Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Before The Fall-Before The Garden Of Eden Fell Into Disrepair-Sir Alfred Hitchcock’s “I Confess” (1953)-A Film Review    




DVD Review

By Lenny Lynch

I Confess, starring Montgomery Clift,  Anne Baxter, directed by Sir Alfred Hitchcock, 1953

I admit, freely admit that I am a lapsed, very lapsed Catholic of the Roman persuasion although that is no factor in the how or why of drawing this review of an Alfred Hitchcock minor classic I Confess set in Catholic Canada, French-Canadian Canada, Quebec, which is actually a separate country or could be if the Quebecois wanted such an outcome as many have demonstrated for in the past, where my good friend and mentor Josh Breslin’s people came from a couple of generations back. What does factor in is the still scarred, scary, bizarre ritual (ritualistic cleansing at least) memoires of facing the inquisition in the confessional box in the person of the parish priest, one Father Lally who was one son of a bitch on dragging out every last sin out off his charges and pronouncing high dungeon penance that would make many a knee weary down at the blessed altar rail. (Many years later it came out, came out during the scandalous cover-ups and then exposes of the sodomites in the pulpits in the Boston Catholic diocese that good old Father Lally was giving absolution gratis for his favored boys who confessed to all kinds of sexual fantasy sins that the bastard then made them pay for scarring at least one of maybe two generations of innocent boys. He died before any of them got any satisfaction of seeing his crimes exposed and sent prison bound. Money will never wash away the crimes against humanity that Father Lally inflicted on this troubled world. As least for believers there is the satisfaction that he will burn in hell for eternity and maybe a few can get some solace from that.)

But all that has nothing to do with the plot of the film except that the sanctity of the confessional, the so-called penitent-priest confidentially plays a big role in this film. A rather extreme way that the privilege which after all is a legal privilege in a court of law and no something church ordained although maybe it had its roots in that way back when which can be looked at. Penitent X (I don’t want to violate that sanctity even as a lapsed, very lapsed Catholic) has committed murder, maybe not murder one but murder nevertheless and maybe murder one if X had done it in the act of a robbery which would make it felony murder. He and his wife work for Priest A, played by Montgomery Clift, at the rectory and after he committed the dastardly crime he confessed in the confessional to Priest A. He is home free or at least he thinks he is since he has some kind of understanding that Priest A will not snitch on him to the coppers, and he doesn’t.

Where things get dicey is that way back when before he was ordained, before he got “religion” after being in the military during World War II he had a torrid affair with a woman who subsequently married somebody else but was still in love him. Why that matters is that she and Priest A were seen together the night of the murder and he can’t explain where he was at the time of the murder. Looks like the big step-off for a guy just doing his job. Things get a little better after a trial in which the good priest is found not guilty although that standard is not the same as innocent and the festering parishioners are ready to nail his ass to the wall over the romance stuff. Before they can get the tar out though Penitent X’s wife tells all her husband was the murderer and for that act of sanity he kills her and then runs like a bastard to get away. No way will he do so though as the coppers nab the bastard and he buys nothing but six feet of hard dirt for his troubles. Yeah, nothing here made me want to jump back on the priest-ridden bandwagon as much as I hate to see an innocent guy, a straight-laced priest with a sullen past come close to the big step-off.      

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Author of “I Am Not a Tractor” pens thoughtful op/ed on lessons from Fair Food movement for #MeToo, “#MarchForOurLives” movements… Coalition of Immokalee Workers

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A View From The Left -LAPD Targets Grieving Aunt, BLM Activist Hands Off Sheila Hines-Brim and Melina Abdullah!

