Month: December, 2014
Bernie Sanders offers a 12-point economic program
| December 5, 2014 | 9:31 pm | Action, Analysis, Bernie Sanders, Economy, National | Comments closed
Source:POLITICUSUSA
Sen. Sanders said, “Are we prepared to take on the enormous economic and political power of the billionaire class or do we continue
to slide into economic and political oligarchy?…Today, millions of Americans are working longer hours for lower wages. In inflation-
adjusted dollars, the median male worker earned $783 less last year than he made 41 years ago. The median female worker made
$1,337 less last year than she earned in 2007. Since 1999, household income for the median middle-class family is less than it was a
quarter century ago. We once led the world in terms of the percentage of our people who graduated college, but we are now in 12th
place. Our infrastructure, once the envy of the world, is collapsing. Real unemployment today is not 5.8 percent, it is 11.5 percent if
we include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time when they want to work full time. Youth
unemployment is 18.6 percent and African-American youth unemployment is 32.6 percent.”

  Sanders detailed a 12-point economic program to:
– Invest in our crumbling infrastructure with a major program to create jobs by rebuilding roads, bridges, water systems, waste water plants, airports, railroads and schools.
– Transform energy systems away from fossil fuels to create jobs while beginning to reverse global warming and make the planet habitable for future generations.
– Develop new economic models to support workers in the United States instead of giving tax breaks to corporations which ship jobs to low-wage countries overseas.
– Make it easier for workers to join unions and bargain for higher wages and benefits.
– Raise the federal minimum wage from $7.25 an hour so no one who works 40 hours a week will live in poverty.
– Provide equal pay for women workers who now make 78 percent of what male counterparts make.
– Reform trade policies that have shuttered more than 60,000 factories and cost more than 4.9 million decent-paying manufacturing jobs.
– Make college affordable and provide affordable child care to restore America’s competitive edge compared to other nations.
– Break up big banks. The six largest banks now have assets equivalent to 61 percent of our gross domestic product, over $9.8 trillion. They underwrite more than half the mortgages in the country and issue more than two-thirds of all credit cards.
– Join the rest of the industrialized world with a Medicare-for-all health care system that provides better care at less cost.
– Expand Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and nutrition programs.
– Reform the tax code based on wage earners’ ability to pay and eliminate loopholes that let profitable corporations stash profits overseas and pay no U.S. federal income taxes.
Bernie Sanders provided the Left and liberals with a powerful rallying cry in 2016.
The confederacy was about slavery, NOT states rights!
| December 4, 2014 | 9:47 pm | Analysis, National | Comments closed

http://uprisingradio.org/home/2010/09/07/the-confederacy-was-about-slavery-not-states-rights/#sthash.lwAv46Wb

Charles Barkley ripped by Olympic icon for Ferguson comments – NY Daily News
| December 4, 2014 | 9:46 pm | Analysis, National | Comments closed

http://m.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/charles-barkley-ripped-olympic-icon-ferguson-comments-article-1.2031204#bmb=1
I was very moved when I came across this story about John Carlos, and remember the black power salute he gave in Mexico City along with fellow team mate…He indeed paid a hell of a price for his convictions
I couldn’t not imagine going through what happen to his life after this country tried to destroy him physical-ly , mentally, financially, his wife left him and kill herself; the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr was 39 and because of the stress he had the heart of a 70 year old man; just think what Malcolm X was going through? This society, police state, FBI, CIA, Homeland Security will do anything to destroy you as a MAN…
Let not forget John Carlos, George Padmore, Langston Hughes, others known and not known; we got traitor all around us making statements that it was Michael Brown fault he got killed by police officer Darren Wilson, now Sir Charles Barkley sprewing his poison …
It’s a miracle this brother John Carlos is still alive, he’s still in the land of the living, but what a price to pay; and you know most black people would have renounce their own race and asked for forgiveness to keep a goddam job or superficial status…
John Carlos thank you for being a MAN…

Against police terrorism!
| December 3, 2014 | 8:52 pm | Analysis, Local/State, National, police terrorism | Comments closed

zzz-antiracismby  James Thompson

 

People of conscience in the United States and around the world have recently been disgusted by the brutal murders of African-American males in the United States. What’s worse is that the terrorist police officers have so far escaped prosecution. Of course, I am referring to the cases of Michael Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York.

