Thursday, October 18, 2018

As The 100th Anniversary Of The Armistice Day 11/11/1918 at 11 AM Commences-Some Creative Artists Who Fought/Died/Lived Through The Nightmare That Destroyed The Flower Of European And American Youth -Bertolt Brecht-“To Those Born After”

As The 100th Anniversary Of The Armistice Day 11/11/1918 at 11 AM Commences-Some Creative Artists Who Fought/Died/Lived Through The Nightmare That Destroyed The Flower Of European And American Youth -Bertolt Brecht-“To Those Born After”   


By Seth Garth


A few years ago, starting in August 2104 the 100th anniversary of what would become World War I, I started a series about the cultural effects, some of them anyway, of the slaughter which mowed down the flower of the European youth including an amazing number of artists, poets, writers and other cultural figures. Those culturati left behind, those who survived the shellings, the trenches, the diseases, and what was then called “shell shock,” now more commonly Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) which is duly recognized, and compensated for at least in the United States by the Veterans Administration in proven cases reacted in many different ways. Mainly, the best of them, like the ordinary dog soldiers could not go back to the same old, same old, could not revive the certitudes of the pre-war Western world with it distorted sense of decorum and went to what even today seem quirky with moderns like Dada, Minimalism, the literary sparseness of Hemingway, and so on. I had my say there in a general sense but now as we are only a few months away from the 100th anniversary of, mercifully, the armistice which effectively ended that bloodbath I want to do a retrospective of creative artistic works by those who survived the war and how those war visions got translated into their works with some commentary if the spirit moves me but this is their show-no question they earned a retrospective.

Almost everything the good German communist, and that is a worthy designation for him, the communist part, when that was  an important ideal reads almost as well and timely today. Here is one which those old time radicals who still are in the struggles should ponder: 


                                                                               Bertolt Brecht


                        To Those Born Later

I

Truly, I live in dark times!
The guileless word is folly. A smooth forehead
Suggests insensitivity. The man who laughs
Has simply not yet had
The terrible news.

What kind of times are they, when
A talk about trees is almost a crime
Because it implies silence about so many horrors?
That man there calmly crossing the street
Is already perhaps beyond the reach of his friends
Who are in need?

It is true I still earn my keep
But, believe me, that is only an accident. Nothing
I do gives me the right to eat my fill.
By chance I've been spared. (If my luck breaks, I am lost.)

They say to me: Eat and drink! Be glad you have it!
But how can I eat and drink if I snatch what I eat
From the starving, and
My glass of water belongs to one dying of thirst?
And yet I eat and drink.

I would also like to be wise.
In the old books it says what wisdom is:
To shun the strife of the world and to live out
Your brief time without fear
Also to get along without violence
To return good for evil
Not to fulfill your desires but to forget them
Is accounted wise.
All this I cannot do:
Truly, I live in dark times.

II

I came to the cities in a time of disorder
When hunger reigned there.
I came among men in a time of revolt
And I rebelled with them.
So passed my time
Which had been given to me on earth.

My food I ate between battles
To sleep I lay down among murderers
Love I practised carelessly
And nature I looked at without patience.
So passed my time
Which had been given to me on earth.

All roads led into the mire in my time.
My tongue betrayed me to the butchers.
There was little I could do. But those in power
Sat safer without me: that was my hope.
So passed my time
Which had been given to me on earth.

Our forces were slight. Our goal
Lay far in the distance
It was clearly visible, though I myself
Was unlikely to reach it.
So passed my time
Which had been given to me on earth.

III

You who will emerge from the flood
In which we have gone under
Remember
When you speak of our failings
The dark time too
Which you have escaped.


    German; trans. John Willett, Ralph Manheim & Erich Fried


The Devil’s Child-With Bette Davis’ “In This Our Lives”(1942)-A Film Review

The Devil’s Child-With Bette Davis’ “In This Our Lives”(1942)-A Film Review  




DVD Review

By Senior Film Critic Sandy Salmon

In This Our lives, starring Bette Davis, Olivia deHavilland, George Brent, Dennis Morgan, directed by John Huston, 1942  

Some people are born under the sign of the devil, the sign of 666. They may not want to do the devil’s bidding, may want to be as sweet as sweet can be but are organically incapable of doing anything but leaving storm, stress and chaos behind them, And that is just for starters on their “good” days. In the film under review, In This Our Lives, we run up against the devil’s spawn, the devil’s daughter, although born of woman (who might have aided mightily in that daughter’s recklessness come to think of it).

