Wednesday, June 21, 2017

In Cambridge-REMINDER- Save The Date: Film - "National Bird: Drone Wars"

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REMINDER- Save The Date: Film - "National Bird: Drone Wars"

Why is our government killing thousands of people around the globe they can’t even identify?
See National Bird, a film about the secret US drone assassination program.
Tuesday, July 18, 2017, 7 pm
Central Square Library
45 Pearl St, Cambridge
Directed by Sonia Kennebeck, this powerful documentary follows the dramatic journey of three whistleblowers who are determined to break the silence around one of the most controversial current affairs issues of our time: the hidden U.S. drone war, which has escalated under President Trump.
Plagued by PTSD and guilt over participating in the killing of thousands of faceless people, including children, they courageously decide to speak out publicly, despite the possible severe consequences.  The film also interviews people on the ground in Afghanistan whose families and lives have been shattered by the deaths and lost futures of those who have been injured and terrorized by drones.
After the film there will be a short discussion with suggestions of things we can do to stop this immoral and indefensible form of warfare.
Sponsored by Eastern Massachusetts Anti-Drones Network, a task force of UJP (United for Justice with Peace) JusticeWithPeace.org, (617) 776-6524.
Co-sponsored by Mass Peace Action
Upcoming Events: 
Newsletter: 

Women lead protest at US detention Centre



To  alt  
Dear friends,
On 15 June, 12 women detained in North West Detention Centre near Tacoma (Washington State, US) went on hunger strike.  Few days later they were 25.
Please write in support of this courageous struggle to expose the horrible conditions and abuse that women and men face inside, circulate their updated information to your network, and be directly in touch with NWDC Resistance through their Facebook page.
Close all detention centres everywhere!

Activist Goes on Hunger Strike Outside the Northwest Detention Center
Maru Mora Villalpando Joins the Tacoma 12 and Adelanto 9 in Calling for an End to Human Rights Abuses in Immigrant Detention

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Solidarity Camp outside North West Detention Centre (April 2017)
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Maru Mora Villalpando
Tacoma, WA - On Monday, June 19th, Maru Mora Villalpando, member of the NWDC Resistance, will begin  a hunger strike to call attention to the plight of up to 1,600 immigrants held in detention suffering human rights abuses at the Northwest Detention Center (NWDC). On June 15, 2017, at least a dozen detainees went on hunger strike to call attention to inhumane detention conditions, refusing to eat for multiple days. By June 18, NWDC Resistance organizers received reports that more than 25 hunger strikers are calling on GEO Group to provide edible, nutritious food, on ICE to provide fair and timely hearings, and on civil society to step up and take action for the injustices in our communities. In response, Maru Mora Villalpando is going on hunger strike, and is joined by other members of civil society who are stepping up their solidarity.

As hunger strikers on the inside are discussing ceasing their strike on the inside, Maru will keep the hunger strike continuous by holding space on the outside. A female hunger striker in detention said: “I feel more deteriorated every day, more bad, more worse, because of what we are living through and what we are seeing inside. What we are suffering is horrible, horrible. Here they don’t care what conditions we are living in… they don’t care about anything.” To listen to her story, go to: http://bit.ly/2sIyXzZ

GEO Group’s human rights abuses are not a case of “bad apples.” Just this week, GEO employees have refused to complete basic maintenance, such as repairing a broken air conditioner when projected temperatures are expected to reach 78 degrees. Likewise, people in detention have noted repeated problems with incorrect medications resulting in hospital visits, suicide attempts, and inadequate access to medical treatment -- even in diagnosed cases of malignant cancers.

There are also 9 asylum seekers on hunger strike at the GEO-owned Adelanto Detention Facility in Southern California. Rather than releasing asylum seekers pending their hearing, they were subjected to further trauma -- pepper spray, beating and solitary confinement. The #Adelanto9 continue on hunger strike to call attention to these blatant human rights abuses, meaning that people inside and outside detention centers are on hunger strike throughout the West Coast.

