Sunday, August 17, 2014

Free Chelsea Manning - President Obama Pardon Chelsea Manning Now!

Amnesty renews call on US govt to free Manning

Join us in urging President Obama to Pardon Chelsea Manning!

July 30, 2014 by the Chelsea Manning Support Network

One year after Chelsea Manning’s conviction, Amnesty International is still calling on the US government to grant her clemency.  Amnesty demands that Chelsea be freed immediately, and for the US government to, “implement a thorough and impartial investigation into the crimes she uncovered.”  Read the full statement from Amnesty International below or click here to view it on amnesty.org:
Amnesty
Exactly one year after Chelsea Manning was convicted of leaking classified government material, Amnesty International is renewing its call on the US authorities to grant her clemency, release her immediately, and to urgently investigate the potential human rights violations exposed by the leaks.
Chelsea Manning has spent the last year as a convicted criminal after exposing information which included evidence of potential human rights violations and breaches of international law. By disseminating classified information via Wikileaks she revealed to the world abuses perpetrated by the US army, military contractors and Iraqi and Afghan troops operating alongside US forces.
“It is an absolute outrage that Chelsea Manning is currently languishing behind bars whilst those she helped to expose, who are potentially guilty of human rights violations, enjoy impunity,” said Erika Guevara Rosas, Americas Director Amnesty International.
“The US government must grant Chelsea Manning clemency, order her immediate release, and implement a thorough and impartial investigation into the crimes she uncovered.”
After being convicted of 20 separate charges Chelsea Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison, much longer than other members of the military convicted of charges such as murder, rape and war crimes.
Before her conviction, Chelsea Manning had already been held for three years in pre-trial detention, including 11 months in conditions which the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture described as cruel and inhumane.
Chelsea Manning has always maintained that her motivation for releasing the documents to Wikileaks was out of concern for the public and to foster a meaningful debate on the costs of war and the conduct of the US military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Notable amongst the information revealed by Private Manning was previously unseen footage of journalists and other civilians being killed in US helicopter attacks.
“The US government appears to have its priorities warped. It is sending a worrying message through its harsh punishment of Chelsea Manning that whistleblowers will not be tolerated. On the other hand, its failure to investigate allegations that arose from Chelsea Manning’s disclosures means that those potentially responsible for crimes under international law, including torture and enforced disappearances, may get away scot-free,” said Erika Guevara.
“One year after the conviction of Chelsea Manning we are still calling on the US government to grant her clemency in recognition of her motives for acting as she did, and the time she has already served in prison.” 
Amnesty International has previously expressed concern that a sentence of 35 years in jail was excessive and should have been commuted to time served. The organization believes that Chelsea Manning was overcharged using antiquated legislation aimed at dealing with treason, and denied the opportunity to use a public interest defence at her trial.
In addition, there is little protection in US law for genuine whistleblowers, and this case underlines the need for the US to strengthen protections for those who reveal information that the public has the right to know.
It is crucial that the US government stops using the Espionage Act to prosecute whistleblowers like Chelsea Manning.

Join us in urging President Obama to Pardon Chelsea Manning!


As The 100th Anniversary Of The Beginning of World War I (Remember The War To End All Wars) Starts ... Some Remembrances-Poet’s Corner

Laurence Binyon

Ypres



She was a city of patience; of proud name,
Dimmed by neglecting Time; of beauty and loss;
Of acquiescence in the creeping moss.
But on a sudden fierce destruction came
Tigerishly pouncing: thunderbolt and flame
Showered on her streets, to shatter them and toss
Her ancient towers to ashes. Riven across,
She rose, dead, into never-dying fame.
White against heavens of storm, a ghost, she is known
To the world's ends. The myriads of the brave
Sleep round her. Desolately glorified,
She, moon-like, draws her own far-moving tide
Of sorrow and memory; toward her, each alone,
Glide the dark dreams that seek an English grave.

The Pity of It


I walked in loamy Wessex lanes, afar
From rail-track and from highway, and I heard
In field and farmstead many an ancient word
Of local lineage like "Thu bist," "Er war,"
"Ich woll," "Er sholl," and by-talk similar,
Nigh as they speak who in this month's moon gird
At England's very loins, thereunto spurred
By gangs whose glory threats and slaughters are.
Then seemed a Heart crying: "Whosoever they be
At root and bottom of this, who flung this flame
Between folk kin tongued even as are we,
"Sinister, ugly, lurid, be their fame;
May their familiars grow to shun their name,
And their brood perish everlastingly."
Peace Action: Working for Peace Since 1957 FacebookTwitterBlogContact us
 
The tragic death of Michael Brown at the hands of the Ferguson police is a reminder that the upsurge in violence is not restricted to the Middle East or any one place.  It’s right here in our own communities.

Like the Trayvon Martin killing two years ago, the problems of racism, easy access to firearms, and the assault on our civil rights are all, once again, in the spotlight. I suspect I don’t have to explain why peace activists are taking action, mostly in support of activists of color who are leading the organized response to this latest perversion of justice.  Anti-violence is at the very heart of our struggle.

In this case however there is another element that directly connects to our ongoing work to build a more peaceful and just future – that is – militarism.  It’s time to demilitarize our police.

As the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq ‘wind down’ (though clearly not all the way down) the Pentagon has been offering surplus weapons to local police forces for free.  Tens of thousands of M-16’s, as well as mine-resistant trucks and other battlefield hardware have already been transferred to jurisdictions around the country – but the Pentagon still has lots and lots of free stuff to give away. 

A bipartisan chorus has already begun to speak out in Congress against this practice.  Even Tea Party and right wing extremist Ted Cruz is raising alarm.

Tell your Member of Congress where you stand.

How much military hardware has been transferred to local jurisdictions?  It’s not easy to know as the Pentagon makes the trail difficult to track.  Most of the data available comes from local and state officials – like the State of Missouri which CNN reports has received some $17 million worth in transfers from the Pentagon.

I find, and I’m confident you do as well, the images of police in full military gear aiming assault rifles at unarmed protesters upsetting.  We can expect to see more and more of this in the future too, if we don’t do something about the economic terrorism visited upon the poor in our society at the hands of the 1 percent. 

We know, for example, the Pentagon has in place plans for dealing with civil disorder brought about by economic or environmental disaster threatening the stablity of the government.  Arming local jurisdictions is a step in the wrong direction.

Since the 1980’s the US government has enabled the militarization of the police force as part of its so-called War on Drugs.  Post 9/11 politics opened the flood gates with grants from the federal government to prepare for the imminent terrorist threat.  Now, as combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan have ended, the Pentagon is literally giving battlefield hardware away. 

The militarism of policing – both in terms of weaponry and tactics – is a threat to our freedom as great as any coming from outside our borders.  It’s time to put it to a stop.

Write you Member of Congress today!
Please forward this message to your friends.
Humbly for Peace,
Kevin Martin
Executive Director
Peace Action


empowered by Salsa
Veterans For Peace Demands Justice for Michael Brown Jr




Veterans For Peace offers its deep condolences to the family of Michael Brown Jr. and stands in solidarity with the family, the people of Ferguson and the Greater Saint Louis Region. We call for a complete, swift and transparent investigation. And we demand justice for Michael Brown Jr. and his family.

