This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Wednesday, February 03, 2010
*The Latest From The International Socialist Organization's "International Socialist Review"
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The "Massachusetts Citizens Against The Death Penalty" Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
Markin comment:
This one is easy, at least to say. Down with the barbaric death penalty. Free Mumia Abu-Jamal!
Markin comment:
This one is easy, at least to say. Down with the barbaric death penalty. Free Mumia Abu-Jamal!
The Latest From The International Bolshevik Tendency Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*From The National Assembly To End The Iraq And Afghanistan Wars and Occupations- A Guest Commentary
Click on the title to link to the "National Assembly To End The Iraq And Afghanistan Wars And Occupations" Website.
Markin comment:
I was in the audience for this speech. Two things to think about for right now from our communist perspective. Not one word is said about a socialist or communist solution, as opposed to the now ritualistic anti-imperialist rhetoric required at these confabs, as result of all the good activity projected here. Presumably it is enough to get to the streets and ....get some newly elected 'progressives' pressured into doing good deeds in the same old structure. We have been down that road for a thousand years, or it seems like it. Ouch!
Secondly, I love the streets as much as anybody in order to fight for our perspective but even I have to confess to a rather "conservative" bent in reaction to this grab bag of ideas about the virtues of mass actions. There is no overall perspective about fundamentally changing to a new society, and a new way of doing our governmental business. Workers councils, workers parties, workers governments sound very good right about now after all this fluff. And LESS utopian.
More later on this group.
BUILDING MASS ACTIONS
NEW ENGLAND UNITED CONFERENCE
JAN. 30, 2010 MIT
BY Marilyn Levin, Co-Coordinator, National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations
I remember a discussion of antiwar strategy where a list was made of who really had the power to end the war in Iraq as the basis of where we should focus our efforts. The list started with the soldiers - if youth didn't join the army or soldiers refused to fight, then the war would end. Second was the President and Congress - ultimately, they were the only ones who could stop funding the war and order the troops home. That was the list. When I suggested they were forgetting the most important and powerful group, the American people - working people, immigrants, people of color, students - who when mobilized in mass actions could bring the war machine to a halt and force the Congress to act - they looked at me like I was hopelessly naive and living in a fantasy world.
Well, I contend that until the American people are mobilized not just to vote for candidates every two years but to go to the streets in large numbers to act on their antiwar sentiments by demanding an end to wars and occupations and a reordering of our financial system from a war economy to a peace economy, then Congress won't be compelled to stop, as they were forced to withdraw from Vietnam.
Howard Zinn understood this and that is his legacy. He showed that throughout history, social change occurs not from the top down but from ordinary people organizing in their own interests against the powerful. He said "It is not who is sitting in the White House that is important - it is who is sitting in."
Some say that if we are not able to bring hundreds of thousands into the streets, mass actions are not viable. This is simply not true. It is still how we get from small to large. We can't wait until thousands are ready to come into the streets and then jump in and offer leadership. No, we keep protesting and connecting with those who are ready to join together in action at that time.
I have been privileged to be a part of some of the major victories of the last 50 years - the civil rights movement, the struggles for women's, gay and immigrant rights, the anti-Vietnam war movement, and I know the power of these social movements. None of these movements began with mass mobilizations. In the civil rights era, we had small demos and large ones and we kept demonstrating until we won. Small demos don't hurt the movement, they are simply ignored by the media. This does not mean it wasn't effective in terms of movement building and reaching new activists. New people, especially youth, are always heartened by action.
People who are critical of mass action are not bringing many more people into the movement or increasing pressure on the government by their methods. Electoral action may bring people to the polls but it doesn't sustain them in action organizations; just meeting with elected officials and calling their offices does not pressure them to change.
Periodic unified mass actions, along with other types of actions, are necessary for the following reasons: to forge unity, to provide continuity so that we build upon each action, to counter the propaganda machine of the mass media by keeping the issues in the public eye, to inspire and bring in new activists, to explain the connections between issues and bring social movements together for a common purpose, to expose our government's role and real designs, to pressure the government to change, and to empower the opposition.