Call to Action: Hunger strikers and solidarity supporters are holding down a 24-7 encampment outside the Northwest Detention Center. Please join them to show people held in detention that they are not alone, and the state of Washington will no longer tolerate human rights abuses!

For live updates on the #Tacoma12 and solidarity hunger strikes, visithttps://www.facebook.com/NWDCResistance/.

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NWDC Resistance is a volunteer community group that emerged to fight deportations in 2014 at the now-infamous Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, WA. NWDC Resistance is part of the #Not1More campaign and supported people detained who organized hunger strikes asking for a halt to all deportations and better treatment and conditions.

Contact: Maru Mora Villalpando, (206) 251 6658maru@latinoadvocacy.org


#Tacoma12     #Adelanto9     #Not1More      #NoEstánSolos

Dear Warrior Writers Fam,


To  a

Dear Warrior Writers Fam,

Warrior Writers is excited to launch a social media campaign dedicated to celebrating our 10th birthday and all the good work that has been done over the past decade. We'd like to invite you to participate in a conference call tomorrow, to collaborate and share ideas about the campaign. While it is still in the development stage, we conceptualize the upcoming campaign as a virtual gathering space for artistic product, linking and directing energy towards our fundraising campaign, and a way to celebrate 10 years of Warrior Writers. We hope to spread the word about our organization, as well as help get our third book funded and published.

We need your help. If you would like to collaborate/share ideas about the forthcoming campaign, please join us for the conference call tomorrow, June 20th, at 9 pm EST. Call in number: 605.475.5900 code: 101010.

Warmly,
Lovella & Carlos

Feeling generous? Make a donation to help publish our 10-year anniversary book.
Want to make an artistic submission? Find out more and apply here.
Copyright © 2017 Warrior Writers, All rights reserved.
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Aegis Destroyer Arrives on Jeju Island

Aegis Destroyer Arrives on Jeju Island

 
The USS Dewey Aegis Destroyer (DDG-105) made entry into the Jeju navy base amid people's protest. Facing the three small kayaks in protest to it, a Coast Guard ship was sent to stop the kayaks. Photographer Oum Mun-hee says, in the photos, you can see crews on the ship and even firing from the ship just before its entry to the port.
 
According to the Yonhap News, there will be 'live-fire naval exercise' in southern waters near Jeju Island joined by the three nations of South Korea, United States and Canada. The article details the Navy's words that 'the three sides plan to hold various drills on interdiction, air defense, anti-submarine operations and ballistic missile detection, along with live-fire training.'
 
 
 
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 652
Brunswick, ME 04011
(207) 443-9502
http://www.space4peace.org 
http://space4peace.blogspot.com  (blog)

Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth. - Henry David Thoreau

Veterans For Peace: No More Troops in Afghanistan


Veterans For Peace: No More Troops in Afghanistan

The Trump Administration announced it has given Defense Secretary Jim Mattis the authority to determine troops levels in Afghanistan. It is widely believed that Mattis favors sending several thousand more U.S. troops to Afghanistan. Why? Perhaps to break the “stalemate” as described by the Commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, Army General John Nicholson when describing the war to the Senate Armed Services Committee. In his June 13th testimony, Secretary Mattis told the same committee, “We are not winning in Afghanistan right now.”
Veterans For Peace calls for a different direction than more war. We call on Congress to stop funding war and demand a plan for a peaceful solution. We call on the President to immediately begin withdrawal of U.S. troops and take a new direction towards diplomacy and peace. And we call on the people of the U.S. to resist war and demand policies that foster peace and prosperity at home and in Afghanistan.
It should be clear after 16 years and the death of tens of thousands of people that no one is a winner in Afghanistan. There is no clear concept of what it means to win there. In fact, it is no longer clear why the U.S. continues to keep troops in Afghanistan and now is on the brink of increasing the number of men and women in harm's way.
The U.S. has claimed to be at war in Afghanistan to deny “terrorists” training and staging areas to attack the United States and to protect the people of Afghanistan. After this long period of war, what does the U.S. have to show for its military efforts? 
Since the horror of September 11, 2001, the U.S. has been on a path of war, wreaking havoc on millions of people around the globe. Because of displacement, death and maiming of loved ones by U.S. wars, animosity towards the U.S. has increased and the world has become less safe.  The animosity caused by the wars has created a larger pool of people willing to fight the U.S. In 2001 al Qaeda had limited influence and ISIL did not exist. Now Al Qaeda and ISIL have affiliated groups and sympathetic supporters around the globe.
The protection of the Afghan people has been a total failure. It has been widely reported that the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan found that there were 11,418 civilian casualties (3,498 deaths and 7,920 injured) between January and December 2016, an overall increase of 3 percent. An appalling number of those casualties were children – 923 deaths, and 2,589 injured – a 24 percent increase over record-high numbers from 2015. In addition, 3,535 coalition forces have died; three of which were recently killed as a result of an insider attack fire from an Afghan soldier. We must add to these losses all the people who are physically and psychologically broken and families torn apart.The human cost is immeasurable. But there is also a dollar cost to war. The U.S. has spent over $1 trillion in this failed and depraved effort in Afghanistan. These dollars represent lost opportunities to repair U.S. infrastructure, pay for healthcare, create jobs and address a host of human needs.
It is not too late  for a different direction. War was always the wrong option. Perhaps it was not clear 16 years ago. It should be clear now more than ever!

Louisiana, 1811 America’s Forgotten Slave Insurrection

Workers Vanguard No. 1113
2 June 2017
Louisiana, 1811
America’s Forgotten Slave Insurrection






