PAKISTAN, February 9—The working class here is facing the terrible exploitation. Pakistani bosses are trying to make the lives of poor working class more miserable by privatizing big industries and business. Actually Pakistani bosses are acting upon the instructions of world imperialists. On the advice of IMF, World Bank and other monetary institutions, Pakistani bosses are increasing tax over the salaried individuals and working class people (and giving tax amnesty to rich people), taking back the subsidies and privatizing schools, hospitals and other big industries.
Pakistan International Airlines has more than twenty six thousand employees in Pakistan. Government’s decision to privatize PIA fueled the strikes all over the Pakistan. Joint Action Committee of PIA (which is formed by different unions in PIA) launched big demonstrations in different cities of Pakistan. In one of the largest demonstration in Karachi some “unknown” people killed three employees of PIA. After this horrible incident workers decided to suspend all flight operation because of that there was no flight for four days. Subsequently government decided to impose “Essential Services Act” which bans all the union activities and strikes. With the help of some so called union misleaders and “Essential Services Act” bosses are trying to resume the flight operation.
Doctors and other health employees are also striving against bad working conditions, low wage and harassment at work places in Khyber Pukhtoon Khawa province of Pakistan. Draconian law of “Essential Services Act” has also been imposed in KPK to prevent doctors and health employees to organize strikes but it is difficult for the bosses to prevent big strikes of working class in KPK.
Teachers are also organizing strikes in Punjab province of Pakistan. They are demanding an increase in pay, security at work places and free health and educational facilities for them and their families. Bosses are using tear gas, baton charge and jails to keep the teachers away from strikes.
Health Employees association in Kashmir and Paramedical Association in Baluchistan is striving against exploitation, price hike and low wage. Misleaders are playing the role to keep the bosses rich by breaking the strikes but anger of workers is proving that nobody can stop them.
Terrorism is playing vital role to strengthen the bosses by giving them an excuse to use power against poor working class.
MEXICO, February 10— The crisis of overproduction hits Mexico, driving bosses to attack workers. The working class is fighting back!
The overproduction of oil is causing a worldwide crisis for capitalist bosses, and the bosses of Mexico are in crisis, too. As always, the bosses are increasing their attacks against the working class to try and salvage their unjust and criminal system, and at the same time increase their enormous wealth.
Bosses Try to Centralize Control
In Mexico, the local capitalist class is using a new law, Pact for Mexico, in order to unify the capitalist class and more efficiently attack workers. The Pact has support from all levels and branches of government across the political spectrum, from the ruling right-wing party PRI to the fake-left Green Party. They hope that by getting all the bosses on the same page, they can crack down on worker resistance and restore profits, thus furthering the attack on students.
With this law, the federal and state governments are trying to reassert control over the unions. Part of this law affects the education workers and the teacher’s union. Teachers are being forced to participate in punitive job evaluations and they are losing their power of collective bargaining. All of this translates to attacks on job benefits and wages, and therefore a lower quality education for students. They are attacking teachers with the military, the bosses’ media, and freezing of the union bank accounts, arresting union leaders, and the orders to jail union leaders, amongst other strategies.
To confront these fascist policies, the teachers union (CNTE) and its Oaxaca local Section 22 called for walkouts, marches, and strikes. As state intimidation increases, teacher participation in these actions is declining. In response, Section 22 of the teachers union organized a Political Congress in January 2016, with the main objective of reorganizing and strengthening the resistance movement.
Union Leaders Con Workers into Electoral Farce
What did the union leaders decide at the Political Congress? Not organizing for more fightback! The union misleaders, phony communists, and reformist groups are once again trying to lead the workers of Section 22 into bourgeois electoral politics, which can never serve working-class interests. They are organizing a “punishment vote” by urging workers to vote against the dominant parties. History has shown time and time again that voting for different parties can never bring change. Only with fightback and communist revolution can the working class get what they deserve: a world where they are the decision makers. In that fightback spirit, teachers burned electoral papers (see front page photo).
