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10 reasons to vote PSL

10 reasons to vote PSL.

10 reasons to vote PSL

Statement from the Lindsay/Osorio Presidential Campaign

November 6, 2012

10 Reasons to Vote PSL

Ballot Status:

Arkansas

Colorado*

Florida

Iowa*

Louisiana

Minnesota

New Jersey

New York

Rhode Island

Utah*

Vermont

Washington State

Wisconsin*

*In Colorado, Iowa, Utah and Wisconsin, the PSL has stand-in candidates because those states’ ballot access requirements prohibit the names of Peta Lindsay and Yari Osorio from appearing. In Colorado, Utah and Wisconsin, the stand-in candidates are Gloria La Riva and Filberto Ramirez Jr. In Iowa, the stand-in candidates are Gloria La Riva and Stefanie Beacham.

Across the country, write in Peta Lindsay and Yari Osorio!

Ballot initiatives:

Florida

  • No on 6 – Florida Abortion Amendment

Maine

  • Yes on 1 – Support marriage equality

Maryland

  • FOR Question 4 – Defend the MD DREAM Act
  • FOR Question 6 – Defend marriage equality

Minnesota

  • No on the MN Marriage Amendment
  • No on the MN Voter Identification Amendment

Washington

  • Approve Referendum 74 – Support marriage equality
  • No on Initiative 1240 – No on charters, fund public schools

Please note that this is only a partial list of important ballot initiatives on the Nov. 6 ballot.

  1. Make a job a Constitutional right
    Tens of millions are jobless and under-employed because the capitalists control employment. A decent paying job must be a legal, guaranteed right. The minimum wage should be raised to $20 per hour and a living income must be guaranteed for those who cannot work.
  2. Make free health care, free education and affordable housing Constitutional rights
    These are essentials of life and should not be run for-profit. Create a completely free and public health care system. Make education freecancel all student debt. Stop all foreclosures and evictions – end all mortgage interest payments to the banks
  3. Shut down all U.S. military bases around the world—bring all the troops, planes & ships home
    U.S. foreign policy uses the pretext of national security to enforce the imperialist interests of the biggest banks and corporations. That’s what is behind the endless wars and occupations. Use the $1 trillion military budget instead to provide for people’s needs here and around the world. Stop U.S. aid to Israel. End the blockade of Cuba.
  4. Stop racist police brutality and mass incarceration
    More than three million people are behind bars in the largest prison complex in the world. Mass incarceration of our youth is the real crime. End the mass incarceration of oppressed communities. Fully prosecute all acts of police brutality and violence.
  5. Defend our unions
    Support the right of all workers to have a union. Fight back against the attacks on collective bargaining. Pass the Employee Free Choice Act and repeal the Taft-Hartley Act. In the spirit of Wisconsin, rebuild a fighting—and striking—labor movement.
  6. Equality for women and free, safe, legal abortion on demand
    Stop the attack on women’s reproductive rights and defend Roe v. Wade. Women must have the fundamental right to choose and control their own bodies. Women still earn 22 percent less than men, and the gap is even more severe for Black and Latina women. Close the wage gap and end the gender division of labor.
  7. Full rights for all immigrants
    Abolish all anti-immigrant laws. Stop the raids and deportations. The government’s war on immigrants must end. The border wall must be dismantled.
  8. Full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people
    Make same-sex marriage a federal right—keep the movement in the streets. Fight anti-LGBT discrimination and violence.  
  9. Save the planet—End capitalism
    We need a central economic plan to significantly cut greenhouse gases, clean up the environment and build a massive renewable energy network. The for-profit economic system creates incentives to pollute. No fracking, no Keystone pipeline!
  10. Seize the banks—Jail Wall Street criminals
    The banks’ vast wealth came from the people’s labor and tax-dollar bailout. Capitalist banking is a form of organized crime, rewarding greed and fraud with obscene bonuses. These billionaires looted and destroyed the economy. It is time to seize their assets and use those resources in the interests of the vast majority. Power must be taken out of the hands of the super-rich, and the Wall Street criminals must be held accountable.

Don’t forget to make a financial contribution today

Help pay the credit card bill for literature and travel expenses of volunteers who took time off of work and school, and away from their families, to make sure that people across the country would know about the option to vote for Peta Lindsay and Yari Osorio.

Donate

Special: We will also be doing a live video broadcast from our campaign wrap party tonight, time TBA. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter for the announcement.

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Content may be reprinted with credit to VotePSL.org.

PSL on the ballot in 13 states nationwide

PSL on the ballot in 13 states nationwide.

September 14, 2012

The Party for Socialism and Liberation is proud to announce that our presidential campaign has achieved ballot access in 13 states. In six of these states, the PSL candidates will be the only socialists on the ballot.

In each one of these states, supporters of the Lindsay/Osorio campaign volunteered their spare time to do the work required to gain ballot access. We collected almost 45,000 petition signatures and met 125 people willing to be electors for the PSL in a period of six months.

The PSL will be on the ballot in every region of the country: the West – Colorado, Utah, Washington; the South – Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana; the Midwest – Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin; and the Northeast – New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont.

About 85 million people live in these states, which include the third and fourth most populous states: New York and Florida. Almost 40 million registered voters — representing more than one-quarter of those registered in the country, and more than one-quarter of electoral votes — will have the option to vote for the PSL.