Veterans For Peace deplores all forms of violence. We call on the people of the region to continue to channel their anger towards building power, solidarity and creating change nonviolently. However, as we ask people work to direct their energies towards positive change, we reserve special outrage for state violence. We applaud the decision to give control of security operations to the MO State Highway Patrol in an effort to de-escalate police violence in Ferguson. It appears this change is working and we call on the responsible authorities to recognize that de-escalation is an ongoing process.

We are military veterans who once served the state as agents of violence, given the tools and authority to take the lives of the “enemy” and excused for taking the lives of innocent people in the name and interests of the state. We are able to recognize abuse of power and use of excessive force.

What happened in Ferguson, MO last Saturday and the aftermath of police over reaction to community expressions of grief and anger is the outcome of a national mindset that violence will solve any problem. Thirteen years of war has militarized our whole society. We see equipment designed for the battlefield used in our nation’s streets against our citizens. We see police in uniforms and using weapons indistinguishable from the military.

Week after week we see reports of police abuse and killings of innocent and unarmed civilians. And instead of fair and swift justice to ensure citizens can trust they are protected and served by the judicial system, time and time again we see police given impunity for their crimes and citizens left in disbelief wondering where to turn next. This injustice plagues diverse ethnic and “racial” communities, but the Black community has, historically and in present day, seen this abuse consistently and most intensely. Many people in Black communities across the nation have said they feel as if they live in a war zone.

The unrest in Ferguson and similar incidents of citizen rebellions are the outcome of state abuse and neglect, not of hoodlums and opportunists. Eventually, any people who are held down will attempt to standup. They will struggle for their humanity. Paraphrasing Fredrick Douglas, this struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it will be a struggle. This is what we see in Ferguson today.

We cannot call for peace in the streets at home and at the same time conduct war for thirteen years in the streets of other nations. We cannot admonish youth for using violence to seek change when the U.S. uses bombs and drones as the primary tool to drive the change it wants. We agree with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., “I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today: my own government. For the sake of those boys, for the sake of this government, for the sake of the hundreds of thousands trembling under our violence, I cannot be silent.”

Peace at home will not be had if we do not seek peace at abroad. We must work for both. Veterans For Peace will not be silent.

***A 50th Anniversary, Of Sorts- Motown’s The Supremes’ Baby Love  





 
 
Frank Jackman comment:

In a world where the U.S. is ominously increasingly intervening in the civil war in Iraq, the Palestinians in Gaza stand practically defenseless against the Israeli juggernaut, and the flames of cop-driven racial hatred have surfaced in places as diverse as Ferguson, Mo and New York City commemorating the 50th anniversary of the emergence of The Supreme and their string of great dance-worthy hits may seem a little out of place. But just a little as those of us from the Generation of ’68 remember back to those  dark night dances where the three good-looking black women formed the musical background to many a last chance, last dance promise of things to come. Now back to the world.  

Free Chelsea Manning - President Obama Pardon Chelsea Manning Now!

ACLU preparing to sue Army over Manning’s gender treatment

aclu_logoChase Strangio, Staff Attorney of the LGBT & AIDS Project, American Civil Liberties Union. August 12, 2014
Today, the ACLU, the ACLU of Kansas and Chelsea Manning’s civilian defense counsel, David E. Coombs, sent an official letter of complaint (PDF) to officials at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth, and also notified Defense Secretary Hagel that we intend to take legal action if the Defense Department does not provide her with proper medical treatment for her previously diagnosed Gender Dysphoria. Below please find some background info and a quote attributed to the ACLU’s lead attorney on this case for your use.
Nearly one year ago, Chelsea Manning announced that she is female and planned to seek treatment for her diagnosed Gender Dysphoria while incarcerated.  Ms. Manning requested an evaluation and treatment immediately after she arrived in August 2013 at the Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth and in September 2013 was again diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria by military doctors. Though a treatment plan was recommended by several military doctors and approved by the command at Fort Leavenworth, no treatment was initiated. Today we informed the Department of Defense that we will initiate legal proceedings if Ms. Manning does not receive appropriate treatment.
“The continued failure to provide Ms. Manning with this treatment is inconsistent with well-established medical protocols and basic constitutional principles,” said Chase Strangio, staff attorney with the ACLU’s Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Project. “Our constitution requires that the government provide medically necessary care to the individuals it holds in its custody. It is cruel and unusual punishment to withhold from Ms. Manning the care that the military’s own doctors have deemed medically necessary. The Army is withholding her care for political reasons, which is simply not permitted by our Constitution.”
From a medical perspective there is nothing complicated or controversial about Ms. Manning’s diagnosis or the treatment recommended by her doctors. Gender Dysphoria is a serious medical condition and hormone therapy is part of the accepted standards of care for this condition. Without necessary treatment, Gender dysphoria can cause severe psychological distress, anxiety, and suicidality. For this reason, the National Commission on Correctional Health Care and the American Psychological Association have issued policy statements in support of providing treatment to prisoners diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria in a manner consistent with community standards of care.
The official policy of the Federal Bureau of Prisons and most state agencies is to provide medically necessary care for the treatment of Gender Dysphoria, and courts have consistently found that denying such care to individuals in detention for non-medical reasons violates the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution.

From The Marxist Archives-A System in Its Death Agony-From The Pen Of Early American Trotskyist Leader James P. Cannon 
 



Workers Vanguard No. 1050
8 August 2014
 
A System in Its Death Agony
 
In a speech delivered to a meeting of students at New York University in 1951, American Trotskyist leader James Cannon laid bare the bloody workings of U.S. imperialism, which had emerged from World War II as the world’s dominant capitalist power. He underlined that only international workers revolution can put an end to the privation and war endemic to the decaying capitalist profit system.
 
Capitalism is an outworn social system. The First World War was the sign of its bankruptcy as a world order. Prior to that, for half a century, capitalism had grown and expanded. It had maintained an uneasy peace in the world, except for numerous local wars and colonial expeditions by which the great powers divided up the world. But things have changed since then. Just consider for a moment how much they have changed in thirty-seven years since the first shots were fired in 1914. Two world wars, devouring the lives of tens of millions of people, and wounding nobody knows how many more, and destroying so much of the material culture of the world. Two destructive world wars and a terrible worldwide depression with its unmeasured toll of misery and death. And now the mad armaments race toward another world war, the end of which no one can see or prophesy....
The workers of the United States haven’t said their last word yet by a long shot. The foreign policy of American capitalism is united with its domestic policy. The war program carries with it the program of militarizing and regimenting the country, already under way; of stamping out liberties, which is in the design; and of driving down the living standards of the workers, which is in progress with the wage freeze on the one side and skyrocketing inflation on the other....
There is an alternative. In my opinion this alternative is to recognize the social reality of our time, to see capitalism as a world system in its death agony, completely reactionary and beyond salvation by any means. The alternative to support of this doomed social system is to ally oneself with the future, with the socialist and labor movement, and with the great colonial revolutions in process and still growing. The alternative is to work for a union of the world’s workers and the colonial peoples, to put an end to imperialism and open the way for the socialist society of the free and equal. That is the way to secure peace and progress and a good life for all.
 
