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For Vincent and Tamir, Fight Capitalist State Terror
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- 10 March 2016 74 hits
INDIANA—“Racism means we got to fight back!” This chant set the tone at the vigil and rally for the non-indictment of slain youth Tamir Rice and all victims of state violence.
In response to continuing racist, capitalist-created violence and government-sponsored terror, a communist-led Black Lives Matter group organized this fightback. Over 30 residents braved the below-freezing temperatures to stand in multiracial solidarity against police violence and the conditions that foster violence in our communities.
People lit candles and carried signs with the names and pictures of some of the countless victims of racist police terror across the country. Among the victims discussed was Vincent Smith Jr., a Black teenager in Gary, Indiana who was unarmed when police shot him in the head in 2006. Back then, PL’ers joined community protests to bring the cop to trial. After a sham trial, the murderer got away scot-free. Much like Tamir, Vincent was yet another Black child whose life was cut short by police terror with impunity. It’s a very old song that workers know by heart.
Planting Communist Ideas
PLP had put forth the political line that there will never be justice for working class people in a capitalist system that needs to exploit to survive. Comrades have been introducing CHALLENGE to members in Black Lives Matter and highlighting how KKKop murders, crimes, garbage school systems, etc. all have a common root: capitalism. We’ve used the pamphlet Smash Racism to show the history of how racism is used to oppress all people, while specifically strangling Black working class people, and how organizing as a party to fight racism and to end capitalism is the only way to win.
The people in our mass organization recognize the connection between capitalism and racist state violence. At the rally, people enthusiastically took CHALLENGE and initiated conversations about how the ruling class makes money from racism, poverty, and mass incarceration. Workers here in this mainly Black region are living the racist nightmare of poverty engineered by politicians and profiteers in a dead-end capitalist system. As we build in the local movement against police violence, protests like this one provide opportunities to bring the message of communism to the masses. It is also good training for bigger fightbacks!
QUEENS, NYC—At a film showing of Burn! a woman Emergency Medical Technician announced that TransCare had shut down and laid off nearly 2,000 EMTs, paramedics, dispatchers and others.
The workers received no warning and were told they were not getting paid for the last week they worked. To add insult to injury, many learned that the paychecks they received three weeks ago had bounced!
Lynn Tilton, owner of TransCare, will continue be a millionaire while capitalism burns workers’ livelihoods. The TransCare workers have no union and because they received no warning about the coming mass layoffs, were not prepared to take collective action. They began to scramble and do the little they could to protect themselves: file for unemployment benefits, file complaints with the Attorney General over the lack of notice, and contact lawyers about a suit against the company.
However, our TransCare comrade had another idea—organize workers to protest in front of the company’s office in lower Manhattan. So we decided to call a rally for two days later, write a flyer, post it on Facebook and contact as many TransCare workers as we knew.
Capitalism Burns Workers
Burn! depicts a revolution of slaves in the Caribbean during the 19th century. We realized that as the film Burn! perfectly illustrates wage slavery is a brutal system of exploitation, and like chattel slavery it only serves the interest of the capitalist class. We decided the rally would offer us many advantages in bringing our fight to the forefront but total eradication of wage slavery will only come to fruition under a communist system, moreover a communist system led by the PLP. This led to our talking about marching on May Day (Saturday, April 30)—the only true workers’ day where workers affirm their connection in the struggle for a world without racism, sexism and other forms of capitalist exploitation.
PLP fights with TransCare Workers
The first rally PLP organized drew only six workers and two supporters. Four days later, we had another rally, this time with a dozen workers and five supporters, including members of the CUNY faculty and staff union. Another rally is planned for next week.
Under capitalism, any company can shut down and throw their workers out onto the streets. So while we fight for back pay, we also need to explain to TransCare workers, and to CUNY students and professors, that we need to take state power.
Power will in the hands of working people women and men, who will carry out the task of using the wealth we create to provide everyone with the things we need: housing, health care, jobs that make use of our talents and interests, international cooperation of workers without wars and national borders, and the elimination of racism and sexism. March on May Day!
QUEENS, NYC—At a film showing of Burn! a woman Emergency Medical Technician announced that TransCare had shut down and laid off nearly 2,000 EMTs, paramedics, dispatchers and others.
The workers received no warning and were told they were not getting paid for the last week they worked. To add insult to injury, many learned that the paychecks they received three weeks ago had bounced!
Lynn Tilton, owner of TransCare, will continue be a millionaire while capitalism burns workers’ livelihoods. The TransCare workers have no union and because they received no warning about the coming mass layoffs, were not prepared to take collective action. They began to scramble and do the little they could to protect themselves: file for unemployment benefits, file complaints with the Attorney General over the lack of notice, and contact lawyers about a suit against the company.