It is our historical and moral obligation to organize masses of people to challenge US imperialism and its war machine, the greatest threat to humankind and our planet ever known. A movement has no existence unless it organizes and is visible. It is imperative that we do this because the Afghans, the Iraqis and the Pakistanis need to know they have not been abandoned and left at the mercy of the U.S. war machine and the oil corporations. Soldiers and their families will not organize against the war until they see they will be backed by a strong civilian antiwar movement. Young people will not join the military, in spite of the economy, when they see support for redirecting the war budget into jobs. We need to play a leading role in a movement of international opposition to wars and exploitation.
What are the barriers to mass action? One is lack of unity in the movement. We have an antiwar movement that started large and was allowed to dwindle in spite of growing public opposition. We got lost in the morass of the last election and have not recovered yet. We also face the danger of getting buried again in the next election. (We've got to keep those Democrats in power so they continue their bipartisan war policies and drain our economy by trillions.) These elections are now continual without the breaks where we could organize between them that we used to have. We can't afford to keep getting derailed and marginalized. Second is the lack of a mass action perspective that focuses on organizing masses of people in the streets, not on pressuring Congress. Third is maintaining an Out Now demand - Out now from Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and all the other places the US dominates by its military might. Not "Out Someday, Maybe".
I am one of the National Co-Coordinators of the National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations, a national network of organizations who formed in 2008because of the vacuum of leadership and organization in the antiwar movement. We organized around five basic principles that we hold today as the basis for where we stand:
1) Unity - all sections of the movement working together for common goals
and actions;
2) Political Independence - no affiliations or support to any political party;
3) Democracy - decision-making at conferences with one person, one vote;
4) Mass Action - as the central strategy for organizing while embracing other
forms of outreach and protest; and
5) Out Now - the central demand to withdraw all military forces,contractors,and bases from the countries where the US was waging war on the people.
We will hold our third conference this summer in Albany, NY and we are expanding co-sponsorship to have a truly unified movement conference to project future mass actions. We supported and built last March's national actions in DC, SF, and LA and we are actively building March 20. It doesn't matter who initiates the demonstrations, we need to join all of our forces to bring out the most numbers and to get the US antiwar movement back on track to finally bring an end to these ever-widening and endless wars and occupations win the fight for jobs, health care, education, reparations for Haiti, and all the rest of the social necessities we need to have healthy and productive lives.
Markin comment:
I was in the audience for this speech. Two things to think about for right now from our communist perspective. Not one word is said about a socialist or communist solution, as opposed to the now ritualistic anti-imperialist rhetoric required at these confabs, as result of all the good activity projected here. Presumably it is enough to get to the streets and ....get some newly elected 'progressives' pressured into doing good deeds in the same old structure. We have been down that road for a thousand years, or it seems like it. Ouch!
Secondly, I love the streets as much as anybody in order to fight for our perspective but even I have to confess to a rather "conservative" bent in reaction to this grab bag of ideas about the virtues of mass actions. There is no overall perspective about fundamentally changing to a new society, and a new way of doing our governmental business. Workers councils, workers parties, workers governments sound very good right about now after all this fluff. And LESS utopian.
More later on this group.
BUILDING MASS ACTIONS
NEW ENGLAND UNITED CONFERENCE
JAN. 30, 2010 MIT
BY Marilyn Levin, Co-Coordinator, National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations
I remember a discussion of antiwar strategy where a list was made of who really had the power to end the war in Iraq as the basis of where we should focus our efforts. The list started with the soldiers - if youth didn't join the army or soldiers refused to fight, then the war would end. Second was the President and Congress - ultimately, they were the only ones who could stop funding the war and order the troops home. That was the list. When I suggested they were forgetting the most important and powerful group, the American people - working people, immigrants, people of color, students - who when mobilized in mass actions could bring the war machine to a halt and force the Congress to act - they looked at me like I was hopelessly naive and living in a fantasy world.
Well, I contend that until the American people are mobilized not just to vote for candidates every two years but to go to the streets in large numbers to act on their antiwar sentiments by demanding an end to wars and occupations and a reordering of our financial system from a war economy to a peace economy, then Congress won't be compelled to stop, as they were forced to withdraw from Vietnam.