Among these opportunists are Aristarco Aquino Solís, ex-General Secretary for PRD, a leading liberal political party. In 2006, the PRD approved the deployment of the federal police (Policía Federal Preventiva, PFP). These police arrested and jailed hundreds of teachers, students and farm workers in Nayarit and other states. In 2007, they used Section 22 to make a pact to vote for Gabino Cue for governor of Oaxaca, as “punishment vote to [dominant parties] PRI and PAN”. Gabino betrayed the teachers in 2015 accepting the Education Reform, the punitive evaluation, and the teachers have not been paid more than 5,000 pesos since then. He called for the arrests of leaders of the teachers strike and jailed Othón Nazariega, Roberto Jiménez, Efraín Picasso y Juan Carlos Orozco.
Other misleaders are Zenén Bravo, militant for the UTE-FPR-Communist Party of Mexico and Perfecto Mesinas Quero (local legislator for Convergencia, the actual party of the governor of Oaxaca Gabino Cué Monteagudo).
In 2015, these parties joined to sign the Pact for Mexico and the approval of the structural reforms that the national and international bosses are using to take over natural resources like oil, beaches, mines, and water. Most of the working class is now suffering from high unemployment, low salaries and hunger.
History shows that these misleaders do not serving working-class interests. They are colluding with the bosses in attacking the movement in exchange furthering their electoral career ambitions.
Don’t Vote, Organize for Workers’ Power
The participating delegates in the Political Congress and its working class base must avoid being part of this illusion of democracy. It is nothing more than a bourgeois dictatorship oppressing and exploiting us with their reforms, their laws, institutions, jails, police, border patrol, and its army.
The working class will advance when we break the political and ideological chains that tie us to this capitalist system. The working class must depend on creating its own process of liberation, building towards a communist society without oppressors or oppressed.
The bosses have an open reign if the working class is not organized. They can take over our energy resources, our minerals, our water and much more. They can exploit us without mercy in exchange for a miserable salary.
The Progressive Labor Party is calling all the teachers, students, and workers, to fight for communism, a system organized and led by the workers, where the exploitation and violence against our working class will be outlawed. Smash this capitalist system that exploits, jails, and kills teachers, workers and students! Join us!
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No Justice for Black Working-Class Women Under Capitalism
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- 12 February 2016 85 hits
BROOKLYN, January 21 — “If we don’t get it, shut it down!” Members of Progressive Labor Party and The Committee for Justice for Kyam Livingston chanted as we took the street and stopped traffic in front of the Brooklyn Criminal Court building where Kyam was murdered thirty months ago.
After hours of suffering in pain, crying for help, being threatened that the kkkops would “lose” her papers if she didn’t stop complaining, Kyam died while waiting for a simple arraignment before a judge. Thirty months have passed but no criminal or departmental charges have been lodged against the kkkops who murdered her by refusing her cries for medical attention. We have also learned how the (in)justice system serves the bosses’ racist, sexist system.
No Justice Under This System
We began our rally as we have many, many times before by detailing the facts and politics of this case. Today, our plan was to demand the arrest of those responsible. Our long struggle has produced the tapes showing the last seven painful hours of Kyam’s life spent in a filthy, vermin-infested holding cell. Kyam’s mom confronted the kkkops outside of the courthouse. She demanded they be held responsible. She demanded the arrest of the murderers. They did nothing. Then Kyam’s mom and several supporters went inside the building. In a courtroom, they made the same demand. The same result. Next, they confronted supervising court cops. Again, either with smiling faces or stony silence, they did nothing. The ska and reggae musician Jimmy Cliff was right: “It’s rebellion these kind of action breeds. I can’t get no justice under this system.”