 

Many people have commented on the militarization of the US police force. There is a long history of police terrorism in this country. Local police have consistently been used by the upper-class to enforce racism and protect the property rights of the wealthy. In the US, the police are clearly unarmed of the state and their mission is to terrorize working people, particularly working people of color.

 

In Houston, many of us remember the famous photograph of a person in KKK regalia exiting a Houston Police Department patrol car in the 1970s. We also remember the brutal slaying of civil rights leader Carl Hampton and, more recently, the racist execution of James Byrd by white supremacists.

 

Very recently, anti-immigrant racists in Texas and elsewhere have formed unlawful militias to terrorize immigrants.

 

The legacy of terrorism, brutality and racism is long in nature and national in scope.

 

However, the recent events are particularly despicable. The court decisions create the impression that racism is okay even when it leads to murder.

 

The first African-American president of the United States, Barack Obama, has called for peaceful protests as a reaction to the failure of the courts to put the murderous police officers on trial even though there are videos documenting their murders. This should give people of conscience pause to consider the efficacy of protests in redressing social grievances.

 

Peaceful protests as a first step in reaction to police brutality are always a good idea. However, a serious movement to oppose police brutality is needed. A serious movement would include political activity as part of the struggle against police brutality.

 

People of conscience should work together in a united effort to elect people to public office who will fight for the interests of working people and particularly working people of color.

 

One place to start would be to enact legislation that would harshly punish racist terrorist action by both private and public law enforcement organizations.

 

One model for new legislation in the United States would be the “Constitution (Fundamental Law) of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.” There has been a great deal of negative propaganda against the USSR produced by the US government and the largest corporations since 1917. However, the reality is that the USSR had a long history of supporting civil rights internationally. Many black leaders in the United States received a great deal of support from the USSR. Most notable was Paul Robeson, but there were many others, including Angela Davis.

 

Article 36 of the USSR Constitution (p. 38) reads (Citizens of the USSR of different races and nationalities have equal rights.

 

Exercise of these rights is insured by a policy of all round development and drawing together of all the nations and nationalities of the USSR, by educating citizens in the spirit of Soviet patriotism and Soviet internationalism, and by the possibility to use their native language in the languages of other peoples of the USSR.

 

Any direct or indirect limitation of the rights of citizens or other establishment of direct or indirect privileges on grounds of race or nationality, or any advocacy of racial or national exclusiveness, hostility or contempt, are punishable by law.”

 

There is no longer a USSR to stand up for and advocate for the rights of African-Americans in the United States. It is up to the people of the United States to take on this role and demand that our citizens not be brutalized by the vicious, paid, stooges of the bourgeoisie. Until working people fight for political power, the brutality will continue and expand.

 

Wake up, people of the United States! What Gus Hall used to call a “whiff of fascism” has expanded into a stench of fascism. A unified movement of working people can turn this around!

Gerald Horne discusses “Race to revolution”
| December 3, 2014 | 7:49 pm | Analysis | Comments closed

http://www.c-span.org/video/?322715-1/book-discussion-counter-revolution-1776-race-revolution

Is There Life After Social Democracy?
| December 2, 2014 | 8:13 pm | Analysis | Comments closed

