Category: political struggle
Permanent voters list will suppress voter participation
| January 15, 2015 | 7:32 pm | Analysis, Communist Party Canada, political struggle | Comments closed
Communist Party of Canada – Manitoba
387 Selkirk Ave. Winnipeg MB R2W 2M3
(204) 586-7824 – cpc-mb@changetheworldmb.ca


January 15, 2015


Communist Party calls for elections to be a paid holiday

Premier Selinger’s proposal yesterday for a permanent voters list to replace the “costly” enumeration process is flawed and anti-democratic. The Premier is reported to believe that a permanent voters list will “increase voter turnout,” but facts contradict this belief.

Elections are the most important of all government spending, touching on core issues of democracy and governance. It is alarming that suddenly the two main parties in the Legislature are reportedly “eager” and “willing” to discuss or implement this proposal.

A permanent list is more likely to be inaccurate for the poor, students and discriminated groups, tilting elections in favour of the wealthy and those who face no discrimination.

The Premier needs to explain why turnout actually declined in the 2008 federal election, the first that used the National Register of Electors, to 59 per cent, the lowest in history. Studies show enumeration is better than a permanent voters list in terms of both accuracy and costs.

Inaccurate permanent lists are part of a pattern of voter suppression in North America which includes the effective disenfranchisement of about 500,000 people in Canada because of last year’s so-called Fair Elections Act.

A far better way to boost turnout is to make the provincial election a paid holiday. This would demonstrate the esteem Manitoban’s have in the electoral process.

Failure to make it a paid holiday and instead to create a permanent voters list will show how much the large parties truly value the full meaning of democracy. A full pubic discussion, with hearings across the province, are needed before “costly” enumeration is axed.

More paid holidays would also be a job-creating measure.*

Information: Darrell Rankin, Leader, Communist Party of Canada – Manitoba (204) 586-7824

* * * * * *
*Considering there are 250 work-days in a year, profits may decline by 1/250, or .4% because of lost production. Increased hiring to make up for this loss and to maintain market-share would boost hiring and payroll income, growing the domestic market and compensating profits in the long-run. More paid holidays (eg, International Women’s Day or International Workers’ Day) have the same economic effect as a shorter work week or reducing the pension age. The experience of Britain’s Ten-and-a-half Hours Bill (1848) and the 40 hour work week supports this contention. – DR

REACTIONARIES DON’T HAVE THE VOTES TO OVERRIDE KEYSTONE VETO
| January 12, 2015 | 8:29 pm | Analysis, political struggle | Comments closed
Source: Fox news
Republican Sen. John Hoeven (R-ND) grudgingly admitted on Fox News Sunday that Senate Republicans don’t have the votes needed to override President Obama’s expected veto of a bill authorizing the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.
Transcript via Fox News Sunday:
WALLACE: All right, Senator Hoeven, why do you think the president keeps dragging this out, as I say, six years and now more review at the State Department? And to get directly to the point that Senator Coons brought up, will you have — whether you’re going to pass it, you’re going to send it to the president. Are you going to have the 67 votes in the Senate to override the president’s veto?
SEN. JOHN HOEVEN, R-N.D., ENERGY & NATURAL RESOURCES CMTE: Well, first as to what is the president doing, actions speak louder than words. He’s delayed this project for more than six years. Americans won World War II in less than six years. So, clearly, he’s trying to defeat the project with endless delays, which is why it’s important that Congress acts. And as far as getting it past and overriding a veto, we go back to the merits, it’s about energy, it’s about jobs, it’s economic growth, increases GDP $3.4 billion, and it’s about national security by achieving energy security.
Look, you have got an overwhelming majority of the public that wants this done. The latest Fox poll on this issue, 68 percent of Americans want the Keystone pipeline built. Every state on the route, seven states have approved it. The only thing holding it up is President Obama.
WALLACE: Let me ask a direct question, though, because we have got — we’ve got a lot to cover here, do you at this moment have the 67 votes to override the veto?
HOEVEN: Right now we have got about 63, but we’re going to the floor with an open amendment process trying to foster more bipartisanship, getting the Senate to work the way it’s supposed to work, so that we can pass this measure and other measures and either override the veto or attach the builder, other legislation that will get 67 votes.
Democratic Sen. Chris Coons (DE) pointed out on the same program that it is obvious that Republicans won’t have the votes to override Obama’s veto, “And I think we should notice that there were enough votes voting against that in the House, that it’s clear there will not be a veto override. So, my hope as this comes to the Senate, we will take it up. We will not override the president’s coming veto, and then we will move past this issue and towards a real debate about what Americans want. An energy policy that includes growing good jobs, American innovation and infrastructure, energy independence, and that doesn’t hurt our environment. We can and should be able to get to that discussion.”
Republicans don’t have the votes to override President Obama’s promised veto. What Sen. Hoeven was referring to was a plan to attach Keystone XL authorization to legislation that the president has to sign. However, it is questionable whether or not, the additionally needed Democratic votes would be there for anything that Keystone XL is attached to. By pressing the issue on Keystone XL, Republicans are setting up a potential government shutdown type showdown on Keystone XL.
President Obama won’t sign the bill, and congressional Republicans have no clear plan to get the pipeline authorized. The Republican push to force Keystone XL on the American people has run into more resistance than they expected, and the result could be a crushing defeat for Boehner and McConnell on a key piece of their agenda.
Ready to run: Campaign training for women
| January 9, 2015 | 9:46 pm | political struggle | Comments closed