—James P. Cannon, “Youth and Foreign Policy” (April 1951)

The Full Speech: 

Fourth International, May-June 1951


James P. Cannon

Youth and Foreign Policy

(A Speech to Students of
New York University, April 25, 1951)


Transcribed from tape recording.
Source: Fourth International, Vol.12 No.3, May-June 1951, pp.72-76.
Transcription/Mark-up: Einde O’Callaghan.

The subject of our discussion today, the foreign policy of the United States, is now recognized on every side as the burning question of the day. It monopolizes the attention of the statesmen, the generals and the diplomats. It is a sign of the times that the specialists in the art of propaganda, true and false – mostly false – concentrate on this subject nowadays, each from his own point of view and special interest. Through this poisonous fog of slanted propaganda the truth has a hard time making its way.
The people of America, as distinguished from their rulers and misleaders, in their great majority have been traditionally peace-loving, nationally exclusive and self-sufficient, even isolationist, in their sentiments. But they have long since been convinced by the course of events that foreign policy is their greatest concern today and the source of their greatest fears. For they know in their bones, no matter what the statesmen and the propagandists say, that US foreign policy is driving not toward peace but toward war.

Not An Academic Question for Youth

And I believe that of all the elements and age-brackets in the population of the country, those who are most acutely sensitive to this relationship of foreign policy and war are the youth; that is, those who will have to do the fighting and the dying in the ultimate execution of our foreign policy as it is directed today. For the young people foreign policy is no academic disquisition, but a question of life and death.
Therefore, I am glad of the opportunity you have given me to speak to an audience of young university people on this subject today. First of all, I wish to express my appreciation of the spirit of fair play and free speech which has been manifested on so many sides, especially in the student body, and I assume also in the administrative staff, which has made my discussion with you possible.
I believe in free speech. I have fought for it a long time, for others as well as for myself. Free speech is a necessary instrumentality for the dissemination of full information and the clarification of ideas which can lead to correct decisions. In the early days of the pioneer socialist movement in this country and the IWW, with which I was affiliated, we put up many battles, not without hazards and penalties for some of us, for the right of free speech. I first came into collision, and eventually to an irrevocable break, with the Communist Party over this question – over the attempt.to suppress the rights of a minority faction to which I belonged to present their views and defend them in fair debate. For forty years 1 have been mixed up one way or another in the fight for free speech, either as a defendant under prosecution defending my own rights, or as an active participant in organizations and committees defending the rights of others. I know all about free speech.

“Great Debate” Only Over Tactics

I speak here today on the subject of foreign policy from the viewpoint of Marxist socialism, the socialism of the class struggle. 1 have lived to see the United States take part in two world wars. As a socialist I opposed them both, and I am opposed now to the American intervention in Korea and the program of spreading it into a Third World War. As a socialist I know that capitalist wars are waged not for high moral principles as the lying propagandists say, but for profits and plunder, for territories, for markets and fields of investment. I cannot conceive of a more disgraceful act of self-repudiation for a socialist than to support a capitalist war.
The great debate, so-called, which is proceeding with feverish intensity today in the halls of Congress and in the press, on radio and television, in forums, on platforms and in pulpits, does not in my opinion touch the real problem of war and peace. The differences of Truman and MacArthur, the two protagonists in the debate as it is presently unfolding, are only tactical and strategic, not fundamental. They differ on where to begin, and when to begin, to drop the atom bomb and start the Third World War. But both policies, the policies of Truman and the policies of MacArthur, are imperialistic. They both aim at war and hope to solve the economic problems of the United States by means of war.
Hoover is rather on the side-lines, a third party in the discussion whose influence is declining. The Hoover policy is imperialistic also, but in too limited a way to serve the economic requirements of American capitalism. His conception of a western hemisphere fortress is too small for the present-day world. The New York Times, in my opinion, correctly disposed of the Hoover thesis from the point of view of big finance, with the editorial observation that his program would signify “economic strangulation” for the United States – as a capitalist nation, that is.

Dilemma of American Capitalism

In the last analysis, the same thing holds true for the programs of Truman and MacArthur and ultimately condemns them both to bankruptcy. The dilemma of United States capitalism arises from the fact that it has come to the apex of its riches and its power, as the heir of bankrupt Europe, in a world that has no room for expanding capitalism, as it still had half a century ago. It is not only the western hemisphere that is too small. Europe and Asia are also too small. In fact, the whole world is too small to meet the demands and needs of American capitalism with its ever-accumulating surpluses of capital and manufactured goods, which cannot be absorbed at home on a capitalist basis.
The Soviet Union, one-sixth of the world’s surface, is closed off to the capitalist world as a market and field of profitable investment. Eastern Europe in the recent period has been closed off. And now China, the great object of the war in the Pacific, the prize for which the war against Japan was waged, has not only been wrested from the control of Japanese imperialism. In the process of war and revolution China has torn itself out of the orbit of capitalist exploitation. And the colonial revolutions have just begun. The world open to capitalist exploitation is narrowing down, while the demands of American imperialism for markets and fields of investment grow ever more rapacious and insatiable. That is the dilemma of a bankrupt social system which “foreign policy” cannot conjure out of existence.

Economic Root of Imperialist Policy

The bankruptcy of capitalism is registered in terms of human poverty and misery for which it is the primary cause. As we here today discuss the question of American foreign policy and the dilemma of American imperialism, just let one simple fact have the floor. There are two billion people in the world which capitalism has ruled so long, and more than one-half of these people never get enough to eat all their lives. This is an established fact, undisputed by anybody. It is a matter of common knowledge.
These hungry people don’t want propaganda. It is the biggest illusion and delusion to imagine that hungry people who number more than a billion are just waiting for somebody to give them the low-down in learned professorial essays. They know what they want. They want bread, and land, and national independence. Capitalism cannot supply them, and has not supplied them. That is the nub of the problem of the world today. Neither Truman nor MacArthur can bomb it out of existence, although that is what their “foreign policy”stupidly aims to accomplish.
The terrible contradictions of American capitalism forbid and exclude a humane and peaceful foreign policy. The narrowing fields for capitalist exploitation on the one hand, and the constantly growing surpluses of capital and goods produced in the United States – this is the economic circumstance determining the imperialist foreign policy of the United States. It is not a matter of bad will or ignorance on the part of one statesman or another, although God knows there is plenty of that. It is an ineluctable contradiction of an economic nature. That is what determines the imperialist foreign policy of the United States and drives it to militarization and to war.

