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Combat capitalist contagion with communist fightback
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- 31 December 2020 92 hits
On December 20, in suburban Indiana, Dr. Susan Moore, a Black woman, died of racism after doctors dismissed and refused to treat her Covid-19 symptoms and severe pain. Meanwhile, in South Africa, a factory is producing millions of doses of lifesaving vaccines for the U.S. and other wealthy nations in Europe, but none for the poor Black people who work and live there—and who have been hit harder by the pandemic than in any other country on the continent. With racism and exploitation as its lifeblood, this capitalist profit system infects and sickens everything it touches. Progressive Labor Party calls for workers to vaccinate our class against the contagion of capitalism with the only medicine that really works: communist revolution (see box below). Build the fight to build a need-based and collective system! Join Progressive Labor Party!
Capitali$t healthcare: pay or die
Because big pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer are driven by their need for maximum profit, they won’t suspend “intellectual property rights” to their vaccine. As a result, “most people in low-income countries will be waiting until 2024 for Covid-19 vaccinations if high-income countries keep engaging in what some are calling “vaccinationalism” (Duke Global Health Institute, 11/9/20).
After centuries of looting workers in Africa, Asia, and South America, the imperialist countries have cleared the shelves. “Over half (51%) of the doses reserved will go to high-income countries, despite the fact those countries only represent 14% of the world’s population” (Forbes, 12/15/20).
In falling-in-a-frenzy powers like the U.S., vaccines have been trapped in a muck of anti-scientific skepticism, money-mad competition, and individualism. The bosses’ allergy to science reflects broader capitalist decay. Finance capital, the dominant wing of the U.S. ruling class, is using the vaccine to attempt to buy back workers’ trust in its failing institutions—a must as they prepare for global war against China and perhaps Russia.
Medical apartheid, global scale
The international working class is justifiably mistrustful of medical science. There is a long racist history of Black, Latin, and Asian workers being forced or coerced into dangerous mistreatment. White workers are also hurt because racism weakens the health of the entire working class:
• Jamaica, 1760s: British doctor John Quier experimented with smallpox inoculations (a precursor to vaccines) on 850 enslaved people, including pregnant women and sick infants.
• Alabama, U.S., 1830s: Enslaver J. Marion Sims, “father of gynecology,” operated on enslaved women without anesthesia. He shared the racist belief that Black people didn’t experience pain like white people, a myth that infects doctors to this day (The Washington Post, 7/11/2020)—as Susan Moore attested before they killed her.
• Namibia, 1900s: In line with his call to ban “mixed marriages,” Eugen Fischer sterilized the descendants of European-born fathers and Black mothers. He later joined the German Nazi party and performed medical atrocities in the fascist death camps.
• Alabama, U.S., 1930-1970s: In the infamous Tuskegee study of untreated syphilis, 600 Black men were left to sicken and die, even after a cure was found.
• Puerto Rico and Massachusetts, 1950s:During a period of eugenicist legislation and forced sterilization, two Harvard professors tested a birth control pill in the slums of Puerto Rico and asylums in Massachusetts. Women’s uteruses were sliced to “understand the drug’s effect on ovulation” (The Crimson, 9/28/17).
• Côte d’Ivoire and Thailand, 1990s: HIV treatment was withheld from men, women, and newborns.
• India, 2005-2017: Nearly 5,000 mainly low-caste workers died in drug trials and research (The National, 9/17/18).
Covid-19 has once again exposed medical racism. It’s no accident that deaths are highest among Black, Latin, Asian, indigenous, undocumented, imprisoned, indigenous, and poor workers. They are the most vulnerable to exposure and infection from racist inequalities in healthcare, jobs, housing, and food quality. Because of capitalism, they are the most likely to have underlying conditions like diabetes and heart disease.
Ruling-class chaos breeds skepticism
Under outgoing Racist-in-Chief Donald Trump, anti-scientists seized control of nearly every corner of U.S. policy, from the environment to public health. But the main wing finance capitalists also bear responsibility for many workers’ lack of confidence in the new vaccines. Chief medical advisor Anthony Fauci initially cautioned against wearing masks—an outright lie to cover for the bosses’ shortage of protective equipment—before calling for their mass use. Before endorsing the vaccine, President-elect Joe Biden initially sounded warnings against it as politically motivated and rushed to benefit Trump (NYT, 9/16/20).
