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The Queen is Dead: Long Live The Working Class!
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- 24 September 2022 101 hits
The nine-mile line to mourn Queen Elizabeth II, the monstrous figurehead for degenerate Nazi-loving billionaires and callous capitalist bosses, reminds us that the working class still struggles through a dark night of false unity with the ruling class. Through Elizabeth’s seventy years as the royal family’s number-one parasite, British imperialism exploited, enslaved, tortured, and slaughtered countless workers across the globe (see box on the British atrocities on page 6). The Queen “spent a lifetime smiling and waving at cheering native people around the world, a sort of living ghost of a system of rapacious and bloodthirsty extraction” (New York Times, 9/11). As the monarchy looted an estimated $28 billion from the international working class, more than 20 percent of the British population sank into poverty (House of Commons Library, April 2022).
But even though many in our class seem enthralled by the royal family’s wretched excess and lavish pageantry, including the $9 million it took to put Elizabeth in a box, a reckoning is coming. As of September 1, a week before the Queen’s death, more than 150,000 workers—including postal and telecom workers, trash collectors, and lawyers—were on strike to protest stagnant salaries shredded by double-digit inflation. Despite no support from the so-called Labour Party, 45,000 transportation workers walked off their jobs, paralyzing train, subway, and bus lines across the country for days. Teachers, nurses, and doctors will soon have strike votes of their own, and the country’s two largest trade unions are pushing for coordinated strikes in “one of the most significant waves of industrial unrest the United Kingdom has seen since the ‘winter of discontent’ in the late 1970s” (cnn.com, 9/1). Workers will always fight back!
As escalating inter-imperialist rivalry leads to world war, the murderous essence of the British monarchy and all the global ruling classes will be exposed. When that day comes, what Progressive Labor Party does to organize workers now will make all the difference. It will determine whether the millions shedding tears for the dead Queen will continue on into the furnaces of fascism and imperialist war or whether they’ll join PLP and our Red Army in the fight for a classless society—for communism.
Inequality: as capitalist as queen and country
Following World War II, Britain, like much of Europe, installed a social safety net to counter workers’ gains under socialism in the Soviet Union. But with each passing decade, as the British Empire waned and expired, the rulers no longer had imperialist super-profits to prop up their failing profit system at home. Wages, services, and living standards were cut to the bone.
In recent years, untold thousands in Britain have died from neglect by a financially gutted National Health Service (independent.co.uk, 1/28/17).
Nearly one in five children live in households where people go hungry regularly(borgenproject.org). Super-exploited immigrants have suffered the most from these racist attacks. Amid this misery, the Queen sat placidly on her throne with her heap of stolen jewels, gently spewing the big lie that the British Crown actually cared about its loyal subjects. In real life, Elizabeth cared only about her horses, her plump rat dogs, her Nazi sympathizer husband, her appalling children (including rapist Prince Andrew and famously racist and corrupt Prince Charles, finally promoted to King), and the finance capitalists who run the country as a very junior partner to U.S. imperialism.
Gross inequalities are part and parcel of capitalism, a system where humanity takes a back seat to the drive for maximum profit. In 2020, a girl born in “the most deprived areas” of England could expect to have only 52 healthy years—as compared to 71 years in “the least deprived areas” (theguardian.com, 4/25). That Queen Elizabeth stayed hale and hearty into her mid-90s is no cause for celebration. It’s the story of a vampire whose wealth and privileges were sucked from the blood and toil of the working class.
The only good royal is a dead royal
Not everyone was fooled by “likely the most famous person on the planet” (Vanity Fair, 9/8). In the days after Charles grabbed the crown and scepter, some workers faced arrest for holding signs declaring “Not My King,” reminiscent of the “Not My President” protests by anti-Trump workers in the U.S. The problem with reformist opposition is that it accepts the dead-end political superstructures of capitalism, whether electoral “democracy” or a “constitutional” monarchy. In either case, it keeps workers tied to lesser-evil bosses and straitjacketed by the profit system.
Many Black workers and immigrants from one-time British colonies used social media to critique the bloody, racist history of British colonialism. While this was better than mourning a dead figurehead, national liberation politics doesn’t aim to smash class society; it wants workers to be ruled by bosses who look like them. This class-collaborationist thinking feeds the deadly trap of nationalism. It ultimately serves the dominant liberal rulers in enlisting working-class support for World War III.
