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Bernie Sanders No Solution: Liberal Pols the Main Enemy
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- 30 July 2015 71 hits
It’s easy to spot right-wing capitalist mouthpieces, the politicians who build racism by attacking immigrants, poor people, and what little remains of the social safety net. But the more dangerous enemies are the liberals, whose main job is to deceive and pacify the international working class. Ranging from Pope Francis to Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, these fake leftists are falling over one another to bemoan the profit system’s growing economic inequalities.
The latest darling of the lethal ruling-class liberals is Bernie Sanders, the U.S. senator from Vermont who is challenging Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Party nomination for president in 2016.
Why are these liberal misleaders gaining influence and so much attention from the bosses’ media? Workers around the world are angry. If their anger is directed at the capitalist system and organized around the class-conscious outlook of the Progressive Labor Party, it will be game over for the bosses. PLP fights for the working class to gain power. We’re building a mass party in more than two dozen countries to win workers to build a communist world of true equality, and to smash this racist, imperialist system with communist revolution!
As the U.S., China, Russia, and other imperialist rivals intensify their fight over oil and other resources, they use their politicians to win the loyalty of the workers they oppress. Their first lie is “we’re all in this together,” a promotion of patriotism and all-class unity that divides the international working class. The second lie is that the capitalist system, which cannot exist without the brutal exploitation of our class, can somehow be reformed.
Sanders: Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
Bernie Sanders is being promoted by the liberal finance capitalists as an alternative for workers and youth disillusioned by Barack Obama’s presidency and by Hillary Clinton—the same role candidate Obama played against Clinton in 2008. But when recently confronted by activists from Black Lives Matter, Sanders—a long-time supporter of the hyper-racist Israeli state—had nothing to say about racism. His bankrupt solution to the system’s problems is to make workers part owners of the companies they work for. This reactionary idea would make workers even more vulnerable to the cyclical crises of capitalism, chaining them more tightly to the big banks for loans.
Every four years, the U.S. working class is fed a new “savior” candidate, yet the result never changes. Workers continue to suffer, with Black and Latin workers hit hardest.
The ruling-class Center for American Progress (CAP) think tank praised Sanders three times in its 2013 paper, “Growing the Wealth: How Government Encourages Broad-Based Inclusive Capitalism.” Who runs CAP? Its top donors include Citigroup and the Rockefeller and Soros foundations. Madeleine Albright, the secretary of state under Bill Clinton who justified the sanction-driven murder of half a million Iraqi children, serves as a director. CAP’s chairman is John Podesta, formerly Bill Clinton’s chief of staff and currently Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman. This is the same Bill Clinton who promoted the racist mass incarceration of Black youth, the hiring and arming of 100,000 more cops, and the destruction of welfare and educational opportunities for mainly Black and Latin workers.
Sanders has ruled out an independent, third-party candidacy; he is running strictly as a Democrat. Both he and his party’s leaders know he has little or no chance to prevail. His job is to build enthusiasm among workers and youth for the boss-controlled electoral process, and then to throw his support to whatever Democrat wins the nomination. Sanders’ constituency represents many of the people the U.S. ruling class needs to embrace its agenda for wider imperialist wars, and in particular for a military draft. These are the workers and youth PLP must win to our ranks to fight for communist revolution!
A recent piece in Counterpunch (7/21/15) recounts Sanders’ role as a cynical ruling-class tool as early as 1990: “[Sanders] went to the Kennedy School at Harvard for six months and came back with a new relationship with the state’s Democrats…. Bernie has become an ardent imperialist. Sanders endorsed [Bill] Clinton in 1992 and 1996.”
Like every liberal imperialist politician, Sanders and his pro-worker mask present a grave danger to our class. As a U.S. congressman and senator, according to Street (7/21/15), Sanders voted for:
- Economic sanctions that killed more than a million Iraqi civilians;
- Every U.S. bombing of Iraq since 1992;
- Sending U.S. military units to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to threaten Iraq because “we cannot tolerate aggression”;
- Bill Clinton’s overtly racist Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (1994), which accelerated the mass incarceration of Black and Latin workers and youth;
- U.S. interventions in Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Liberia, Zaire (Congo), Albania, Sudan, Afghanistan and Yugoslavia.
Sellouts Love Sanders
Nineteen of Sanders’ top 20 contributors, according to Open Secrets.org, are among the largest trade unions. These unions have sold out our class by collaborating with the bosses to defeat working-class fightback. Their traitorous leaders haven’t led a significant strike in over three decades.
The other top Sanders contributor is the American Association for Justice, a creation of billionaire imperialist George Soros’s Open Society Foundation and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. Sanders is no friend of the working class. He is deeply intertwined with the highest circles of the U.S. ruling class.