It’s not too late to be a part of this exciting campaign:

Get involved with the Lindsay/Osorio 2012 Presidential Campaign today!

Request Peta Lindsay or Yari Osorio as a speaker for an event in your area.

Join the Party for Socialism and Liberation!


Below is a report published following the completion of ballot access efforts in New York State in August.

Filing petitions for Lindsay / Osorio campaign in New York S
PSL campaign volunteers wait to file petitions for ballot access in New York State.

On Aug. 14 at 9:03 a.m., the Party for Socialism and Liberation filed an Independent Nominating Petition with the New York State Board of Elections in Albany to place Peta Lindsay and Yari Osorio on the ballot. PSL volunteers arrived at the BOE early in the morning before they opened to ensure that we could file at the very first opportunity when the filing period opened.

We met all of the requirements to be on the ballot for the 2012 presidential elections, including submitting nearly 30,000 signatures – almost double the required number. We are proud to say that millions of working-class people will be able to vote for a socialist alternative in New York State. Peta Lindsay and Yari Osorio will be the only socialists on the ballot in New York for the office of president and vice president.

An army of volunteers is working hard to get a socialist campaign on the ballot in as many states as we can — but your help is needed. Please make an urgently needed donation toward travel and accomodations for volunteers, filing fees and other costs of obtaining ballot status.

The requirements to be listed on the ballot include submitting 15,000 valid signatures of registered voters, with at least 100 valid signatures from each of half of the state’s 27 congressional districts. These signatures could not be collected prior to July 10, and were due on Aug. 21 – but the PSL filed a full week early because of an extraordinary all-volunteer effort carried out around the state.

The first phase of the Party for Socialism and Liberation’s Presidential Campaign has been a great success. Through a tremendous amount of hard work, we have succeeded in meeting the requirements for ballot status in nine states and are in the process of achieving status in several more.

New York State was our biggest challenge. For 35 consecutive days, volunteers worked tirelessly in New York City’s five boroughs, and cities in Upstate and Long Island to collect the necessary signatures and prepare the filing. The army of volunteers sacrificed vacation time, days off, and time with their families to make sure that a powerful voice of socialism and struggle would be on the ballot in November in this key state.

Petitions for Lindsay / Osorio campaign in New York State

PSL on the ballot nationwide

We are very excited at the prospect of being able to reach millions of people across the country with the Peta Lindsay/Yari Osorio campaign.

The PSL has now gained ballot status in every major region of the country. We are already on the ballot in New York, New Jersey and Vermont in the Northeast; Arkansas in the South; Iowa and Wisconsin in the Midwest; and Colorado, Utah and Washington in the West – and we are still working on several additional states in these regions.

Since we began the petitioning effort in March, we have collected more than 40,000 petition signatures, recruited more than 100 electors, held conventions and paid filing fees. Hundreds of volunteers are working around the clock in cities and towns throughout the country.

The capitalist elections impose burdensome and costly ballot access requirements designed to exclude third parties – but we are meeting this challenge with a massive nationwide mobilization to give voters a socialist option in as many states as possible. Be a part of this effort by making a generous donation now.

Join our campaign of struggle

The PSL’s Lindsay/Osorio Campaign is one of struggle. We will carry forward the message that the key to bringing about real progressive change is building a powerful people’s movement that stands together with our sisters and brothers around the world who are resisting imperialism and exploitation.

As capitalism sinks further into crisis, it is more important than ever that we explain that there are really only two choices for the future: Continue with a system based on maximizing profits for a tiny elite regardless of destruction to people or the planet, or create a new, sustainable system based on meeting people’s needs – socialism.

How many cities, towns and campuses we can travel to, how many people we can reach and bring into the struggle – in short, how successful we can be with the precious few weeks we have until election day – depends largely on you.

There are many ways you can help:

Content may be reprinted with credit to VotePSL.org.

Behind the defeat in the Walker recall election

Behind the defeat in the Walker recall election.

 

Behind the defeat in the Walker recall election

How does capitalist democracy work?

By Jeff Bigelow

JUNE 6, 2012

 

Gov. Scott Walker’s anti-recall campaign sold the lie that greedy public sector workers and their unions were costing the taxpayers exorbitant amounts for high wages and lavish pensions.

The recall election in Wisconsin was won by organized Big Money. Lots will be said by many pundits about various aspects of the election, but the most important issue is how Big Money or the 1 percent were able to shape the electoral environment. Looking at that question exposes how capitalist democracy operates.

 

It also helps to answer the question being asked by many—why do people vote against their own interests?

 

In his victory speech, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker said he wanted to first of all thank God for his abundant gifts. This was not only an appeal to the religious right-wing but also an attempt to give praise to the billionaires whose gifts brought him the election victory.

 

On Jan. 18, 2011, Walker told billionaire Diane Hendricks that his strategy was to go after collective bargaining rights for public employees first and then get a Right to Work for Less law, in a strategy which he explicitly described as divide and conquer. She gave him over $500,000 during just a three month period in 2012. Hendricks’ ABC Supply Inc., the nation’s largest wholesale distributor of roofing, windows and siding paid no state income taxes in 2010.