http://www.chatham.edu/pcwp/education/readytorun/pittsburgh.cfmRead-to-Run-300x250-ad-Politics-PA

Response to “This is How Bernie Sanders Will Run For President”
| January 8, 2015 | 7:47 pm | Analysis, Bernie Sanders, National, political struggle | Comments closed
by A. Shaw
Rebecca Nelson’s piece, posted below, titled “This is How Bernie Sanders Will Run For President,” is perhaps the best piece published anywhere, so far, on the mechanics of the Sanders’ campaign.
Among other things, mechanics often include:
(1) Planning and budgeting ………… (6) Paid media
(2) Fundraising………………………….. (7) Candidate activity
(3) Targeting …………………………….. (8) Opposition research
(4)  Voter contact ………………………. (9) Volunteers
(5)  Free media ………………………….(10) GOTV
Let’s look at the Sanders’ campaign, as it is presented in Nelson’s piece, from the point of view of each of these subjects.
As for planning and budgeting, Tad Devine, the top political consultant for the campaign, didn’t say, during the interview with Nelson, anything about budgeting. As for planning, Devine shows that the campaign has come a long way in working out a plan for victory.  Practice will show whether the plan is any good.
As for fundraising, Devine was completely silent. At this time, the Sanders’ campaign is widely believed to have something like $4.5 million in its bank accounts. The campaign does not accept contributions from big corporations or from super-rich individuals like the Koch brothers.
As for targeting, again, Devine was silent.  But of course the campaign is during a lot of work on targeting.
As for voter contact, Devine says it is one of three “key elements” — “extensive research, sustained voter contact, and technology for mobilization.” Devine emphasizes “sustained” voter contact rather than just contact. Devine didn’t say how the campaign will “sustain” contact, but he hints that the
“the  technology for mobilization” is also a  technology for contact. This technology enables the campaign to initiate communication with targeted voters by  accessing their cell phones, laptops, tablets, etc.
As for free media, Devine seems to think that free media will be obtained chiefly by the candidate’s style and by the campaign through the use of leaks to the press. The Clinton campaign already leaks profusely.
Nelson writes “Devine got a kick out of Sanders’s direct, unequivocating style.” Devine believes the mass of the electorate will get a kick out of “Sanders’s direct, unequivocating style” after the electorate contrasts his style with the indirect and equivocating style of Hillary Clinton.
Devine doesn’t seem to think much of spontaneous grassroots efforts to generate free media coverage or support for the candidate whether the efforts are by volunteers working with the campaign or by independent supporters. On the Left, such efforts are rare, but on the Right, they’re common.
As for paid media, this is Devine’s expertise.
He threw this out there as something he may or may not push in paid media.
“My view of campaigns is, you get in them to win,” he said. Extensive research, sustained voter contact, and technology for mobilization are key elements of that. “You bring all those things together, not to make a statement, but to make a difference in people’s lives. And the way you do that is not “ just seeking political office, but winning political office.”
In other words, it is not about  “just seeking political office, but winning political office. It’s not to make a statement, but to win.
On the Left, some people believe the aim is to lose and to flaunt the candidate’s political independence from bourgeois parties, especially the DP. So, to them, a statement is more important than a win.
As for candidate activity, Devine is specific about Bernie’s role.
“Devine also repeatedly stressed the importance of Iowa and New Hampshire, the two key early-primary states,” Rebecca Nelson writes.
“The way you get over that skepticism and not be considered a fringe candidate,” Devine said, “is by putting together the resources that you need to communicate a message, putting together a campaign mechanism that people can look at and can see that there is the capacity to run a serious campaign on the ground in the early states, through mass media, and through the new tools of politics which President Obama has succeeded so well with in two presidential campaigns,” Devine says.