The latest polls say that more than a quarter of the U.S. population remains hesitant to get the vaccine. Skepticism is highest among Republicans at 42 percent, followed by Black adults at 35 percent (KFF.org), though these numbers may be decreasing as more people get vaccinated. From the data we have so far (see box below), it seems clear that the vaccine is safe and effective—if only because the capitalist bosses need a healthy working class to stem their economy’s hemorrhaging of billions of dollars. Ultimately, the U.S. empire is at stake.
Collectivity over individualism, science over subjectivity
The Kaiser Family Foundation poll also monitored workers’ attitudes toward collectivity. Half of those questioned believe that getting vaccinated is “part of everyone’s responsibility to protect the health of others.” But the other half believe it is “a personal choice.” This is the virus of individualism, the mythology of capitalist “freedom” that acts against workers’ own interests. The collective comes first. Our decisions must be based on the needs of the entire working class.
For communists and their friends and comrades, it is necessary to educate ourselves on how vaccines work and why they are crucial to the well-being of our class. Just as we approach strikes and reform struggles as schools for communism, we must fight for the health of our working-class brothers and sisters while exposing the rulers’ racism and profiteering.
As long as we live in a capitalist system, pandemics are inevitable. But herd immunity is a step toward communism. Workers must be healthy and fit to battle against the racist and sexist atrocities to come. We must fight for a communist revolution that will make workers’ collective health primary.
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The mRNA Covid-19 vaccine explained
The Progressive Labor Party hails the development of vaccines and urges workers to take what is demonstrating to be a safe and effective shot against Covid-19.
Unfortunately, the racist, profit-driven capitalist medical system heightens our fears and mistrust even when scientists get it right. In fact, research on mRNA (short for messenger RNA) vaccines began in the early 1990s. Scientists have tested these vaccines in both animals and people for SARS, MERS, Ebola, Zika, and rabies (Harvard Health Publishing, 12/10/2020). The Covid-19 vaccine is not the result of speedy experiments.
In a nutshell, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines mimic a part of the surface of the Covid-19 virus called the spike. A harmless fragment of viral spike proteins primes our immune system to attack and ward off the disease in the event of exposure. There is no virus in the vaccine. Together, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines tested nearly 30,000 people. They’ve demonstrated 95 percent efficacy in preventing Covid-19, with virtually no serious side effects aside from a few cases of rare and treatable allergies. For a video explaining how the vaccine works, go to www.tinyurl.com/asapsciencecovid
The subjects in clinical trials have been mainly white men; only 5 percent are Black (Healthline, 8/9/20). In fact, community outreach groups have reached out to Black volunteers to make the study more inclusive and representative of the population. Fighting for equitable research is part of the antiracist fight.
Since Covid-19 has had a disproportionate impact on Black and Latin workers, from death rates to unemployment, they should have priority for vaccination. Fighting for equitable distribution is also part of the antiracist fight.
Judging from the long history of vaccines, long-term ill effects are unlikely. Local reactions at the injection site are common. Fatigue and fever are more common after the second dose. Most people experience sore arms and little or nothing more.
No medication is 100 percent safe. But with 82 million Covid-19 cases and over 1.8 million confirmed deaths worldwide (Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, 12/30/20), the vaccines’ benefits far outweigh their risks.
INGLEWOOD, CA, December 30—Only a system as ruthless as capitalism would put a family out on the street in the middle of a raging pandemic. With the ICU beds at zero percent availability, LA is a dangerous place to contract Covid-19 right now, yet that is exactly what happened to one of the family members because of this eviction. Through the class struggle, fighters are learning the profit system cannot and will not provide for our class. Only we can do that through communist revolution.
Members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP) have united with a working-class family to reclaim their home from a blood-thirsty mortgage company attempting to make a quick buck off of racist gentrification. PL’ers are fighting tooth and nail to hold on to the home stolen from this working-class family, but that will not stop the next family from being evicted. Capitalism is a system that will always put profits over people.
In the 55 years PLP has existed, many inspiring struggles have been waged, some won and some lost. Regardless of the reform outcome, we see glimmers of hope of the communist future we are fighting for! This struggle is no different.
Here to stay
When three young women boldly defied eviction orders under threat of arrest and brutality by the police, we can see the seeds of what we are building. On Friday, December 18, these women leaders, one as young as 17, confidently walked up the front steps, entered their home, and turned on all the lights—their commitment to fight back written on their t-shirts – “HERE TO STAY!”