 

Just a few weeks later, on Feb. 23, 2011, Walker told someone who he believed to be billionaire David Koch that he had a bat in his office which could be used to achieve his goal of union busting.

 

Although pay for teachers had been capped since 1993 and public sector unions were not on the offensive, the goal of Walker and his backers in 2011 was to eliminate these unions. Unions for public employees are the last sources of significant power for organized labor as well as for the interests of unorganized workers.

 

Tens of millions of dollars were pumped into Walker’s campaign to win the recall election. Much of it came from the super wealthy outside of Wisconsin. This money created the slick right-wing Madison Avenue ads that inundated every household.

 

The rich put their money into this fight because they saw it as part of their class war against the workers. This was a referendum on slashing workers’ rights, especially public workers. It was played out in Wisconsin but finance capital saw that it would have national ramifications.

 

Role of the Democratic Party

 

The recall effort itself was the result of the efforts of hundreds of thousands of workers who gathered one million signatures to recall Walker. When they filed those petitions on Jan. 17, it was crystal clear that they wanted this election to be about basic labor rights—the right to bargain, the right to have a contract and the right to have union recognition including long established union security clauses providing for dues.

 

The Democratic Party took over the message and shifted it to a blander mixture with a focus on corruption. The national Democratic Party essentially ran away from the Wisconsin battle in a way that once again shows that they have no interest in supporting labor’s cause. President Obama did not come to the state to support the fight for basic rights. His absence served as another example from a long list of unfulfilled campaign promises—that he would walk on union picket lines after he became president and that he would fight to get labor laws passed with fairer terms for union elections—the Employee Free Choice Act—and more.

 

Role of labor

 

The ranks of labor were pushing for a battle in the electoral arena. Public unions put significant money and organizational resources into the fight. These unions included the teachers unions, firefighters, AFSCME (state city and county workers), SEIU and others.

 

However, two locals in Milwaukee—police and fire unions—endorsed Walker in the recall, while no statewide unions did. It is important to remember that Walker exempted these unions from any of the negative effects of his anti-collective bargaining law. Firefighters, of course, are workers that all of labor should support, and this local union betrayal was especially odious because an African American firefighter and union leader was a candidate for lieutenant governor.

 

Instead of a message that public workers have rights that everyone should have, the anti-labor story is that if anyone has a wage, a right or a pension that others do not have, then we should take it away from them.

While Walker is most known for his initial attack against the public sector unions, the construction trades also joined the recall effort in a more significant way than in almost any other previous fight. The statewide Operating Engineers Local 139, with about 9,000 members, previously had endorsed Scott Walker for governor in 2010 on the promise that he would not support Right to Work legislation while delivering a larger budget for bridges and infrastructure. Walker’s flip on that overcame reservations about the Democratic candidate who, as a Mayor of Milwaukee, bargained hard against them on major contracts.

 

Union leaders had come together as a coalition and chosen Democratic Party politician Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk as their candidate in the recall primary. The time limits imposed by the state’s election process required quick action, but the union leaders’ lack of involvement among the hundreds of thousands of activists who had put the recall on the ballot was a signal of things of things to come. Falk was defeated in the recall primary by Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett (who had previously been defeated by Walker in 2010).

 

No thought was given to having a truly independent candidate with a real program addressing workers’ needs. Eventually, the labor leaders deferred to the regular Democratic Party pundits and confined the campaign to a shifting message that did not resonate with people.

 

Support for labor from the most oppressed communities

 

Organizations and leaders in the African American and Latino communities—some of the most oppressed sectors of the population—campaigned hard to get rid of Scott Walker. Early reports reveal that record numbers were mobilized to vote.

 

SEIU had organizers working in poor communities for some time to help mobilize action and exert power on a number of issues.

 

Democrat Barrett’s concession speech

 

When Barrett took the podium to announce that he had lost the race, he stressed that now is the time to “work together” with Walker. This is typical “good form” for a Democratic Party leader but poison for labor. Now is not the time to work with union busters; now is the time to organize even more diligently against them.

 

He talked about “democracy”—but not workers democracy. He called on people to stay engaged with city and state politics.

 

Why did some workers vote for Walker?

 

Without a doubt some people are wondering: What were they thinking! Why did they vote for Walker?

 

The Walker campaign focused on taxes and make-believe figures on job creation. Their message was that greedy public sector workers and their unions were costing the taxpayers exorbitant amounts for high wages and lavish pensions that others don’t have.

 

Walker constantly refers to “union bosses” and his allies frequently refer to “union thugs” or “union goons”. These terms turn reality on its head. If he were speaking the truth, he would be talking about the captains of finance who are his bosses and who are financing and directing his actions.

 

When Walker’s Wisconsin budget bill was passed, it increased spending in FY 2013 on prisons while imposing $792 million in aid cuts to school districts, $250 million in cuts to the university system and $71.6 million in cuts to technical colleges. In addition, nearly $500 million was cut from Medicaid programs, eliminating necessary important components of health care. At the same time, these financial bosses have gotten Walker and the legislature to approve $1.6 billion in corporate tax breaks over the next 10 years. Profits have increased—but not jobs.

