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Revolution, Yes! Elections, No! Imperialist War Has Got to Go!
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- 31 October 2012 79 hits
An imperialist war-maker will occupy the White House no matter who wins the presidential election. Imperialism inevitably breeds war to settle conflicts among capitalist nations. In the United States, both the Democrats and Republicans organize for war to maintain U.S. domination worldwide. They differ only on how to wage it, on how the war machine can best protect and project U.S. capitalists’ global interests.
Recent endorsements of Barack Obama or Mitt Romney by various retired military brass reflect a real difference in the kind of warfare the victor will pursue. In an October 21 appearance on CBS, Colin Powell, point man for the first genocidal Gulf War against Iraq in 1991, backed Obama. Three days earlier, Romney announced formation of a “military advisory council” of more than three hundred blood-soaked ex-generals and admirals. One of its more prominent members is Tommy Franks, the commander of the second genocidal Gulf War against Iraq, launched by George W. Bush in 2003. The two beribboned butchers hold competing views that mirror different capitalists’ interests.
The Powell Doctrine: Mass Support for Massive War
Colin Powell’s military doctrine demands overwhelming force, a clear objective, hosts of allies and mass popular support. The 1991 Iraq War, as waged by Powell as chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, reflected the need of ExxonMobil, Chevron and British BP and Shell for oil-field security and government stability. Powell led 956,600 troops (73 percent from the U.S.) in ousting Saddam Hussein’s 120,000 soldiers after George H.W. Bush complained they “had poured into Kuwait and moved south to threaten Saudi Arabia.”
In 1991, Powell and the elder Bush took firm control of Kuwait’s oil wells and shored up Saudi defenses, a move that angered aspiring oil baron Osama bin Laden. But they deliberately refrained from marching on Baghdad. Instead, they left Bill Clinton the task of containing Hussein with airstrikes and sanctions that killed a half-million children.
Shock and Awe: War on the Cheap
Romneyite Tommy Franks was top ground commander for the post-9/11 U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and later Iraq. In neither case did U.S. forces amount to more than 200,000, even though both were aimed to defeat and replace the existing regimes. In 2003, as Secretary of State, Powell also pushed for invading Iraq. But he called for tens of thousands of troops more than Franks and his neo-conservative bosses — War Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Richard Cheney — had agreed upon. Outmaneuvered, Powell quit the next year.
Rumsfeld and his cohorts proceeded to opt for a swift, high-tech, “shock-and-awe” invasion, saying the war should be run “with the troops we have.” They predicted that Iraqis would greet U.S. troops with flowers. The reality was a trillion-dollar disaster that massacred more masses of workers.
The current state of Iraq and Afghanistan, largely the work of both Bushes, Franks, Rumsfeld & Co., troubles the oil-driven capitalists served by Powell. Because of the Gulf Wars, Exxon now has major operations in both the north and south of oil-rich Iraq. But violence and a rickety government keep the country’s production under three million barrels a day, far below the six million barrels promised by war planners. In Afghanistan, meanwhile, Taliban attacks have prevented the surveying — let alone the building — of the Exxon- and Chevron-backed Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) gas pipeline. It now languishes on the drawing board.
Powell in the Rockefeller Camp
As a self-styled “Rockefeller Republican,” Powell aligns with Rockefeller-dominated firms including Exxon, Chevron and JPMorgan Chase. It’s not just a phrase. In 2003, with Iraq and Afghanistan both under siege but far less productive than he wished, David Rockefeller presented troop-booster Powell with the Gen. George C. Marshall Award for service to U.S. imperialism. And Powell sits on the board of the Rockefeller-led Council on Foreign Relations, U.S. imperialists’ top think tank.
Tommy Franks’ capitalist loyalties lie elsewhere. Until an Obama-engineered 2009 purge, Franks was a board member of Bank of America, the gigantic bank with a more domestic than imperialist focus. Today the former general sits on the board of Chuck E. Cheese, a string of pizza parlors with relatively little use for the Pentagon.
Romney’s inconsistent foreign policy pronouncements and jumbled cast of counselors mirrors a fragmented Republican Party. His top donor, Sheldon Adelson, promotes Israeli attacks on Iran. Team Romney includes neo-conservatives John Bolton, Dan Senor and Elliott Abrams, who prefer Franks-style war-on-the-cheap. But it also features at least one long-term war supporter: the Rockefellerite Robert Zoellick, a protégé of ex-Secretary of State James Baker, who has strong ties to ExxonMobil and JPMorgan Chase. For a time Zoellic headed the major U.S. imperialists’ beloved World Bank.