http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/

“Labour’s problems aren’t very different from those of other Western social democratic parties… In this sense we are experiencing not merely a crisis of the British state but also a general crisis of social democracy” (Labour Vanishes, Ross McKibbin, London Review of Books, November 20, 2014).
McKibbin’s summary assessment of social democracy is both keen and cogent. Social democracy, the political expression of twentieth-century anti-Communist reformism, has arrived at a juncture that challenges its vision as well as its political vitality. In McKibbin’s words: “Over the last twenty or thirty years the great social democratic parties of Germany, Austria, Scandinavia, Australia and New Zealand (and now France) have bled support…” One could add, though in a less dramatic way, the ersatz US social democratic party, the Democratic Party.
In a real sense, social democracy drew its energy from its posture as an alternative to Communism. For various reasons– fear of change, anti-Communist demonology, ignorance, imagined self-interest– many of those disadvantaged by capitalism took refuge in the tame, gradualist, and militantly anti-Communist parties claiming space on the left. By advocating an easy parliamentary approach, charting a cautious, non-confrontational road, and enveloping the effort with civility, social democratic thinkers believe they can win popularity and smooth the sharp edges of capitalism.
After the founding of the Soviet Union and the birth of international Communist parties– many of them mass parties– the old Socialist International hewed to a reformist line that separated it from Communism while posing as advocates on the side of the workers and for socialism. Parliamentary successes followed from the adoption of moderation and the condemnation of Communism, a lesson learned only too well by practical leaders.
The model for social democracy after the Bolshevik revolution was undoubtedly the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Assuming power after the abdication of the Kaiser, the SPD swiftly suppressed the revolutionary zeal of the masses and established a parliamentary regime. By suppressing Communism, the SPD sought to accommodate the hysterical fears of the bourgeoisie and the petty bourgeoisie, a tactic destined to permeate social democratic thinking to this day. Despite being the largest party bloc in the Reichstag until July of 1932, neither appeasement of the right nor “responsibly” overseeing a capitalist economy under great duress would rescue the SPD and Germany from the rise of Nazism. Social democrats are fond of blaming the SPD’s failure on the militant left or right-wing extremism, but they willfully ignore the blatant fact– equally true today– that people turn away from centrist parties when they fail to keep their promises. Ruling Germany became more the goal of the SPD than ruling it well and in the interest of Germany’s working people.
With Communists’ resistance to fascism earning the respect and trust of the people, as it did throughout most of Europe, social democracy fared poorly after the War. It is well established today that where European social democratic parties were prepared to distance themselves loudly and forcefully from collaborating with Communists, “friends” in the US were only too happy to give them covert and overt aid. The CIA and the host of other acronymic entities created by the US government to subvert anti-capitalist and pro-labor activities worldwide found willing collaborators in social democratic parties, especially among those who clearly identified Communist success with social democratic failure. It was not long before the opportunism of anti-Communism infected the entire social democratic movement: In 1951, the Socialist International formally dissociated itself from Communism, characterizing it as terrorist, bureaucratic, imperialistic, and freedom-destroying. Articles 7, 8, 9, and 10 of the Frankfort Declaration excommunicate Communism, condemning it to the netherworld with all of the fervor of the Inquisition.
But opportunism begets opportunism. By 1959 any pretense of socialism was erased from the grandfather of social democratic parties, the SPD. With the Godesberg program, the SPD effectively renounced a commitment to socialism, replacing it with vague notions of social justice and allusions to democratic advances. German social democracy thus made its peace with capitalism, under the banner of anti-Communism, and would, henceforth, pledge to never stray from the path of reform.
Nearly all other socialist and social democratic parties followed suit. In place of socialism, the doctrine of social welfare emerged as a tepid surrogate for eliminating exploitation from social and economic relations. Social democracy created an artificial, divisive wall between marginally well-off working people– the so-called “middle class”– and their more destitute class brothers and sisters. Instead of expropriating the expropriators, social democracy insists that the burden of pacifying the poor should be borne socially, with much of that burden falling on working class families.
Class, like socialism, was relegated to the dustbin. In its place was the concept of civil society with markets determining social status, compensation, and the distribution of goods and services. Those who lacked the physical or mental assets to compete for the “opportunities” afforded by markets were supposed to be protected by a metaphorical societal “safety net,” a set of programs designed to guarantee a marginal life for those alleged to be lacking competitive skills or spirit. Thus, the cry of “Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité,” so inspirational in the French Revolution, was diluted centuries later to the liberty of markets, the equality of the jungle, and the selfishness of individualism. The only vestige of eighteenth-century humanism remaining in social democratic theory is a shabby, porous net that guarantees that “losers” in the game of life will remain losers.
For decades, the supposed shining star in the social democratic firmament was Sweden. The myth of Swedish “socialism” sustained the few claims to social justice remaining intact with the soft left’s assumption of the role of capitalism’s handmaiden. Whatever credibility this view might have enjoyed was devastatingly punctured by an article written by Peter Cohen in the July-August 1994 issue of Monthly Review (Sweden: The Model that Never Was). Taking two Pollyanna articles from the previous year to task, Cohen, a long-time resident of Sweden, states emphatically: “Like all European Social Democratic Parties, the SAP [Social Democratic Workers Party] not only accepts capitalism but defends it against any attempt at change. The party has always argued that what is good for Swedish corporations is good for the Swedish working class.”
Cohen presages the fate of the US and European working classes when he explains that the SAP has always accepted that class collaboration “requires the working class to accept cutbacks– of all types– when corporate profits decline, and even when they don’t.” Cohen outlines the virulent anti-Communism in the SAP that led it to support internment of Communists in WWII and work hand-in-glove with US Cold Warriors, citing its support for Pinochet’s government and hostility to Portugal’s revolution.
The SAP instituted the so-called “solidarity wage policy,” a cynical leveling of workers’ wages within the total wage package. Cohen explains: “The “solidarity wage” does not affect the imbalance of income between workers and capitalists. It only redistributes wages between different groups of workers. It also makes the SAP look like a dedicated defender of the workers’ interests.”
Cohen documents the role of the SAP in introducing private schools into the Swedish education system, in pro-capitalist tax “reform,” and in weakening Swedish social insurance (the “safety net”).
He cites the SAP’s call (now ubiquitous in all capitalist countries) to retard workers’ compensation in the interests of “competitiveness.”
Cohen’s remarkable article is uncannily prescient of the evolution of social democracy over the two decades to follow his article, an evolution of closer and closer class collaboration. In his words: “The table manners shown by the strong in the course of their meal may be more attractive in countries with Social Democratic governments, but the digestive process is the same.”
It is tempting to see this development as a mutation of the social democratic ideal, as a departure.
It is not.
Instead, it is the trajectory of social democracy in a world where the specter of Communism has ebbed. Without pressure from the left, social democratic parties shed all pretense of representing the working class against capital and political power. Today, social democratic parties– like the US Democratic Party– function under the illusion that Europe and North America are classless societies, while acknowledging the problem of poverty plaguing the so-called “underclass.” Absent an aggressive commitment to resource redistribution, the 2007-2008 economic crisis has caught the moderate left in the vise of either imposing additional burdens on the majority to help the poor or ignoring their increasing desperation. To a great extent, they have chosen to ignore growing poverty while aiding capital in its effort to extract itself from the mire of global crisis. In essence, social democrats believe that capitalism can be steered out of the crisis without seriously modifying the existing relationship between capital and workers.
For workers seduced by social democracy, the romance has proven truly tragic. A partnership with capital combined with a commitment to buffering capital’s “excesses” proves to be an extravagant self-deception; capital accepts no such concession. Rather than delivering capitalism with a human face, the architects of anti-Communist reformism have delivered division, concession, austerity, hardship, and imperial aggression.
But even more tragically, the failure of the social democratic project drives far too many people, including disillusioned workers, toward the extreme right, fascism, and neo-Nazism. Throughout Europe and the US, working people thirsting for answers have been betrayed by reformism. Unfortunately, they far too often turn to the right, a turn that conjures eerie images of the rise of fascism between the Wars.
Workers deserve a better option.
Zoltan Zigedy
64% AND US SEN. BERNIE SANDERS
| December 2, 2014 | 7:57 pm | Analysis, Bernie Sanders, National | Comments closed