 

That is their program, and they sell it by vilifying labor. In areas reached mostly by right-wing radio and governed by right-wing elites from the pulpit to the County Board, the Big Lie works. It is a Big Lie that has been in development since the 1940s and especially since the 1960s. As corporations move production overseas, the ruling class spins the story in a way to blame unions here for “pricing themselves out of the market.” They spin the story to divide workers in the United States from workers abroad.

 

In 2012 so far, General Electric has moved its medical equipment division headquarters from Waukesha, Wisconsin to Shanghai, China. The Thermo-Fisher Corporation is planning to move nearly 1,100 jobs from Wisconsin to Mexico.

 

In the race for maximum profits at any cost and the race to shove workers down to the lowest level of rights and pay on a world scale, they have refined the Big Lie technique and used it on a mass scale.

 

The truth about public services such education, health care, child welfare and transportation is never told. These services are rights that were won through struggle—and which would never be provided by private companies that only care about profit.

 

The truth about public workers is never told—that their pay is modest, that most do not qualify for social security and their only pension is what the union has been able to win in a contract or through legislation.

 

Instead of a message that public workers have rights that everyone should have, the story is that if anyone has a wage, a right or a pension that others do not have, then we should take it away from them. And at the same time ignore the vast wealth of the CEOs. Ignore the vast profits made by the banks and the holders of state and local government bonds who get their interest payments first from every state budget while programs for the people get cut.

 

The principal blame for the election result in Wisconsin is not with the workers of Wisconsin but with the rich who spin this message and who control the levers of power in that state and around the country.

 

The road not taken: This is what democracy could have looked like

 

In March of last year, when Walker threw down the gauntlet and signed the “Budget Bill” killing many collective bargaining rights, labor leaders opted to move the struggle from the streets into the electoral arena.

 

Many experienced labor activists, including some leaders in the Madison area, know that workers have greater power in the streets because of the way money controls elections. On Feb. 22, 2011, the 97 unions of the South Central Federation of Labor of Wisconsin, representing 45,000 workers, unanimously passed a resolution calling for the preparation for a general strike.

 

A general strike would have electrified workers everywhere. It could have begun as a one day strike in Wisconsin cities with the greatest union strength and then expanded in terms of both days and areas covered. Millions of workers across the country who were upset with cutbacks, layoffs, privatization and more would have been inspired to take action.

 

Shutting down the state would have been a quicker and more definite blow to Walker and could have resulted in a defeat for Walker as compared to the defeat for labor experienced in the recall election.

 

General strikes are feared by the ruling class. In reference to a Philadelphia teachers strike—Jan. 8 to Feb. 28, 1973—William Usery, director of the Federal Mediation Service, said that “We came within an eyelash this year of having a test of the effectiveness of the general strike as a weapon in the United States—a weapon that has at times paralyzed the economies of France and Italy.” He went on to say that if labor had engaged in the general strike that many had called for—and if they had won—then “there would have been enormous pressures to do it again—and again—and again.”

 

That is the fear of the ruling class. If workers exercise their power, there could be no stopping them. No rights would be out of reach.

 

The Democratic Party is doing all it can to orient people to the November presidential election and away from struggle. Almost without exception labor leaders are focused on that election.

 

Rank-and-file members can learn a lot from this experience in Wisconsin. Labor’s hope lies not in the electoral arena but in solidarity and action on the job and in the community.

 

Content may be reprinted with credit to LiberationNews.org.

An economic recovery—for capitalists

 

An economic recovery—for capitalists.

An economic recovery—for capitalists

 

Statement of the Lindsay/Osorio campaign

 

June 4, 2012

Unemployed job seekers attend a job fair in New York City.

Despite the economic turmoil of the last few years, the biggest banks and corporations have managed to consistently remain profitable ever since the massive taxpayer-funded bailouts. However, as the bleak jobs report for May shows, workers have been left out of this so-called recovery.

 

A total of 69,000 new jobs opened up in May, the lowest number in a year. Because about 125,000 jobs a month are needed just to keep up with the growing workforce, the official unemployment rate increased slightly to 8.2 percent. If workers who are thought to have “dropped out” of the workforce and those who have been forced to accept part-time work are included, the figure rises to 14.8 percent.

 

As these statistics make clear, the capitalist system offers no solution to the epidemic of unemployment and underemployment. That’s why the Lindsay/Osorio campaign proposes a socialist solution.

 

We demand: Seize the banks—Jail Wall Street criminals with the vast wealth of society—which we, the working class, create—liberated from Wall Street parasites, we can initiate a massive jobs program.

 

Our 10 point program states: Make a job a Constitutional right. Tens of millions are jobless and under-employed because the capitalists control employment. A decent paying job must be a legal, guaranteed right. The minimum wage should be raised to $20 per hour and a living income must be guaranteed for those who cannot work.

 

Capitalists employ workers for only one reason: without our labor, they cannot make a profit. When they can no longer profitably sell the commodities we make, as is the case in an economic crisis, they carry out mass layoffs without a second thought as to the devastating consequences to workers or their families.

 

Even in times of relative stability, the ruling class still needs a constant reserve of unemployed people to accommodate the chaotic and unplanned shifts in direction inherent in capitalist development. Having more workers than available jobs also helps depress wages and strengthens the negotiating position of the capitalists.

 

A job is central to human dignity and should be considered a basic right. Like all other rights for working people, it cannot be fully or permanently realized under capitalism. To fight unemployment at its root, support the Lindsay/Osorio campaign and join us in the fight for a socialist future!