Workers’ fightback is the future
Whether the bosses use monarchs or presidents or generals to control and pacify the working class, we have no decent future under capitalism. Whatever reform crumbs they give us will be clawed back in the inevitable next crisis of a chaotic system. In the muck and mire of this political cesspool, it is the Party’s job to challenge dead-end ideas that can lead only to fascism and global war.
The workers in the Soviet Union and China got a small taste of what is possible in a society built by and for workers. Basic needs for all—food, housing, health care, literacy—were foremost. Racism and sexism were attacked as rotten ideas that divide the working class. While these socialist societies wound up reverting to capitalism, they pointed the way to what a communist world could be. For our Party, the first step is to continue to immerse ourselves in working class struggles, where we can smash the all-class unity the bosses are so desperate to build. PLP has a different vision. We see a future where workers will turn the guns around and end capitalism for all time with communist revolution. Join us!J
In 1933, the British royal family showed its true colors with a Nazi salute. From left: Queen Elizabeth’s mother, the wife of soon-to-be-King George VI; eight-year-old Princess Elizabeth, the future Queen; Princess Margaret, her younger sister; and Prince Edward of York, better known as the Duke of Windsor, who had a mutual admiration society with Adolph Hitler. The Sun, July 18, 2015
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Justice for Raymond: How Do You Spell Racist? NYPD
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- 24 September 2022 132 hits
The Bronx, NY, September 10 –-Today Progressive Labor Party (PLP) members and friends joined with family and friends of Raymond Chaluisant to rally for justice for Raymond who was murdered by racist KKKop Dion Middleton (See CHALLENGE, 8/24). At the rally, youth led chants demanding justice including "How do you spell racist? NYPD," "If we don't get it (justice) shut it down" and "white cop, Black cop all the same; racist terror is the name of their game." A sound system was used so neighbors could hear the speeches and chants. A picket line with signs caught people’s attention. Participants reached out to let people passing by know about the racist murder and the need for all students and workers to join the fight against racism and the capitalist system. Neighborhood folks welcomed our flyers and our paper, CHALLENGE. In fact, we ran out of both, distributing 200 copies.
On July 21, off-duty kkkop Dion Middleton robbed the working class of 18-years-young Latin teen Raymond Chaluisant by shooting him in the face for playing with a toy water gun. The murderer then fled the scene, leaving Raymond dead in a pool of his blood. The murder of Raymond was no accident. NYPD and all police departments teach cops to view Black, Latin and immigrant youth and workers as criminals who can be killed with impunity.
This whole capitalist system depends on and builds racism to keep workers divided and makes even more profits by paying non-white workers even less for their labor while keeping decent housing and other necessities out of their reach. Racist terror by cops is an important tool of the system; it is critical to quelling antiracist fightback.
Even after being indicted for second degree murder, first degree manslaughter and second degree manslaughter, Middleton was granted bail and a chance to walk free while many youth are locked away for years at Rikers Island jail wthout even a trial. Even if Middleton is convicted and sent to prison, justice will never exist under this racist system.
The real role of politicians and government is to con or terrorize the working class into "obeying the rules" of capitalism -- "rules" made for and by the handful of the super-rich who live off the blood, sweat and tears of the working class.
That is why PLP fights for communism, a system run by and for the whole working class, where racism and sexism will be outlawed. All the world's children will be brought up as working class brothers, sisters and children. This will not happen tomorrow. But we can fight and win a communist future where it is a reality.
JOIN US IN THE FIGHT FOR JUSTICE FOR RAYMOND AND A COMMUNIST WORLD FOR ALL OUR CHILDREN!
Progressive Labor Party (PLP): Read CHALLENGE-DESAFIO@PLP Newspaper @www.PLP.org
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Looking Backward, a window on a post-capitalist world
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- 24 September 2022 98 hits
Not only do tens of millions of people around the world hate capitalism and want to see it replaced with communism, but they have felt that way for many generations. 125 years ago, Edward Bellamy wrote the novel Looking Backward, 2000-1887, a powerful and intelligent critique of capitalism, a system that Bellamy considered cruel and wasteful. But Looking Backward also contains a vivid description of some aspects of an egalitarian society that might replace capitalism.
The book begins with the main character, Julian West, who suffers from insomnia, going to sleep under hypnosis in 1887 in Boston in a fortified chamber. A fire destroys his home but not the chamber, and Julian awakes in the year 2000 and discovers that life as he knew it has changed dramatically.