The monuments and statues we would build are those that honor fighters for liberation, not least the men and women who fought to destroy the slavocracy: the abolitionists; the Civil War soldiers, including 200,000 black troops, who crushed the Confederacy; those who rose up against the slave order. Among the latter are the hundreds who fought for their freedom in the January 1811 uprising in Louisiana—the largest, though largely unknown, slave insurrection in U.S. history.
From 8 to 10 January, 1811, an army of 500 slaves spread terror against the slaveowners on the German Coast of Louisiana. They killed two slave masters, burned plantations and marched toward New Orleans armed with axes, sugarcane knives and a few guns. Chanting “Freedom or Death,” they aimed to establish a black republic. The suppression of this insurrection was instrumental in consolidating Louisiana’s French planters into the U.S., including recent émigrés from France’s former colony of Saint-Domingue. It extended the reach and power of the slavocracy, which would finally be shattered by the Civil War.
The foundation for the 1811 uprising was the slave revolt in Saint-Domingue (Haiti), which began in 1791 and ended with the withdrawal of French troops in 1803 and the establishment of a black republic on 1 January 1804. The Haitian Revolution both inspired the insurrectionists, among them transplants from Saint-Domingue, and haunted the slave masters who feared its replication on North American soil.
In turn, the Haitian Revolution was inspired by the French Revolution. Under the banner “liberty, equality, fraternity” the masses rose up beginning in 1789, destroying the entrenched aristocratic and feudal order. In 1792, the French Republic was proclaimed, followed shortly by the execution of King Louis XVI in January 1793. However, France’s new bourgeois rulers brutally fought to maintain slavery in Haiti, which at the time of the 1791 uprising accounted for 60 percent of France’s export trade. In the face of continuing black revolt, and with England threatening to attack France’s most lucrative colony, the radical Jacobin regime in Paris, which came to power in 1793, abolished slavery in Saint-Domingue in 1794. Five years later, Napoleon Bonaparte took power in a coup, reinstated slavery and in January 1802 dispatched an armada and 20,000 French troops to reconquer the colony—only to be driven out the following year.
With the loss of his Saint-Domingue cash cow, Napoleon saw little use for his other major New World colony, the Louisiana Territory. In 1803, he sold it for a song to the U.S., an acquisition that nearly doubled U.S. territory. By 1810, slaves made up more than 75 percent of the total population of the region—a greater proportion than any other slave society in North America. The brutal conditions they faced working Louisiana’s sugarcane fields were matched by the huge profits their labor generated.
The architect of the 1811 rebellion was Charles Deslondes, whose position as a trusted slave driver on the plantation of Manuel Andry enabled him to move through the sugar fields without suspicion. Deslondes spread word through small cells scattered up and down the coast. On the night of January 8, the uprising began with an incursion on the mansion of Deslondes’ master. After wounding Andry and killing his son Gilbert, the group armed themselves with muskets and ammunition from the basement. They then started a two-day march down River Road toward New Orleans, which was 40 miles away. Groups of slaves joined them as they passed other plantations. Later, maroons (escaped slaves) left the security of their wooded retreats to fight alongside the rebel army. Terrified white residents either fled to New Orleans or hid out in the backwoods near their plantations.
Fearing that the city’s majority black population (including many free blacks) would join the rebellion, Louisiana governor William Claiborne ordered New Orleans sealed and a 6 p.m. curfew for black people. General Wade Hampton, a South Carolina slaveowner, mobilized two companies of volunteer militia, 30 regular troops and a detachment of 40 seamen who halted the slaves’ advance 15 miles from the city. A second militia of 80 planters formed by Andry unwittingly flanked the slave army on the morning of January 10. Though outnumbering their pursuers, the slaves were outgunned. After quickly running out of ammunition, they were brutally routed. Sixty-six fighters were killed and many others captured. Shortly after, the planter militias, supported by the U.S. military, captured Deslondes, chopped off his hands, broke his thighs, shot him dead and then roasted his body on a pile of straw.
Over the next few weeks, more than 100 slaves were executed. Their heads were put on poles and their dismembered corpses were publicly displayed as a warning to others. The federal troops called in to suppress the uprising and secure New Orleans were drawn from those defending the bogus Republic of West Florida that U.S. settlers seized from Spain in 1810, foreshadowing the grab of Texas from Mexico two decades later. Extending from Baton Rouge on the southwest to Natchez on the northwest and Mobile on the east, this “republic” gave the U.S. control over the Mississippi River and eliminated a haven for escaped slaves and native tribes, while securing commerce on the river.
Louisiana’s French planters, who had been contemptuous of the Anglo government in D.C. and indifferent to West Florida’s annexation, now became advocates of a strong U.S. military presence. One year after the uprising, Louisiana was admitted as a slave state, as other regions of the Louisiana Territory were later—Missouri (1821) and Arkansas (1836). The Mississippi Territory, which had been ceded by Spain in 1797, was divided into Mississippi and Alabama; they were admitted as slave states in 1817 and 1819. Between 1820 and 1860, the population of the Deep South slave states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama grew over 600 percent to almost 2.5 million. New Orleans became America’s second-largest port—and largest slave market. This confluence of events, of which the suppression of the Louisiana rebellion played no small part, consolidated the bulk of what would become the Confederacy.
We hail Charles Deslondes and his comrades. We seek to honor their memory by finishing the Civil War through a working-class socialist revolution.

A View From The International Left- British Trotskyists Say: No Vote to the Labour Party! Down With the EU!