Howard Zinn understood this and that is his legacy. He showed that throughout history, social change occurs not from the top down but from ordinary people organizing in their own interests against the powerful. He said "It is not who is sitting in the White House that is important - it is who is sitting in."
Some say that if we are not able to bring hundreds of thousands into the streets, mass actions are not viable. This is simply not true. It is still how we get from small to large. We can't wait until thousands are ready to come into the streets and then jump in and offer leadership. No, we keep protesting and connecting with those who are ready to join together in action at that time.
I have been privileged to be a part of some of the major victories of the last 50 years - the civil rights movement, the struggles for women's, gay and immigrant rights, the anti-Vietnam war movement, and I know the power of these social movements. None of these movements began with mass mobilizations. In the civil rights era, we had small demos and large ones and we kept demonstrating until we won. Small demos don't hurt the movement, they are simply ignored by the media. This does not mean it wasn't effective in terms of movement building and reaching new activists. New people, especially youth, are always heartened by action.
People who are critical of mass action are not bringing many more people into the movement or increasing pressure on the government by their methods. Electoral action may bring people to the polls but it doesn't sustain them in action organizations; just meeting with elected officials and calling their offices does not pressure them to change.
Periodic unified mass actions, along with other types of actions, are necessary for the following reasons: to forge unity, to provide continuity so that we build upon each action, to counter the propaganda machine of the mass media by keeping the issues in the public eye, to inspire and bring in new activists, to explain the connections between issues and bring social movements together for a common purpose, to expose our government's role and real designs, to pressure the government to change, and to empower the opposition.
It is our historical and moral obligation to organize masses of people to challenge US imperialism and its war machine, the greatest threat to humankind and our planet ever known. A movement has no existence unless it organizes and is visible. It is imperative that we do this because the Afghans, the Iraqis and the Pakistanis need to know they have not been abandoned and left at the mercy of the U.S. war machine and the oil corporations. Soldiers and their families will not organize against the war until they see they will be backed by a strong civilian antiwar movement. Young people will not join the military, in spite of the economy, when they see support for redirecting the war budget into jobs. We need to play a leading role in a movement of international opposition to wars and exploitation.
What are the barriers to mass action? One is lack of unity in the movement. We have an antiwar movement that started large and was allowed to dwindle in spite of growing public opposition. We got lost in the morass of the last election and have not recovered yet. We also face the danger of getting buried again in the next election. (We've got to keep those Democrats in power so they continue their bipartisan war policies and drain our economy by trillions.) These elections are now continual without the breaks where we could organize between them that we used to have. We can't afford to keep getting derailed and marginalized. Second is the lack of a mass action perspective that focuses on organizing masses of people in the streets, not on pressuring Congress. Third is maintaining an Out Now demand - Out now from Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and all the other places the US dominates by its military might. Not "Out Someday, Maybe".
I am one of the National Co-Coordinators of the National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations, a national network of organizations who formed in 2008because of the vacuum of leadership and organization in the antiwar movement. We organized around five basic principles that we hold today as the basis for where we stand:
1) Unity - all sections of the movement working together for common goals
and actions;
2) Political Independence - no affiliations or support to any political party;
3) Democracy - decision-making at conferences with one person, one vote;
4) Mass Action - as the central strategy for organizing while embracing other
forms of outreach and protest; and
5) Out Now - the central demand to withdraw all military forces,contractors,and bases from the countries where the US was waging war on the people.
We will hold our third conference this summer in Albany, NY and we are expanding co-sponsorship to have a truly unified movement conference to project future mass actions. We supported and built last March's national actions in DC, SF, and LA and we are actively building March 20. It doesn't matter who initiates the demonstrations, we need to join all of our forces to bring out the most numbers and to get the US antiwar movement back on track to finally bring an end to these ever-widening and endless wars and occupations win the fight for jobs, health care, education, reparations for Haiti, and all the rest of the social necessities we need to have healthy and productive lives.