Again, these “new tools” are the technologies of voter contact and mobilization.
“Though unofficial 2016 campaigning has already started for many contenders—including Sanders, who has paid visits to early-primary states—voters across the country won’t have years to personally get to know the senator. That’s why Devine would hammer the early primary states—Iowa and New Hampshire, in particular—with ‘hundreds of town-hall meetings, a format that he will be extremely comfortable in,’ ” Nelson writes.
,
As for opposition research, Devine didn’t say one word, suggesting a clean campaign.
As for volunteers, Devine talks about “technology” for mobilization, but volunteers aren’t exactly  unmobilized technology.
Devine didn’t have much to say about volunteers, because the campaign must first attract and train volunteers before it decides how to use them. Devine teaches campaign management at Harvard University as well as at other schools. He has explored the potentiality of trained and untrained volunteers in line with the tenets of the Chicago school of politics — i.e., Harold Washington, Luis Gutierrez, Rudy Lozano, Jesse Jackson, David Axelrod, Barack Obama, etc.
Devine doesn’t seem keen on the idea of a key role for volunteers, trained by the campaign, in this race.
This is too bad because the Tea Bags, like the Chicago school, are real good at attracting volunteers, training them to do key work, and deploying them in key positions.
Devine should consider hiring one of his best and brightest at Harvard or some other school where Devine teaches, to handle volunteers.
Somebody with a lot of go.
As for GOTV, Devine didn’t say anything.
                                                                  CONCLUSION
Devine is on the right track.
This is How Bernie Sanders Will Run For President
| January 8, 2015 | 7:44 pm | Analysis, Bernie Sanders, National, political struggle | Comments closed
The Vermont senator is going for the win, and a longtime friend and veteran media consultant is already strategizing his path to victory.
November 13, 2014 The first time Tad Devine met Bernie Sanders, in 1996, the political consultant did what he does best: gave him advice for how to win.
Then a House member from Vermont running for his fourth term, Sanders was skeptical of Washington political types, of which Devine was the epitome. An experienced Democratic media strategist, Devine had worked on the campaigns of Jimmy Carter and Michael Dukakis. He told Sanders, now Vermont’s junior senator, that to keep his seat in the House, he needed to make sure that voters knew which side he was on.
“Remember, Bernie’s an independent. I’m a Democrat,” Devine told National Journal. “I asked Bernie, ‘Listen, if it’s tied between the Democrats and Republicans, are you gonna vote for Gingrich, or are you gonna vote for Gephardt for speaker?’ And he was like, ‘What, are you kidding? What, are you crazy?’ He came back full Bernie on that.”
Of course, Devine recalled, he’d vote for Missouri Democrat Dick Gephardt. Devine got a kick out of Sanders’s direct, unequivocating style, he said, and the two hit it off.
Eighteen years later, Sanders has all but announced that a presidential run is in his future—and longtime friend Devine is on board. A few months ago, the senator broached the possibility with the veteran media consultant, who, since advising Sanders’s 1996 House campaign, has worked on both Al Gore’s and John Kerry’s bids for the White House. Ever since, the two have been talking about the prospect. “I think we have a meeting scheduled sometime next week,” Devine said.
The self-proclaimed socialist is widely considered a long-shot for the Democratic nomination—though he’s an independent, he has implied he wouldn’t run as a third-party candidate so as not to play spoiler—let alone for the Oval Office. A Sanders campaign would surely move the national conversation to the left, ensuring that the progressive issues he’s championed for decades—such as wealth inequality, the outsize role of special interests in politics, and campaign finance reform—get airtime, and push Hillary Clinton, the Democratic heir apparent, to address them. Beyond that, it’s assumed, he wouldn’t gain real traction. For Devine, though, success is absolute.