However, our TransCare comrade had another idea—organize workers to protest in front of the company’s office in lower Manhattan. So we decided to call a rally for two days later, write a flyer, post it on Facebook and contact as many TransCare workers as we knew.
Capitalism Burns Workers
Burn! depicts a revolution of slaves in the Caribbean during the 19th century. We realized that as the film Burn! perfectly illustrates wage slavery is a brutal system of exploitation, and like chattel slavery it only serves the interest of the capitalist class. We decided the rally would offer us many advantages in bringing our fight to the forefront but total eradication of wage slavery will only come to fruition under a communist system, moreover a communist system led by the PLP. This led to our talking about marching on May Day (Saturday, April 30)—the only true workers’ day where workers affirm their connection in the struggle for a world without racism, sexism and other forms of capitalist exploitation.
PLP fights with TransCare Workers
The first rally PLP organized drew only six workers and two supporters. Four days later, we had another rally, this time with a dozen workers and five supporters, including members of the CUNY faculty and staff union. Another rally is planned for next week.
Under capitalism, any company can shut down and throw their workers out onto the streets. So while we fight for back pay, we also need to explain to TransCare workers, and to CUNY students and professors, that we need to take state power.
Power will in the hands of working people women and men, who will carry out the task of using the wealth we create to provide everyone with the things we need: housing, health care, jobs that make use of our talents and interests, international cooperation of workers without wars and national borders, and the elimination of racism and sexism. March on May Day!
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International Working Women’s Day FIGHT SEXISM, BUILD COMMUNISM
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- 10 March 2016 75 hits
As we mark International Working Women’s Day on March 8, the state of the world seems grim. Imperialist wars fueled by the U.S., Russia and China are intensifying. Capitalist economies are in crisis or on the brink. As always, instability in the profit system means more attacks on working-class women.
In Syria, a civil war manipulated by the U.S. and Russia has displaced millions of women. They are twice as likely to die from shelling or air strikes as men. In refugee camps in countries like Jordan, where women and children compose more than 80 percent of the population, they are at higher risk of sexual assault. Often they lack basic reproductive and sexual health services, resulting in higher death rates.
In the U.S., President Barack Obama is ramping up racist deportations of women and children who fled north to escape pervasive violence in Latin America—a result of two centuries of U.S. imperialism. Women are the majority of immigrants entering the U.S. on the “Train of Death.” An estimated 100,000 women per year are kidnapped into forced labor and, increasingly, sex slavery (Congressional Research Service, 7/29/15). The situation is worsening by the day. Drug cartels are shifting their operations into highly profitable global trafficking networks, while capitalist governments look the other way.
As for the immigrant women who survive the journey to the U.S. and now face deportation, what is waiting for them at home? A Zika virus linked to deadly diseases and birth defects, with capitalist health services promoting abstinence as the only solution.
Feminism vs. Fightback
In reaction to these sexist attacks, some women workers choose feminism and the dead end of identity politics. Millions are rallying behind Hillary Clinton’s campaign slogan: “I’m with her.” They are being won to the dangerous idea that a woman president will somehow make things better for women workers—an echo of Obama’s election in 2008 as a “post-racial” president. Eight years later, Obama’s racist immigration apparatus has deported more workers than all previous presidents combined. His administration has murdered thousands of workers with drone strikes. He continued his Republican predecessor’s policies of forcing workers to bail out the very banks that profited most from the genocidal war in Iraq. These banks also evicted millions of workers, of whom a disproportionate number are Black workers, from their homes.
Here is the hard reality of the profit system: If elected, Clinton will do no more for women workers than Obama did for Black workers.
Internationally, the same trend holds true. In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel has failed to improve conditions for working women, who are stuck at 78 percent men’s income for comparable work, a ratio unchanged for the past five years (Deutsche Welle, 3/16/15). In India, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi brutally suppressed striking railway workers and pushed their families out of their homes. In Britain, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher attacked striking miners, closed unprofitable industries and privatized those that remained.
Why is it that women politicians don’t make things better for working-class women? Merkel, Clinton, and Gandhi are allied with the capitalist class. The capitalists fund their campaigns and dictate their policies. Sexism means lower pay for everyone, for both men and women, and super-profits for the bosses. Men’s wages are depressed precisely because women’s are even more depressed. Sexism means that working families, and working mothers in particular, are overburdened by childcare and housework. Sexism means that women are a disposable labor force for the bosses. When the occasional woman attains a position of power, the bosses use this exception as another excuse to blame other women for being poor.
Above all, the capitalist bosses need sexism to exploit and divide the working class.