Talk About Peace Is Cheap

These facts are well-known to the decisive ruling circles of this country, those circles who represent the great accumulations of capital for whom the New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune speak most authoritatively. They know these facts and that is why they will not listen to any talk of isolationism; or of limitation to the western hemisphere; or of making peace with China and Russia. Not at all. Such proposals do not fit into their policy in any way whatever, except as propaganda to deceive the people. To be sure, they all blandly deny any imperialist aims. They all talk for peace. But talk is cheap. That is the first lesson in politics 1 would recommend to you young men and women, if by any chance you are studying political science in some class or other. Talk is cheap, but facts speak louder. All this talk of peace and denial of imperialist aims is just routine propaganda, belied by deeds everywhere.
The “theoretical justification” for this phony “non-imperialist” and “peace” propaganda of the masters of America has been undertaken by some people, including your professor of philosophy, Sidney Hook, who call themselves “democratic socialists.” They correspond in my opinion – you will forgive me if I unintentionally offend your religious sensibilities – they correspond to the missionaries who were sent out to soften up the native peoples in the colonies for subjugation and exploitation by the great powers in the past.

Shoddy “Theory” of the Neo-Missionaries

I have here a few quotations as samples of this theoretical missionary work, this shoddy attempt to prove on a theoretical basis, the non-imperialist and peace-loving character of the most rapacious imperialist power that ever existed in the world. Here is a quotation from a published document entitled To Our Friends In Europe and Asia:
“The development of American capitalism has not led to imperialism; it does not fulfill Lenin’s theory of imperialism as the inevitable last stage of capitalism.”
Another quotation from the same document, a denial, “that American capitalism depends on imperialist expansion for its very life.”
And a third quotation:
“The US had a great internal free trade market and such enormous, natural resources that today she is an exporter of raw materials as well as of manufactured goods. The economic facts of life in America were and are very different from the facts in Europe which led Lenin to formulate his theory of imperialism.”
The signers of this document – among them Lewis Corey, James T. Farrell, Sidney Hook, Upton Sinclair and Norman Thomas – attempt to convince the people of Europe and Asia that the economic laws determining the imperialist character of the old Europe, about which Lenin wrote, do not apply to its successor to the domination of the world, the beneficent United States of America.
The best I can say for this “theoretical” exercise is that it must have been written on the assumption that nobody will read it who ever read Lenin. While it is true that there were certain differences between the line of development of American capitalism into imperialism and a similar development in Europe, the differences all accentuate the imperialist drive of the United States. It is true that American capitalism had, and still has, a great internal market. It had a whole continent to exploit in contra-distinction to the hemmed-in countries of Europe. The development and exploitation of this vast territory provided an expanding internal market for a long time. It also opened up a. widening field for the continuous investment and re-investment not only of the profits of American capitalism itself, but also of billions and billions of dollars imported from Europe in the development of this country. That was the case up to the time of the First World War.

Reality of US Economic Development

Then the situation and the relationship of Europe and America began to change fundamentally. America, which was a debtor nation at the beginning of the First World War has become the richest capitalist nation in the world, and the creditor of the whole world. Meanwhile, the internal market, great as it was and still is, proved in the crisis of the 30’s that it could no longer absorb the products of American industry on a capitalist basis. A slight decline in exports was sufficient to plunge American economy into the most devastating crisis the world ever saw, a crisis which lasted ten years and even then was only temporarily and artificially overcome by war expenditures.
Our theoretical justifiers say that America exports raw materials in contra-distinction to some of the older European countries analyzed by Lenin, and therefore cannot be imperialist by Lenin’s law. That argument wouldn’t even convince Governor Thomas E. Dewey. Did you read Dewey’s speech in answer to Hoover? Dewey’s speech lists, one after another, the strategic raw materials which America needs from foreign sources for its industries and for its armament, including uranium. He points out the various spots around the world where they are located and cannot be had and incorporated into the American industrial process without the Sources being controlled by the United States or its allies.

Facts That Refute Hook and Co.

America exports wheat and cotton, but a great number of strategic raw materials, absolutely necessary for its industry and its war machine, have to be imported at any cost, even at the cost of war. And so great is the power of America over this supply of raw materials, it caused an explosion in the British cabinet just the other day. One of the main reasons for the resignation of Bevan from the cabinet of the Labor Government was that America is cornering the raw material supplies of the world, stimulating inflation in Europe and endangering British economy.
Lenin said the epoch of capitalist imperialism, as distinguished from the epoch of free competition, is characterized mainly by the export of capital. The development of home industry reaches the point where it can no longer absorb the accumulations of profits piled up by the capitalist investors. In addition to the export of manufactured goods they have to find foreign fields where this surplus capital can be invested at a high rate of profit under conditions of political security for the investment.

Urgency of Investment Drive

How does that apply to America? Why, I think it applies a hundred times more than it ever did to England, France and Germany, which were the great imperialist powers before the First World War. All you have to do is look at the figures of the accumulation of capital and the rate and volume of its exportation by America since the beginning of the First World War. These figures do not lie and cannot be lied away. To bring forward the “non-imperialist” argument at the present time, when the bulk of the surplus capital of the entire world is held here in the United States; to say that this country, which has the virtual monopoly of world capital, is not confronted by the imperialistic problem of investing outside its own borders – that is to make a mockery of facts as well as of theory.
Our theoretical missionaries mention the gifts dispensed by the American Santa Claus, the loans and the donations for military purposes to foreign governments, including Chiang Kai-shek, Syngman Rhee, Franco and all the other representatives of “freedom and democracy.” What is all this largesse designed for? It is represented in the document I have quoted here as a sign of the beneficence and peace-loving character of the American capitalist government.

Real Aim of American Largesse

Cutting out the buncombe and getting down to brass tacks, permit me to give you another interpretation. These loans and donations are primarily designed to prop up the shaky capitalist structures and create the political conditions for profitable investments. Not even the free-spending United States capitalists want to pour out billions of dollars in investments for the development of backward foreign countries without guarantees that their investments will be secured and pay off. What is necessary for the security of their investments? “Stable political conditions.” And these stable political conditions, as they are understood in Washington and Wall Street, require puppet governments which can suppress revolutions and colonial uprisings and guarantee at all costs that the profits of the investors will be secured regardless of the interests of the exploited people.
There is a second reason why they dole out money so freely. The Marshall Plan, etc. came at a convenient time, when America was threatened With an economic crisis which was due to the overproduction of goods that the domestic market could not absorb. The huge expenditures, creating an artificial market, alleviated and postponed the crisis. Benevolence here was happily married to expediency.
We Marxists interpret the foreign policy of the United States government from economic facts. The capitalists who own the government need foreign markets for their surplus goods. They need secure political conditions for profitable investment in foreign lands. Their demands are insatiable and cannot be restrained. Loans and investments in Russia, Eastern Europe, and now China, are considered unsafe. The policy is not to “contain” the Soviet Union in Russia and Eastern Europe. No, that is only a temporizing tactic. The ultimate aim and imperious necessity is to overthrow the governments in these countries; to open them up as markets and fields of investment under secure political conditions. This is the real goal of American foreign policy, which spells in the final analysis the drive to dominate the entire world. They select their allies to serve that end; “benevolence” and “democracy” have nothing to do with it.