A glimpse of communism
Capitalism’s individual struggle for the means of life (food, clothing, housing) under capitalism has been replaced with a cooperative system that provides everyone — men, women, children — with an equal share of society’s surplus, in the form of a credit card. There is no money. Bellamy envisioned a new society in which the private ownership of the means of production and distribution has been replaced by public ownership.
Every person capable of working is required to do so, but only from the ages of 21 to 45. Upon retirement at 45, people are free to pursue hobbies, further education or travel. Young people are well-educated and encouraged and assisted to find jobs they are most interested in and capable of doing. Harder jobs have shorter hours in society’s “industrial army”.
Every neighborhood in Boston — and every other city and town — has high-quality dining halls, libraries, recreational facilities, theaters, and clothing distribution centers where people can select what they want using catalogs and paying with their credit cards. There is no more poverty and crime has been greatly reduced. The new society has more wealth because it’s eliminated the waste, lack of planning, competition (including needless advertising), and the cost of an extensive state apparatus (including the police and an army that had been used to protect the property of the wealthy, suppress working-class rebellions and deal with crime caused by poverty).
Socialism restores capitalism
Bellamy’s new society is more than socialism. Money has been eliminated and since everyone — those working and those not working; husbands, wives, children — receives a credit card with the same amount, people receive according to the communist principle of “to each according to his needs” rather than the socialist principle of “to each according to his work.” The communists who led the revolutions in Russia and China fought for socialism as a stage leading to communism. But socialism retained features of capitalism such as exploitation through wages, small businesses, and some private ownership of land. Thus socialism led to the restoration of capitalism in the Soviet Union and China.
Looking Backward was a best-selling novel in the late 19th century, third in popularity after Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom’s Cabin (anti-slavery novel that exposed the viciousness of slavery and helped build the abolitionist movement leading to the Civil War) and Lew Wallace's Ben-Hur. Bellamy clubs sprang up around the country to discuss how to organize to win the changes depicted in the book.
And Bellamy wrote a sequel, Equality, to describe the new communist-type society in greater detail.
Revolution necessary to bury racist capitalism
Looking Backward is very persuasive in its insistence that the new communist-type system is superior to the old dog-eat-dog world of capitalism. Yet the novel does have its imperfections:
- Bellamy was averse to class struggle. So in the novel the new society comes about in the early 20th century when enough people were horrified by the chaos, poverty, violence and misery of capitalism and decided collectively to replace it. A revolution had not been necessary, only the widespread realization that the big corporations needed to be nationalized, money eliminated and each person provided with an equal share of society’s bounty. Bellamy was a believer in gradualism and evolutionary socialism, which the ruling class will never accept — either in 1887 or today.
- The mills in New England, where the novel is situated, were populated largely by immigrant workers, yet immigrants are virtually invisible in the book, and there’s no mention of Black workers trapped in sharecropping plantation system, nor discussions of racism.
- There’s no indication that the new society changed the nature of work. The “industrial army” seems to function the same way it would under capitalism, except that salaries are the same. A doctor and a factory worker receive the same pay, although the latter is likely to be less satisfied with his or her work. The new society has evidently not abolished the division of mental and manual labor, a crucial feature of class societies.
- The novel does show how the new society improves the lot of women, many dependent on their husbands for money. But it does so in an off-putting Victorian manner, with women (through Edith, one of the main characters) portrayed as delicate and feminine, which is a little different from her prototype in the 19th century.
- Bellamy’s egalitarian society, while impressive in many ways, is portrayed as finished, with no suggestion that struggle would be necessary to maintain its egalitarian nature and prevent the rise of a new ruling class. In the novel, on top of the new society sits a paternal central government that competently plans and controls production and distribution. There’s no revolutionary party and no more political struggle, because society is now portrayed as perfect. But every new society is subject to tensions between individuals who subjectively may want more privileges and benefits for themselves and their friends, and the collective that maintains objectivity and its egalitarian features.
Despite these reservations, Looking Backward is a beautifully written, powerful plea for a new world, a communist world. The novel played a key role in the radicalization of some of the most prominent labor leaders of the day, such as the Socialist Party leader Eugene Debs. It can still play that role in our time.
