crisis during the Great Depression, and in the middle of it all the old Communist Party organized industries as well as the Teachers’ Union (TU) and College Teachers’ Union (CTU) in cities like NYC.
Communist-led students and faculty in the TU/CTU fought back and won demands like tenure, higher pay and better classroom conditions. They won by uniting Black and white students and faculty in the classrooms through internationalism and militant antiracism against Jim Crow through campaigns like the Scottsboro Boys. They also organized to expelracists and Nazi sympathizers from campuses.
PLP has analyzed the mistakes of the old movement elsewhere, and as we continue to learn from the revolutionaries before us, PL’ers today fight to revive the rank-and-file militancy of that era in every classroom and union meeting to build a mass Party for communist revolution.
Discontent and dissatisfaction with the PSC misleaders at today’s event was expressed by many colleagues. Our task is transforming those feelings into action to build student-worker- faculty unity through sharpening local campus struggles and continuing to build our growing Party study-action groups.
Bosses’”Deals” are preparation for imperialist war
Even if passed, no bosses’ “New Deal” has ever or will ever save the working class. The U.S. bosses have their sights set only on saving their sagging blood-soaked empire. They want our students and youth to fight and die for it in wider imperialist wars against their working class sisters and brothers in other countries.
Tellingly, the “New Deal for CUNY” apes the bosses’ Great Depression-era New Deal, by liberal Democrat president Franklin Delano Roosevelt. FDR’s New Deal was a racist attack on Black and immigrant workers that did not end the Great Depression — World War II did. Government spending on WWII was 10 times the amount that it spent on the New Deal. The U.S. capitalist class ramped up its war production and set the stage for the decades-long world dominance of U.S. imperialism, while the then-communist led Red Armies in the Soviet Union and China defeated the bulk of the Nazi and Japanese fascists.
With U.S. imperialism now on the decline against rising Chinese and resurgent Russian imperialism, imperialist world war and fascism are once again on the horizon. Only the international working class can smash capitalism once and for all. From NYC to Moscow to Beijing, PLP fights to build a mass Red Army to fight for a new revolutionary communist world, not another capitalist “Deal”! Students, workers and faculty, JOIN PLP!
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Paul Robeson: Communist and member of the international working class
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- 18 December 2021 91 hits
The career of Paul Robeson, in both life and death, is an inspiring story of antiracist struggle and revolutionary communist class-consciousness and fightback, an arc that remains a model for the entire international working class. It’s also a story that makes crystal clear the racist hypocrisy of the U.S. ruling class, and the treachery of the bourgeois Black misleaders who attempted to appropriate his memory after his death—while during his life, did everything they could to repress and tarnish him.
Scholar, athlete, singer, actor, antiracist, communist
Robeson won an academic scholarship to Rutgers University in 1915. He was only the third Black person ever to have attended Rutgers, and one of only two Black youth at Rutgers during his entire four years on campus. At college he was both an academic and athletic leader, making Phi Beta Kappa (an academic honorary society), as well as being a All-American football player, and starring in several other sports. And even though Robeson had a beautiful and powerful singing voice, he was barred from the Rutgers Glee Club because of racism at the school's social functions.
Robeson developed a career as a concert singing artist. He had appeared in a singing role in the Broadway musical, “Show Boat” in 1928, and would repeat the role in a film version seven years later. But he was cast in a racist stereotype, and Robeson hoped that through concerts he could side-step the racist pressures involved in dramatic productions and films.
Throughout this period his political consciousness was being developed in the Communist Party. Their influence began to give him the insight that racism was not an isolated phenomenon, but was an intrinsic and necessary part of capitalism, and would never be defeated until the capitalist system itself was destroyed
‘In Soviet Union, I am not a Negro, but a human being’
Robeson’s trips to the then-communist-led Soviet Union in 1934 and 1936 had an enormous effect on him, where he stated for the first time in his life, he felt like a human being, walking in full human dignity. During the Spanish Civil War, moved by the energy, selflessness, and antiracist struggle, he appeared at rallies and concerts to raise money. He also visited Spain to give concerts for the communist-led International Brigades fighting the Spanish, German, and Italian fascists, including a performance on the front lines.