Explains Support of Reaction Everywhere

Just ask yourselves a question, friends. How does it happen that the United States government, implementing its foreign policy, which the priests of spurious theory tell us is so peaceful and so beneficent and concerned so purely with the welfare of the human race – which includes, we presume, the half billion people who never get enough to eat – how does it happen that everywhere American foreign policy, backed up by American military force, supports the capitalists, the landlords, the usurers, the kings and the fascist gangs against the people?
In China they support Chiang Kai-shek whose regime was so corrupt and reactionary that the people rose up en masse to drive him out. America takes sides against the people everywhere: In Spain with its fascist butcher, Franco; in Greece with its monarcho-fascist regime; in Korea with its Syngman Rhee; in Indo-China where the people are struggling for independence against French imperialism and have to fight against the overwhelming might of American financial help and military supplies; in Malaya and the Philippines; in Portugal, Turkey and South America. All over the world, wherever the hungry people are rising in a struggle for land, and bread, and national independence, they confront the United States of America with its money and its bombs.
The people everywhere know these facts because they bring down upon them death and destruction all the time. And because they know these facts, they are not apt to be taken in by the theory of Professor Hook, elucidated in an article in the New York Times Magazine, that the real need of America is a “propaganda offensive.” When people know the facts, it is pretty hard to deceive them by words, especially when they feel the facts on their bodies and bones, in blows and bloody attacks.
The more practical artificers of American foreign policy, as distinguished from their professorial advisors, know that it is a waste of money to try to convince these half-billion people throughout the world by propaganda that America is their friend. The hard-headed statesmen gave an ironic answer to Sidney Hook and his propaganda theory the other day in Congress when they voted to cut the appropriations for the “Voice of America” by 90%. It was a big surprise to many people. But these realistic politicians in Washington have more faith in their guns and their bombs to make the people of the world love them, than in propaganda which belies all facts.

Is Imperialist Policy Realizable

Now a question we should ask ourselves is this: Can our life purpose be committed to the fate of this American imperialist power? Disregarding all moral considerations and all concern for the human race except ourselves and our families, our little circle, can we say, well, America is bound to dominate the world anyway and we might as well go along and serve it and save ourselves? I would say, even from that narrow and morally impermissible standpoint the question does not have an easy and facile answer.
Is the United States of America as it is now constituted on a capitalist basis all-powerful? Can she lick the world with guns and atom bombs and impose her will by force everywhere, as some ignorant braggarts and narrow-minded militarists like to say? Can she enslave and exploit the whole world and make good conditions for us, the favored few, within her borders? In my opinion, an objective examination of the real facts of the world situation can only raise the gravest doubts of the capacity of American capitalism to carry out even a small part of the global designs implied in its foreign policy.
Capitalism is an outworn social system. The First World War was the sign of its bankruptcy as a world order. Prior to that, for half a century capitalism had grown and expanded. It had maintained an uneasy peace in the world, except for numerous local wars and colonial expeditions, by which the great powers divided up the world. But things have changed since then. Just consider for a moment how much they have changed, in thirty-seven years since the first shots were fired in 1914. Two world wars, devouring the lives of tens of millions of people, and wounding nobody knows how many more, and destroying so much of the material culture of the world. Two destructive world wars and a terrible world-wide depression with its unmeasured toll of misery and death. And now the mad armaments race toward another world war, the end of which no one can see or prophesy.

Peoples of World Rising Against US

These are the achievements of capitalism in the last third of a century. This system, I say, is bankrupt. This system is in the twilight period of its decline and its decay. The peoples of the world are rising up against it, and especially against its chief representative, the United States of America. The rest of the capitalist world would fall of its own weight without American money and American arms. There isn’t a country in Europe where a capitalist government could stand up for many months without American power and support. That applies to all of them from Greece to Franco’s Spain, to Italy, to France and all the others, except possibly England, and England too would soon follow the others.
The peoples of the Orient, who have thrown off the shackles of the old colonialism, show no disposition to wear new ones. They are not asking to be taken into America’s sphere of influence and exploitation. On the contrary, they are fighting against it with all of their strength and passion.
The victims of Stalinism in Russia and Eastern Europe badly need a political revolution; but they don’t want any “liberation” by the arms and bombs of the United States, and the consequent restoration of the capitalists and landlords, and the splitting up of their countries into colonies for American exploitation.
The workers of Europe, and particularly the workers of Germany, have made it perfectly clear in this last year that they don’t intend to fight the battles of United States imperialism in another war. An expression of that attitude has come like a lightning flash from England this week. The resignation of Bevan from the cabinet throws the Labor government into a crisis and raises the question of the Atlantic Pact, and all the other war plans of the United States. This is a direct expression of the unwillingness of the people of England to be tied, as Bevan said, to the chariot of America. A dispatch from Paris in the Times this morning says that the sentiments of Bevan are echoed in socialist and labor circles all over Europe.

US Labor Will Have Its Say

And finally, the workers of the United States haven’t said their last word yet by a long shot. The foreign policy of American capitalism is united with its domestic policy. The war program carries with it the program of militarizing and regimenting the country, already under way; of stamping out liberties, which is in the design; and of driving down the living standards of the workers, which is in progress with the wage freeze on the one side and skyrocketing inflation on the other. All this in my opinion will meet resistance in the United States. The crisis in the Labor Mobilization Board may already be a sign of the coming storm.
So I wouldn’t advise young people to bet their heads on the victory of American imperialism.
There is an alternative. In my opinion this alternative is to recognize the social reality of our time, to see capitalism as a world system in its death agony, completely reactionary, and beyond salvation by any means. The alternative to support of this doomed social system is to ally oneself with the future; with the socialist and labor movement, and with the great colonial revolutions in process and still growing. The alternative is to work for a union of the world’s workers and the colonial peoples, to put an end to imperialism and open the way for the socialist society of the free and equal. That is the way to secure peace and progress and a good life for all.
Friends, I recommend this alternative program to you. It is better. For it offers you something worth fighting for, with the prospect of victory at the end, a victory for all humanity in which you and your generation will share.
NYPD “Broken Windows”: License to Kill-Outrage over Cop Choke-Hold Killing of Eric Garner


Hands Off The Ferguson, Missouri Protesters-Stop The Police Killings Of Black Youth-Stop The Harassment Of The Press- Free All Protesters Now!  

 

Frank Jackman comment: 

It has always been easy for the American imperialist capitalist government and their police to treat black youth, especially black males and increasing Latinos like they have treated the peoples of Southeast Asia in the past, and in Iraq and Afghanistan more recently as so much collateral damage when they pulled the hammer down. Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Michael Brown, and a myriad of others shot down over the years by the police and/or vigilantes cry out for justice in Ferguson, Missouri and New York City this day and will not accept another whitewash. 