by A. Shaw

“What I think really happened is about 64 percent of the American people rejected the two-party system,” Bernie Sanders, US senator and possible presidential candidate, said recently on Comedy Central’s “Colbert Report.”

When Bernie says 64% of the people rejected the two-party system in the 2014 mid-term elections, what does this mean?
It means only one-third of the people accepts this system that 64% rejects. It means the reactionary and swine-like third of the people — a minority of the people — now dominate the political arena. It means the political arena is now a pigsty.
What is this two-party system that Bernie mentions?
In a 1959 article Work In the Two-Party System, William Z. Foster said the two-party system is “two old bourgeois parties.”
Hence, the two-party system is nothing but bourgeois rule or bourgeois power over the people.
 
So, 64% of the people reject  bourgeois rule or power.
To win, Bernie has to show the people that he is not a gluttonous hog who solely and exclusively represents the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie even in the regime’s touted democratic form.
Two-thirds of the people are fed-up with those “two old bourgeois parties.”
Clearly, 64% will not pick a candidate solely on party label. To the 64%, the labels DP and GOP are worthless.
Most likely, 64% will pick despite the presence of worthless and rejected labels.
64% may look for the candidate that represents chiefly the working and middle classes, despite his or her odious label.
Bernie has a big head start over all of his rivals.