Whether Sanders, Clinton, or some other capitalist shill becomes the Democrats’ choice for the next electoral circus, workers have no stake in any election. Every capitalist democracy is a dictatorship of the bosses. Every capitalist ruling class aims to channel workers’ frustrations into support for some lying capitalist candidate. PLP says, “Don’t vote, revolt!” We fight to organize the international working class to end the capitalists’ dictatorship, build a communist world, and smash racism, sexism, and imperialism once and for all. Join us!
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Sanders-Style “Socialism:” What’s In A Name?
Bernie Sanders has made headlines as a self-proclaimed “socialist,” whatever that means. In the mid-19th century, at the dawn of the modern communist movement, there were many competing political ideas. The movement founded by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels believed in a two-stage theory of revolution. They proposed that workers must first fight for socialism, a system that would entail armed revolution and a workers’ dictatorship but also temporarily retain the wage system and certain inequalities. In practice, however, in both the Soviet Union and China, socialism led not to communism but back to capitalism. In Road to Revolution 4 (1982), PLP broke with the two-stage theory and put forward the idea of winning workers directly to communism.
When Marx and Engels labeled their seminal 1848 document the “Communist Manifesto,” it was in part to distinguish themselves from countless socialist groups proclaiming a confusing mix of programs. Politicians like Sanders love to call themselves “socialists” precisely because the term is so vague. It’s no accident that “Nazi” stood for “National Socialist German Workers’ Party.” In the 1920s and ‘30s, the Nazis employed the term “socialism” to mislead frustrated workers away from support for the world’s first socialist republic, the Soviet Union.
We cannot afford to make the same mistake. Workers must not buy the “socialist” label, especially from capitalist fakers like Bernie Sanders.
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, July 18 — “Shut this racist rally down! Chase them out of town!” Scores of anti-racists took up Progressive Labor Party’s chants at a rally here against the Ku Klux Klan. Both Black and white working-class families welcomed PLP’s call for multiracial unity against all forms of nationalism.
South Carolina has been rocked by racist murders. Walter Scott was shot in the back by kkkop Michael Slager after a routine traffic stop. Klan-lover Dylann Roof murdered nine people at Emmanuel AME Church, spurring a national debate over public displays of the Confederate flag.
The bosses permitted two nationalist protests at the South Carolina State House. On the north side steps were Black nationalists advocating for the “power in the melanin” and for Black capitalism. On the south side were the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the National Socialist Movement, a Nazi organization, calling for white power.
The white supremacists waved Confederate flags and performed Hitler salutes. In response, PLP and others in the crowd chanted, “Death, death, death to the racists!”
PLP has a long history of fighting Klan and Nazi groups. We invaded a Nazi headquarters in Chicago and physically stopped them from broadcasting from a Kansas City radio station. We smashed David Duke and his forces in Boston. We burned a Klan hood at a John Brown demonstration in Texas and stood up against armed Klansmen in Tupelo, Mississippi. More recently, we infiltrated and attacked these gutter racists at New York City Hall and in Morristown, New Jersey.
In short, these cowardly fascists have a history of taking a beating from anti-racists. And that’s what happened here today. A group of Black rebels beat a KKK scum who had earlier taunted the crowd with racist slurs. Wherever fascists are on the attack, the working class must up the ante and fight back.
Part of fighting back means attacking the root of racism: capitalist state power. The ruling class runs on racist exploitation of workers. U.S. bosses reap billions of dollars each year by paying Black, Latin, and migrant workers less than white workers. The genocide of indigenous people and enslavement of Black people is the foundation of U.S. state power. All capitalist institutions are built on this bedrock of racism: the government, police, military, industry, schools, prisons, churches, media, hospitals, and more.
Just as the Nazis won much of the German working class to its genocidal ideology, U.S. ruling-class racism helps gutter racist groups dupe poor white workers into scapegoating other members of their class. By dividing workers with the mythical concept of race, the rulers make it more difficult for communists to build the multiracial movement we need to smash the system.
PLP fights for communist state power. The working class will rule every aspect of society. This world will be based on need and collectivity, not racist and sexist exploitation. Wherever we put forward these ideas, workers respond to them. More than 500 anti-racists, Black and white, took our leaflets and CHALLENGEs in Columbia. Some signed up for a CHALLENGE subscription.
Black Capitalism Is Still Capitalism
Unfortunately, despite a small PL presence, the most conspicuous alternative to the neo-Nazis was a group of Black nationalists. These counter-revolutionaries called for a country without “Indian, Chinese, or Irish” workers. They called upon Black people to “buy Black and invest in Black businesses”—in other words, to identify and ally with Black capitalists. They also threatened “any blue-eyed devil” who “dared to come” to their town hall meeting after the rally.
