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Socialist Alternative, P.O. Box 45343, Seattle WA 98145 Phone: (206)526-7185 Comments? Suggestions for improving our web page? Please email info@SocialistAlternative.org |
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
Sunday, December 16, 2012
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Socialist Alternative, P.O. Box 45343, Seattle WA 98145 Phone: (206)526-7185 Comments? Suggestions for improving our web page? Please email info@SocialistAlternative.org |
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Socialist Alternative, P.O. Box 45343, Seattle WA 98145 Phone: (206)526-7185 Comments? Suggestions for improving our web page? Please email info@SocialistAlternative.org |
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Socialist Alternative, P.O. Box 45343, Seattle WA 98145 Phone: (206)526-7185 Comments? Suggestions for improving our web page? Please email info@SocialistAlternative.org |
Accused of Lifting Veil on U.S. War Machine-Bradley Manning Pretrial Hearing: Drop All Charges!
Workers Vanguard No. 1014 |
7 December 2012
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Accused of Lifting Veil on U.S. War Machine-Bradley Manning Pretrial Hearing: Drop All Charges!
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
DECEMBER 4—Army private Bradley Manning spoke publicly last week
for the first time since he was detained in May 2010 for allegedly handing over
a trove of classified documents to WikiLeaks that exposed U.S. imperialism’s
schemes and wartime atrocities. Charging Manning with 22 offenses including
espionage and “aiding the enemy,” military prosecutors are threatening him with
life imprisonment, having decided not to pursue the death penalty. Taking the
stand at a hearing on a defense motion to dismiss all charges on the grounds of
unlawful pretrial punishment, Manning recounted the torturous conditions of his
confinement, which one prison psychologist described as worse than at Guantánamo
or on death row. The hearing is continuing as we go to press.
The suffering and deprivation inflicted on Manning is meant as a
message: the U.S. imperialists will not tolerate any light shed on their
workings. This vendetta was also designed to break him so that he would
implicate WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange, who remains holed up in the
Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid extradition to the U.S., via Sweden (see
“Hands Off Julian Assange!” WV No. 1010, 12 October). In the past week,
protests demanding Manning’s freedom have taken place from the court site, Fort
Meade near Baltimore, to Berlin and other cities.
Last month, Manning offered to accept responsibility for providing,
as an act of conscience, at least some of the 250,000 diplomatic cables, 500,000
Army reports from Iraq and Afghanistan and video from Baghdad that WikiLeaks
made public. Shortly before Manning testified last week, the presiding military
judge accepted the framework that would allow him to plead guilty to some lesser
charges, which carry a maximum sentence of 16 years. Manning has not yet filed a
formal plea. Even if the plea were to be accepted, Manning still faces trial on
the maximum charges unless the case is dismissed and could receive a life
sentence if found guilty of only one of them. The court martial is now slated to
begin in March.
If Manning did make available the material attributed to him in the
tentative plea, he provided a major service to working people and the oppressed
the world over. In seeking to galvanize proletarian opposition to the capitalist
order, we welcome even a slight lifting of the veil on the imperialists’ war
machine. The video Manning is accused of leaking shows an Apache helicopter
gunning down and killing at least 12 people in Baghdad in 2007, including a
Reuters journalist and his driver, while the pilots laugh and gloat. The war
logs document 120,000 civilian deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan and a formal
military policy of covering up torture, rape and murder. The cables address all
manner of lethal operations within U.S. client states, from the “drug war” in
Mexico to drone strikes in Yemen.
With over 20 supporters attending the court hearing, Manning
detailed the depravity of his enraged military jailers. His first two months in
custody were spent in what Manning described as an “animal cage” in Kuwait,
where he was kept isolated and disoriented. “I just thought I was going to die
in that cage,” he told the court. Returned to the U.S., he was thrown into what
he called “a shark-attack environment” at the Quantico Marine brig in Virginia,
where he was kept for nine months. He spent at least 23 hours a day alone in a
six-by-eight-foot cell with no window or natural light, forbidden to exercise,
lie down or even lean against a wall if not sleeping. Even when he was allowed
to sleep, he was periodically awakened by guards who also subjected him to daily
strip searches and forced nudity.
Quantico commanders justified their handling of Manning by
classifying him first as a “suicide risk” and then putting him on “prevention of
injury” status. While Manning had been driven to despair by the unrelenting
abuse he suffered in Kuwait, at least 16 official reports from brig
psychiatrists at Quantico concluded that Manning was not a threat to himself or
others. Nevertheless, his status did not change until he was transferred to Fort
Leavenworth in April 2011 amid international condemnation of his treatment. By
the admission of the colonel in charge of Quantico at the time, a blind eye was
turned to these reports because a staff dentist made assessments more to the
liking of the brass!
Court documents show that one base commander instructed staff to
“do whatever we want” to Manning. The parameters of the torture regime were run
up the chain of command to the Pentagon. Meanwhile, the handprint of the White
House is all over the case. With a push from the Obama administration, Manning
was charged under the 1917 Espionage Act, with the Commander-in-Chief himself
declaring last year that Manning “broke the law.”