“My view of campaigns is, you get in them to win,” he said. Extensive research, sustained voter contact, and technology for mobilization are key elements of that. “You bring all those things together, not to make a statement, but to make a difference in people’s lives. And the way you do that is not just seeking political office, but winning political office.”
The GOP’s midterm romp proves just how ready the country is for a politician like Sanders, Devine said. Republicans didn’t win because voters want to embrace their policies; people were voting for a different direction—and voting against President Obama.
Likely Republican presidential contenders, such as Ted Cruz and Rand Paul, have tried their hardest to tie Clinton, their assumed opponent, to Obama, whom many voters disdain. This, too, seems to be an emerging strategy for Sanders’s impending campaign.
“If a better alternative was offered,” he said, “an alternative that put people ahead of powerful interests, that made it clear who’s side of the fight you were on, that laid out a set of policies that could work in the real world, in favor of people, I think a lot of those people who voted for Republicans would make a different choice.”
Devine also repeatedly stressed the importance of Iowa and New Hampshire, the two key early-primary states. Sanders, a longtime proponent of campaign finance reform, would have a head start in those states because of the massive outside spending in the midterms there.
“People in Iowa and New Hampshire have just gone through this experience, have seen it up close in their Senate races,” Devine told National Journal. “So this isn’t gonna be some theory about how money affects politics. It’s very practical and very immediate for people in those states. And I think Bernie is really going to frame his message by talking about those things.
“Like a lot of issues he’s been talking about for a long time, they’re catching up with him,” he added. “He’s been talking about them for years, and now they’re coming into focus for people in a much more meaningful way.”
Still, a big hurdle for a Sanders campaign would be the senator’s hard-left political views. Devine admits that while Sanders is beloved in Vermont, he would face some struggle transitioning to a national stage. Devine is confident, however, that Sanders could gain not only name recognition, but also credibility as a serious contender.
“The way you get over that skepticism and not be considered a fringe candidate,” Devine said, “is by putting together the resources that you need to communicate a message, putting together a campaign mechanism that people can look at and can see that there is the capacity to run a serious campaign on the ground in the early states, through mass media, and through the new tools of politics which President Obama has succeeded so well with in two presidential campaigns.”
Devine said Sanders, a gruff man who, at 73, says what he means and could easily be described as crotchety if he didn’t talk so lovingly about his grandkids, is “easily misunderstood.” When people have the chance to really get to know Sanders, and spend time with him, “you realize why people like him,” he said. “He’s direct with them, he connects with them, he very much provides a voice for people who don’t have a lot of voice in Washington.”
Though unofficial 2016 campaigning has already started for many contenders—including Sanders, who has paid visits to early-primary states—voters across the country won’t have years to personally get to know the senator. That’s why Devine would hammer the early primary states—Iowa and New Hampshire, in particular—with “hundreds of town-hall meetings, a format that he will be extremely comfortable in.”
That, most of all, would be the key to Sanders’s success on a national stage: voters getting to know who the senator really is. Unlike Devine, though, they won’t have 18 years to do it.
Farewell, Comandante!
| March 7, 2013 | 9:40 pm | Action, Cuba, Hugo Chavez, political struggle, Venezuela | Comments closed