Workers Vanguard No. 1050
 







8 August 2014
 
NYPD “Broken Windows”: License to Kill-Outrage over Cop Choke-Hold Killing of Eric Garner
 


They can’t cover this one up: Eric Garner, a 43-year-old black Staten Island man, assaulted and choked to death by a gang of “New York’s finest” on July 17. They squeezed the life out of Garner as he said over and over, “I can’t breathe!” While one of the killers applied a choke hold, another pinned Garner’s chest to the ground with his knee. As cops swarmed over the scene, paramedics arrived but did nothing to save Garner’s life. Cellphone videos caught it all and quickly went viral, helping create simmering rage at yet another NYPD racist killing.
Eyewitnesses exposed the NYPD’s lies from the get-go. The cops said that Garner had resisted arrest for selling loose cigarettes, which is how he made some money after his asthma forced him to quit his parks department job. As everyone at the scene outside Tompkinsville Park saw, Garner, a large man, had just broken up a fight between two youths. The next day, people crowded around a makeshift memorial expressed to Workers Vanguard their bitter anger at the killing of a popular local figure. Known for buying food and clothes for the down-and-out, Garner, a father of six, was “a giant teddy bear,” as one acquaintance put it.
“It stops today!” These words, among Garner’s last as he was set upon by the NYPD, quickly became a rallying cry for all those fed up with daily humiliation and brutalization at the hands of the cops. Protests over Garner’s killing, held repeatedly since July 17, have drawn hundreds at most. But anger at the NYPD is palpable. Garner’s funeral in Brooklyn turned into a spontaneous street protest when the turnout overflowed the church.
Two days after the cops killed Garner, protesters outside the 120th Precinct booed a local politician off the platform when he said that “we are supported by the precinct.” Chants of “1-2-0” and “fuck the police” told the real story. The 120th precinct is notorious for treating the North Shore, where the borough’s black and Latino minorities are concentrated, as a hunting ground. In late July, the family of Irving Mizell filed a suit charging cops with killing the 52-year-old man last year by dragging him down seven flights of stairs and beating him. He was “screaming he couldn’t breathe,” Mizell’s brother told the Staten Island Advance (31 July). “His cries fell on deaf ears, just like Mr. Garner’s, and he died in that precinct.”
Now the cops are looking for payback for the most widely publicized video of Garner’s brutal killing, taken by his friend Ramsey Orta. Just days after Police Commissioner William Bratton lashed out at people causing “interference” with the cops by videotaping arrests, police arrested Orta on gun possession charges. Free Ramsey Orta now! Drop all charges!
The medical examiner’s ruling that Garner died due to a choke hold combined with chest compression has increased pressure on prosecutors to arrest Daniel Pantaleo, the cop caught on video strangling Garner. No question: Pantaleo and his cohorts are guilty as hell. But the killer cops get off time and again. By the lights of the racist capitalist rulers, the cops are just “doing their job” when they snuff out lives in the ghettos and barrios. In very rare cases, local authorities or the Feds make a cop do time in order to make a show of cleaning things up. Even then, the cops almost always get just a slap on the wrist.
One of Garner’s friends put it bluntly the day after the killing: “There ain’t no justice.” Not for the black masses, not for the unemployed, not for working people. The justice system does work for the tiny class of capitalists, who reap obscene profits from an economic system built on the vicious exploitation of labor and the brutal oppression of black people. The cops are the front-line defenders of that system. In Albuquerque, New Mexico, police have been blowing away Latinos and homeless white people who, like the black poor, have been thrown onto capitalism’s scrap heap.
It doesn’t matter which capitalist party, Democratic or Republican, runs the machinery of state violence, or how many civilian review boards or similar whitewash schemes are in place. The most notorious cases of New York cop terror bear this out: black graffiti artist Michael Stewart (beaten to death—1983); infirm black grandmother Eleanor Bumpurs (shotgun—1984); Anthony Baez (choke hold—1994); Amadou Diallo (41 bullets—1999); Alberta Spruill (heart attack caused by a concussion grenade—2003); Sean Bell (50 rounds—2006); Kimani Gray (seven bullets—2013). The truth is that such murderous, systematic repression will end only when the multiracial working class, whose labor makes this society run, seizes power and sweeps away the entire racist capitalist system and its police enforcers.
Now there is Eric Garner, a casualty of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s police “reforms.” De Blasio was elected in November based on promises to rein in stop-and-frisk, which has tormented hundreds of thousands of blacks and Latinos, and to champion working people and the middle class against the finance and real estate barons. In “De Blasio: Liberal Populist Face of Capitalist Politics” (WV No. 1032, 18 October 2013) we warned that any hopes he generated would be cruelly dashed, writing: “Whatever posture he takes today and whatever palliatives he may dole out, de Blasio as mayor will be charged with managing the finance capital of U.S. imperialism on behalf of the Wall Street plutocrats and real estate barons who run the city.”
De Blasio never called for scrapping stop-and-frisk, only for its reform. Under Bratton’s “broken windows” clampdown on petty violations–an approach he honed as commissioner under racist pig mayor Giuliani in the 1990s–the NYPD is stepping up racist harassment, and worse. Now arrests are skyrocketing for everything from dancing for money in the subways to rolling a joint on your stoop. This will only accelerate the criminalization of black youth and others suffering such arrests, who in Bratton’s eyes are just closet felons anyway. Meanwhile, cops continue to wantonly use the choke hold, even though it’s supposedly been banned. Eric Garner was victimized by “broken windows.” So was Rosan Miller, a seven-months-pregnant black woman in East New York, Brooklyn, who was put in a choke hold by an NYPD thug on July 26 for the “crime” of grilling food on the sidewalk!
Reverend Al Sharpton, who has led some of the protests over Garner’s killing, has announced plans for a mass march across the Verrazano Bridge on August 23. Make no mistake: As always, his role in getting in front of the anger over cop terror is to contain and channel it into appeals to the same “justice” system that gives the cops a license to kill. Sharpton, who decades ago wore a wire for the Feds, demands a federal “investigation” into Garner’s killing when the whole world saw an execution by the cops on the street. In his current role as a prominent Democratic politician with ins to City Hall and the White House, Sharpton acts as a tool of the racist capitalist rulers. A longtime aide of Sharpton, Rachel Noerdlinger, is now a principal adviser to de Blasio and his wife, playing a key role in the mayor’s handling of the outrage over Garner.
Echoing Sharpton’s calls for reliance on the “justice” system is the reformist International Socialist Organization (ISO). In Socialist Worker (22 July), the ISO pushes a petition calling on de Blasio, Bratton and the Staten Island district attorney to conduct “a thorough and fair investigation” so that Garner’s killers are “held accountable.” The cops are accountable: to the capitalist class that pays them to enforce its rule and protect its profits against workers and the oppressed. The ISO positively reports demands by “New Yorkers Against Bratton” for a federal investigation into the NYPD’s “culture of brutality” and for “community control of the police.” Sowing the dangerous illusion that the rulers can be pressured to cede control of the police to the very people the cops are paid to repress, the reformists reinforce the chains that bind the working class and minorities to the capitalist injustice system.
Anger over cop terror needs an organized, militant expression—one that can link the ghetto and barrio masses with the social power of the working class. Racist police brutality is an integral part of the capitalist system. But a massive mobilization of labor could give the cops pause. To achieve this requires a political struggle against the craven labor bureaucracy, which has shackled the potential power of the unions and sped their decline through its loyalty to the profit system and its ties to the Democratic Party.
Eric Garner was from a “transit family.” His mother, Gwen Carr, is a subway train operator. His sister, Ellisha Flagg, is a bus driver, and his niece is a subway car cleaner. Each belongs to the 35,000-strong Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 100. A number of transit workers attended Garner’s wake and funeral. But the Local 100 leadership has done nothing to organize solidarity with their grieving members. No doubt this is in deference to the TWU tops’ “brothers” in the cop “unions.” Make no mistake—cops, prison guards and security guards are not workers but their mortal enemies. They have no place in the labor movement.
What is needed is a class-struggle leadership that will get the unions off their knees and mobilize the workers at the head of all the exploited and oppressed. Linked to the anger of the ghettos, the proletariat, with its heavy concentration of black workers, has the social power to end the rule of racist capitalism through socialist revolution. The crucial task is to build the revolutionary workers party needed to lead the proletariat to victory.
When Children Are the Enemy-By Mumia Abu-Jamal




Workers Vanguard No. 1050
 




8 August 2014
 
When Children Are the Enemy-By Mumia Abu-Jamal
 
The following commentary was transcribed from a July 14 prisonradio.org recording.
 