The government is intent on painting a portrait of Manning as a
traitor who aided and abetted Al Qaeda, with the judge even giving the go-ahead
to prosecutors to introduce the contents of Osama bin Laden’s hard drives. The
prosecution does not feel compelled to present evidence that any tangible aid
was provided to an “enemy.” Rather, it argues that it is sufficient to establish
that Manning knew that U.S. adversaries could access the information that was
now in the public domain. Thus Washington equates disclosure of classified
information by “whistleblowers,” journalists or anyone else with treason. And by
the lights of the “war on terror,” an “enemy” could mean virtually any opponent
of the U.S. government.
It is the norm for the imperialists to accompany their depredations
around the world with official silence and secret dealings. In 2011 alone, U.S.
officials classified more than 92 million documents. Revolutionary leader Leon
Trotsky observed in November 1917: “Imperialism, with its dark plans of conquest
and its robber alliances and deals, developed the system of secret diplomacy to
the highest level.” Opponents of imperialist occupations and war must be won to
the understanding that it will require a series of socialist revolutions around
the world to put an end to the capitalist order, which maintains itself through
systematic violence and lies.
Veronica Jones Memoir-Witness Helped Expose Mumia Abu-Jamal Frame-Up
Workers Vanguard No. 1014
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7 December 2012
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Veronica Jones Memoir-Witness Helped Expose Mumia Abu-Jamal Frame-Up
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
“As I lay in a coma for two months in early 2007, I could hear the
voices around me.... All I knew was that I wanted to live. I did not want to
die, not like this. There’s a lot I want to do and say and have wanted to say
for years.”
Veronica Jones did live for another three years, and before she
died in 2009 at the age of 48, finally got her say in an autobiography as told
to her sister Valerie, which was posthumously published earlier this year.
Veronica and the Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal is the riveting story of a
20-year-old mother of three and part-time prostitute who was an eyewitness at
the scene of the 9 December 1981 murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel
Faulkner. This was the killing for which Mumia Abu-Jamal, a former Black Panther
Party spokesman, a MOVE supporter and acclaimed journalist, was falsely accused
and sentenced to death.
Jones’ personal story cuts a large chunk out of the heart of the
racist frame-up and decades-long conspiracy to legally lynch Mumia, an innocent
man, or to keep this fighter for the oppressed locked in prison hell for the
rest of his life. Several days after Faulkner’s killing, Jones told police she
saw two black men run from the scene. Neither of these could have been Mumia,
who was found slumped on the sidewalk profusely bleeding from a shot from a
policeman’s gun. Jones’ report of two men running away would have been
devastating to the prosecution scenario, which is that Mumia “must have” been
the one who shot Faulkner because no one else but Mumia and his brother William
Cook were on the street corner with Faulkner. But under intense intimidation
from the Philly cops, at Mumia’s 1982 trial Jones recanted her account, dealing
a blow to his defense. Although several witnesses saw one or more black men flee
the scene, almost all of these witnesses’ accounts were kept from Mumia’s
jury.
However, 14 years later, Jones came forward at a post-conviction
hearing and stood up to the prosecutors, cops and “hanging judge” Albert Sabo to
explain how the cops had pressured her to lie at the 1982 trial. In retaliation,
Sabo and the prosecutors had her arrested on the witness stand and
dragged off to jail on the basis of a New Jersey bench warrant (for supposedly
trying to pass a bad check!) that had been issued more than two years earlier.
Jones defiantly told Sabo’s court: “You think that’s going to make me change my
story. It’s not!” Returning to the hearing after being released from jail, Jones
demonstratively sat with Mumia’s supporters.
In her 1996 post-conviction testimony, Jones revealed how only days
before Mumia’s trial, two detectives visited her in jail where she was held
facing robbery charges. In her book, she describes how the sadistic cops laughed
at her pleas to go to the bathroom, forcing her to urinate on herself. The cops
threatened Jones with a long prison sentence on gun possession charges if she
didn’t play ball, adding that her three daughters would be taken and placed in
foster care. She recalled that one “detective stepped over to me only inches
from my face, the whole while staring me directly in the eyes, never taking his
eyes away from mine and with a straight face said, ‘We want you to tell the
court that Mumia Abu-Jamal is the person that shot Officer Faulkner and we will
make those five to fifteen years disappear’.”
At trial Jones refused to finger Mumia but denied her initial
report that she had seen two men flee the shooting. What she did say, though,
was that the cops had offered her the same deal they gave prostitute Cynthia
White—to work the streets without cop harassment in exchange for saying that
Mumia shot Faulkner. This had the potential to blow the frame-up apart, and for
that reason was suppressed by Judge Sabo as “not relevant.”
The pressure put on Jones to echo White’s false account underscores
the fragility of the prosecution’s case. Cops and prosecutors disappeared
evidence exonerating Mumia and manufactured such fake “evidence” as a confession
purportedly uttered by Mumia as he lay near death shortly after the shooting—a
tale that was concocted by prosecutors and cops two months after Faulkner’s
killing. White, the prosecution’s star witness, was the only one to testify
seeing Mumia with gun in hand. No other witness even recalled seeing her in the
area at the time. In the months leading up to Mumia’s trial, White repeatedly
changed her account of what she saw. One reason the cops put intense pressure on
Jones was that they feared that White couldn’t keep her fabricated story
straight at trial. (For a fuller account and documentation of Mumia’s frame-up,
see the 2006 Partisan Defense Committee pamphlet, The Fight to Free Mumia
Abu-Jamal—Mumia Is Innocent!)