Robeson also supported the anti-lynching efforts of the militant National Negro Congress. Being outside the control of the bourgeois leadership of the NAACP and the Urban League, Robeson became a loathed target of bourgeois Black misleaders, especially the NAACP.
During World War II, Robeson crisscrossed the U.S. appearing at rallies, concerts and other causes in support of the anti-fascist war effort. He drew enormous crowds, raising enthusiasm and hundreds of thousands of dollars from Black and white working class audiences.
Unapologetic amidst capitalist attacks, liberal betrayal
In 1943, he appeared in another very successful production of Othello on Broadway. He was at the peak of his popularity as an antiracist, an actor, a singer, and a fighter against fascism. By 1943, J. Edgar Hoover, head of the F.B.I., already had him tagged for “preventive detention” in the event of some “crisis.”
The end of World War II saw a great increase in racist lynchings throughout the U.S. South, and a rise in racist oppression in the rest of the country. Robeson connected sharpening racist attacks with U.S. imperialism in the post-World War II Cold War era. In April 1949, he attended a Paris meeting of the World Partisans of Peace, where he attacked imperialist plans for a new war against the Soviet Union and the emerging communist-led China. As anticommunism ran rampant, he was denounced by the entire Black bourgeois misleadership—Walter White, Roy Wilkins, Bayard Rustin, A. Philip Randolph, et al., the AFL, and bosses in the entertainment industry.
Peekskill: kkkops and racists riot
The bosses’ hatred of Robeson culminated in a fascist attack which succeeded in breaking up a scheduled concert where Robeson was to sing near Peekskill, NY on Saturday, August 27, 1949. The concert was rescheduled for Sunday, September 4. Several thousand guards of Black and white workers and veterans, communists, and supporters protected Robeson and the 20,000 concert-goers, while Robeson sang in the face of rifles aimed at him (Duberman, Paul Robeson 1988, p. 369).
After the concert, state troopers forced departing vehicles with families with small children to pass through a gauntlet of rock-throwing fascists. One hundred and fifty concertgoers were injured but overall, the day remained a victory for Robeson and the antiracists, showing that determination, organization, and courage could defeat racism even in the face of brutal attacks.
Blacklisted, interrogated for being a communist
In the aftermath, Robeson was blacklisted. Bookings in the U.S. disappeared, and the government revoked his passport in 1950, thus depriving him of the ability to tour abroad. Nevertheless, during this period, he remained politically active, singing and marching to support the Rosenbergs as they were sentenced to death by the U.S. government for fighting against capitalism, speaking at May Day rallies, appearing at benefit concerts for the Labor Youth League and the World Youth Festivals, speaking out against racism and imperialism.
In 1956, he was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), where he was an unrelentingly hostile witness. Throughout this entire period the bourgeois Black misleaders didn't lift a finger to support him. This exposes how Black nationalism is a pro-ruling class idea and a deadend for Black workers.
With the restoration of his passport and the upsurge in the Black civil-rights movement in the late 1950s, Robeson's career saw a mild resurgence. He was able to tour both in the U.S. and abroad until illness overtook him in the mid-1960s. He died on January 23 in 1976.
After his death, the bourgeoisie, both Black and white, engaged in a hypocritical orgy of adulation, naming schools, college centers, and libraries after a man they hated, despised, and feared. All the while hiding and distorting what he really stood for: multiracial unity and a world run by and for working people—a communist world.
A person's life is a process and there was only one Paul Robeson. He was a communist, he belonged to the international working class and the international communist movement. He was a militant supporter of both.
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Remembering Kevin Whitfield: A communist intellectual of principle and character
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- 18 December 2021 123 hits
Kevin Whitfield, a cherished member of the Progressive Labor Party (PLP), died on August 12, 2021 from Alzheimer’s disease. Kevin was born in Brooklyn in 1933 and spent part of his youth in the Panama Canal Zone. There he saw firsthand the horrible impact of U.S. imperialism on the lives of the local working class. This experience helped set Kevin on the path to a life committed to destroying capitalism. Following World War II, his family returned to Queens, NYC where Kevin attended high school and later Columbia University studying Classics and languages.