In the background, they were heralded with cheers from those assembled at the house in support. Campaign participants posted signs of protest around the house, put up Christmas lights, and brought in food and other necessities for the family.
The mother of the family who we are working with bought the family home in 2006 with two mortgages, one very large, the other much smaller. This immigrant family found ways to piece together money and never missed a mortgage payment for 14 years. In 2012, the mother was scammed into believing that she no longer had to make payments on the smaller mortgage.
Then in 2016, Trojan Capital Investment, LLC (Trojan) purchased the smaller mortgage and immediately sent her a “default” notice. It was no coincidence that the notice was sent soon after the announcement that the SoFi football stadium would be built in Inglewood just a few miles away from the family’s home.
The working-class connection
On November 30, the mother and her three teenage children, two of whom attend the school where one of our PLP comrades teaches, were evicted from their home by the LA Sheriff and Inglewood Police Department (IPD). The mother contacted a non-profit community organization that she had worked with. The non-profit in turn contacted a local tenants’ union that two PLP members have been working in for the last two years. The non-profit, together with tenants’ union members, immediately began a campaign to save the house for the family.
The eviction came just as Governor Gavin Newsom was issuing a “safer-at-home” advisory because of a huge increase in Covid-19 cases. Los Angeles County already has the second largest homeless population in the U.S. and the crisis has only worsened during this pandemic. The 2020 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count showed 66,436 people in LA county experienced homelessness, which is a 12.7 percent rise from last year (Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, 6/12/2020).
Our regular involvement in mass organizations and in our schools has created an opportunity for our Party to be a part of this struggle, which represents a broader struggle against the horrors of racist, anti-working class gentrification and homelessness. This fightback is a testament to PLP’s commitment to building a mass Party and fighting among the masses in the workplace, schools, and community organizations.
Working class fights back against eviction
The immediate goal of the reform campaign is to get Trojan to negotiate the return of the family’s home. There have been many positive aspects to the campaign so far. The tenants’ union has many young workers who have an understanding of the racist, sexist, and murderous aspects of the capitalist system.
Several members have gone “all in” on the fight back, doing multiple shifts to guard the house 24/7 from the IPD, taking the lead on canvassing in the neighborhood to get support from workers, and planning political education activities involving the family and supporters.
The tenant’s union has brought to bear its experience fighting racist gentrification at an apartment complex located across the street from SoFi, where tenants’ rents have skyrocketed. The commonality in the two struggles shows that working-class renters and homeowners have the same class interests.
Other PLP members have also actively participated in the campaign. We highlighted the dual role of the cops—they are racist terrorists who intimidate and murder our sisters and brothers while simulatenously work as thugs for businesses like Trojan, which add workers to the homeless population in order to cash in on their investments. In other words, the police serve and protect the profit system.
When the united working class exercises its political power through the might of one international Party, we can eliminate the profit motive for racism, homelessness, gentrification, and killer cops. No reform can ever accomplish that—only comunist revolution can.
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2020: Capitalism is the virus, communism is the cure
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- 31 December 2020 104 hits
The fatal system of capitalism is in crisis and the only way a system built on profit and exploitation can be sustained is by feeding off workers. This year, workers around the world were shook up by the Covid-19 pandemic and bosses showed that there’s no limit to the lengths that they will go for profit. Bosses proved that the ruling class has and will always bail out their fellow crooks, while the working class showed that whether bloody and hardly breathing we too will fight tooth and nail for the lives of workers. The Progressive Labor Party(PLP) will put communism in practice whenever we’re faced with a crisis. The resounding lesson from this year is that capitalism is the virus and communism is the cure.
The disease of capitalism kills
Bosses from China to the U.S. have used their killer kkkop attack dogs on workers, carried out racist murders, have left the most vulnerable to die unprotected and carried out inhumane evictions. As a result, nearly two million workers have died of Covid-19 and hundreds of millions more have suffered greatly—not just from Covid-19 but from this burning system of capitalism.
Although Jim Crow Joe Biden won the U.S. 2020 election, workers are still losing their jobs by the millions and bosses of all races and stripes are squabbling over what crumbs they would toss at workers. They then rescinded the offers of student loan forgiveness, closing immigrant detention centers and any other worker protections in the next breath. Meanwhile both Small and Big Fascist factions of the U.S. ruling class have agreed to bail out banks and corporations to the tune of trillions of dollars.