*The Latest From The "National Committee To Free The Cuban Five"
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
Markin comment:
As I never tire of saying-defense of the Cuban Five is the defense of the Cuban Revolution. That is doubly important for those of us here in the United States, the "belly of the beast".
Markin comment:
As I never tire of saying-defense of the Cuban Five is the defense of the Cuban Revolution. That is doubly important for those of us here in the United States, the "belly of the beast".
*The Latest From Afghanistan From Reuters- Hell, Troops Out Now!
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The "Carnival Of Socialism" Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The "by any means necessary" Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
Markin comment:
I, after looking at an entry on this site concerning Venezuela strongman Hugo Chavez's call for a 5th International, would feel much better about such prospects if there had been an actual socialist revolution in that country as opposed to an oil-dependent social welfare program under a left nationalist regime. Hell, even Cuba's Fidel and the ill-fated Tricontinental International at least had some form of workers state behind it. This thing has the look of a Latin version of the ...Second (Social-Democratic) International of faded memory.
Markin comment:
I, after looking at an entry on this site concerning Venezuela strongman Hugo Chavez's call for a 5th International, would feel much better about such prospects if there had been an actual socialist revolution in that country as opposed to an oil-dependent social welfare program under a left nationalist regime. Hell, even Cuba's Fidel and the ill-fated Tricontinental International at least had some form of workers state behind it. This thing has the look of a Latin version of the ...Second (Social-Democratic) International of faded memory.
*The Latest From The "Socialist Appeal" Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The "black man with a library" blog -Black Is Back
Click on the title to link to the blog mentioned in the headline. Some excellent material on black history here. I will be "stealing' plenty of it in the future.
*The Latest From The "Further Left Forum" Blog
Click on the title to link to the blog mentioned in the headline.
*From The Bob Feldman 68 Blog- The 1968 Columbia SDS Actions
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The "United For Justice With Peace" (UJP) Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline.
*From "Boston Indy Media"- The New England United Anti-War Conference
Click on the title to link to the report mentioned in the headline.
*The Latest From The International Marxist Tendency Website
Click on the title to link to the Website mentioned in the headline
* The Anti-War Iraq And Afghan War Troops And Veterans Must Not Stand Alone-A Link To The IVAW Website
Click on the title to link to the "Iraq Veterans Against The War" Web site.
Markin comment:
I am proud to add this link to the IVAW site to this blog today. But more than that, these anti-war soldiers, sailors and airmen must not stand alone. Get The Trucks and Planes Rolling! All Out Of Iraq And Afghanistan Now!
Markin comment:
I am proud to add this link to the IVAW site to this blog today. But more than that, these anti-war soldiers, sailors and airmen must not stand alone. Get The Trucks and Planes Rolling! All Out Of Iraq And Afghanistan Now!
*The Latest From The "Black Is Back" Website
Click on the title to link to the "Black Is Back" Website mentioned in the headline.
*The "Winter Soldier" Testimony- From The Anti- War Iraq Veterans Against The War (IVAW)
Click on the title to link to the "Winter Soldier" testimony being presented by some of the soldiers who fought there- the Iraq Anti-War Veterans (IVAW).
Markin comment:
Sometimes just one combat soldier's story is worth more than ten rallies. It happened during the Vietnam War with the VVAW. Now another soldier generation, unfortunately, has to tell its story. Listen up, closely. And like I said in an early blog entry today. Get the damn trucks and planes rolling! All Out Of Iraq and Afghanistan Now!
Markin comment:
Sometimes just one combat soldier's story is worth more than ten rallies. It happened during the Vietnam War with the VVAW. Now another soldier generation, unfortunately, has to tell its story. Listen up, closely. And like I said in an early blog entry today. Get the damn trucks and planes rolling! All Out Of Iraq and Afghanistan Now!
*The Latest From The "Black Agenda Report" Website
Click on the title to link to the "Black Agenda Report" Website.
February Is Balck History Month
February Is Balck History Month
*The Latest From The "New England United" Anti-War Coalition Website
Click on the title to link to the "New England United" anti-war coalition Website.
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