Maybe I am being too harsh, maybe that fallen daughter could not help herself but let’s see how the whole thing played out. One Stanley Timberlake, she of the old-time Timberlake fortune gone bust through a meek father and a scheming uncle’s shady doings, played by Bette Davis, she of the “Bette Davis eyes” and “put her hands in her back pockets Bette Davis style” is engaged to mild-mannered people’s lawyer Craig, played by mild-mannered butter would not melt in his mouth George Brent. One Roy Timberlake Fleming, Stanley’s sister, played by Olivia de Havilland and in possession of no Bette Davis eyes is married to an up and coming surgeon Peter Fleming, played by emotional volatile and morose Dennis Morgan. The sisters and Fleming live in the old Timberlake house along with neurotic, bed-ridden of woman born Ma and sedate Pa Timberlake brewing up a witch’s cauldron in a hothouse atmosphere which may have fatal to some parties in more than one way. (By the way don’t be thrown off by the masculine names, Stanley and Roy in an Elizabeth, Mary, Katherine age these most unlike sisters for they both are seriously into the menfolk. Some serious psychanalysis could be worked through figuring out why those names and the effects of cruelty, of childhood taunt, but that is that is for the secular types to fathom. I’m sticking with the devil’s bargain theme.)                    

Here’s where the devil’s daughter, where the sign of 666 takes off and leads all parties astray. Mantrap Stanley lures Peter away for Roy leaving Craig somewhere short of the altar. One moonless night (it had to be moonless to do such dastardly work) the pair blew town, lived together for a time and then got hitched got married. All while the fickle Stanley decided she was bored and needed some distraction driving the emotional volatile and morose Peter up a wall. Needless to say the jilted Roy and Craig are crestfallen but still for a while carry the torch for their respective jilters. Needless to say already that Stanley-Peter marriage was not made in heaven.

Get this though, follow me please, Roy and Craig have a chance meeting which eventually leads them to tie the knot, get hitched, you know married. Bingo though in the meantime that marriage not made in heaven leads the remorseful Peter to kill himself. Chalk one up for Stanley’s devilish charms. After Stanley cries for about ten minutes she is off again to taunt/lure Craig into going back with her. No dice but not for a lack of trying. He was supposed to meet her at some gin mill but was a no show. She got drunk to contain her rage and then left the joint, got into her car, and sped away. Sped away in a residential area and wound up killing a child and grievously wounding the mother. Then sped away leaving nothing but a hit and run mystery to be solved.

Here is where the devil’s child idea really gets a workout in a sequence of scenes that could have taken place in 1877, 1919, 1942 the year of the film, and today, 2017, as well. See spoiled rotten Stanley was not built for jail cells and to be some hard-ass prisoner’s honey. So she lays the blame on a young up and coming black kid, the son of the Timberlake’s old-time maid, who was studying to be a lawyer under Craig’s tutelage. She claimed on a stack of seven sealed Bibles (like any devil’s disciple would) that she had left the car with the kid to be washed. Claimed she had not been out of the house all evening. The kid like many, too many, generations on young black men sensed his was doomed-his word against a white woman’s in America in 1877, 1919, 1942. 2017.

All her tales were bullshit of course but she had everybody going for a while including lawyer Craig. But she doth protest too much. In her frenzy to get out from under she was ready to sell the black kid, Craig, Roy, her old man, her scheming uncle, anybody to get in the clear. Also no go. See she had left a telltale address on Craig’s calendar where they were to meet at a certain hour at that bar. Craig checked and the bartender vividly remembered her. Expecting to be taken to her well-deserved jail cell she broke from the house and fled by car to parts unknown. The cops in hot pursuit. During the ensuing car chase she made a fatal turn and that was that. A home inside the gates of hell-also well-deserved. Now tell me that she wasn’t born under the 666 sign-huh.                     


In Boston November 11th - Time to reclaim Armistice Day as a day of PEACE-The Vets are organizing! The people are marching!

In Boston November 11th - Time to reclaim Armistice Day as a day of PEACE-The Vets are organizing! The people are marching!



The Smedley Butler Brigade of Veterans for peace in Boston, long prohibited from being in the Veterans Day parade (too political), will again be having the "follow up" parade (20+ years??), but this year we want to make it as clear as possible that our event is an Armistice Day commemoration.  US legislation calls for a period of silence, to reflect on the horror of war, and then for church bells to be rung as a sign of rededication to world peace.  THIS IS A LEGITIMATE US HOLIDAY FOR PEACE!!  We need to take it back from the Military Industrial Complex and we want you to join us.