Romney’s uncertain allegiances stand in contrast to dyed-in-the-wool imperialist Powell’s jump to Obama. “I’m not sure which Romney we would be getting,” he told CBS. “One day he has a certain strong view about staying in Afghanistan, but then on Monday night he agrees with the withdrawal.”
Anti-Obesity Campaign = Youth As Cannon Fodder
Obama has a more insidious assemblage of generals and admirals in his corner. It promotes the wellbeing of children while not so secretly planning their deployment in all-out war against China or Russia or both. More than a hundred retired flag officers, organized as “Mission: Readiness,” have signed on to Michelle Obama’s anti-obesity campaign. Their aim is to improve young people’s health as they are mobilized for world war. In other words, they want more effective cannon fodder.
As this group laments, “Being overweight or obese has now become the leading medical reason why young adults cannot enlist in the military. The Defense Department estimates that 1 in 4 young adults is too overweight to enlist” (Mission Readiness website, 9/25/12). But as the current depression impels more jobless youth to join the Army, U.S. military recruiters are roughly meeting their targets. So why the worry? It can only be that the Obama/Powell camp has a larger mobilization in mind than Romney and Franks envision.
Under capitalism, a system based on the bosses’ drive for maximum profits, the state apparatus called the government — including the courts, cops and prisons used in racist attacks on millions of black and Latino youth and workers — is an instrument for class rule. To enforce that rule, the capitalists require war to maintain profits and control of resources — especially oil, the heart and soul of industry and the military.
Racism: Hallmark of Imperialist War
The two Gulf oil wars have an especially racist character. They target workers and their families in the Middle East, a region that imperialist powers have long victimized and mercilessly exploited. Workers in Iraq, Iran, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan and Pakistan have been victimized by bombings, massacres by drones, assassinations and direct invasions. As it trains working-class soldiers, the U.S. military whips up racist hatred against Muslims and Arabs, demonizing them as violent and worthless human beings. To fill their quotas for cannon fodder, the generals are pushing the recruitment of undocumented immigrant Latino youth with empty promises of citizenship — a cynical maneuver endorsed by Obama to shore up his political base. Racist wars have long been the province of the U.S. war machine, going back to the genocide against Native Americans. Racism is the foundation of U.S. capitalism, netting the bosses hundreds of billions in super-profits from wage differentials.
Elections: Capitalists’ Tool to Oppress Working Class
Elections are created to maintain the charade of “democracy,” the dangerous lie that the working class chooses who will run the government and their lives. In reality, the role of all elected officials is to serve the capitalist class and its profit needs. In the U.S., despite tactical differences that reflect the bosses’ factional disagreements, both Democrats and Republicans represent the same interests. Capitalism is the dictatorship of the ruling class.
Our class has no stake in the capitalists’ dispute over how our daughters and sons should kill and die in their profit-driven wars. The goal of the Progressive Labor Party is for the working class — the producers of all value, from which the bosses derive their profits — to dictate the course of our lives. In so doing, we will eliminate what capitalist profits breed: wars, racism, sexism, mass unemployment and poverty. Our alternative is communism, the dictatorship of the working class, which will free us from the horrors of the profit system. Join us.
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Haiti Teachers Blast Slave Wages, Rotten Schools, Cholera
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- 31 October 2012 77 hits
HAITI, October 28 — Sometimes all it takes is for someone to stand up and say no, for the whole system of exploitation and oppression to reveal itself. The rebels might get some crumbs from the bosses’ teeming table for his trouble. They might go back to being resigned to the bosses’ state power for ever. Or they might be radicalized by the experience and spend the rest of her life fighting for the working class.
But whatever the outcome of a reform struggle, once people stand up, and organize themselves, and then stand up stronger in numbers and conviction, and take the streets and march to the seat of power together, to the men with guns and money — then all bets are off, and it’s a teaching moment. It’s a moment when our action unmasks the power relationships that hold us in chains.