Workers Vanguard No. 1136
29 June 2018
 
LAPD Targets Grieving Aunt, BLM Activist
Hands Off Sheila Hines-Brim and Melina Abdullah!
LOS ANGELES—“That’s Wakiesha!” With these words, Sheila Hines-Brim threw the ashes of her niece, Wakiesha Wilson, who died in police custody, at LAPD chief Charlie Beck at a Police Commission meeting on May 8. In response to Hines-Brim’s defiant act, Beck ordered her forcibly removed from the meeting and arrested. As she was being hauled out by police, Melina Abdullah, professor and chair of Pan-African Studies at Cal State University L.A. and a well-known organizer of Black Lives Matter (BLM) Los Angeles, arrived at the meeting. Abdullah asked other attendees to film the police’s brutal manhandling of Wakiesha’s aunt, after which a cop yelled out “Arrest Melina!”
Both Hines-Brim and Abdullah were charged with suspicion of misdemeanor battery on a police officer and ordered to post $20,000 bail each. Outrageously, Beck obtained a temporary restraining order against Hines-Brim on May 17, branding her a dangerous criminal. Although the charges were not pursued against the two women at their June 1 court hearing, the prosecutor’s office can still do so anytime within a year. We demand: Drop the charges now!
Wakiesha Wilson, a 36-year-old black mother, was arrested in the early morning hours of 26 March 2016 on suspicion of felony battery and booked into the Metropolitan Correction Center. Some 24 hours later, she was dead. Demonstrating the cops’ contempt for black lives, Wilson’s family was not even informed. When they arrived in court for Wilson’s arraignment on March 29, all they learned was that she would not be appearing. It was only the next day that an LAPD supervisor told Wilson’s mother, Lisa Hines, to contact the coroner, who stated that Wilson had hanged herself three days before.
Although the cops claim that Wakiesha committed suicide, the family has been adamant that she was upbeat when they talked to her only 90 minutes before her death and that they had made plans to call again later that day during the family Easter celebration. Wilson was moved to an isolation cell, itself a violation of jail policy. An LAPD report states that 21 crucial minutes were missing from the jail surveillance videotape. In addition, several minutes elapsed between the time Wilson was observed by two guards slumped on the floor of her cell and when CPR was administered. Late last year, LAPD jailer Reaunna Bratton was fired for failing to render immediate medical aid to Wilson—a fact that the cops tried to cover up. Wilson’s mother filed a $35 million suit against the city, which eventually agreed to pay $298,000 to make the claim go away.
Whatever the exact circumstances of Wilson’s death, one thing is clear: the LAPD’s story stinks. State officials in Texas similarly claimed that black activist Sandra Bland, who in 2015 was found hanging in a county jail cell after being assaulted and arrested by a state trooper, had committed suicide. These are far from the only examples.
According to a 2014 article in Mother Jones, based on a rough calculation of Justice Department statistics, “black people were four times as likely to die in custody or while being arrested than whites.” More recently, a study of “Fatal Interactions with Police” conducted at Washington University in St. Louis found that 60 percent of black women killed by the cops were unarmed. As we wrote in “The Police Are Guilty” (WV No. 1072, 7 August 2015) following Sandra Bland’s death, cop terror against black people “is not an ‘excess’; it’s a calculated program. It is the way U.S. capitalism, which is built on the bedrock of black oppression, resolves the contradiction between the assertion of some formal equal rights and the forcible segregation of the bulk of the black population at the bottom of society.”
LAPD: Deadly Enemy of Black People, Latinos
For decades the LAPD was synonymous with an all-out police war against black people, Latinos and the poor. Today, police chief Charlie Beck is lionized in the media and by local politicians as having ushered in a new era of enlightened policing. In fact, Beck won his spurs in the 1980s and ’90s under LAPD chief Daryl “Choke Hold” Gates as part of the Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums (CRASH) unit. This “war on gangs” (read: black and Latino youth) unleashed the notoriously brutal and corrupt Ramparts division. Scores of cops from Beck’s own unit were implicated in shootings, beatings, frame-ups and more.
Now Beck, who was appointed in 2009 by Democratic Party mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to “clean up” the LAPD, is heralded for building “trusting relationships” with communities. That’s not the story out on the streets, where the LAPD has killed more people than any other police department for several years running. To name but a few: Manuel Jamines, a 37-year-old Mayan day laborer from Guatemala, executed by a cop in 2010, his killing saluted by Villaraigosa as an act of bravery; Ezell Ford, a 25-year-old black man with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, shot down in 2014; a few months later Charly “Africa” Keunang, an unarmed homeless black immigrant, savagely beaten and then fatally shot on a crowded Skid Row sidewalk. In 2017, police snipers killed a man in Sunland from a helicopter, a first for this gang of violent marauders.
For the last two years, BLM activists in Los Angeles have protested at weekly Police Commission meetings together with Wakiesha Wilson’s family. Across the country hundreds of BLM protesters have been arrested and targeted for police surveillance and repression for their opposition to cop terror. Yet for all their courage and dedication, the demands of BLM do not challenge the system of racist American capitalism, which is the root cause of cop terror. Instead, their demands are based on the liberal strategy of pressuring the capitalist rulers to either reform or abolish their police thugs.
In L.A., where BLM had been demanding that Beck be fired as top cop, Melina Abdullah cheered his announcement of early retirement (scheduled for June 27) by tweeting, “Thank you to our partners who stood with us to make this happen.” The whole history of the LAPD demonstrates that it doesn’t matter who’s the police chief, nor if the cops are black, white or Latino. The police are accountable only to their capitalist masters. Nor is the bourgeoisie going to divert funds from the LAPD to “things that actually make communities safe,” such as housing for the homeless, mental health resources and after-school programs, as Abdullah called for on May 9 on Good Day LA. The very conditions of destitution faced by millions in America—homelessness, poverty, starvation, disease—are the product of a system based on production for profit and maintained by the police as well as the military, courts and prisons.
In the U.S., these armed shock troops defend a capitalist system rooted in the oppression of black people stemming from the days of chattel slavery. Los Angeles has always been a viciously segregated city. According to the 2010 census, 60 percent of black Angelenos lived in areas with few whites, the legacy of segregationist covenants and racist housing policy from the local to the federal level. At the same time, black people, roughly 10 percent of the city’s population, made up 35 percent of the homeless. Next to black people—in terms of per capita and household income, education and unemployment—is the vast Latino populations in Southern California. In 2017, nearly 20 percent of all Latino families in L.A. County lived in poverty.
To reap the trillions they amass through the exploitation of labor, the capitalist rulers set workers against each other—white against black and Latino, native-born against foreign-born. That they get away with it is in large part thanks to the trade-union misleaders, who preach the lie that the interests of the workers are tied to the profitability of U.S. capitalism. To this end, they chain the workers to their class enemy, centrally through the Democratic Party, and embrace the killer cops as union brothers and sisters. The LAPD jailer implicated in Wakiesha Wilson’s death was a member of the Service Employees International Union Local 721, whose leadership defended her against being fired. All cops, prison and security guards—the sworn enemies of workers and the oppressed—should be kicked out of the unions!
The working class, whose labor keeps the wheels of profit turning, is the only force with the social power and objective interest to wage a struggle against the exploitation, racial oppression and all-sided misery of capitalist class rule. Black and Latino workers are a crucial part of the L.A. union movement and represent a bridge between labor and the ghettos and barrios. Many of these unionists, their families, friends and co-workers have had their own experience with the LAPD and can help inculcate into the working class the understanding that the cops are not allies but enemies of labor.
Marxists seek to advance this consciousness as part of the fight to educate the working class that it needs its own party organized independently of the capitalists, their state and their political parties. We struggle to break the working class from all political representatives of the capitalist class—Democratic, Republican and Green—as a vital component of the struggle to build a revolutionary workers party. Such a party will fight to lead a proletarian revolution that will smash the capitalist state and rip the productive forces away from the bourgeoisie, a step toward establishing a centrally planned economy that serves the interests of the working class and oppressed.