The most dramatic new revelation in Jones’ book is that she was
having sex with Faulkner over a period of time before the shooting. In previous
testimony, Jones had made clear that she knew Faulkner and that he had helped
her. Jones’ book recounts how Faulkner assisted her one night after two other
Philly cops viciously raped and robbed her, recalling, “He didn’t seem surprised
by my story of what happened that night.” According to her memoirs, they had sex
the night of Faulkner’s shooting, when he was in a strange mood as if “something
really confidential” was “going to go down out there.”
Jones’ account of Faulkner’s frame of mind accords with the
situation detailed in the subsequent confession of Arnold Beverly that he, not
Mumia, shot and killed Faulkner. Beverly’s 1999 sworn affidavit (one of the
documents in the PDC pamphlet) tells how he and another man were hired for the
job because Faulkner “was a problem for the mob and corrupt policemen because he
interfered with the graft and payoffs made to allow illegal activity” such as
prostitution, gambling and drugs.
Veronica Jones remained a visible supporter of the fight to free
Mumia until her death, and for that she paid a great price. “She was determined
to tell the whole story,” Valerie Jones writes in the book’s introduction, “for
herself, for her family and above all, for an innocent man on death row. She
believed, as I do, that Mumia Abu-Jamal is guilty of nothing except surviving
that night and her own experience points to a deliberate police frame-up.” The
book concludes, “The state’s determination to execute Mumia impacted the
entirety of Veronica’s adult life.” The book includes a foreword by Mumia and a
legal afterword by Rachel Wolkenstein, formerly a PDC counsel who was part of
Mumia’s legal team in the late 1990s and continues to provide him legal
assistance.
In 2011, ten years after a ruling by a federal judge overturning
Mumia’s death sentence, the Philly district attorney’s office announced that it
would not seek to reinstate the death penalty. Mumia, who never should have
spent one day in jail, now faces the living death of life in prison without
parole. There is no justice in the capitalist courts! Since first
taking up Mumia’s defense in 1987, the Spartacist League and the PDC have
favored every possible legal action against the frame-up while at the same time
stressing that fighters for Mumia’s freedom must place their reliance on the
power of mass, labor-centered protest. It will take a workers revolution to
smash the greater prison house that is racist American capitalism, opening the
road to an egalitarian socialist society. The future American workers state will
honor the memory of Veronica Jones for her brave defiance of the executioners in
black robes.
Extradited to Spain for Defending Basque Rights-Free Aurore Martin!
Workers Vanguard No. 1014
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7 December 2012
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Extradited to Spain for Defending Basque Rights-Free Aurore Martin!
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
We reprint below a November 2 leaflet by the Comité de Défense
Sociale (CDDS)—a class-struggle, non-sectarian legal and social defense
organization associated with the Ligue Trotskyste de France, section of the
International Communist League. It was distributed in French and Spanish at a
15,000-strong demonstration on November 10 in Bayonne, in the French Basque
country, protesting the extradition of Aurore Martin to Spain. Martin was
arrested on the grounds that she had attended several meetings of the pro-Basque
independence organization Batasuna, even though this organization is not illegal
in France. Her arrest was made possible by a European Union (EU) agreement that
introduced the so-called European Arrest Warrant. Under this agreement, any EU
member state must arrest and extradite to the requesting EU state anybody deemed
by the latter to be a criminal suspect.
The CDDS condemns the extradition by the French state of Aurore
Martin to Spain, where she faces up to 12 years in prison. Just days before
Martin’s detention yesterday, two other Basque activists, Izaskun Lesaka and
Joseba Iturbe, were arrested near Lyon in a joint operation by the RAID [elite
French cop unit] and the Spanish Guardia Civil. Both Lesaka and Iturbe are
suspected of belonging to the ETA pro-Basque independence group, and Lesaka is
purported to be one of three activists who in October 2011 read out the ETA
statement that it was definitively renouncing armed struggle.
The French and Spanish capitalist states have no intention of
dropping their bloody vendetta against the Basque nationalists, despite ETA’s
renouncing armed struggle. The Basques, as well as other national minorities
such as the Catalans and the Corsicans, along with the Muslim population, are
used by the French and Spanish bourgeoisies as all-purpose scapegoats. As the
worst economic crisis in decades rages, this serves to divide and weaken the
working class in order to push through the bosses’ renewed austerity attacks as
well as to justify the raft of new laws increasing state repression, which are
also ultimately aimed at workers struggling against capitalist oppression. This
is not to mention the opaque maneuvers and rivalries at play around the European
Union, in which the lives of militants are cynically traded as bargaining chips
for imperialist interests. The Aurore Martin case and the European Arrest
Warrant vividly show how the EU, insofar as it is “united” at all, is united
over the oppression of minorities and the workers movement. Down with the
EU!
Already this year, the total number of arrests of alleged ETA
members stands at 24. Sixteen of those took place in France, three in Spain and
five in other countries. We demand that all charges be dropped immediately
against Aurore Martin, Izaskun Lesaka and Joseba Iturbe and that they be
immediately released from the clutches of the French and Spanish states. We also
demand that the hundreds of other Basque nationalist activists jailed in French
and Spanish prisons be freed!