Here is the legislation which created, in the United States, Armistice Day:

President Wilson’s Proclamation of 1919

“To us in America the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn

pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service and with gratitude

for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because

of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and

justice in the councils of the nations...”

We would love to have your organization become a part of this important event. We will gather between 12:00 pm (noon) and 12:30 pm on the corner of Charles and Beacon Streets.

1st Parade steps off at 1:00 pm – our parade will follow the same route then we will continue to Faneuil Hall for our

Armistice Day for Peace Event includes Veterans from different eras who will recite original works of Poetry, Prose and Song

. The only way to get our government and media to take notice of our demands is to put large numbers of people in the street. We need to work together. Our strength is in our numbers.

This is also a fun and festive activity with music and lots of energy. Bring your banner, make a sign, raise your voice, and spread the word. The Vets are organizing! The people are marching!

On The 80th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Leon Trotsky-Led Fourth International (1938)- *From The Pen Of Leon Trotsky- The Popular Front In Spain, 1936

Click on title to link to Leon Trotsky's article on the Popular Front in the heat of the Spanish Civil War. Those who want to defend the concept, the POUM, the POUM leadership of Nin/Andrade/Maurin, etc.-Take cover.

In Boston October 25- Support Colin Kaepernick and Stand Against Trump's "Patriotism " Narrative


VFP Smedley<vfpsmedley@gmail.com>

We need VFP flags in the audience!!!!   Show veterans support Colin Kaeparnick and the NFL players taking a knee!



# ENDINJUSTICE

WHAT:     PRESS CONFERENCE

WHEN:      OCTOBER 23RD    2:00 – 3:30 PM

WHERE:    MADISON PARK HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL FIELD
ROXBURY, MA

WHY:      TO LAUNCH A PEOPLE’S CAMPAIGN, #ENDINJUSTICE, TO TURN THE NATIONAL CONVERSATION AWAY FROM SHAMING THE NFL      PLAYERS FOR KNEELING TO, WE THE PEOPLE, SUPPORTING THEIR TRUE MESSAGE -  AN URGENT AND UNDENIABLE  NEED FOR POLICE REFORM (ON THE STREETS AND IN OUR PRISONS), CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM, AND AN END TO RACIAL INJUSTICE.

WHO:   YOUTH, COMMUNITY MEMBERS, FAMILY OF VICTIMS OF POLICE BRUTALITY, MILITARY VETERANS, 
EX-POLICE OFFICERS, CLERGY, EX-DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS OFFICERS, EXONEREES

SPONSORS:  
HAITKAAH SOCIAL JUSTICE PROJECT,  VETERANS FOR PEACE, THE MASSACHUSETTS 6


FOR INFORMATION
CALL - 781-492-3552
FB PAGES -
# ENDINJUSTICE / HAITKAAH SOCIAL JUSTICE PROJECT
VETERANS FOR PEACE / THE MASSACHUSETTS 6
  • MADISON PARK FOOTBALL FIELD IS ON THE CORNER OF RUGGLES STREET & DEWITT DRIVE, ROXBURY, MA (BEHIND WHITTIER STREET APARTMENTS).
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A View From The International Left- 20 Years After Imperialist Peace Fraud Northern Ireland: Catholics Under Threat