On 1943 Anti-Mexican “Zoot Suit” Riots (Quote of the Week) This June marks the 75th anniversary of anti-Mexican (and anti-black) riots in Los Angeles, dubbed the “Zoot Suit” riots by the bourgeois press.

Workers Vanguard No. 1136
29 June 2018
TROTSKY
LENIN
On 1943 Anti-Mexican “Zoot Suit” Riots
(Quote of the Week)
This June marks the 75th anniversary of anti-Mexican (and anti-black) riots in Los Angeles, dubbed the “Zoot Suit” riots by the bourgeois press. Whipped into a frenzy by the media, mobs of sailors and soldiers, wielding clubs, rampaged through L.A.’s barrios for a week while cops arrested youth dressed in zoot suits. Hundreds were stripped naked and beaten senseless. We print below an excerpt from an article in the Militant, newspaper of the then-revolutionary Socialist Workers Party, describing the pervasive atmosphere of racist reaction amid World War II that fed into the violence. Such reaction also included the internment of Japanese Americans during the war. Today, as racist attacks continue to rise, we underline that it is in the vital interest of the multiracial labor movement to mobilize in defense of minorities and all the oppressed.
In and around Los Angeles a considerable minority of the population is Mexican or of Mexican descent. They are and for years have been the victims of discrimination in much the same way that Negroes are in the South. They are not wanted in many restaurants, etc.; they are segregated in housing, and consequently in the schools; they are barred from many jobs; they are the victims of police persecution and brutality. Many of the youth form together in gangs; some of them wear zoot suits as a form of self-expression, as many Negro and white youth do.
The capitalist press, largely anti-Mexican, has labored to create the impression that everyone wearing a zoot suit is a gangster, just as the New York press recently tried to smear every Negro as a mugger. As a result of their propaganda, lies, and half-truths they whipped up a certain hysteria against all dark-skinned people and helped to inflame the servicemen into vigilante action, praising them after the fighting had begun for doing a better job against the “gangsters” and “petty crooks” than the cops had done. The servicemen, joined by anti-Mexican elements, went after everyone with a dark skin. Carey McWilliams, author and president of the National Lawyers Guild in Los Angeles, reports that at least half of the people seriously injured were not wearing zoot suits and that the same proportion holds true for the hundreds arrested by the police.
The city council voted to make the wearing of zoot suits a misdemeanor; the police arrested a lot of Mexicans and Negroes; Los Angeles was declared out of bounds for the servicemen. For the time being the violence has subsided, and the press—seeing a decline in the city’s business with the servicemen barred—is sanctimoniously calling for peace. But it is perfectly plain that no problems have been solved and that at the slightest provocation the whole thing may flare up again, if not through servicemen then through civilians.
What is necessary, if the situation is really to be corrected, is an end to all discrimination and segregation practices against Mexicans and Negroes in industry, in social life, in housing, in the press, plus enforcement of their democratic rights, plus a widespread and deepgoing educational program on the meaning and effect of race discrimination; such a campaign can be launched most effectively under the leadership of the labor movement.
—“Coast-to-Coast Wave of Violence Strikes at Negroes and Mexicans,” Militant, 19 June 1943, reprinted in Fighting Racism in World War II (1980)