Aurore Martin Extradition: Valls Finishes Job Begun by Sarkozy and
Guéant
Back in October 2010, a European Arrest Warrant was issued by the
Spanish government against the French Basque activist Aurore Martin, demanding
her extradition on the basis of alleged “participation in a terrorist
organization.” The “evidence” cited is that she attended six public meetings of
Batasuna in 2006 and 2007—four in Spain and two in France. The Batasuna party,
outlawed in Spain, is a perfectly legal party in France. Aurore Martin is also
accused of writing an article for the (legal) Basque newspaper Gara and
of having dealings with the Basque Lands Communist Party (EHAK), which was
outlawed in Spain in 2008. There is not even the slightest attempt by the French
or Spanish government to produce evidence linking Aurore Martin to any armed
activity; this French citizen was extradited by France’s top cop, Manuel Valls,
and is today imprisoned in a Spanish jail solely because of her opinions and
political solidarity with the cause of Basque independence. Her extradition,
based on no tangible evidence, provoked outrage against Valls from practically
all National Assembly members from the Basque country, even the most
“republican” among them.
When an arrest warrant was issued against Aurore Martin in 2010,
she went into hiding. But six months later, in early June 2011, she decided to
“lead a normal public life again” and attended a public meeting in Biarritz on
the subject of the European Arrest Warrant. Days later, on June 21,
[then-president Nicolas] Sarkozy’s minister of the police, Claude Guéant, sent
in his cops to arrest her in Bayonne. But they were literally pushed back by the
activists and local people, and Aurore Martin eluded arrest. At the time, Guéant
stated that France would do its “duty” and that her extradition would be carried
out. However, after a 3,000-strong march in Bayonne demanding that her arrest
warrant be lifted, there was no further attempt by the French government to
arrest her. That is, until Valls and the popular-front government under
[Socialist president François] Hollande stepped in to finish the job. In a
recent interview in El PaÃs, Valls praised the “exemplary” cooperation
between the French and Spanish governments and declared that the French
government would “help Spain 100 percent” in pursuing the fight against ETA
“with full firmness.”
The arrest and extradition of Aurore Martin are very much in line
with the sinister crusade against the Basque nationalists carried out by the
Socialist predecessors of Valls and Hollande. As we wrote in a short statement
denouncing the European Arrest Warrant against Aurore Martin back in March 2011:
“We denounce the police cooperation between France and Spain, which, starting
with the GAL [“Anti-Terrorist Liberation Groups”] state terrorists under [French
president François] Mitterrand and the Spanish Socialist Workers Party
government of Felipe González in the 1980s and continuing up to today, has cost
the lives of dozens of people and led to the arrest and imprisonment of hundreds
of activists.” The workers movement must protest the extradition of Aurore
Martin! For the right of self-determination of the Basque people, south and
north of the Pyrenees! Down with the European Arrest Warrant! Down with the
capitalist European Union!
Parti Québécois Government: No Victory for Workers, Youth-State Vendetta Against Quebec Student Activists
Workers Vanguard No. 1014
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7 December 2012
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Parti Québécois Government: No Victory for Workers, Youth-State Vendetta Against Quebec Student Activists
We reprint the following article from Spartacist Canada
No. 175 (Winter 2012/2013), newspaper of the Trotskyist League/Ligue
Trotskyste, Canadian section of the International Communist League (Fourth
Internationalist).
In the aftermath of the student strike that rocked Quebec this past
spring and summer, the capitalists’ cops and courts are pursuing a vindictive
campaign against strike activists. A particular target is one of the student
movement’s most prominent spokesmen, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois of the Coalition
Large de l’Association pour une Solidarité Syndicale Etudiante (CLASSE). On
November 1, Quebec Superior Court justice Denis Jacques found Nadeau-Dubois
guilty of “contempt” for encouraging student protesters to ignore court
injunctions. The CLASSE leader now faces up to a year in prison and $50,000 in
fines.
The judge railed that Nadeau-Dubois had advocated “anarchy” and
that his comments could pave a “road to tyranny.” Underlining the political
nature of this frame-up, his ruling cited the precedent of the May 1972
convictions of the leaders of Quebec’s three trade-union centrals [federations]
for contempt of court. The jailing of these union leaders for refusing to order
workers to obey strikebreaking injunctions sparked a spontaneous eleven-day
general strike, the most deepgoing working-class struggle in Quebec history.
Other student militants face even more serious charges. Over 3,300
protesters were arrested during the strike, a number far exceeding even the mass
roundups of leftists, nationalists and union leaders under the War Measures Act
in the “October Crisis” of 1970. Among them is Yalda Machouf-Khadir, the
daughter of Québec Solidaire MNA [National Assembly member] Amir Khadir. She
faces charges of “conspiracy,” assault and breaking and entering following her
alleged participation in the trashing of a former Quebec education minister’s
office. Other activists face the Orwellian charge of “inciting fear of
terrorism,” which carries a potential five-year jail sentence.
In order to hunt down and frame up political activists, the
notoriously vicious Montreal police set up a special unit last year called
GAMMA—Guet des Activités des Mouvements Marginaux et Anarchistes (Surveillance
of the Activities of Marginal Movements and Anarchists). The ongoing witchhunt
of left-wing activists highlights a basic truth: the capitalist state, including
the cops and courts, is not neutral, but is the repressive fist of the ruling
class, to be mobilized against striking workers, student radicals and anyone
else who dares challenge the oppressive status quo. We say: Drop all
charges now!