 

Content may be reprinted with credit to VotePSL.org.

Armed Revolution?

They tell you to vote. They tell you that matters, that democracy will win out in the United States of America, and that it is the only way to achieve progress. I understand, we would all like for the world to be perfect, and for political differences to be argued like the statesmen of old, instead of bloody, violent revolution. Some people won’t stand for that. You see, they talk about the market place of ideas, of freedom, of human rights, but they’re the biggest hypocrites on earth. They won’t allow anything other than their Christian fascist idea of America, not even if it is slightly nudged a tiny bit left by neo-liberals. For all their rhetoric about freedom, they only care about the freedom they tell you that you can have. Of course, that’s contradictory, but their not the best at realizing their own cognitive dissonance. To the point:

People for the American Way have reported that a GOP group has called for an armed revolution should Obama get reelected in November. Not, let’s regroup and fight another day in the voting booth, no, an armed revolution to overthrow the United States Government. Ironically these crazy conservatives are the same one who supposedly worship the US constitution. Here, I’ll let these fascists speak for themselves:

The newsletter by the way is the “Constitutional Conservatives” from Stanardsville, Virgina. In a column called “Whitehouse Watchdog”, editor Ponch McPhee (the hell kind of name is that anyway? Ponch?) states the following:

“We have before us a challenge to remove an ideologue unlike anything world history has ever witnessed or recognized.

An individual who has come to power within a Nation which yields it’s strength over the entire world.

An elected leader who shuns biblical praise, handicaps economic ability, disrespects the honor of earned military might.

In the coming days and weeks ~ we the people must come to grasp as a common force, our very soul’s, that our future as a sovereign nation is indeed at risk.

If every single individual that you know, would contact 25 other individuals ~ we can make a difference that will be heard across the Commonwealth and in Washington.

The ultimate task for the people is to remain vigilant and aware ~ that the government, their government is out of control, and this moment, this opportunity, must not be forsaken, must not escape us, for we shall not have any coarse (SIC)  but armed revolution should we fail with the power of the vote in November ~ This Republic cannot survive for 4 more years underneath this political socialist ideologue.”

He cries bitter tears because the nation is not bowing down far enough to his personal interpretation of the bible, his moronic economic references, and high conservative platitudes topped with an icing of ridiculously outrageous hyperbole. He ends the idiotic rant by calling for an armed revolution to overthrow the government should Obama win again. Now, as the faithful readers of my humble blog will know, I am no fan of Obama, nor am I voting for him in November. However, I think the GOP consistently overplays its hand. It thinks it represents, and speaks for every American. If they start an armed revolution, they just might find out how true that’s not. You want an armed revolution in the US? To make it even more right wing? Give it a shot, I’ll sit back and laugh while you plunge the US into bloody conflict and division it may never recover from. There’ll be plenty of leftists who want it too, but I don’t think they realize that. That’s not surprising since these Christofascist morons can’t see beyond the ends of their collective individualist noses, let alone foresee what would happen if a violent civil war broke out in the country. Links to stories and newsletter below:

Sources: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/gop-newsletter-calls-armed-revolution-if-obama-re-elected

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/08/greene-county-virginia-gop-obama-revolution_n_1501510.html

http://gcrcgop.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/march2012.pdf

Occupy the workplace!

Occupy the workplace!.

Occupy the workplace!

Workers have strategic power once organized

APRIL 29, 2012

 

Auto workers occupy their factory in the Flint sit-down strike of 1936-37. In the following months, the tactic spread across the country (see below).

 

Striking electrical workers at the St. Louis Emerson plants, 1937

 

Woolworth retail workers in New York City celebrate a victorious sit-down strike, 1937.

 

This article was published in the ‘May Day Means Unity!’ Edition of Liberation.

View the complete issue.

On the surface, working people appear to have no power. The super-rich, the employers and the politicians—backed up by the cops, the courts and the jails—seem to hold all the strings, to control everything. On the national level, corporate bosses decide what will be produced, who will work and who will not. Their hired hands in Washington decide who gets bailed out and who gets sold out.

 

At the level of the individual workplace, the owners exercise the same sort of domination. Since we live under a legal system that above all recognizes the private property rights of individuals and corporations, owners are given absolute control over who gets hired and fired, how much to pay, the enforcement of arbitrary rules, the reviews of employees, the organization of the business, and when to relocate or shut down a business altogether. At work, the reality of this system—as a dictatorship of the capitalist owners—is clearly revealed.

 

Unions and the strike weapon

 

The main way that workers have typically fought the employers’ dictatorship is by organizing labor unions. As long as workers are not organized, they have no power. A worker either has a union and collective bargaining rights, or the worker is essentially reduced to individual begging. As the famous union song “Solidarity Forever” goes, “For what force on Earth is weaker than the feeble strength of one—but the union makes us strong.”

 

Unions allow workers to feel their collective power at the bargaining table and when they use their ultimate weapon—the strike. It is the workers who make society run and who can bring it to a halt. If the owners of a hotel or a factory or any corporation were not to show up on a given day, operations would be largely unaffected. If the workers don’t show up, operations stop.