Communism Will Smash Sexism
And so: What is to be done? How can we eliminate sexism? Sexism is inseparable from class society. The only way to end it is to eliminate classes by creating a communist society, where all workers can contribute and have our needs met. Revolutionary victories of the past show us the potential of the future. In socialist China, prostitution was virtually eliminated. In the socialist Soviet Union, educational facilities at all levels granted equal access to men and women. (At the height of the Soviet era, 60 percent of engineers were women.) Maternity leave with full pay was universal; new mothers had no worry about losing their jobs. There were ample kindergartens, day care centers, nurseries, and playgrounds, as well as communal dining rooms. The concept of housekeeping as “women’s work” was abolished.
While the Soviet and Chinese revolutions made progress in many ways, they also had flaws we can learn from. They represent only the beginning of what we, the working class, can achieve in the future! This International Working Women’s Day, we must celebrate women as the holiday’s communist founders intended: for their historical contributions to building society and for their revolutionary strength.
But one day is not enough. We must dedicate ourselves to a lifetime of fighting sexism in our homes, at our jobs, and in the streets. In Pakistan, Progressive Labor Party is advancing the leadership of women in the fight against slave-labor working conditions for men and especially women. In PLP in Brooklyn, women are leading the fight for justice for Kyam Livingston, Shantel Davis, and Kimani Gray, all killed by racist and sexist kkkops. In PLP in Mexico, women comrades are at the forefront of the fight against racist education reforms and fascist state terror.
All around the world, waging anti-sexist battles is a way to put another nail in the bosses’ coffins. Help us bury the bosses and their profit system! Join PLP in the fight against sexism, racism, and capitalism. Let’s work together to create a communist society that meets all workers’ needs and frees us of exploitation. We have a world to win!
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What is International Working Women's Day?
International Women’s Day (IWD) is an international holiday on March 8 that celebrates women and their revolutionary power. It has strong roots in the communist movement. IWD first began in New York as “Women’s Day,” organized by the Socialist Party of America. In 1909, it became a commemoration of the 1908 strike of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union. In the 1910 international meeting of communist and socialist leaders, known as the Second International, women members pushed to establish an International Women’s Day. By 1911, more than a million workers were celebrating IWD. Anti-sexist struggle continues to make it an historic day for all workers, women and men.
During Czarist Russia, the struggle for working-class women became synonymous with the open call for overthrowing the government. During World War I, the Russian Bolsheviks made IWD a demonstration of women workers against imperialism. On March 8, 1917, the women of St. Petersburg sparked and led the February Revolution, which in turn paved the way for the October revolution and the first workers’ state.
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Rally Against Racism Toughens Up Working Class of Worcester
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- 10 March 2016 66 hits
WORCESTER, MA—On Martin Luther King’s birthday Progressive Labor Party provided a revolutionary alternative to the passivity and treachery of local liberal misleaders and the working class responded in force! The Progressive Labor Party and friends organized a militant march against racism while the town bosses lorded over a traditional Martin Luther King Day breakfast which they hijacked from grassroots organizers years ago. In defiance of the local bosses scores of people came to our march despite the very cold temperatures.
Liberal Bosses Exposed
Sharp struggle at the breakfast exposed fascists masquerading as liberals. A fighter was injured when police arrested him for passing out fliers on predatory lending practices—at a breakfast for Dr. King! A city official who was co-chair of the MLK Day breakfast ordered the arrest of the activist. Scratch a liberal—find a fascist!
PLP and others organized our march against racism. We protested retaliatory criminal charges brought against four protesters who blocked our city’s busiest intersection some time ago. We marched from a church on Temple St. to this intersection, Kelly Square. We showed the bosses and our working class brothers and sisters that we will not be intimidated by retaliatory prosecutions.
Our marchers were reflective of the whole working class. Among the marchers were women and men, Asian, Latin, Black, and white, young and old, Christians, Muslims, Jews, and atheists. One of our friends is a survivor of the Holocaust who is nearly 100 years old; he came and marched the entire distance.
At Kelly Square, we held a rally in where speakers connected capitalism and racism. Our words echoed across the frigid intersection, heard by passers-by and spread word of mouth, social media, and the local press. One speaker demanded a $15 minimum wage. Another demanded an end to mass incarcerations and discrimination against ex prisoners. The main speaker from PLP called for end of the capitalist system, which needs racism, with communist revolution.
To Be Attacked is Good
Racist columnists in our local paper were especially hateful in their attacks on the march and on PLP that appeared in print the next day. To be attacked is a good thing! In ensuing days the working class responded by sending letters to the editor defending our march against racism. The church near where we met for the assembly for the rally was attacked by some of the city bosses, even though it did not directly endorse the rally. Illusions about what side the city bosses are on cannot persist in the face of such brazen assaults on anti-racist fighters, especially with PLP in the mix constantly raising the need for workers to break with the bosses leaders and to become leaders ourselves in the fight for a communist world.
Because of this march, the working class of Worcester has become stronger in the fight against racism and economic injustice.