I’ve been watching for days now as media reports display the growing hatred at the arrival of Central American children across the Mexican border.
 
American voices crackle with bile as they begin the drumbeat for their immediate deportation.
Vile names are called against them, and they are described as “invaders,” “sick” and “dirty.”
In truth, they are refugees from want and war, almost all the result of U.S. interventions in Central America in support of murderous military regimes and the mindless drug war.
These are the grandchildren of NAFTA, the economic policy which leached wealth from Mexico and its neighbors.
That said, this antipathy shown towards children is deeply disturbing.
It reminds me of the era of the Second World War, when a bill was submitted in Congress to allow the entry of thousands of Jewish children. The Wagner-Rogers bill would’ve saved 20,000 kids living in Germany, but President FDR, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, opposed it—and the bill died.
Actually, many U.S. elites opposed it, including Roosevelt’s cousin, Laura Delano Houghteling. She was the wife of the U.S. immigration commissioner, who argued, “20,000 charming children would all too soon grow into 20,000 ugly adults.”
Such crude racism portrays the ugliness of Americans, and the day will come when we will look back at how these children are treated today—and we will not feel pride.
This frenzy, this political and social fear whipped up by petty, ambitious politicians will yet pass.
But left behind will be our shame at how a nation that claims so much greatness, can be so small—and so cruel.
From imprisoned nation, this is Mumia Abu-Jamal.
©2014 Mumia Abu-Jamal
*   *   *
Mumia Abu-Jamal, a former Black Panther, renowned journalist and supporter of the Philadelphia MOVE organization, is America’s foremost class-war prisoner. Framed up because of his political views on false charges of killing a Philly cop, Mumia spent almost 30 years on death row. Since December 2011, he has been condemned to life in prison with no chance of parole.
Contributions for Mumia’s legal defense can be made out to the “National Lawyers Guild Foundation,” earmarked “Mumia,” and mailed to: Committee to Save Mumia Abu-Jamal, 132 Nassau Street, Room 922, New York, NY 10038. To correspond with Mumia, write to: Mumia Abu-Jamal, AM 8335 SCI Mahanoy, 301 Morea Road, Frackville, PA 17932.
Children Flee U.S.-Made Hellholes-Central American Refugees: Let Them Stay!-Full Citizenship Rights for All Immigrants!


Workers Vanguard No. 1050
 




8 August 2014
 
Children Flee U.S.-Made Hellholes-Central American Refugees: Let Them Stay!-Full Citizenship Rights for All Immigrants!
 