From The Partisan Defense Committee-Nina Droz Sentenced—Free Her Now! (Class-Struggle Defense Notes)

Workers Vanguard No. 1136
29 June 2018
 

The following article appeared under the Partisan Defense Committee's Class-Struggle Defense Notes masthead in the print version of this issue of Workers Vanguard. The PDC is a class-struggle, non-sectarian legal and social defense organization which champions cases and causes in the interest of the whole of the working people. This purpose is in accordance with the political views of the Spartacist League.


Nina Droz Sentenced—Free Her Now!
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
On June 12, Puerto Rican activist Nina Alejandra Droz Franco was hit with 37 months in prison on trumped-up federal charges of conspiracy to start a fire near the Banco Popular building in San Juan during the May Day national work stoppage and mass protests that rocked Puerto Rico in 2017. Having already served more than a year in prison as she awaited sentencing, Droz now faces another two years behind bars.
Droz initially faced charges of “malicious use of fire” and “conspiracy.” She took a plea deal on the lesser charge of conspiracy and gave up her right to appeal to avoid a sentence that could carry up to 30 years in prison. According to the U.S. rulers, since the Banco Popular building is used for “interstate commerce,” Droz had committed a federal crime. Nina is innocent. She was targeted for her political activism against the management board imposed by the Obama administration in 2016—known as the “junta”—which has enforced savage austerity on the population.
In Puerto Rico, Droz has become a symbol of the crackdown on protesters by the U.S. government and its Puerto Rican lackeys. Her frame-up and cruel treatment are meant to send a chilling message to all those engaging in struggle against job and pension cuts, school closures, lack of infrastructure and overall starvation measures. These struggles have continued in the wake of the destruction of last year’s Hurricane María and the criminal neglect of the U.S. colonial overlords, which, according to a recent Harvard study, left some 4,600 dead.
During her sentencing hearing, Droz bravely spoke about the conditions of the women in the prison where she had been locked up. After the hurricane, the cells were overheated and had no ventilation; women could not shower for days and were told to drink toilet water if they were thirsty.
Since her arrest, Droz has been the victim of abuse by prison authorities, including being denied medication and put in solitary confinement twice, including for 13 days in the Federal Detention Center, in Tallahassee, Florida, where she endured separation from her family and supporters. Droz was sent to solitary confinement in Florida because of her advocacy on behalf of prisoners with hepatitis C, HIV, diabetes and cancer who were being denied medical care.
Notably, the FMPR teachers union has taken up the case of Nina Droz. During this year’s May Day national work stoppage, they and others demanded her freedom. FMPR teachers and University of Puerto Rico students have themselves been victims of violent police repression (see “Puerto Rico May Day: Cops Attack Demonstrators,” WV No. 1134, 18 May). Protesters arrested that day still face charges. Hands off May Day protesters!
The real criminals are the U.S. imperialists who have bloodily repressed independence fighters for decades and kept Puerto Rico subjugated as their colony. We oppose the starvation measures imposed by the colonial masters and enforced by the capitalist government of Puerto Rico. The case of Nina Droz captures well their desire to suppress all dissent. It is in the interest of the multiracial U.S. working class to demand freedom for Nina Droz, call to cancel Puerto Rico’s debt and stand for Puerto Rico’s right to independence.