The long struggle for Justice for Kyam has shown once again that the racist, sexist capitalist system holds little regard for the lives of Black women workers. KKKops ruthlessly kill our working-class brothers and sisters and then get off scot-free. That is how capitalist justice works! Under capitalism, the police serve the capitalist class, not the working class. Their role is to enforce the bosses’ laws and terrorize workers, especially Black and Latin, to prevent rebellions. With worsening capitalist conditions, police terror will only intensify.
Shut This Racist System Down
Only a communist society where the working class has state power can rid the world of racist killer kkkops. Justice is a world without bosses, profits, cops, or borders. We must build PLP worldwide in order to overthrow capitalism and create a state for workers. That is why we chanted, “If we don’t get it, shut it down!” and took to the streets. As we gave speeches about capitalist injustice, almost everyone walking by took CHALLENGE and some had conversations with us about revolution. This long struggle is only the beginning of building for a communism. We invite readers and your friends to join us as we keep up the struggle on the 21st of every month. Kyam means we’ve got to fight for revolution.
WORCESTER, MA — Members and friends of PLP protested at the City Council meeting to condemn cops in public schools.
The police presence is a racist reaction to the majority 55 percent Black and Latin students. From the beginning of this school year to November 23, 19 students have been arrested, including two from the middle school. The majority of these arrests have been for “disruption and disorderly conduct,” which are not crimes. These arrests are another aspect of growing fascism in the schools.
PLP members, some who are educators, spoke about the school-to-prison pipeline and how it has a devastating effect on mainly Black, Latin, Asian and white working-class students. We also read a petition to the Council against arresting children in schools, signed by over 100 community residents.
Schools Teach Obedience
Two professors of sociology at a local university pointed out that police in schools make the environment more dangerous rather than safer for children and teachers. The professors shared studies showing when students are arrested they do not graduate. The City is using the Alabama model for training on School Resource Officers (SRO’s), which maximizes minor infractions or annoyances and make them an offense subject to arrest. Once the cops are called to the school they’re compelled to make an arrest; now these students will have a criminal record. We stated that under no circumstances do we want cops in the schools and called for replacing SRO’s with more art and music teachers and guidance counselors, along with conflict and peer mediation. We need multiracial unity of teachers, students, parents and workers. We cannot leave the education of our children to the police, or to hedge-fund bosses.
Worcester is looking to close its $2 million budget gap, but the highest paid employees of the City, after the city manager, are police. This reflects the role of education. Capitalism needs public education to enforce discipline over our class — to teach the future workers obedience, patriotism and passivity.
Union Head Blames the Victim
Our group was multiracial, well-received, and included women and men, parents, professors, teachers and cafeteria and hospital workers. After the PLP members and friends from the community spoke, the head of the teachers union (who signed our petition) also spoke and said he agrees with us on some things. But he believes having the cops in the schools will keep the teachers safe since there have been some teachers hurt when breaking up fights between students. Such racism towards students is no surprise in a system founded on the racist reaping of super-profits off the backs of Black and immigrant workers. Teachers’ enemies are not students — it’s capitalism. There is no safe place for students or teachers under capitalism.
We need an international communist Party that fights for the working class. Workers led by PLP will continue to struggle against the criminalization of our children. We are meeting with parent groups and will make our demands at the School Committee.
PLP is taking hold of the political climate in the City of Worcester and injecting it with revolutionary politics and action. The only way to really fight for students is through the unity of teachers, students and parents. And we must point out that even with more money, even with any reform, the role of schools is to teach workers to accept and internalize capitalist relations. The final victory will come when we can unite all workers to destroy capitalism through communist revolution.
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Richard Wright Review Study Communist History, Organize the Masses
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- 12 February 2016 80 hits
Richard Wright was a famous anti-racist Black writer in the United States during the mid-20th century. While the ruling class portrays him as an anti-communist from the get-go, Byline Richard Wright: Articles from the Daily Worker and New Masses (2015), compiled by Earle V. Bryant, reveals Wright’s enthusiasm for the U.S. and international communist movement in the 1930s. By reading this collection, we can gain historical insights on how to organize among masses of workers.