 

In other words, the working class, which appears to have no power, really possesses the greatest power of all. If workers unite on a political or economic issue and withhold their labor, the power of the working class becomes instantly recognized.

 

One example was the 2005 strike by New York City transit workers, who were resisting givebacks demanded by the mayor and city government. The corporate media in the city, which fawns on the Wall Street looters, universally portrayed the workers defending their pensions and health care benefits as the worst kind of criminals. Despite huge fines and threats of jail for its leaders, the union showed that New York cannot run without the workers.

 

The opportunity now exists to advance the struggle, but it will require creativity and boldness.

Taking organization to the next level

 

Labor unions continue to be the largest organizations of workers in the United States, and have a vital role to play in the protection of workers’ interests. A chief task of any new social movement of poor and working people will be to defend and rebuild existing workers’ organizations and form new unions in the expansive service sectors where the vast majority of workers are unorganized.

 

But the unions have been severely weakened over several decades. Declining membership and subservience to the political program of the Democratic Party have left the AFL-CIO crippled as it tries to survive in the face of ruthless corporate assaults.

 

A chief factor that has weakened labor is the global mobility of capital. Capitalists tell workers that to remain “competitive” and keep their jobs, they must accept lower and lower wages. They threaten to shut down if workers dare to fight back. The message is clear: Resistance is futile.

 

While unions have given workers an opportunity to respond collectively, they generally accept the numberone rule of capitalism: The owner has the final say and ultimate control over production. Labor unions soften exploitation by fighting for higher wages and better benefits and working conditions, but accept that the factories, offices, machinery and decisions to employ are the exclusive property of the private owners.

 

To resolve the problems of global capitalism in the interests of working people requires as a major first step the advancement of a radical idea, backed up by radical action—that workers have a right to control their jobs.

 

Sit-down actions: The original ‘occupy movement’

 

In 1934, the Great Depression had been going for nearly five years, unemployment was officially over 20 percent and millions of people had become homeless. Nearly every attempt to organize unions had been defeated. Because of the high numbers of unemployed, those with jobs generally had less confidence to struggle for better conditions and pay. They knew they could easily be replaced.

 

But that year saw a remarkable and highly unusual development: In three cities—Minneapolis, San Francisco and Toledo, Ohio—there were general strikes. The strikes were led by truckers, dock workers and auto workers, respectively, but brought in workers from every industry.

 

This new surge led to the formation of the Congress of Industrial Organizations in 1936, and then the historic 43-day Flint Sit-down Strike. When General Motors, anticipating a strike, attempted to move equipment out of a major auto factory in Flint, the workers seized first one

 

GM plant and then another, and courageously held both for more than a month. Communists played a critical role in leading these actions.

 

Up until that time, the huge auto industry had no recognized unions, and conditions on the assembly lines were extreme. But, following their victory, hundreds of sit-down strikes broke out in every kind of corporation from factories to hospitals, retail stores and more. During that year, 5 million workers joined unions, a 250 percent increase in the number of union members in the country.

 

The sit-down strike, the occupation of a workplace, was a new tactic for labor. If they had gone out on strike in the traditional manner, with picket lines outside the factory gates, it is likely that the capitalists and the police forces would have found it much easier to disperse them.

 

Workers’ control

 

The opportunity now exists to advance the struggle, but it will require creativity and boldness. Popularizing the idea that workers have a right to control their workplaces, while remaining within the confines of the capitalist system, would still be a very significant step for the class struggle. Instead of accepting cuts, layoffs and shutdowns, workers can fight to assert their own “property right” to their jobs based on the extra value their labor has created beyond what they are paid in wages. If a business is going bankrupt, workers can assert their right to control it because they are its principal creditors who repeatedly “loan” their labor in advance of payment.

 

In fact, toward the end of the 1937 Flint sit-down strike, Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins defended the occupying workers and declared that a job was a “property right.” It was only the mass struggle of the workers that led a high-ranking government official to make such a statement.

 

In 2009, the workers at Republic Windows and Doors in Chicago revived the sit-down tactic when the company threatened to shut down and throw them out of work. The workers returned to occupy the same factory this year to press their demands again.

 

A battle over whose rights come first—those of the capitalists to their private property versus the rights of the workers to a job, housing, food, health care and so forth—has the potential to bring about a mass transformation in consciousness. That is exactly what happened in the course of the Flint strike seven decades ago, and it can happen again.

 

Content may be reprinted with credit to LiberationNews.org.

Mayday!

If a plane is going down, its crew will sound the call for help. The international sign of distress is “Mayday.” It comes from the French phrase “m’aider” meaning “help me”. Looking forward to Tuesday’s Mayday actions that are expected to happen around the globe, it dawned on me how fitting that coincidence is. We’re in trouble, not just the US, not just Europe, but the world.

International Worker’s Day, held on May 1st of every year is not a recent tradition. It has its roots in the dark days of the industrial revolution, and was born out of struggle, oppression and class warfare. The tradition started in The 1880s, as a commemoration of the Haymarket Massacre, where police opened fire, killing several striking workers, and a few of their own policemen as well. It was a wake up call for workers around the world, as they recoiled in disgust at the harsh brutality of the capitalist machine against workers. Since then, we have commemorated their struggle, and ours, by going out into the streets and making ourselves heard.