Workers Vanguard No. 1141
5 October 2018
 
20 Years After Imperialist Peace Fraud
Northern Ireland: Catholics Under Threat
The following article is reprinted from Workers Hammer No. 243 (Autumn 2018), newspaper of our comrades of the Spartacist League/Britain.
Twenty years after the imperialist-imposed Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a sectarian Orange statelet. Premised on the continued presence of British troops, the Agreement copper-fastened sectarian divisions and perpetuated the oppression of the Catholic population. It has not done working‑class Protestants any good, either.
Northern Ireland is more segregated than ever, with Catholic and Protestant neighbourhoods divided by “peace” walls. More than 90 per cent of social housing is segregated and more than 90 per cent of children attend segregated schools. The reality of life for the oppressed Catholic minority was starkly underscored by this July’s Orange Order “marching season.”
The Eleventh Night bonfires and Twelfth of July marches, commemorating the victory of the Protestant William of Orange over the Catholic James II in the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, are not some quaint celebration of Protestant culture, but a rallying point for anti-Catholic terror. While the level of violence is less than during the Army’s 1969-2007 Operation Banner, this summer once again saw towering bonfires featuring signs calling to kill all Catholics. To underscore those threats, Irish tricolours [flags] and Republican election posters were placed on the bonfires before they were set alight. One also featured a sign saying “Fuck your Ballymurphy massacre inquiry,” referring to calls for an inquiry into the killing of eleven unarmed Catholics (including a priest and a 45-year-old mother of eight) by British soldiers in West Belfast in August 1971. The massacre is powerfully depicted in the new documentary by Callum Macrae, The Ballymurphy Precedent.
Government contractors required police protection to dismantle bonfires in Belfast that were deemed dangerously close to homes. In response the Loyalist paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) declared that there would be serious disorder. Cars and a bus were hijacked and set on fire, blocking roads. Access was obstructed to Belfast City Airport and a major hospital. A bomb exploded in the Catholic Short Strand and there was an arson attack on a Catholic special needs school. The Loyalist-orchestrated violence resulted in no arrests and was barely mentioned in the British news.
In contrast, when rioting broke out in predominantly Catholic Derry the weekend before the Twelfth of July march, the capitalist state unleashed brutal repression. For six nights leading up to the Orange march, crowds of youths from the Catholic Bogside, some reportedly as young as eight, threw paint and petrol bombs at police. Criminally, bombs were also thrown at homes in the Protestant Fountain enclave. In response, hundreds of cops rampaged through the Bogside firing rubber bullets and, aided by the British Army, raiding houses and indiscriminately seizing people. One video shows a 16-year-old being taken from his home by heavily armed, balaclava‑wearing police, his hands bound with cable ties. The youth was released after an interrogation in which “not a shred of evidence was put to him,” according to his legal representative. On the Twelfth itself, police penned local residents behind barricades while Orange Order bands marched provocatively through Catholic areas.
It is not at all clear what forces were behind the rioting. The PSNI [Police Service of Northern Ireland] blamed the so-called “New IRA,” and Republicans have certainly carried out indiscriminate attacks on Protestants in the past. In this case, Republican organisations from Sinn Féin to the dissident Saoradh were quick to condemn the communalist violence against the Fountain. A 29 July article in the Phoenix, a Dublin-based magazine of investigative journalism, hinted at possible involvement of security force provocateurs.
Noting the recent revelation that British police and intelligence services have been using youth under 16 in covert operations, the Phoenix observed:
“There is no previous tradition in Derry of the kind of sustained assault on the loyalist bastion on the west bank of the city, the Fountain estate, yet a large gang of youths was seen to roam apparently at will over several days and launch petrol bomb attacks on random Protestant targets across the security divide.”
The article pointed out that the groups carrying out such attacks “are highly feared in their immediate neighbourhoods, not just because of their access to weaponry and propensity for immediate violence but precisely because they are viewed as a breeding ground for spook informants.”
The mobilisation of British troops in the Bogside (site of 1972’s Bloody Sunday, when the Parachute Regiment killed 14 Catholic civilians) is a blunt reminder that, while no longer routinely used for street patrols, thousands of troops remain in Northern Ireland. PSNI chief constable George Hamilton defended the role of the army backing up the police and claimed it was “nothing out of the ordinary.”
British imperialism has brought centuries of exploitation, oppression and bloodshed to the island of Ireland. No good can come of the British presence; the existing tie between Northern Ireland and the British state can only be oppressive to the Irish Catholic population. The presence of imperialist forces is an obstacle to a proletarian class mobilisation and solution.
Marxists in Britain have a particular obligation to oppose their own ruling class and its state forces. We demand: All British troops and bases out of Northern Ireland! While this demand does not automatically ensure any advance in a revolutionary direction, it is a necessary starting point for a revolutionary, proletarian perspective in these islands.