Heading into 2021, there’s a race between bosses around the world for the vaccine. The lack of equal access to the vaccine and floundering international influence means workers will still lose and the bosses' racism means Black, Latin and Asian workers will be attacked the hardest. This year has only increased the urgency for workers to unite on the job, and in our neighborhoods and schools to fight back and build a communist movement.
Ascendant China, resurging Russia fill void
Throughout the pandemic, with brute force, militarized policing, and silencing tactics against whistleblowing doctors, bosses in China have clamped down on the coronavirus outbreak and used the lockdowns to enhance their economic position. In the wake of president Donald Trump sabotaging multiple international trade agreements, China’s bosses announced a 25-year bilateral deal with Iran in August, followed by the massive Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) in league with fourteen other Asian-Pacific nations.
The bosses in Russia projected significant military influence in conflicts in Libya, Nagorno-Karabakh, Belarus, and Syria. History shows that declining empires do not go quietly into the night. Battle lines were noticeably hardened in the last twelve months as the imperialist bosses continued their march towards another world war.
Still, in spite of all the capitalist state-sanctioned violence, 2020 offered some clear and inspiring visions of international working-class power on display. Workers rebelled in a scope not matched in over half a century, with the fires of multiracial working-class unity striking mortal fear to the core of racist bosses across the globe.
Workers want and will fight for liberation
Members of the international communist Progressive Labor Party (PLP) were proud to fight alongside our class throughout the year, receiving and giving leadership in the midst of class struggle. Our collective resolve was tested and strengthened, and we were reminded of our class’s potential to run society in workers’ interests, without borders, bosses, or profits. These lessons will no doubt be carried into the new year as PLP continues to win people to our international Party and a lifetime of revolutionary communist struggle.
In the early days and weeks of the pandemic, despite unknown risks, millions of working people stepped up to share resources and solidarity for their class. Mutual aid organizations popped up all over the world and massive car caravans were organized to protest the racist outbreaks of Covid-19 exploding in the bosses’ concentration camps. Workers in Haiti, a country devastated by centuries of imperialist intervention, banded together to provide public health resources, shelter, and food. Mass tenant organizations opposing evictions have gained traction in major cities.
The racist murders of Black workers Breonna Taylor and George Floyd provoked mass worker-led rebellion on a scale not witnessed since the late 1960s. Workers rebelled against a capitalist system that has no regard for our lives. Members of PLP travelled to Minneapolis, Kenosha, and Philadelphia to fight alongside our class and spread communist politics in opposition to capitalist state terror. The working class unleashed fightback in cities such as Bogota and Lagos, where workers fearlessly squared off against the bosses’ paramilitary forces.
Millions marched and took the streets from Poland to Thailand to Belarus to Chile. A general strike of 250 million workers in India—the largest in human history—demonstrated widespread opposition to pro-corporate agriculture reforms.
As communists in PLP, we are proud and inspired to fight as part of this international class struggle. We have waged an uncompromising fight to win other workers beyond the traps of identity politics, voting, and reforms. We have made modest gains in demonstrating that communist revolution through our mass Party is not only necessary, but possible.
Onward to another year of fightback
In 2021, PLP and friends of the Party will fight for what’s best for our entire international working class and put communism in action through fightback and dialectical-materialist study. As the international working class heads into the next year, the stakes are undoubtedly high. The racist and sexist bosses clearly have no intention of letting up, and due to their imperialist rivalries will be forced to ramp up fascist attacks in preparation for war.
May the lessons of class struggle that we have drawn in the past year lead us forward in our fight for a world free of racism, sexism, poverty, and imperialist war! Onward to a communist future!
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Lessons from the fight against racist hospital closure
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- 31 December 2020 98 hits
CHICAGO, December 22—On December 15, a state review board voted against the racist proposal to close Mercy Hospital on Chicago’s south side. Mercy is a safety-net hospital, the city’s oldest, that treats majority uninsured and underinsured Black and Latin workers.
The board’s decision came as the result of hundreds of workers, patients, and community members organizing for months to oppose the closure. We have participated in rallies and caravans, blocked intersections, shared petitions, and gave countless speeches and testimonies as a means to prevent this racist attack on workers in the middle of the deadly coronavirus pandemic. Members of the international communist Progressive Labor Party (PLP) have been active fighters in this struggle.