This year is a bit different. Capitalism has dug itself into a hole that it can’t seem to find it way out of. Decades of imperialist war, erosion of worker’s rights, the diluting of democracy, the killing of our environment, and other issues to many to list here at once have capitalism on its knees. Europe struggles to recover from its years of corruption, and an angry populace who are standing up against austerity. While the 1% lived high off the hog, amassing huge amounts of wealth and power, the working classes of the world have been pressed harder and harder by the day. Less working, harder, for less pay. They tell us that there just isn’t any money, not enough to go around. All the while corporations like Apple, GE, BP, and others post record profits. They expand and build more wealth, while hiring less and less. This is not a sustainable economy, in any way, shape, or form. Someone told us this was going to happen. He wasn’t a prophet or a priest. He wasn’t a fortune teller. He was a philosopher, and a political scientist. He knew this would happen, because this is the logical end for capitalism. This is what unrestrained greed leads to. It leads to imperialism, corruption, massive economic inequality, and a crumbling country and world. His name was Karl Marx, and he was right. Capitalism is acting out the theories he put forth in the 19th century. The question, is not if, but when this system will fall. What the most important question is, is what will replace it. Do we let the fascists take over? Do we just let the world fall into a state of disarray and chaos? No. We fight for a new, better world, where workers are in control. We fight for real democracy, economic equality and social justice. We fight for a socialist future, where instead of wealth being concentrated, and most people left out in the cold, we work together to build a better society, and a better world. Inequality will be destroyed. Which side will you be on?

Join us in the streets on Mayday.  The class war is real, and if you’re not part of the solution, you are part of the problem. Join us.

Japanese Sovereignty & US Hegemony

Ever since the end of WWII, U.S. forces have been stationed in Japan. Although the country is no longer a threat to its neighbors, or anyone, and is an officially pacifist nation, the U.S. has opportunistically used Japan as its footstool since the 1940s. The Japanese people are tired of the foreign occupation, and rightfully want the US troops gone.

In a recent story from Japan Times, the U.S. government is asking the government of Japan to fork over about a billion dollars US to aid the movement of Marines based in Okinawa to Guam. This is going back on the US government’s promise to shoulder the costs alone. Even though the US is trying to move fewer Marines than it promised, it not only wants Japan to pay the agreed amount (82 billion Yen) but pay more on top of that as well. This is another example of the weight of the US’s occupation of this island archipelago nation. While Japan struggles to raise itself from heavy debt, a sluggish economy, and problems arising from last year’s earthquake and tsunami, the US government, in its greed, is trying to walk all over the people of Japan.

This is a common occurrence, and one that the Japanese are well familiar with. In a related story, Foreign Minister Koichiro Genba traveled to Okinawa, negotiating parts of the movements of the Marine bases in Okinawa. The US government wants to relocate Marines within the prefecture, a plan that has been met with fierce opposition by the people of Okinawa, who dislike the foreign military presence in their homeland.

As I have said on this blog before, I support the right of self determination for Japan, and the immediate departure of all foreign bases from Japan. It’s time to return sovereignty to the people of Japan, who have been denied this right by imperialists for so long.

Free Japan from American hegemony, NOW.

Obama the Right Wing Failure: Guest Writer

It was pointed out to me by @HermitLiberal on twitter, that I was not nearly comprehensive enough in my excoriation of the failures of Obama. While I was trying to make a simple point, and not trying to write comprehensively, he made some damn good points. Here they are:

Here’s a list of some more things Obama has failed at that you missed in your blog.

Transparency- Candidate Obama pledged governmental transparency and to protect whistle blowers. Not only has Obama failed to commit himself to transparency (including having secret meetings with insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies early in his presidency which helped shape his lackluster support for real Health Care Reform), his administration has gone after more whistle blowers than any previous administration in recent history. This includes international hero Bradley Mannings, whose brave deeds illuminated multiple crimes committed by the US, including the killing or two Reuter’s reporters. Rather than protect his commitment to transparency and shield Mannings from prosecution, he allowed Mannings to be taken into custody, where he has been tortured and denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial.

Attacking Alternative Sources of Media and violation of personal privacy- Using Bradley Manning’s as an excuse, Obama’s ‘Justice’ Department has gone after Wikileaks, discrediting them as a journalist institution and declaring them as an enemy. They’ve collaborated with Sweden in an attempt to have Julian Assange expedited to the US, where they intend to imprison him for the rest of his natural life as a vendetta against his journalistic exploits that caused personal embarrassment to America. In the administrations personal vendetta against Manning’s and Assange, they’d violated people’s personal privacy, demanding networks like Yahoo, Google, and Twitter to hand over the personal information of anyone they deem to have connections with these two, and implemented a gag order that would prevent these companies from notifying to users that they have turned over that user’s personal information to the government.

Ending Free Speech- Recently, Obama has begun clamping down on the First Amendment’s guarantee to free speech. The other day he signed a bill which would prevent peaceful protestors from gathering in areas where those protected by the secret service will be. This grants the government unprecedented power to end any peaceful demonstration or protest by appointing secret service protection (effectively one agent) wherever a protest emerges. Additionally, it would prevent protests in some federal buildings and further widen the gap between elected government officials and their constituents. Additionally, the president has moved this years G8 conference to Camp David to prevent protests. This sets an alarming precedence, as this could lead to a trend of conferences and other events that could incur protest to be held in places where protestors are not allowed. These two events, along with the aforementioned attack on freedom of press, form an all to disturbing attack on one of our countries most cherished amendments to the constitution; the 1st amendment.