The sustained, militant struggle by tens of thousands of students
won wide support among working people in Quebec. In the end, the students were
able to win their bottom-line demands for withdrawal of a massive tuition hike
and repeal of the draconian Bill 78, the “law of the nightsticks” enacted by
Jean Charest’s Liberal government in an attempt to break the strike. But nothing
fundamental has been resolved, and many student militants recognize that the
newly-elected Parti Québécois regime will soon launch a new round of attacks on
workers and student youth, as PQ governments have always done in the past.
PQ premier Pauline Marois cancelled the Liberals’ tuition hike to
put a lid on social struggle. But the PQ is already vowing to increase tuition
in line with inflation, and its promised “summit on higher education funding”
explicitly excludes the student unions’ just demand for free education. Amid the
sordid corruption scandals exposing (some of) the dirty deeds of Quebec mayors
and other politicians, the PQ’s overriding priority has been to assure the
“business community” that it can “balance the budget” and effectively manage the
capitalist order. This will mean yet more austerity measures against workers and
the poor.
The election of the bourgeois-nationalist PQ is not a
victory of any kind for workers and student youth. History has shown repeatedly
that the PQ in power is an enemy of the working class. In 1982-83, the
government of party founder René Lévesque launched sweeping attacks on
public-sector unions. In 1999, Marois, then minister of health in Lucien
Bouchard’s PQ regime, introduced a bill ordering nearly 50,000 striking nurses
to return to work. These and other attacks by the last PQ government paved the
way for the even more savage assaults of the Charest Liberals.
Student struggle can provide a spark for the broader social
struggle necessary to beat back capitalist attacks. However, as we emphasized
throughout the student strike, it is the organized working
class—in the factories, mines and transportation systems—that uniquely
has the social power and material interest to bring the bourgeois profit system
to its knees. Despite its history of militant struggle, the Quebec working class
is tied to the capitalist order by union misleaders who have long supported the
PQ in the name of “national solidarity.” The student strikers received both
“advice” and financial support from the union tops, who used their authority and
influence to limit the struggle and secure “social peace.” To unleash the social
power of Quebec labour, a new leadership must be forged that can mobilize the
workers independently of the PQ and all other capitalist parties.
Social Struggle and the National Question
Marois’ victory in the polls unleashed the usual wave of chauvinist
hand-wringing in the English Canadian bourgeois press, though the fact that the
PQ was only able to garner a minority government led to sighs of relief that no
new sovereignty referendum would soon be on the agenda. However, the question of
Quebec independence still looms large as a central feature of Canadian politics,
one that will, sooner or later, erupt anew.
The national question in this country—the forcible incorporation of
the francophone Québécois nation in an Anglo-dominated Canada—has long served to
divide the working class. In English Canada, anti-Quebec chauvinism is fostered
by the “Canadian unity” demagogy of the NDP [New Democratic Party] social
democrats and their allies in the top trade-union bureaucracy. Within Quebec,
national oppression is manipulated by the bourgeois nationalists and their
labour lieutenants to bind the working class to its own francophone oppressors.
As revolutionary internationalists who oppose all forms of chauvinism and
discrimination and work to unite the workers in anti-capitalist struggle, we
advocate Quebec independence. This is the best means to get the national
question off the agenda, so that the workers of both nations can see clearly
that their enemies are their own respective capitalist exploiters.
As the student struggle came to a head, the strike leaders
increasingly dissipated the energies of the student movement into the
parliamentary shell-game: “Anybody but the Liberals.” Léo Bureau-Blouin, former
head of the Fédération Etudiante Collégiale du Québec (FECQ), ran for the PQ and
was elected to the National Assembly. While declining to endorse any political
party, the more radical CLASSE federation began organizing its protests around
slogans like “Neoliberals out!” A CLASSE position paper issued just before the
election opined that “The only way to force the government to truly respond to
the popular will is to put in place a sufficient balance of power and to not
give it any respite.”
Unable to conceive of any other strategy than putting pressure on
the capitalists’ government, the CLASSE leadership promotes illusions that the
“popular will” can be forced upon the ruling class. Such illusions are spread in
a more crude form by various reformist left groups. For example, an article on
the International Socialists’ (I.S.) website (10 September) was headlined
“Quebec Election 2012: A Major Victory for Students and the Left.”
The I.S. and other reformists have worked overtime to spread
illusions in the PQ’s “left” appendage, Québec Solidaire (QS). As we have noted,
the purpose of QS, a petty-bourgeois populist party, is to channel the anger of
youth and workers back into the safe channels of bourgeois parliamentarism and
Québécois nationalism. At the height of the struggle and the police repression,
QS joined in the violence-baiting of student activists, attacking “vandalism” by
“rioters.” When his own daughter was arrested, Amir Khadir told a press
conference, “If reprehensible acts were committed by my daughter or whoever
else, one must take responsibility for one’s actions” (La Presse,
7 June). QS leader Françoise David made clear in the build-up to the election
that QS would be prepared to support a PQ minority government.
Tear gas, stun grenades and rubber bullets rained down on student
protesters during the strike, providing a crucial lesson about the brutality of
the capitalist state to a generation of youth engaging in political struggle for
the first time. Conclusions must be drawn from these and other experiences to
provide a road forward against the unceasing attacks of the ruling exploiters.
As we wrote in one of our French-language supplements distributed at the mass
student protests:
“Only the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of workers
rule can put an end to poverty and all-sided oppression and open up new vistas
for humanity. This is not just a task for Quebec, but for all of Canada, the
U.S. and the entire world. The way forward for Quebec student radicals is to
commit their energy to forging a binational, multiethnic Marxist vanguard party,
part of a reforged Fourth International, world party of socialist
revolution.”