Best known as the author of Native Son (1940) and Black Boy (1945), Wright was Harlem chief for the Daily Worker—the newspaper of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA)—for six months in 1937. He wrote more than two hundred news stories, along with several pieces published in the New Masses, the CPUSA’s cultural magazine. A large sampling of these writings are gathered in Byline Richard Wright.
The collection sheds valuable light on political organizing during the high point of the CPUSA’s leadership in the class struggle:
- “The Shame Spot of New York” focuses on rent strikes, demonstrations for lower prices, and protests against denial of medical care and police brutality. Many of these actions were spearheaded by women.
- “The Winds of War” documents support in Harlem for the Spanish Loyalists and Chinese anti-fascists.
- “Heroes Sung and Unsung” describes Harlem’s memorials for William Campbell, a white truck driver who lost his life saving Black children from a tenement fire.
- “Art for Life’s Sake” details the emergence of a revolutionary culture around the defense of the Scottsboro Boys, the reception of radical blues artist Lead Belly, and the short-lived literary magazine, New Challenge.
A study of the anti-racist history of the U.S. is important for communists in the current period. It helps to develop leaders who are in touch with the masses and fight for principled politics, in the interest of the whole working class.
Wright No Anti-Communist Skeptic
While literary historians have stressed Wright’s break from communism, his enthusiasm for the achievements of the CP-led mass movement is stunningly apparent here. For example, in an August 1937 piece titled “What Happens at a Communist Party Branch Meeting in the Harlem Section,” Wright alludes to how the Soviet Union is “building Socialism”; details egalitarian interactions between women and men, Black and white; and concludes that “for the first time in American history the Negro is receiving his [sic] highest possible pitch of social consciousness [through]…education from the vanguard of the working class, the Communist Party.”
In Harlem’s reaction to the victory of Joe Louis, a black U.S. boxer, over Nazi Germany’s Max Schmeling, Wright discerns “the secret dynamics of proletarian aspiration. . . . They wanted to feel that the world was theirs as much as anybody else’s. . . . They wanted to own things in common and do things in common.”
These are not the words of an anti-communist skeptic.
Besides detailing rank-and-file CP activity, Byline Richard Wright reveals the significant influence of the CP within the broader antifascist workers’ movement of the time, known as the Popular Front. The names in Wright’s reportage are an honor roll of anti-racist fighters from the time: Benjamin Davis, Angelo Herndon, Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., “Queen Mother” Audley Moore, Louise Patterson, Richard B. Moore, Thyra Edwards, Harry Haywood, Langston Hughes, Max Yergan, A. Philip Randolph, and—yes—even Thurgood Marshall, who subsequently would become the first Black U.S. Supreme Court justice.
While a number of these figures would later pull back from their communist affiliations, and the Popular Front involved the CP in problematic cross-class alliances, Wright’s writings reveal the other side of this contradiction: Leftist politics guided many aspects of the mass movement.
Lessons from Old Movement
The CP’s turn towards reformism (e.g., its support for Roosevelt’s New Deal and the Jim Crow Army) alienated Wright and others, and initially led them to criticize the CP from the left. Under pressure from the CIA and FBI, Wright later cut himself off from the communist movement. But Bryant’s compilation contradicts the anti-communist lie he was fooled into or financially forced into being a communist.
PLP has consistently attacked the CP for selling out the workers and siding with liberal bosses. We organize directly for communism, relying only on the working class (not “lesser-evil” politicians). We understand that fighting racism is essential to defeating the profit system. These differences from the old communist movement have enabled us to grow internationally and win many workers to a communist outlook.
Times were very hard in the Harlem of Wright’s day. But Byline Richard Wright reveals that thousands of class-conscious anti-racists, both Party members and rank-and-file activists, threw themselves into organizing efforts guided by the vision of a better world. Although circumstances have changed, PLP members working in mass organizations today can gain both guidance and inspiration from studying the achievements of the 1930s.