Such moments are when revolutionaries are born and it’s not about crumbs any more but the whole loaf. If a few communists are in the crowd, especially ones of different colors, genders, countries, and languages, it can be a prophetic moment. One in which we glimpse the guns and money abolished, the bosses thrown into the sea. Then it’s time to organize to make that revolution happen. If many more become communists, it does happen eventually.
Teachers in Haiti want a living wage and a decent public school system and an end to cholera. Just a few crumbs from the billions gambled away in one day on Wall Street. They are re-organizing themselves for a nation-wide two-day strike November 12-13, undeterred by Hurricane Sandy’s washing out their first strike date last week. They are standing up. And given the pressure-cooker of rage and political desire that is Haiti at the moment, and the presence of revolutionary communists in PLP, many can be won to revolution.
More specifically, in the open-air auditorium of a, run-down school, they were shouting: “Teachers are tired! Teachers are tired!”
Tired of a pittance that barely covers transportation, a leaky-roof lodging, a few sets of clothes, two meals a day, and our own kids’ school fees this month.
Tired of a hundred noisy, frustrated teenagers packed so tight into a room that only the first row can hear you try to teach. Tired of seeing the few full-time, half-secure teaching jobs in a country of 80% unemployment going, not to the qualified young coming full of hope out of the Teachers’ Colleges, but to cynical incompetents put there by politicians who see a teacher’s job simply as a paycheck to reward a client with.
So when a union speaker asked journalists not to interview her but the teachers themselves, what sprang from their hearts in a singing chant led by the sopranos was: “Teachers are tired! Teachers are tired!” Eighty teachers had come through the torn-up streets of this small port town to an organizing meeting called by their union.
The teachers’ meeting began. The left-wing national union and student leaders took the mike and speakers from far away told of their own desire to build the strike with international support. “You are not alone,” they heard from someone who worked in the Chicago strike. They heard of the campaign in the U.S. to end cholera, and the lift their union had given this campaign by making that a strike demand, by far the most significant action of the campaign so far. This town is seeing a spike in cholera deaths, predictable after heavy rain.
Then the witnesses from the teachers’ assembly came to the front and spoke their piece. There was a debate, to be resolved by the union exec meeting the next day, about which date to re-launch the strike.
It was a good meeting, a glimpse of the nation-wide structure of rank-and-file assemblies and a fifty-strong leaders’ group the union has spent a year building. Women took the lead at some points, gaining confidence by sitting together, leading the singing.
But after a wage increase, what? After the end of cholera, which new preventable illness will cut workers down? As long as capitalism remains, these struggles will go on endlessly.
Hurricane Sandy Can’t Wash Away Haiti Teachers’ Strike
Support the Nation-Wide Teachers’ Strike in Haiti and Internationally!
National march in many Haitian cities to launch the strike, Monday November12
Strike all the schools November 12-13, 2012
To see the strike demands, the union’s call for support, and where to write letters and send donations to the strike fund: http://psc-cuny.org/unnoh.
Write letters of support from unions, churches, student and community groups, professional asssociations
Organize forums on the strike in union halls, schools, campuses and churches
March and rally to support the strike at Haitian consulates, U.S. government offfices, the U.N. and the World Bank.
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Mexico’s Labor ‘Reform’ Chops Wages, Hours, Seniority
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- 31 October 2012 78 hits
The Labor Reform in Mexico is exposing the true nature of the capitalist system. The bosses, in their dogfight to control markets and maintain their rate of profits, have forced the Mexican government to reform labor laws, and take back many of the gains that the working class fought for and won through the years, many in bloody struggles, as in Chicago and Cananea in northern Mexico.
The recently-approved Labor Reform is an insult to the struggles and dignity of the international working class. The bosses argue that the reform will generate jobs in Mexico, but it will almost certainly cause unemployment in another part of the world. This shows that the international working class has only one option: to become organized around an international party like PLP to fight for communism.
The ruling class and the government are trying to convince us that the reform will benefit workers because, they claim, it will create jobs. The reality is that the capitalist system is in the midst of a profound crisis and the bosses are less willing to honor benefits such as seventh day payments, paid vacations, utilities, and bonuses.
Under their new system, workers won’t earn seniority. Even more importantly, it allows bosses to hire workers by the hour instead of by a work-day of 8 hours. This will only mean more poverty and misery for the working class. It’s hard enough to live on 8-hour wages much less trying to survive working only 2 or 3 hours.