— “Students: Ally with the Working Class!” SC No. 174, Fall
2012 [reprinted in WV No. 107, 31 August]
* * *
To aid the legal defense fund for students and other protesters
arrested during the strike, send contributions to: Association pour une
Solidarité Syndicale Etudiante, 2065 rue Parthenais, Local 383, Montreal QC H2K
3T1. You can also contribute directly to the defense fund for Gabriel
Nadeau-Dubois: Comité de Soutien à Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, 2065 rue Parthenais,
Bureau 08, Montreal QC H2K 3T1.
Bourgeois Philanthropy and Working-Class Misery
Workers Vanguard No. 1014
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7 December 2012
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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Bourgeois Philanthropy and Working-Class Misery
(Quote of the Week)
As the capitalist ruling class and its media mouthpieces once
again trumpet the virtues of helping the needy in the holiday season, we offer
Friedrich Engels’ scathing depiction of the 19th-century English bourgeoisie’s
self-serving “charity” toward its victims.
The relation of the manufacturer to his operatives has nothing
human in it; it is purely economic. The manufacturer is Capital, the operative
Labour. And if the operative will not be forced into this abstraction, if he
insists that he is not Labour, but a man, who possesses, among other things, the
attribute of labour-force, if he takes it into his head that he need not allow
himself to be sold and bought in the market, as the commodity “Labour,” the
bourgeois reason comes to a standstill. He cannot comprehend that he holds any
other relation to the operatives than that of purchase and sale; he sees in them
not human beings, but hands, as he constantly calls them to their faces; he
insists, as Carlyle says, that “Cash Payment is the only nexus between man and
man.”…
Let no one believe, however, that the “cultivated” Englishman
openly brags with his egotism. On the contrary, he conceals it under the vilest
hypocrisy. What? The wealthy English fail to remember the poor? They who have
founded philanthropic institutions, such as no other country can boast of!
Philanthropic institutions forsooth! As though you rendered the proletarians a
service in first sucking out their very life-blood and then practising your
self-complacent, Pharisaic philanthropy upon them, placing yourselves before the
world as mighty benefactors of humanity when you give back to the plundered
victims the hundredth part of what belongs to them! Charity which degrades him
who gives more than him who takes; charity which treads the downtrodden still
deeper in the dust, which demands that the degraded, the pariah cast out by
society, shall first surrender the last that remains to him, his very claim to
manhood, shall first beg for mercy before your mercy deigns to press, in the
shape of an alms, the brand of degradation upon his brow.
—Friedrich Engels, The Condition of the Working-Class in
England (1845)
Billionaire Bloomberg Squeezes NYC Workers-Hungry and Homeless in the Shadow of Wall Street
Workers Vanguard No. 1014 |
7 December 2012
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Billionaire Bloomberg Squeezes NYC Workers-Hungry and Homeless in the Shadow of Wall Street
DECEMBER 4—Five weeks ago, a weakening Hurricane Sandy, which had
devastated parts of the Caribbean and the U.S. East Coast, combined with a
Nor’easter to steamroll much of the coastal areas of New York City. From the
east and south shores of Staten Island across the Lower New York Bay into
Brooklyn’s Coney Island and Red Hook and the Rockaways in Queens, the densely
populated banking center and port metropolis was slammed with killer winds, a
record storm surge and massive flooding. Since then, what stands in stark
contrast is the extent of recovery for the city’s rich and poor, for the
capitalist owners and for the workers who make the city run.
Wall Street was back online within two days of the storm’s
landfall. In little more than a week, a grueling, 24-7 deployment of transit,
sanitation and utility workers had restored life in most of Manhattan to
conditions little changed from the holiday shopping season one year prior. But
for the largely black and Latino residents of public housing projects and the
homeless, the picture was very different. Many were served their Thanksgiving
dinners from volunteer food lines in outdoor parking lots or inside parish
halls. More than a month after the storm, thousands of people still lack heat,
water, power or working elevators, at best getting intermittent service. The
high-traffic emergency room of Bellevue, the 276-year-old free public hospital
evacuated in the storm, is still closed and will not resume operation as a Level
One trauma center before February.
After Sandy flooded the Red Hook Houses in Brooklyn, it took the
New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) two weeks to dispatch workers to knock
on tenants’ doors to see if they were alive. When agency workers finally did
arrive, they found 127 residents requiring medical care, six of whom needed
ambulances. When the NYCHA showed up in the Rockaways, one member of a family of
12 living in a single apartment told the New York Daily News (13
November), “We’re living like animals and all they were worried about was the
$1,000-a-month rent.”
Even in fair weather, it is a struggle for the impoverished
families who live in the projects to get apartments painted, elevators
maintained or broken boilers fixed. But after the storm, even as the NYCHA
announced that it would be weeks or months before heat was restored, it
initially threatened to evict anyone who didn’t pay rent. No surprise, then,
that Red Hook residents lining up for Red Cross blankets were furious when NYCHA
chairman John Rhea showed up on November 12 to magnanimously announce that they
would get a partial rent credit, calling this “a nice little Christmas present.”
Evidently NYCHA bureaucrats view the public housing residents in about the same
light as the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) bosses and city administrators
view their workforces, which is to say, as master to subject.