Kevin’s ROTC (Reserve Officer Training Corps) financed college education required him to serve for more than four years in the Navy. As a U.S. naval intelligence officer fluent in both Russian and German, Kevin was assigned to listen to Russian-language radio reports in the Far East. This gave him a unique perspective on the workings of both the U.S. and Russian militaries. He was forced to listen as fellow U.S. officers bragged about the genocide of three million Koreans killed during that war. Similarly, he witnessed the growing hypocrisy and imperialism of the once socialist Soviet Union.
Fighting imperialism and racism
After his Navy tour of duty, Kevin completed his PhD at Columbia and taught Classics at Columbia, Wesleyan, Brooklyn College, and later UMass/Boston. With his background as a former Naval officer and Irish working-class boy who made good, Kevin could easily have become an academic star. Instead, when anti-Vietnam war students approached him, he gave them his full support. His active opposition to the Vietnam War was a key factor in his denial of tenure at Wesleyan and Brooklyn College.
In the early 1970’s Kevin met members of the International Committee Against Racism (InCAR) and joined the fight to build a multiracial, antiracist mass movement. A few years later, Kevin and his family moved to Boston, where he taught for nearly 10 years at UMass/Boston. He helped build a large and influential InCAR chapter that led to many young people joining PLP. The UMass group became the key component in the many antiracist (often violent) battles against the Klan and other racist groups in Boston and Connecticut. This also included battles against racist police terror in Boston, Worcester and Lowell. Kevin’s efforts helped stop Klan organizing in Boston and New England.
Fighting for communism
As a professor of classics (as well as philosophy and law), Kevin had a great knowledge not only of Greek and Latin, but also of ancient history. Unlike the idealists who one-sidedly glorified Athenian ‘democracy,’ Kevin would point out that Athens was a society based on slavery which conquered and oppressed other parts of the Mediterranean basin. He introduced thousands of students to communist ideas and participated in many campus struggles against budget cuts, racism, and military recruiters. Students would crowd into his office and enthusiastically discuss politics with him there or in the cafeteria.
Kevin was a well studied and modest man who was always there when political work needed to be done, whether writing, editing and distributing leaflets, attending antiracist rallies, or supporting and advising comrades. He worked in community organizations fighting gentrification and evictions and built a communist base among his neighbors in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Serving the working class
Kevin and his wife Pat always welcomed people from all walks of life into their home for good food and provocative conversation. You never heard Kevin complain. He was always comradely, gracious, and supportive, with an ability to make constructive criticisms without judgment. He lent a global and historical perspective to our meetings, struggled with us to follow the plans we had made, and learn from our mistakes.
He modeled for other academics in the Party how to shed the arrogance that’s inherent in professional training and to use one’s position as a “highly educated” person to serve the working class in word and deed. He was a beloved member of the PLP community in the Boston area. We will long remember Kevin’s many contributions. He will live on in our hearts, minds, and in our continued fight back.
The year-long civil war in Ethiopia is a fight over power and money between two vicious groups of local capitalist rulers. It also reflects the sharpening inter-imperialist rivalry between China and the United States for control over the strategically vital Horn of Africa. Most of all, it reminds us that there are no good bosses, no side that represents the interests of the international working class. Workers in Ethiopia have no future under the criminal, Nobel Prize-winning prime minister or the fake-left, identity-based “liberation” forces that stole everything they could while in power.
Only communist revolution, led by a mass Progressive Labor Party, can stop the bosses’ endless blood-soaked clashes for maximum profit. Only communism, a society run by and for the working class, can put an end to sexism, racism, and exploitation.