From last October through June, the Border Patrol seized over 57,000 unaccompanied children along the U.S. border with Mexico, more than double the total for the previous 12 months. This surge is the continuation of a three-year trend in migration of youth, overwhelmingly from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. The horrific violence and grinding poverty that these refugees are fleeing are the direct result of U.S. imperialist domination of Central America. The social fabric of countries there has been ripped apart in recent decades, by everything from the U.S.-engineered dirty wars of the 1980s to the increased militarization in the name of the “war on drugs” and the economic ruination brought about by U.S.-imposed “free trade” agreements.
The exposure in June of immigrant youth packed like sardines in overflowing detention facilities reignited the political debate over immigration “reform.” Republicans and right-wing media pundits took the opportunity to attack Obama for being “soft” on immigration. A reactionary frenzy was whipped up in various border cities, most dramatically in Murrieta, California, where a mob that included Minutemen types and neo-Nazis blocked busloads of immigrants and spewed anti-immigrant vitriol. Several towns and counties have adopted or are weighing resolutions barring emergency housing of immigrants.
President Obama has emphasized that the thousands of child refugees won’t be able to remain in the country. In a June 27 interview, he scolded the parents: “Do not send your children to the borders,” adding, “If they do make it, they’ll get sent back.” The “Deporter in Chief”—who has set a record by deporting over two million immigrants during his presidency—appealed to Congress for $3.7 billion in emergency aid, most of which is intended to strengthen border control and speed up deportations.
To this end, Obama is set on amending a 2008 anti-child-trafficking act signed by George W. Bush. This law allows children from Mexico to be expelled immediately, but requires children from non-bordering countries like those of Central America to be turned over to the Department of Health and Human Services. They are then supposed to be given an immigration hearing or be released to relatives in the U.S. Now the White House wants to grant the Border Patrol the power to throw these children out of the country as quickly as possible without access to legal counsel.
In mid July, the president had nearly 100 women and children deported to the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula, the murder capital of the world. Since the U.S.-backed military overthrow of the Honduran bourgeois-populist Manuel Zelaya in 2009, the country has endured the world’s highest murder rate. (El Salvador and Guatemala also consistently rank in the top five.) In the first half of this year, there were 3,000 murders in Honduras, a country of only eight million people, approximately the population of New York City.
Desperate parents, facing what they see as near-certain death for their children at the hands of either criminal gangs or the vicious police and military, do anything they can to enable their kids to escape. Children are sent on the perilous journey to El Norte, sometimes on their own (many hoping to reunite with parents or other relatives already living in the U.S.). Once in the U.S., large numbers of these young refugees seek permanent residency by applying for asylum or Special Immigrant Juvenile status based on the very real fear of being killed at home. Pursuing asylum involves a tortuous process, and there is no guarantee that it will be granted. For example, gang-related violence and sexual abuse are not considered grounds for asylum.
The Central American refugees should be freed from detention immediately and allowed to stay, whether by being granted asylum or through any other means. The very same U.S. capitalist rulers who plunder Central America turn the screws on workers and the oppressed at home. Defense of immigrants is of vital interest for the labor movement and all fighters against racist discrimination. Everyone who makes it into this country, no matter their age or reason, should be entitled to all the rights of those born here. Our demand is for full citizenship rights for all immigrants, including the right to a U.S. passport and free education. No deportations! Free all the detainees!
U.S. Imperialism’s “Backyard”
The U.S. capitalist rulers have long considered Latin America their own backyard. During the first three decades of the 20th century, U.S. troops intervened in Central American and Caribbean countries on nearly 20 occasions. In the military’s baggage train rode the representatives of giant U.S. corporations, such as the United Fruit Company. In Guatemala, Honduras and other countries derisively referred to as “banana republics,” United Fruit’s will was law. In Guatemala, Washington engineered the 1954 overthrow of bourgeois-populist president Jacobo Arbenz, who had attempted to nationalize some of United Fruit’s land and implement other reforms.
During the 1980s, the U.S. financed, trained and gave intelligence to murderous death squad regimes throughout Central America, which targeted leftists, trade-union and peasant leaders and others. The dirty wars were part of the imperialist Cold War II drive for the counterrevolutionary destruction of the Soviet Union, a degenerated workers state, and for rolling back the gains of the Cuban Revolution, viewing leftist insurgents as Soviet and Cuban proxies. In the U.S., the anti-Soviet war drive found domestic reflection in the escalation of attacks on the unions and black people.
In Guatemala, some 200,000 people—mostly Mayan peasants—were killed and another 45,000 “disappeared” over the course of more than three decades of armed conflict. Honduras was a staging ground for the U.S.-backed contra counterrevolutionaries who sought the bloody overthrow of Nicaragua’s left-nationalist Sandinista government. The U.S. also enlisted the Honduran military in its efforts to smash the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front—a large left-wing guerrilla insurgency that fought against the U.S.-backed military junta in El Salvador.
The tide of migration to the U.S. from Central America dates back to the dirty wars. At the time, thousands of Salvadorans seeking refuge in the U.S. were deported back to the clutches of the execution squads. We demanded asylum for all those fleeing right-wing terror. In contrast to refugees escaping the bloody horror of U.S.-backed regimes, Washington has always welcomed into the country the scum of the earth, not least Cuban counterrevolutionary gusanos.
Further upsurges in migration to the U.S. followed the imposition of NAFTA on Mexico in 1994 and the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) a decade later, each of which caused the economic dislocation of millions. Earlier, the International Monetary Fund and other imperialist agencies had dictated “debt restructuring” programs that axed agricultural subsidies as well as social welfare programs. NAFTA and CAFTA drove even more peasants off the land and into urban squalor by removing protections against U.S.-produced corn and beans, the mainstays of the diet of the poor and the key staples grown by peasants. This misery was exacerbated by the 2008 global economic crisis touched off by U.S. finance capital, which led to mass layoffs in the maquiladora factories as demand for consumer goods dried up.
From the beginning, we opposed the NAFTA “free trade” rape of Mexico and its CAFTA equivalent because they loot the economies of the semicolonial countries, increasing the stranglehold of the U.S. overlords. This proletarian internationalist perspective is in sharp contrast to the national chauvinist standpoint of the AFL-CIO union bureaucracy, which denounced NAFTA for supposedly threatening American jobs.
In Honduras, the conditions for workers and the urban and rural poor have significantly worsened since the Zelaya regime was toppled. Murder is through the roof, gangs are running rampant and spending on public housing, health and education has been slashed. Elected president in 2005, the wealthy landowner Zelaya adopted some palliative measures to head off social unrest and moved to align the country with Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela. These steps infuriated the U.S. and a large sector of the Honduran bourgeoisie, which succeeded in ousting him in the 2009 coup. The Obama administration has fully supported the post-coup regimes and continues to pour funds into the Honduran police and military.
Down With the “War on Drugs”!
In a July 25 meeting with the leaders of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to address the child refugee crisis, President Obama praised the efforts of his Central American counterparts to stem the flow of migrants but urged them to do more. Since 2008, Washington has dramatically increased aid and training for law enforcement in those countries under the banner of the “war on drugs.”
Both the anti-drug war and the “war on gangs” are pretexts for the broad militarization of the region. This crackdown has heightened the violence and intensified repression against the working class and the urban and rural poor. In the bulk of countries where the government is purportedly fighting narcoviolencia, the entire state apparatus is thoroughly interpenetrated with the drug cartels, with everyone from politicians to cops up to their necks in the booming drug trade.
We Marxists are opposed to the “war on drugs,” which is a cover for imperialist military intervention across Latin America and has meant the sowing of murderous terror in poor neighborhoods and rural districts throughout the region. In the U.S., the “war on drugs” has for decades fueled the mass incarceration of black people and, increasingly, Latinos and immigrants. Likewise, the “war on gangs” further criminalizes poor and working-class youth and adds to the capitalist state’s repressive powers.
In Central America, the massive influx of ruined peasants to the cities has created fertile ground for the rise of the “informal economy.” With their traditional livelihoods destroyed by imperialist “free trade,” many people in Latin America have few ways of making a living other than cultivating, selling and transporting drugs or emigrating. We call for the decriminalization of drugs and for all U.S. military forces and bases out of Latin America and the Caribbean. By removing the superprofits that come with the illegal drug trade, decriminalization would also reduce crime and violence.
Immigration and Capitalist Society
Seeking to capitalize on sympathy for the child refugees, some Democrats are again playing the “friend of immigrants” card in advance of the midterm elections. And liberals have been busy pressuring Obama to bypass Congress and issue an executive order to implement immigration “reform.” We would welcome any measure that actually grants some rights or legal protections to immigrants. But nothing the administration has put on the table would actually ameliorate their plight.
Bipartisan reform proposals backed by the White House have aimed to create a completely vulnerable layer of the population made to pay large sums of money for the privilege of working for a pittance with no job protection, no assured immigration status, no democratic rights and no right to any kind of welfare. This purpose is in line with the interests of a section of the American bourgeoisie that wants to preserve a cheap and defenseless immigrant labor pool—the better to sow divisions in the working class. The bourgeoisie’s more nativist wing rails against illegal “invaders” and “criminals” crossing the border, painting immigrants as a burden on the labor market, housing and health care.
Both sides agree on strengthening enforcement. The expansion of Border Patrol infrastructure and militarization of la frontera have proceeded under the current administration at an unprecedented rate, forcing immigrants to seek ever more dangerous routes into the country. Since 2010, border agents have killed at least 28 immigrants. In 2012, a 16-year-old Mexican boy was shot eight times in the back and killed by U.S. border guards who claim he was “throwing rocks” while walking in Nogales on the Mexican side of the border. If caught by the Feds, immigrants are hauled off to facilities marked by wretched conditions. Hundreds of detainees at the Northwest Detention Center outside Tacoma, Washington, have carried out a series of hunger strikes this year, protesting deportations as well as their dire situation, which includes being forced into virtual slave labor.
Immigrants are not just victims but form a key and vibrant component of the U.S. working class. Workers must combat the poisonous attempts of the bosses to pit those born in the U.S. against immigrants, many of whom fill some of the most dangerous and undesirable jobs. Organizing these workers into the unions is crucial to the revitalization of the labor movement. The starting point in the fight against the exploitation of workers and oppression of immigrants, as well as against anti-black racism, is recognizing that the workers and the capitalists do not share a common “national interest.” The working class can only better its position by allying with the oppressed in class struggle against its “own” ruling class. Such a perspective is anathema to the union bureaucracy, which is ever loyal to capitalism and its political representatives, especially the Democrats.
What we need is workers revolution to replace the crisis-ridden capitalist profit system with a planned, socialized economy on an international scale. Only socialist revolution can put an end to the growing immiseration of the toiling masses—both in dependent capitalist countries like Mexico and Honduras and in the imperialist centers. When the working class runs society, basic necessities like housing, health care and jobs will not be something people have to desperately risk their lives for. The violence, poverty and misery endemic to the imperialist order will be a mere chapter of the past.