The disaster brought on by the storm threw into sharp relief the
everyday cruelties of life in the financial center of U.S. capitalist society,
which is run for the profit of the tiny group of families who own industry and
the banks. The number of New Yorkers who are dependent on food pantries or soup
kitchens—a number that includes many working poor as well as unemployed—has
swelled far beyond the 1.4 million (17 percent of the population) who survived
in this way before Sandy hit. Already before the storm, there were 47,000
homeless in shelters across the city, many of them victims of bank foreclosures,
others too poor to afford the cost of rent. Sandy increased the number of
homeless by tens of thousands, with most of those driven from public housing in
low-lying areas. The new homeless have been shuffled chaotically from evacuation
centers in public schools to armory floors to hotel rooms without cooking
facilities. One Far Rockaway evacuee, roused from his bed for a transfer,
declared: “It’s like you were being processed to go to jail.”
The scourge of homelessness, though compounded by natural disasters
like Hurricane Sandy, is firmly rooted in the normal functioning of the
capitalist system. A study early this year by the advocacy group Picture the
Homeless estimated that the thousands of properties in New York City that are
kept vacant, largely for the purpose of real estate speculation, could house
some 200,000 people. The same is true nationally as banks have driven millions
from their homes, leaving the properties vacant until real estate prices
rebound. According to the 2010 census, almost 19 million homes in this country
sit vacant while some 3.5 million people remain homeless.
By the lights of the capitalist profit system, it is entirely just
that the bourgeoisie and its high-priced executives possess mansions and
vacation homes around the world, with more rooms than they can count, while the
poor are consigned to crumbling, rat- and roach-infested projects. Meanwhile,
working people who buy homes are prey to the banking and insurance vultures. As
long ago as 1872, Friedrich Engels, who co-founded with Karl Marx the modern
communist movement, addressed the problem in his work The Housing
Question:
“One thing is certain: there is already a sufficient quantity of
houses in the big cities to remedy immediately all real ‘housing
shortage,’ provided they are used judiciously. This can naturally
only occur through the expropriation of the present owners by quartering in
their houses homeless workers or workers overcrowded in their present homes. As
soon as the proletariat has won political power, such a measure prompted by
concern for the common good will be just as easy to carry out as are other
expropriations and billetings by the present-day state.”
Engels concluded:
“As long as the capitalist mode of production continues to exist
it is folly to hope for an isolated settlement of the housing question or of any
other social question affecting the lot of the workers. The solution lies in the
abolition of the capitalist mode of production and the appropriation of all the
means of subsistence and instruments of labour by the working class itself.”
Picking the Pockets of Heroes
The heroes of the Hurricane Sandy disaster are those unionized
workers who were key to saving lives and getting the city back up and running,
even as many of their own homes were destroyed. Transit workers have been lauded
for rapidly restoring subway and bus service. Sanitation workers, who worked
12-hour shifts for weeks, have been hailed by those in hard-hit neighborhoods
for removing mountains of storm debris at great personal risk. But even as NYC
mayor Michael Bloomberg and his cronies pat workers on the back with one hand,
they’re picking their pockets with the other.
The MTA docked the pay of thousands of transit workers who could
not get to work in the first days of the disaster because mass transit was shut
down and bridges and tunnels were knocked out of commission. For workers who
needed emergency leave because their lives had been upended, the MTA bosses came
up with a cynical scheme to allow them time off from work—by having other
transit workers “donate” their own vacation days or sick leave! Yet even that
plan cannot trump the artifice of Mayor Bloomberg. A capitalist in his own right
with a net worth of $25 billion, Bloomberg e-mailed city workers to press them
to contribute, through an automatic payroll deduction, to a “Mayor’s Fund” that
supports volunteer relief efforts.
This is just a sick twist to the lie of “shared sacrifice” that
government agencies and corporations, echoed by the pro-capitalist trade-union
bureaucracy, have foisted on workers for years. Throughout the five-year-long
economic crisis, both Democratic and Republican state and local governments have
cut into wages, pensions and other benefits as part of their war against public
employees unions, which are portrayed as public enemies. Even before that,
bourgeois politicians invoked budget crises to slash the workforce rolls.
During a blizzard that hit NYC two years ago, the same sanitation
workers lauded in the press today were targets of a tabloid hate campaign for a
supposed work “slowdown.” In fact, the workers had to deal with the emergency
after 400 jobs had been cut in Bloomberg’s austerity budget and in the face of
utter negligence by the city administration, which was completely unprepared for
that storm. Today, the unions in every single municipal bargaining unit in the
city, plus the subway and bus workers in the Transport Workers Union, are
working without a contract or with their old contract extended, and some have
been doing so for many years. In fact, all the unionized workers
who are laboring mightily to provide necessary services in the New York-New
Jersey region have been under attack. Last summer Con Edison, backed by
Democratic NY governor Andrew Cuomo and rolling in profits, strong-armed the
Utility Workers union into making major concessions to end a lockout. This gave
the lie to the union tops’ tired refrain that Con Edison bosses and workers are
a “family.”
The labor officialdom has played dead in the face of the anti-union
assault, bowing to New York State’s Taylor Law, which bans public employee
strikes, and the whole gamut of laws and regulations aimed at hog-tying union
struggle. To fight for what’s needed, the labor movement must be broken from the
program of class collaboration, which has its political expression in the union
misleaders’ support to the Democratic Party.