Indiscriminate terror against the Protestant population, as with the petrol bombs thrown into the Fountain estate, in no way advances the struggle against Catholic oppression. Such attacks serve only to compact working-class Protestants behind the Loyalist bigots and are crimes from the standpoint of the proletariat. On the other hand, we defend Republicans in conflicts with the forces of the capitalist state or British imperialism (or the fascistic Loyalist paramilitaries). At the same time Marxists oppose the tactic of individual terror against state forces because it is antithetical to what is needed to liberate the working class and the oppressed. The actions of small groups or individuals cannot replace the necessary mobilisation of the mass of the proletariat.
For Workers Revolutions Throughout the British Isles!
Working people in Northern Ireland as a whole suffer some of the worst living conditions in the British Isles, including wages and employment rates. With much of industry having closed down, the Protestant working class has taken it in the teeth while the Catholic population continues to face systematic discrimination and cop terror. While Southern Ireland recently repealed its anti-abortion Eighth Amendment, abortion is still almost completely illegal in the North, as is same-sex marriage. The interests of working people in Northern Ireland have long been subordinated to sectarian hostility and religious backwardness.
Intransigent opposition to all forms of national oppression is an essential part of the revolutionary internationalist programme. Northern Ireland was established as an Orange statelet by British imperialism in the 1921 partition of Ireland. Northern Catholics, part of the Irish nation, remain oppressed. But they live within the same territory as the Protestants—a distinct community which largely defines itself against the Irish Catholic nation and which fears becoming an oppressed minority within a united Ireland. As Leninists, we oppose the Irish nationalist programme of reunifying the six counties of Northern Ireland with the southern Catholic Irish bourgeois state. An equitable solution to the conflicting claims of the interpenetrated peoples of the North requires the overthrow of capitalism throughout the British Isles.
A leadership that can unite Catholic and Protestant workers in struggle against capitalist exploitation must base itself on defence of the oppressed Catholics and opposition to British imperialism. In contrast, the self-proclaimed Marxists of the Socialist Party denounce sectarianism on all sides with a pretence of even-handedness—which in practice amounts to the most grotesque denial of the oppression of Northern Ireland’s Catholic population. Consistently referring to the Orange marches as a question of “rights,” they adopt the language of Loyalist demagogues who defend displays of Protestant supremacy.
A 9 July article titled “Bonfire debate can ignite conflict,” on the website of the Socialist Party in Northern Ireland warns against dismissing “out of hand” Protestant claims that the Eleventh Night bonfires “are an important expression of their culture and identity and primarily a way for the community to come together.” It also equates the Orange sectarian bonfires with Catholic ones marking the anniversary of the British Army’s 1971 imposition of internment, in which more than 1,000 alleged IRA sympathisers were detained without trial. Only those wilfully blind to oppression and the crimes of imperialism (or in thrall to pro-imperialist Labourism) could conflate the Eleventh Night bonfires celebrating imperialism and Catholic oppression with a protest against the military internment of opponents of British rule.
Some anti-internment bonfires include poppy wreaths, British Army regimental banners and the names of sadistic prison screws, but so what?! The police, prisons and army are the core of the capitalist state—an apparatus of organised violence that defends capitalist class rule. As such they are enemies not only of Catholics but also of Protestant workers. (Grotesquely, the Socialist Party considers cops and prison guards workers in uniform.) It’s no accident that the PSNI declared burning symbols of British imperialism a hate crime, but not the Loyalist bonfire threats to kill all Catholics.
The million-strong Protestant community is not one reactionary mass; it is differentiated by class as much as Irish Catholics are. The history of the workers movement in Northern Ireland includes significant examples of proletarian solidarity cutting across sectarian divisions. Examples include the 1919 Belfast engineers strike and the 1932 Outdoor Relief strike. More recently, postal workers went on strike for five days in January 2002 in response to the killing of their Catholic co-worker Daniel McColgan by Loyalist paramilitaries. However, such joint struggles have often been undermined by sectarian actions or diverted into class‑collaboration by the trade union bureaucrats, as in 2002 (see Spartacist Ireland No. 1, Spring/Summer 2002).
The defeat of the 1919 strike and the subsequent expulsion of Catholic workers, and reds, from the engineering industry helped lay the basis for Partition. In 1934, the Communist-influenced Republican Congress organised a group of Protestant workers from the Shankill Road to march in the annual Bodenstown commemoration of Wolfe Tone, the leader of the 1798 United Irishmen uprising. With banners including “Break the connection with capitalism,” this was an anti-imperialist, anti-capitalist act by Protestant workers. It was rebuffed by the IRA, who tried to seize the “communistic” banners.
The crucial factor in forging lasting proletarian unity is a revolutionary workers party. It is necessary to construct a party which will combat every manifestation of oppression and as V.I. Lenin wrote in What Is To Be Done? (1902) “generalise all these manifestations and produce a single picture of police violence and capitalist exploitation.” We seek to build such parties in Britain and Ireland in order to win the majority of the working class to the struggle for an Irish workers republic within a voluntary federation of the British Isles.

In the context of a socialist federation, the Protestants may in the future be voluntarily integrated into a common Irish nation, which they would at present vehemently reject; they may develop a more distinct national identity; or they may find a democratic accommodation outside the framework of strictly national solutions under proletarian rule. The decisive factor in the overall outcome will be the presence of Leninist vanguard parties, rooted in the proletariat of all the peoples of these isles.