Workers Vanguard No. 1113
2 June 2017
 
British Trotskyists Say:
No Vote to the Labour Party!
Down With the EU!
The following two statements were issued as a leaflet by the Spartacist League/Britain, section of the International Communist League, on May 27.
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After years of attacks from successive Blairite [right-wing Labour] and Tory governments, Jeremy Corbyn’s promises to defend the unions; to increase spending for public housing, the NHS [National Health Service] and education; and to renationalise rail, water and the Royal Mail raised the hopes of working people and the oppressed across Britain and provided a welcome challenge to the Blairites. Corbyn’s support has been bolstered by the Tories’ vicious plans to increase the squeeze on working people—including Theresa May’s “dementia tax” scheme to force families to sell the homes of deceased relatives to pay for their home healthcare. But last year, Corbyn sided with the City of London and betrayed his working-class base by campaigning to remain in the EU [European Union]. Now Corbyn is continuing this betrayal by campaigning for Britain to remain in the European single market. The central issue in the 8 June general election is Brexit—and Labour’s position on the EU is contrary to the interests of the working class.
The EU is a reactionary capitalist bloc, originating as the economic adjunct to NATO in the anti-Soviet Cold War. From its inception, the EU has been a weapon to increase the exploitation of workers across Europe. The European imperialist powers—centrally Germany, Britain and France—have used the EU and the German-controlled euro as a means to plunder dependent European countries such as Ireland, Portugal and, most starkly, Greece. The single market which Corbyn embraces lies at the very heart of the capitalist EU project of privatisation and austerity.
Corbyn’s betrayal on the EU pushed workers towards the racist UKIP and the Tories. Now the Labour Party is playing into the resulting chauvinist frenzy, pledging to ban immigrants from recourse to public funds. Immigrants, including many from Eastern Europe, as well as black and Asian minorities constitute a key part of the British working class, often confined to the hardest, dirtiest and lowest-paid jobs. The capitalists use threats of deportation and attacks on the rights of immigrants and minorities to drive down wages and working conditions for the working class as a whole. The workers movement must champion defence of these oppressed layers of society, including organising immigrant workers into the unions. No deportations! Full citizenship rights for all immigrants!
In Scotland, a historic Labour stronghold, Labour is on life support after campaigning together with the Tories against Scottish independence in 2014. As party leader, Corbyn has upheld Labour’s long tradition of loyalty to the reactionary “United Kingdom,” opposing another referendum on Scottish independence and pushing Scottish workers into the arms of the bourgeois SNP [Scottish National Party]. Likewise, Corbyn’s remain campaign meant that Labour failed to provide a working-class pole for the nearly 40 per cent of Scots who voted leave. Advancing the fighting unity of the working class requires upholding the basic democratic right of the Scottish people to determine whether to stay in Britain or to form an independent state, including by holding a new referendum whenever they see fit.
Corbyn’s 2015 leadership campaign and his resounding re-election one year later posed the possibility of driving the Blairites, who have been seeking to transform Labour into an outright capitalist party, out of the Labour Party. Despite the bankruptcy of Corbyn’s parliamentary reformist programme, this would have constituted a step towards the political independence of the working class from its capitalist exploiters. However, in the general election, voting for Labour will not exacerbate the divisions in the Labour Party or advance the consciousness of the working class. Corbyn has blocked with the Blairites and has betrayed the interests of working people on the decisive questions of the EU and Scotland.
In attempting (vainly) to conciliate the Blairites and prove to the British bourgeois establishment that he is “fit” to lead British imperialism, Corbyn has produced an election manifesto packed so full of concessions that it was cheered as “a cornucopia of delights” by Blairite Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee. Despite Corbyn having been a longtime opponent of NATO and a past chair of the Stop the War Coalition, his manifesto now embraces NATO and Trident [nuclear missile system]. The manifesto criticises Tory cuts in military spending and calls for more cops, prison guards and border guards, attacking the Tories from the right for supposedly weakening the capitalist state’s apparatus of repression. Moreover, any moves to actually implement the manifesto’s promised nationalisations would run right up against the privatisation diktats of the EU and its single market, which Labour supports!
Corbyn’s capitulation has not dampened the enthusiasm of the reformist left for electing a Labour government. The Communist Party of Britain (CPB), the Socialist Party (SP) and the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) all called for a leave vote in the EU referendum last year, but for these opportunists, Corbyn’s betrayal on the EU is no obstacle to tailing Labour. The CPB, for the first time since 1920, is not running candidates. Likewise, Dave Nellist, perennial parliamentary candidate for the SP and the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition, is not standing; instead, he is working “to send Jeremy to No. 10” [Downing Street, the Prime Minister’s residence]. For its part the SWP has emblazoned “Back Corbyn—Vote Labour” across the masthead of Socialist Worker. (The SWP’s other masthead slogan—“Vote left in Scotland”—leaves the door open for support to outright bourgeois parties like the SNP and the Greens.)
These reformist outfits are all promoting the illusion that electing a Labour government could meet the needs of working people. In reality, the parliamentary system provides a democratic facade for the class dictatorship of the capitalists, who own the means of production and make their profits from the exploitation of labour. To put the productive wealth of society at the service of workers and those minorities, women and youth impoverished by capitalism requires breaking the power of the bourgeoisie. It requires proletarian revolution to sweep away the state’s repressive apparatus and establish a workers government.
The bourgeoisie has been able to get away with decades of attacks on the working class because the trade union misleaders have diverted and sold out class struggles. Corbyn supporter and notorious sell-out Len McCluskey [general secretary of Unite union] has been particularly outspoken in pushing illusions in the ballot box in order to divert workers away from fighting in their own interests. History shows that improvements in the lives of working people and the oppressed are won through hard-fought class and other social struggle, not by relying on Parliament. The task of rebuilding the fighting strength of the workers movement is tied to forging a new, class-struggle leadership of the unions as part of the struggle to build a revolutionary workers party.
The Spartacist League/Britain seeks to combat illusions in Labourite reformism in order to win the most conscious workers, minorities and youth to build a multiethnic workers party devoted to rooting out the system of capitalist exploitation. The model for such a party was provided by Lenin’s Bolsheviks, who led the multinational working class of Russia to power 100 years ago. Following in their footsteps, we are devoted to the expropriation of the bourgeoisie around the world, to lay the basis for an egalitarian society of abundance based on an international, planned economy. For a voluntary federation of workers republics in the British Isles! For a Socialist United States of Europe!