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Fight for Flores remains strong, communist ideas take root
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- 24 September 2022 99 hits
LOS ANGELES, September 20—”I found the summer project so inspiring! I just wanted to find a way to do that stuff back home in LA too.” This is the sentiment that brought five new young people to our monthly Flores family action against police murder. After nearly three years of activity in the South Central neighborhood, the added burst of new, young energy reinvigorated the struggle.
On November 19, 2019, the LAPD shot and murdered Alex, 34 years old, near South Central Avenue and East 28th Street. Through this antiracist work led by mainly women workers, more people understand the true role of the police in a capitalist society and see PLP as leading the fight against their murders.
Canvass for Alex
The Flores family remains courageous and hasn’t allowed their fight to diminish the two and a half years since Alex Flores was murdered. PLP has worked alongside the family and made it clear that our support is not going anywhere. This strong working class unity has empowered the community to be relentless against police terror.
This month’s action was neighborhood canvassing. In three large groups we went door to door on the blocks where Alex Flores grew up and where his parents still reside. Many knew Alex or heard of his story. Of course, many residents had their own experiences with police harassment, brutality, or murder. This is why we built a concentration in this neighborhood among the most oppressed sections of our class. They have the most to gain from overthrowing this rotten system.
A member of the Flores family has been meeting regularly with a Party club for about a year and has taken more of a leading role in organizing other impacted families in anticapitalist struggles. As we canvassed, she actively gave out CHALLENGE to her neighbors, demonstrating to participants in the mass organization her commitment to getting out Progressive Labor Party's ideas.
What you do counts
Our consistent efforts are starting to bear fruit. At one of the doors we knocked on, a Latin worker recognized CHALLENGE from our monthly events and signed up for a subscription. The young students who attended our summer project organized others in their base to join us in this month’s effort. One of their base members who joined is, in fact, a college student at an east coast campus who happens to be good friends with a base member of a PLP campus leader there as well. Our small effort and modest impact is stretching coast-to-coast! We still have a lot of work to do in the consolidation process with the new people around us, but our future is certainly bright. Power to the working class!
Washington, DC, September 19—Today Progressive Labor Party (PLP) members brought communist politics to a rally of 30 supporters of the Haitian Bridge Alliance at the White House. Protestors declared that nothing has changed since the racist, horrific attack on workers from Haiti, escaping U.S. imperialism, by the U.S. Border Patrol a year ago (see photo). The Biden administration continues to apply Trump-era Title 42 policy to keep immigrants out of the U.S. This racist repressive policy is based on false public health fears of disease that even the CDC has denounced. Another example of how the finance capitalist Big Fascists are just as virulently racist as Trump. The Big Fascists (see glossary on page 6) are more dangerous because they use fake, liberal rhetoric in attempt to build all-class unity and patriotism for imperialist war. They do this all while ratcheting up racist attacks on the working class.
PL’ers active in Public Health Awakened joined the event, the first in a week of action calling for the U.S. to follow its own rules and welcome asylum seekers from Haiti. As we fight alongside our class, it is imperative to point out that the state was created to protect the interest of the ruling class. The very U.S.-led empire that created the conditions for unlivable working conditions in Haiti is the same imperialist empire that is now refusing to provide asylum to the workers whose lives they ruined. Capitalism creates the conditions of misery, and then blame the victim.
Conversations against racism
Protestors were excited to see the articles on Haiti in CHALLENGE. One expressed delight that the paper was in Spanish. A young Black worker used the QRCode to access the newspaper on his phone.Then we joined a conversation with a worker from Telemundo and another speaker who had denounced racism toward Black workers.
The Telemundo worker from the Dominican Republic (DR) described how of bus drivers in his homeland regularly refused to pick up their class sisters and brothers from the neighboring island of Haiti. He shared that he had asked a driver why he did not pick up a young man. The driver replied, “Because he’s Black.” The worker got off the bus in anger and solidarity. Racism is a creature of capitalism, designed by the bosses to divide workers and reap superprofits. It is good for our class to reject all forms of racism, brought on by bosses or members of our own class.
This engagement by PL’ers followed last year’s protest of the racist attacks on Haitian migrants in a letter published in the Washington Post. As a crisis of capitalism and civil war expands in Haiti, there will be more workers and families seeking asylum.
As members of PLP and friends in public health declare, we need multiracial unity and revolution to smash this racist sexist capitalist system!