But as workers already know, this fight is by no means over. The racist billionaire owners of Mercy, Trinity Health, are already plotting in the wake of the ruling to move ahead with the closure.
The time is now to broaden the base of this struggle, and to include even more workers into the fight. It’s essential that we look past pleading with liberal politicians to guarantee a healthy future for our class, because they’ve only proven themselves to fail and attack us, time and again. It’s time to reject this capitalist system that fails billions of workers daily around the globe, and start organizing for an egalitarian communist future with PLP.
Lesson 1: Trust no capitalist politician
During the campaign to keep Mercy open, a strategy has been to try and create leverage and pressure on some of the leading politicians in the city and state. To this end, there have been regular appeals made to Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Cook County Board chief Toni Preckwinkle, and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker. But like their Republican counterparts, these pro-capitalist lackeys are no friends of workers.
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has been silent on the struggle, claiming that decisions regarding hospital closures are more of a “state issue.” No doubt she has her hands full, trying to perform damage control after video was released of the racist Chicago Police Department (CPD) handcuffing Black worker Anjanette Young while naked in her home, during a botched raid (ABC7, 12/21).
In this regard, she follows in the footsteps of her predecessor, Rahm Emanuel, who similarly covered up the dashcam video of CPD’s racist execution of Black teenager LaQuan McDonald until after his re-election was secured in 2015. One of his first moves after getting into office was to close half of the city’s mental health clinics, which served mostly Black and Latin workers (Chicago Tribune, 6/6/19).
State Governor JB Pritzker has admittedly been more vocal about Mercy, but workers have no reason to trust his “progressive” credentials. His family is one of the ten richest in the U.S., at an estimated worth of over 30 billion (Forbes, 12/16). This massive fortune was gained through the direct exploitation of countless workers.
Lastly, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has made a reputation of being a queen of cuts, and is actually in the process of phasing out emergency services at Provident, another safety-net hospital on the south side (South Side Weekly, 11/27). This is in line with her decision almost 10 years ago to close Oak Forest Hospital in spite of worker protest (WBEZ, 8/16/11).
All politicians, regardless of race, at the end of the day are loyal to the needs of this racist profit system. We should not expect a different outcome in trusting them with Mercy’s fate.
Lesson 2: Capitalist health care will never meet our needs
As healthcare workers, we have witnessed firsthand some of the worst racist destruction of this pandemic that has killed over 1.5 million workers worldwide, including over 300,000 in the U.S. Yet despite continued surges in cases and facilities overflowing with patients, the healthcare bosses still have gone ahead and closed over 20 hospitals nationwide this year (Becker’s, 12/9).
Healthcare under capitalism is a commodity, a service to be used in order to turn a profit. Actual outcomes in guaranteeing that we as workers lead healthy lives take a back seat to the bosses’ pocketbooks. With this in mind, it makes sense that Trinity Health would want to move ahead with closing Mercy despite having assets in the billions. Capitalism is about maximizing profits and market share.
Paired with a threadbare public health infrastructure in the city, these hospital cuts prove deadly for Black and Latin workers, whose life expectancy can average a shocking 30 years less than those living in wealthier neighborhoods (AP News, 6/6/19).
If the international working class is ever to reach our true health potential, we need to rid ourselves of this racist destructive system. Only a communist society based on collectivity and worker needs – not profit – can guarantee true health equity
Final lesson: Join PLP, fight for communism
Those of us who have committed ourselves to the fight to keep Mercy open have much to be proud about. We have for the time being forced the bosses to pump the brakes on closing, an outcome that will no doubt save workers’ lives.
But with all reform struggles, the bosses hold the upper hand. They hold state power and as such can take away our hard fought gains.
The only way the bosses can’t quickly reverse the outcome is if workers build an international mass movement to forcibly take state power from them and run a communist society in our interests. It’s been done before, and through organizing a mass revolutionary PLP, we will do it again. PLP invites all workers to join our fight to build a better world.
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Smash MTA cuts with worker-rider unity & communism
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- 31 December 2020 89 hits
NEW YORK CITY, December 30—When capitalism is in crisis, it's workers who sacrifice for the bosses’ profit system. Not only have the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) bosses allowed COVID-19 to steal the lives of over 140 transit workers but they are pushing to layoff roughly 9,000 workers (NYT, 12/16/20). These are attacks on the entire working class. These cuts will especially hurt Black and immigrant workers hardest, who will disproportionately suffer the 40 percent service reductions (NYT, 12/16/20), the crowded trains and buses, and increasing COVID cases.