Written by Government of Cuba
Statement of the Revolutionary Government:

It was with profound and searing grief that our people and the Revolutionary Government learned about the decease of President Hugo Chávez Frías and are therefore preparing to pay a heartfelt and patriotic tribute to him, for he will go down in history as a Hero of Our America. We convey our sincere condolences to his parents, brothers, daughters and son as well as all of his relatives, whom we feel are already ours, for Chávez is also a son of Cuba, Latin America, the Caribbean and the whole world.

In this moment of profound sorrow, we share our deepest feelings of solidarity with the brother people of Venezuela, whom we will continue to accompany under any circumstances.

The Bolivarian Revolution will be able to count on our resolute and unrestricted support at these difficult moments.

We reiterate our support, encouragement and confidence in victory to our comrades of the Bolivarian political and military leadership and the Venezuelan Government.

President Chávez has been waging an extraordinary battle throughout his young and fruitful life. We will always remember him as a patriotic military to the service of Venezuela and the Bigger Homeland; as an honest, clear-sighted, audacious and courageous revolutionary fighter; as a leader and supreme commander in whom Bolivar reincarnated in order to conclude what he had left unfinished; as the founder of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America and the Community of Latin America and Caribbean States.

His heroic and indefatigable struggle against death is an insuperable example of firmness. The admirable commitment shown by his doctors and nurses have been a feat of humanism and dedication.

The return of the President to his beloved Venezuelan homeland changed the course of history. “We have a homeland,” he exclaimed, filled with emotion, on December 8 last, and he returned to his homeland to confront the biggest risks imposed by his disease. Nothing and no one could ever take away from the Venezuelan people the homeland that they have recovered.

The work of Chávez emerges undefeated before our eyes. The achievements attained by the revolutionary people who saved him from the coup orchestrated on April of 2002, who have followed him without hesitations, are already irreversible.

The Cuban people considers him to be one of its most outstanding sons and has admired, followed and loved him as if he were its own. Chávez is also Cuban! He also suffered our difficulties and problems and did everything he could, with extraordinary generosity, especially during the harshest years of the Special Period. He accompanied Fidel as a true son and forged a very close friendship with Raúl.

He excelled in all the international battles against imperialism, always in defense of the poor, the workers and our peoples. Filled with passion, persuasively, eloquently, ingeniously and excitedly he spoke from the roots of the peoples; he sang our joys and recited our passionate verses with ever-lasting heroism.

The tens of thousands of Cubans who work in Venezuela will pay tribute to him through the fervent accomplishment of the international duty and will continue to accompany, with honor and altruism, the heroic deeds of the Bolivarian people.

Cuba will remain forever loyal to the memory and the legacy of Commander President Chávez and will continue to pursue his ideals in favor of the unity of the revolutionary, integration and independence forces of Our America.

His example will guide us in our future battles.

Ever Onwards to Victory!

March 5, 2013
Permanent Mission of Cuba to the United Nations
www.cubadiplomatica.cu/onu

Another view of Henry Winston’s legacy

By James Thompson

In the book “Henry Winston: Profile of a U.S. Communist” by Nikolai Mostovets (Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1983) can be found a recounting of a historic speech by Henry Winston at the 15th Convention of the CPUSA which was held in Harlem. The speech was later developed into a pamphlet entitled “What it means to be a Communist.”

Mostovets tells us:

“In his speech, Henry Winston denounced some Party leaders who were showing bureaucratic inclinations. He especially elaborated on the work Communists were to conduct in the unions. Party members were to educate the working-class politically, organize the unorganized and secure a close interrelationship between the economic and the political aspects of working-class struggle. Winston stressed that economic struggle alone led to opportunism and collaboration with the monopolies. That was important because recently some left and Communist union leaders and activists have forgotten the importance of political struggle and been caught in the quagmire of opportunism.