Nationalism is the rulers’ main tool to divide our class. It traps us into false unity with groups of bosses based on nationality or race, from Barack Obama to the new Black police chief in Ferguson, Missouri. It leads to our self-destruction. As the historian Lerone Bennett wrote in 1970 in The Road Not Taken,
Before the invention of the Negro or the white man or the words and concepts to describe them…these people worked together and relaxed together. They had essentially the same interests, the same aspirations, and the same grievances. They conspired together and waged a common struggle against their common enemy….The race problem in America was a deliberate invention of men who systematically separated blacks and white in order to make money.
The need for a common struggle against capitalism is no less urgent today. Workers from Haiti to South Africa to Cuba must no longer retreat from communist revolution. Those who organize along nationalist lines are lining their own pockets, not serving the international working class.
In Columbia, amid the Confederate and Black nationalist flags, the working class of South Carolina was presented with an alternative: the red flag of communist revolution. Capitalism lives off nationalist division. What it can’t survive is a mass, multiracial communist party. For the working class worldwide, that party is PLP.
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Black Lives Matter Convention: PL’ers Push Back vs. Nationalists
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- 30 July 2015 63 hits
CLEVELAND, July 26 — At the first Black Lives Matter (BLM) convention, as our Black, white, and South Asian comrades chanted “Racism means we got to fight back!” a group of people tried to rip the bullhorn from our hands. They apparently were outraged by a multiracial group like the Progressive Labor Party leading anti-racist chants.
Our opposition wasn’t the Klan. It wasn’t the cops. It was a leaders of Black Lives Matter.
A seemingly progressive, grass-roots organization, Black Lives Matter is in reality backed by arch-imperialist George Soros, the Kellogg Foundation (champions of anti-student education reform), and the Ford Foundation, the philanthropic front group for the Hitler-backing corporation that oppresses workers throughout the world. Given their vested interest in maintaining global capitalism, these funders must keep workers divided to continue to maximize profits. Within BLM, they have found some willing junior partners to promote working-class division, capitalist-controlled elections, and the reactionary ideology of Black nationalism as a false solution to racist police murders and poverty.
BLM’s leadership exposed their anti-worker ideas when they attacked our multiracial group of comrades. Multiracial fightback to smash capitalism—led by the revolutionary communist PLP—is the only solution to racism and poverty. It is the only real threat to capitalists like Soros, Kellogg, and Ford.
The Poison of Privilege Politics
BLM’s leadership attempts to mislead workers into believing that racism is a Black issue that white people cannot fully understand. Since white workers benefit from “white privilege,” as this faulty reasoning goes, their only incentive to fight racism is a moral one—a modern version of the “white man’s burden.” Ignoring the crucial role that racism plays in the exploitation of white workers, BLM asks Black workers and their “white allies” to organize separately in their own communities.
But despite the BLM leadership’s call for a Black-only conference, a dozen Black, white, and South Asian PL comrades from New York, Indiana, Chicago, and DC showed up here. When we entered the conference, the leadership asked our white comrades to leave and wait for them to create a “white ally” space. We remained as one group and attended the workshops, where the leadership consistently attacked the white people simply for being there (see letters, page 6).
If left unchallenged, these attacks would create the illusion that the fight against racism is for Black workers alone. In reality, racism oppresses all workers while super-exploiting Black, Latin, Asian, and immigrant workers. It uses racist distinctions and divisions to drive all workers’ wages down. By focusing workshops on the question of the white comrades’ presence, BLM’s leaders distracted everyone from fighting the system and toward fighting each other.
Black Workers Embrace Communist Ideas
Despite these attacks, many attendees supported our multiracial group. We distributed our literature and held a forum on fighting capitalism with multiracial unity. The forum was a success, with people showing openness to our ideas and even giving us contact information and subscribing to CHALLENGE.
Perhaps our biggest gain was in the experience of engaging the class enemy. All of the PL’ers were young and gained leadership experience. Moreover, we now have a sharper view of today’s Black nationalism and identity politics. We’ve seen it proliferate in our textbooks and classrooms, but we deepened our political understanding by confronting it in practice. We all need to understand how to combat the wide variety of capitalist ideas and better fight for revolutionary communism.
The leaders of Black Lives Matter are not serious about fighting racism. If they were, they wouldn’t be taking money from the same people who create, perpetuate, and depend on racism to reap super-profits. They wouldn’t be doing the bosses’ job by creating divisions between honest Black and white workers who share the same interests. They wouldn’t be holding a conference where they focus more on attacking a multiracial group of anti-racists than on organizing for the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s death.
Progressive Labor Party, not Black Lives Matter, is the only group serious about eliminating racism, poverty, and capitalism. All workers must fight together to smash our chains. Join us!