Though the bosses have temporarily delayed voting on these racist cuts, with the government’s COVID stimulus bill setting aside $4 billion for MTA funding (Curbed, 12/21/2020), it means nothing in the long run.
The Progressive Labor Party (PLP) says make the bosses take the losses. These types of disasters are only possible because we live under capitalism, because the ruling class puts profits first and workers' lives are dead last. This is why we in PLP fight for communism, so that profits, and the concept of money are eliminated, and where workers' needs are the first priority.
‘Doomsday cuts’
MTA bosses have repeatedly claimed in recent months that they need to enact these racist cuts on workers because of their income losses from the pandemic. For starters, the bosses discussed eliminating unlimited subway passes and raising prices for single metrocards. On top of pre-planned fare increases, this measure would put even more hardship on the mainly Black and Latin workers who’ve had more than enough attacks.
The ruling-class media, no friend to riders, has backed these arguments as feasible ways to save the subways and buses. Another proposal includes switching all subway trains to One Person Train Operation (OPTO). This is a system which removes conductors (who open and close the train’s doors from its middle), leaving only the train operator to perform that duty while also moving the train. A recent Op-Ed by Connor Harris, a shill for the racist think tank Manhattan Institute, argued that getting rid of subway conductors could save the MTA $300 million (City and State New York, 9/16/2020). The New York Times, another capitalist mouthpiece, followed suit with the same suggestion last month (NYT, 12/16/2020).
With half of the 55,000 MTA workers Black, laying off thousands of conductors during record unemployment levels is viciously racist — and incredibly dangerous for workers riding the MTA. OPTO supporters argue that the company needs to simply install cameras for train operators to perform this function. However, many stations in the NYC subway system are on a slope, and/or are on curves; this means blind spots that cameras can’t catch. Worse, this would increase strain on the train operator position, forcing them to do even more work. Eliminating positions and combining their functions with others is a hallmark of the bosses.
As expected, virtually none of these “experts” mentioned the true culprit behind the MTA’s money issues, pandemic or not: its perennial billions in debt to Wall Street bankers, from decades of letting the system fall into disrepair.
Union surrenders; workers must fight!
The union has done little to prepare the rank and file for a fightback, with the Transit Workers’ Union Local 100 issuing only a vague flyer warning the MTA they won’t renegotiate the contract or accept any layoffs.
Despite months of “doomsday cuts,” Local 100 didn’t even bother organizing any rallies or demonstrations outside MTA HQ at 2 Broadway. All they did was phone in a half-effort video response to the bosses when the cuts were supposed to be voted on. Former Local 100 president (now president of TWU international)John Samuelson recently proposed taxing NYC workers for their online purchases as a way to raise funds! (NYdailynews, 12/7/20)
In another union meeting, a comrade spoke out against the union president having a press conference with the union president of police during the fight for justice for George Floyd. The union reps were silent and one of their stooges tried defending them. Another worker quickly shut him down saying it was disgusting for union president Tony Utano to even be seen with a racist like Patrick Lynch. The union stooges replied "they don't wanna get involved in politics.”
These union misleaders are in the practice of turning a blind eye to racism, and are in bed with the MTA bosses attacking the workers, leaving us with the best choice there is: uniting and fighting back.
Communism will be doomsday for racism and capitalism
Comrades in transit are sharing our communist line with our coworkers. Self critically, we've been reluctant due to our lack of confidence in the working class to fight back under these attacks. It's easy to give in to cynicism, especially now during the pandemic
But that is what the ruling class wants. They want us fearful, dependent on them and divided. We must remember that even amid great division and difficult odds workers have always united and fought back.
History is on our side. In 1918, the Bolsheviks seized power in the midst of World War I and the “Spanish Flu” pandemic. During the 1930s, when the U.S. was suffering through the Great Depression, the Bolsheviks were blazing a new future, eradicating famines and diseases with their worker-run state. This and more is possible when we expand our confidence in the working class and continue to fight back and build for a communist future. We will continue building the fightback in the MTA, and will follow up with the antiracist fighter who spoke out.
Unity between transit workers and riders is needed more than ever. Transit workers and commuting workers can beat back the bosses when we come together, and unite to build communism: where workers run the transit system and all society without billionaire rulers. Make the bosses take the losses! Join the PLP and fight for communism!