Labor reform is the product of inter-imperialist struggles. By approving the Labor Reform, the Mexican government creates the conditions to increase production at the price of increased misery for the working class. Currently, U.S. Imperialism is declining and facing a threat by the Chinese imperialists, who super-exploit workers and pay even lower wages. Imperialists, to maximize profits, need to decrease their labor cost, and control a docile labor force.
That’s the reason the Mexican state, which serves the interests of the imperialist ruling class, is creating these conditions, similar to those enacted elsewhere.
According to the September 2012 issue of the Mexican journal Proceso, similar New Labor Principles are being pushed in the U.S. and Peru (2009), in Panama (beginning next month), South Korea (last March) and Colombia (since last May).
Labor Reform for Bosses, Revolution and Communism for Workers
Under capitalism and class society, workers have struggled and lost their lives to secure some labor benefits. The profit nature of this system demonstrates now, once again, that any gains made by the workers can be taken away at any moment, using capitalist institutions such as the state, the courts, the police and the army. Workers must continue fighting to benefit our class, not just to reform capitalism but to destroy it with a working-class revolution.
We must fight for our class interests, fight for communism; our party, Progressive Labor Party, has that objective. The bosses are our enemies and none of their initiatives could ever benefit the working class.
We invite you to organize our class brothers and sisters in the factories, schools, communities and armies all around the world to smash capitalism with a communist revolution. We invite you to join PLP.
Los Angeles, October 25 — The big problems facing public education are not necessarily a lack of funds or bad policy, but in fact the system itself which operates on the basis of maximizing profit. That was the message from panelists at a local community college forum titled “Beyond Elections,” attended by close to 150 students. The forum was in the context of the recent push by faculty and teacher unions to pass Proposition 30 which would raise taxes in California to pay for public education.
But the panelists pointed out that the problems originate in the political economy of capitalism; unless public colleges and universities can be turned into profitable enterprises, they will always be depending on a system that prioritizes the building of a racist police state and imperialist war.
This forum reflects the efforts of a group of college professors and students, disappointed with unions’ lack of fight-back, who have been meeting regularly to figure out how to put forward an anti-capitalist analysis in the struggle over budget cuts. PL members are actively helping organize this group, creating opportunities to discuss moving beyond a reformist outlook and how students and workers can work together to build a revolutionary communist movement.
The message was clear: elections are not enough; in fact, they are a trap. No matter the promise, they cannot move workers and students beyond capitalism, which is based on the exploitation of the working class. In his concluding remarks the last panelist pointed out that students and faculty need to recognize that workers have tremendous social power and do not need to depend on ruling-class politicians.
PL students and professors will continue to help organize more forums and actions, especially in public universities and community colleges throughout LA and Southern California. Also, they are already connecting these students to the fighting Walmart workers.
A few days after the forum, several students visited a local Walmart where they met the workers who have organized walkouts. In their discussions, they raised the need for building a worker-student alliance on the basis of class-consciousness and the need for a revolutionary communist outlook.
Oakland, October 27 — A loud and enthusiastic crowd picketed and rallied at Mi Pueblo Market today to popularize a community boycott here in Oakland (see CHALLENGE 10/17). The most organized and noticeable group were young people in 67 Suenos who took over the parking lot chanting, “If you’re E-Verifying, We Ain’t Buying!”. (a redo of E-40’s rap song, “We out here trying to function”). One manager got so frustrated that he threw raw eggs at the crowd!
PLP members and friends participated. We had signs and leaflets in Spanish and English about uniting the working class across all borders. (see photo). Our leaflet explained that the capitalist class worldwide causes migration around the globe and unemployment as a “labor policy,” as a race to the bottom for cheaper labor and maximization of profits. This hurts every worker, citizen or immigrant. We called to abolish racism, sexism, and nationalism with international working-class unity. When you look around, it’s only communists that say class trumps nationalism in all its forms.
Here we have a former “illegal” immigrant, Juvenal Chavez, who now owns 21 stores, pays substandard wages and uses Immigration Customs Enforcement to scare workers from fighting back. Nationalism doesn’t get in his way when he screws these workers! At the same time, his stores always have the red, white and green of the Mexican flag all over the place. “Patron” or “Boss — don’t be fooled — this is CLASS WAR. Capitalists of every nationality and every country are our enemies!