BROOKLYN, July 21 — It is two years since Kyam Livingston was killed in a Brooklyn jail cell. She was ill and crying out in pain for over seven hours while her pleas, and those of others in her cell, were ignored by the murderous New York Police Department. The 24th demonstration for Justice for Kyam was held today, on the second anniversary of her death, outside the courthouse where Brooklyn Central Booking is located. More than 60 people joined this multi-racial rally.
Chants of “We want justice for Kyam Livingston, killed in a Brooklyn cell!” and “If we don’t get it, shut it down!” were loud and clear throughout the demonstration. The sound of voices grew as people arrived at the end of their workday. PL’ers distributed over a hundred CHALLENGEs and several hundred leaflets. As the demonstration took over the street, the police were forced to divert traffic. Anita Neal, Kyam’s mother, her daughter’s ashes in her hands, walked in and then out of the courthouse to make the point that her daughter was now free. As a PL’er sang a song about the true nature of the bosses’ racist terror, Anita’s wailed in anguish for her loss—and in anger at the brutality of the profit system.
Anita’s determination inspires the rest of us to keep fighting back against the system, in the name of Kyam and for the millions slaughtered by police and in wars for profit. Several speakers talked about how the loss of human life from simple callousness and cruelty is business as usual under capitalism, especially for Black workers. Racism and racist terror are built into this system as an essential for the bosses to keep the working class divided. When we build multi-racial unity and fight back, the ruling class shudders in fear!
PLP has a long, storied history of fighting back against racist, fascist police murder in Brooklyn, helping to form multi-racial fight back and justice committees that regularly take to the streets. When we are out fighting for Kyam, we are also fighting for Shantel Davis and Kiki Gray, for Mike Brown and Walter Scott, and for the all too many other victims of police terror. As the sister of Shantel, who was killed by the NYPD in Flatbush three years ago, has said many times: What the cops and bosses don’t realize is that they’re building a family of anti-racist fighters, bonded together.
At the end of the demonstration, a vow was made to keep the battle going, to support Kyam’s mother and the rest of the family in the struggle for justice inside and outside the system. Within that struggle, people learn about the true nature and violence of capitalism. Families of slaughtered relatives may get compensation money through the courts, but the killer cops almost never suffer for their crimes. The racist nature of the system survives unscathed. As a PL speaker said, it’s impossible to get real justice under capitalism. Only a communist revolution can end racism, because only communist revolution will smash the system that breeds and survives on racism—capitalism. Join PLP in the fight for working class justice and communist revolution!
STATEN ISLAND, NY, July 18 — “We are going to continue to fight to build a mass struggle around the issues of racism and police brutality, the only way we can bring any change. Electing politicians won’t change anything!” This declaration of defiance was made today by two dozen workers on the steps to the office of Staten Island Congressman Dan Donovan.
The rally was called to commemorate Eric Garner’s murder and condemn this racist politician. Donovan made sure that the grand jury didn’t indict Garner’s murderer, killer kkkop Daniel Pantaleo, or anybody else for Eric Garner’s murder. He even had the courageous Ramsay Orta, who took the video of Pantaleo’s choke hold, arrested and indicted three times!
Students, campus workers, professors and the local community responded to the urgency of forming a multiracial, anti-racist organization at the College of Staten Island: Staten Island Against Racism and Police Brutality. One group member stated that New York’s “broken windows” policing is the problem, and that New York Mayor Bill de Blasio his appointed police commissioner, William Bratton, are directly responsible for Eric Garner’s murder. As another worker noted, if Pantaleo couldn’t be indicted, a cop will never beheld accountable for killing a Black man.
The Progressive Labor Party salutes the bold community members taking this anti-racist struggle forward! PLP is building a mass, international anti-racist movement of millions to destroy the root of racism—capitalism—with armed communist revolution. We invite these bold fighters in Staten Island to share their lessons and struggles with us, and help us forge a future without racist police terror.
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I was invited to a vigil for Sandra Bland this weekend in Brooklyn by a group of college student activists. Bland, who died in jail in Texas on July 13, is one of the latest victims of racist police terror. There has been a lot of discussion about whether Bland committed suicide or was murdered, but one of the participants at the vigil summed it up: “Sandra would be alive today if she had never encountered that police officer.”
The vigil was poignant and well organized. Everyone had a chance to speak and share their thoughts. Two participants spoke of revolution. Many young women spoke of how Sandra’s death hit home. People agreed that having marches and vigils in working-class communities was better than organizing rallies in the downtown area.
The group of mostly young women marched through Prospect Park and leaflets were given to onlookers. A few people joined, including a young Russian student who spoke of the racism faced by African workers there.
PLP has been saying that we must not “get used” to all the injustices of capitalism and that we should take every opportunity to fight back. These young women, including two students in my class, did a great job of making a statement. Let’s keep fighting back—every day, in every way!