The labor movement should be fighting for a massive program
of public works to restore the damage done by Sandy and rebuild the
decaying infrastructure that the capitalist rulers have allowed to rot. This
would necessarily be combined with a fight to organize the
unorganized and for jobs for all through a shorter
workweek at full union wages. Struggles for these necessities point to the need
to fight for a workers government that would seize the productive
wealth that has been squandered by the capitalist rulers and put it toward
rebuilding this society. This calls for the forging of a new, class-struggle
leadership of the union movement as part of the struggle to build a
revolutionary workers party.
Bourgeoisie Appeals to Volunteerism
If one feature has clearly stood out in the aftermath of Sandy, it
is the massive volunteer effort that continues into the second month of the
disaster. Out of basic human decency, thousands of people have manned food lines
and free clinics and assisted with debris removal, or have simply passed out
bottles of water. But their efforts can fill no more than a tiny part of the
void created by the capitalist rulers’ refusal to mobilize the resources—like
massive amounts of money and hired labor—required to address the crisis.
The volunteer effort has been promoted by bourgeois politicians
from Barack Obama to Bloomberg and New Jersey governor Chris Christie, who are
seizing on it to alibi their neglect of the needs of the
population. Thus it does not come as a surprise that Bloomberg and the
publishers of the New York Times and Wall Street Journal have
hailed the aid provided by Occupy Sandy, a grouping that harks back to last
year’s Occupy Wall Street movement. Chiming in from the left side of the choir,
the reformist International Socialist Organization gushed that Occupy Sandy
signaled that “a push for a people’s recovery is beginning to emerge”
(Socialist Worker, 28 November).
In a brief appearance in the Rockaways on November 29, Bloomberg
told Occupy Sandy volunteers, “You really are making a difference.” He then
hopped into his SUV to flee the wrath of residents still without heat. Earlier,
a reporter for the left-liberal Nation (5 November) observed Occupy Sandy
volunteers joining with FEMA personnel and city cops who brutally drove Occupy
protesters from Zuccotti Park in Manhattan last year, in chanting, “We are
unstoppable, another world is possible.” The reporter thought this was “a truly
bizarre moment.” But in fact the populist Occupy movement from the beginning saw
the cops—the racist, strikebreaking enforcers of capitalist rule—as part of the
“99 percent,” promoting the lie that the police and those they are paid to
suppress have common interests.
As seen today in New York, this country’s ruling class possesses
boundless contempt for workers, the poor and everyone they have relegated to the
bottom of society. At the same time, they moved with alacrity to get the stock
market and other major businesses back in gear after the storm hit.
On a much more massive and deadly scale, the same “priorities” were
at play when Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast and especially New Orleans
seven years ago. For the capitalist class, what mattered in New Orleans was the
port and the tourist trade. Poor and black residents of the city were left to
die or suffer horribly in the sweltering heat. With the National Guard
patrolling the streets, black people were criminalized as “looters,” shot at by
cops and vigilantes and locked up in “Camp Greyhound.” Those whose homes were
flooded were shipped out of state, with the intent that they never return.
In the months and years that followed, the bourgeoisie used every
opportunity to reshape the previously majority-black city—it was even blithely
argued that a city at or below sea level (a requirement for a port) is by nature
uninhabitable. The public school system was largely privatized and the teachers
fired, decimating the union and making the city the epicenter for the charter
school movement. Intact and scrubbed of damage, Charity Hospital, a public
institution, was nonetheless closed down. Large- and small-scale construction
speculation abounds to this day. The port has grown, but the International
Longshoremen’s Association has lost more ground to scab outfits. Although
consisting of solid low-rises that survived the storm well, most public housing
was simply razed.
While the devastation wrought by Katrina was on a scale far greater
than that of Hurricane Sandy, both crises, in their own way, laid bare the
social reality of capitalist America. Why were the 40 nursing homes in
flood-prone areas of New York City not evacuated? A report in the New York
Times (3 December) showed that it was all about saving money. According to
the Times, the evacuation of patients last year in the face of Tropical
Storm Irene “led to millions of dollars in health care, transportation, housing
and other costs.” Thus “when Hurricane Sandy loomed, the officials were acutely
aware that they could come under criticism if they ordered another evacuation
that proved unnecessary.” Nor were the highly vulnerable Bellevue and New York
University hospitals evacuated until after the storm knocked out power, forcing
workers to carry patients down flight after flight of darkened stairways.
Bloomberg’s focus was on the NYC marathon money machine—for which dozens of
generators had been reserved—until a public outcry forced the cancellation of
the race.
There is a fundamental divide in society between the capitalist
class and the working class, whose labor is the source of the capitalists’
immense profits. The working class is not just one more victim of austerity
within the “99 percent.” It is the only force with the potential social power
and historic interest to sweep away the barbarous capitalist system. As we wrote
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina (“New Orleans: Racist Atrocity,” WV
No. 854, 16 September 2005):
“Despite differences over particular policies, the Republicans and
Democrats are united in defending capitalism—an anarchic, irrational
profit-driven system that cannot even provide for the safety and welfare of the
population. The situation cries out for a socialist planned economy, in which
natural resources and the technological and productive forces of society would
be marshaled on behalf of human needs, not profit. What is
urgently required is to build a workers party that can lead a workers revolution
to rip power from the hands of the capitalist class and its political agents,
right-wing Republican and liberal Democrat alike.”
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