Workers ravaged by bosses’ conflict
The latest conflict in Ethiopia began in November 2020, when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed ordered an offensive against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. The TPLF, a group long backed by the U.S. and widely rumored to be tied to the Central Intelligence Agency, had ruled the country with secret prisons and brazen corruption from 1991 to 2018. That’s when Abiy “was appointed by the ruling class to quell tensions and bring change, without upending the old political order” (CNN.com, 11/5). The move backfired when the TPLF—whose leaders were ousted from power and arrested for graft—rejected the new government and reportedly assaulted a federal army base outside Tigray’s regional capital.
The war has dragged on ever since—with workers, as always, bearing the brunt of it. According to a joint investigation by the United Nations and Ethiopia’s human rights commission, “both sides have engaged in violations of international human rights, humanitarian and refugee law…war crimes and crimes against humanity” (Guardian, 11/3). Numerous first-hand accounts have told of civilian massacres, torture, and gang rapes. While most of the terror appears to have been perpetrated by Ethiopian government forces and their Eritrean allies, a “youth group called Samri killed ‘more than 200 civilians’—ethnic Amhara—in Mai Kadra, western Tigray, with the help of local police, militias and others affiliated with the rebel TPLF” (Guardian, 11/3).
Despite loud protests by the UN and calls for a ceasefire by the Joe Biden administration, it’s clear that workers have no “human rights” under capitalism, where they are treated either as commodities for profit or as cannon fodder in the bosses’ cutthroat competitions. To date, despite a media blackout, it’s estimated that tens of thousands have been killed in the fighting in Ethiopia—on top of the 1.4 million that were killed in the earlier, 17-year civil war that originally brought the TPLF to power. More than two million workers have been displaced, and a “man-made famine”—created by government blockades against emergency food deliveries—have left hundreds of thousands on the brink of starvation (Aljazeera, /11/4).
China rising
The carnage in Ethiopia has been fueled by arms exports from an array of capitalist bosses striving to gain a foothold in the Horn of Africa, from China and Russia to Germany, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates (ipsnews.net, 11/25). Before a belated arms embargo declared by Biden on November 1, the U.S. had heavily invested in the “modernization” of the country’s military, dating back to the 1950s.
Besides the fact that it’s the second most populous country in Africa, why does Ethiopia get so much attention from the imperialist bosses? To begin with, it’s a matter of geography. Ethiopia is the dominant nation in the Horn of Africa, which controls the oil route from the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea—from the Middle East to Europe. After being dominated by Britain and the U.S. and then invaded by Italy under Mussolini’s fascists in the runup to Word War II, Ethiopia became a semi-colony of the Soviet Union, pushing a state capitalist ideology that contributed nothing for the benefit of workers. After the Soviet Union collapsed in the early 1990s, the U.S. rushed to fill the void. In recent years, however, there’s a new contender for regional influence, the rising capitalist power of China.
For China, Ethiopia is “the gateway to Africa” and the continental lynchpin for China’s Belt and Road Initiative. China has flooded the country with inexpensive mobile phones, solar energy (in a country where only 30 percent of the population has access to electricity), and ambitious infrastructure projects. “By giving loans that are unable to be paid back in full, China holds Ethiopia firmly within its grasp, creating a never-ending cycle of debt…Chinese lenders require collateral: in this case land and resources. This places the country more into Chinese control, and supplies cheap land for China to build overseas manufacturing” (medium.com, 3/26/20).
The once-sleepy international airport in Addis Ababa is now the third busiest in East Africa, a major cargo hub for Chinese exports (medium.com, 3/26/20). China has also leveraged its growing power in the region by establishing its first overseas People’s Liberation Army naval base in neighboring Djibouti.
Fight for communism!
Never in Ethiopia’s history has there been a government that defends the interests of the working class. Workers have been oppressed by a succession of dictatorial, racist, and nationalist regimes and immersed in endless war. They have no role under capitalism except to suffer and die. The experience of Ethiopia shows the urgent necessity to end capitalism for all time with a mass international revolution that arises from the minds and hands of workers in the factories and fields. The revolutionary ideas of PLP will guide us to replace the dictatorship of the bosses with a dictatorship of the proletariat. Workers' internationalism will smash sexism, racism, imperialism, nationalism, and the exploitation of the working masses. Fight for communism! Build PLP in every corner of the planet!