On Manchester Bombing
The hideous 22 May suicide-bombing in Manchester that killed 22 people and injured dozens more targeted innocent concert-goers including teenage girls and children. The bomb appears to have been detonated by an Islamist youth of Libyan descent. This points once again to the poisonous fruits of British and U.S. mass murder in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria, where horrors like the Manchester bombing are a daily occurrence. In indiscriminately butchering children, the perpetrator of this atrocity has displayed the same mentality as the imperialists: they identify the working class and the whole population with the policies of the ruling-class oppressors.
The day after the bombing, Prime Minister Theresa May activated “Operation Temperer,” a plan for deploying up to 5,000 troops on the streets of Britain to augment the police. This deadly force will in the first instance target the Muslim population, who time and again bear the brunt of the state’s “anti-terror operations.” Jeremy Corbyn is under attack for criticising British intervention in the Near East. Yet he joins the “anti-terror” chorus in demanding more cops on the streets. Ominously, Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced an intended “uplift” in the witch-hunting Prevent programme, which directs public sector workers such as teachers to spy on Muslims to spot “radicalisation.” Under Labour and Tories alike, the purpose of the British rulers’ “war on terror” has been to massively augment the state’s machinery for repression, aimed ultimately at the working class.
As always, the capitalists’ media flunkeys are on the job, whipping up racism against Muslims. Hours after the Manchester bombing, a mosque in Oldham was subjected to an arson attack. The Manchester bombing was a heinous crime, but the fact remains that the biggest terrorists on earth are the imperialists. British, French and U.S. bombing in 2011 led to the ouster and assassination of Muammar el-Qaddafi, leaving Libya a chaotic hellhole and paving the way for ISIS to strengthen its forces in that country. The imperialists support Islamic fundamentalists when it suits their purposes, most notably in the counterrevolutionary war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, but also more recently in Syria, Libya and elsewhere in the Near East. Down with the anti-Muslim “war on terror”! Down with “Operation Temperer”! British, U.S. and all imperialist forces out of the Near East!