Financial Reform- Despite his election being a referendum of the direction of our country’s economy, President Obama has failed to institute any meaningful financial reform. The toothless, watered down Dodd/Frank bill, which is now being held hostage in congress; wouldn’t have even prevented the next market collapse like the one in 2008. It’s lacking strong regulations and an independent bureau, free from moneyed interests, to implement and enforce these regulations. It doesn’t reform the corrupted governmental regulatory agencies whose job is supposed to be to keep tabs on Wall Street and banking, but instead continues to keep these bloated, ineffective, tax dollar draining agencies in service; despite their utter lack of preventing any of the illegal, immoral transactions that led to the financial collapse; even being complacent to the very groups they were supposedly monitoring.

Oil Disaster- After the oil spill in 2010, which was caused by a lack of oversight and implementation of already existing regulations, Obama failed to make any changes. Rather than place a moratorium on deep sea drilling until a time when such a crisis can be contained if one develops; Obama’s administration continued to rubber stamp more authorizations to drill in the deep seas, including some made by the very company that caused the spill; BP. Despite this incident bringing to light the failures of a contigency plan and exposing illegal practices of falsifying documents to the government to get them to improve drilling; no overview or reform of process was made. It’s entirely possible that every rig in the gulf did not have proper documentation when authorized; yet know investigation was formed to determine if these rigs are safe and meeting all federal requirements. Plus, no one was ever held accountable for the deaths of the rig workers, which constitutes as manslaughter under our legal system for willful endangerment and a callous lack of concern for life.

Nuclear Promise Broken- It’s often forgotten that Obama promised not to pursue any more nuclear power until we can come up with a viable way to safely store spent nuclear materials. No attempt to been made in that regard, but his administration has continued to pursue Nuclear energy as a viable alternative energy source.

All capitalism is ‘crony capitalism’

All capitalism is ‘crony capitalism’.

All capitalism is ‘crony capitalism’

A response to libertarian rhetoric

February 16, 2012

Whenever wealth is concentrated in the hands of a tiny minority, they will naturally use that wealth to direct politics.

During the current election cycle, perennial Republican hopeful Ron Paul has garnered significant attention presenting himself as an alternative to the political establishment. Depending on their level of fanaticism, diehard Paul supporters will tell you that he is an opponent of the “new world order,” state-ism or corporatism. One phrase associated with his reactionary libertarian ideology has gained particular traction: “crony capitalism.”

The implication of this outlook is that capitalism in its “natural” state is the solution to society’s problems but has been corrupted by greedy individuals deviating from the ideals of the free market. Instead of fighting for a new system, the libertarians argue, we should eliminate all government handouts and monopolistic entities that infringe on the purity of economic competition. This line of reasoning ignores the fundamental tendencies of capitalism as well as the nature of the state, serving only to derail the growing people’s movement against the 1% and their system of exploitation and oppression.

Monopoly is inevitable under capitalism

One of the basic laws of the capitalist system is the tendency to form monopolies, which arises from what Marxists call the concentration and centralization of capital—an inevitable result of capitalist competition. This process is greatly sped up during crises of overproduction, when companies enjoying the greatest economies of scale and lowest labor costs survive while less profitable companies frequently go bankrupt.

In order to preserve the stability of the capitalist system, the capitalist state has increasingly had to step in to limit this process, especially when the companies going under are judged “too big to fail.” However, this leads to even greater capital consolidation.

There is no going back to

some so-called “golden

age” of capitalism. The

basic laws of the system

are to create monopolies

and increase inequality,

with the rich using their

power to control the

government.

For example, in the middle of the 2008 financial collapse, Bank of America acquired Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch, which would have otherwise gone bankrupt, for $2.5 billion and $50 billion, respectively. If we somehow returned to the era of small-scale competition as Ron Paul advocates, the process of capital consolidation would simply restart and lead us back into the exact same situation.

Libertarians are astounded that wealthy bankers and CEOs constantly exert influence on and trade favors with elected officials. This practice, they argue, should be made illegal to take the “crony” out of crony capitalism. The underlying assumption is that the state is an independent entity, standing above the contradictions of the society it governs. In fact, the state is a tool for the rule of one class over another.

Economic inequality means political inequality

Whenever society’s wealth is concentrated in the hands of a tiny minority, an inherent feature of capitalist society, the 1% will naturally use that wealth to direct the political process. For members of the capitalist class, the costs associated with the maintenance of their state—including lobbying and campaign contributions—are worthwhile investments in the stability of their system.

Look forward, not backward

Ron Paul and other libertarians survive on nostalgia for a golden age of capitalism they insist existed sometime in the past. Instead of trying to turn back the wheels of time, we need to adopt a forward-looking perspective and fight for a society free of crises and cut-throat competition leading to more monopoly, more imperialist wars, more inequality and all the other evils of this rotten system. We need to fight for a society based on the power of working people and the abolition of all forms of exploitation.

Content may be reprinted with credit to LiberationNews.org.

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