Winston also touched on the major aspects of the Party’s cadre policy. he emphasize the importance of establishing and maintaining close contact between the party leadership and rank-and-file union members: ‘the job of leadership is not alone to guide and direct the work of others-it is also necessary to learn… from the members and the workers. Separation from the membership, from the workers can result only in bureaucracy, and placing oneself above the Party, above the interests of the workers.

‘Secondly, it is necessary to show the utmost vigilance and noting and checking the corrupting influences of our present-day society on the thinking and living habits of some comrades, to expose these influences in the interests of the comrade himself, but primarily in the interest of the party as a whole.

‘Thirdly, it is necessary to eliminate all self complacency, cliquish and ‘family circle’ atmosphere in relationship between Communists, especially rooting out all elements of false praise and flattery. For, as one wise comrade put it, flattery corrupts not only the flattered but the flatterer as well. Fourthly, it is necessary to apply criticism and self-criticism in the molding of Party cadres. Criticism and self-criticism are not to be applied on occasions-on holidays-so to speak. They must be applied daily, as indispensable weapons in the examination of the work of our Party and the individual cadres… Only by learning the lessons from mistakes can our Party cadres develop Communist methods, habits, and qualities of leadership.

‘Finally, only those leaders can withstand the pressures of enemy ideology, can relentlessly fight against opportunism in practice, who constantly strive to master Marxism Leninism-the great liberating science of the working-class which alone gives us the confidence in the inevitable victory of the working-class, headed by its Communist vanguard. Those who see only backwardness, immobility and disunity in the working-class are bound to ignore the essential truth that it is the working-class that possesses all the necessary qualities to bring about the transformation of society and build Socialism.'” (PPS. 46-47)

At the end of the book, there are several tributes to Henry Winston:

“The Soviet people know and deeply respect Henry Winston, a staunch revolutionary and Marxist scholar, a sincere friend of the USSR and other socialist countries, and a dedicated champion of friendship between the Soviet and the American people, of peace throughout the world.

On February 4, 1977 the Learned Council of the USSR Academy of Sciences Institute of US and Canadian studies conferred a doctorate honoris causa on Henry Winston. Pravda wrote in this connection: ‘Henry Winston, a prominent figure in the international communist movement, has been awarded this degree for his outstanding contribution to the national liberation struggle theory, for his profound scholarly analysis of practical revolutionary struggle by the working people of the United States for a democratic and social transformation of society, against imperialism and racial discrimination.’

Henry Winston was in Moscow during the 26th Congress of the CPSU is a member of the CP USA delegation.

Upon his return to the United States he declared: ‘I am proud that I have witnessed a historic Congress. The Soviet Communists have advanced a program of further raising the people’s well-being and a comprehensive platform of struggle for peace, détente and disarmament. Only this road of concrete and constructive negotiations and accords to curb the arms race can save mankind from the threat of nuclear catastrophe. This isn’t glaring contradiction to the policies of the current Republican administration. The latter not only dooms millions of Americans to poverty and unemployment but also pushes the world to the brink of catastrophe accelerating war preparations and fomenting anti-Soviet hysteria. Common sense demands acceptance of the Soviet proposals. Today, we American Communists view efforts to publicize and explain the new Soviet peace initiatives to our people as one of our foremost tasks.’

On April 2, 1981 Henry Winston turned 70 years old. The Central committee of the CPSU sent him the following message to mark the occasion:

‘Dear Comrade Henry Winston,

‘The Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union since you warm fraternal greetings and heartfelt congratulations on your 70th birthday.

‘You are well known as a prominent leader of the US Communist Party who has devoted all the long years of his sociopolitical activities to a courageous struggle for the interests of the working class and all the working people of his country, against racism and reaction, for genuine equality, democracy and social progress. Your unwavering loyalty to the ideals of Marxism Leninism and proletarian internationalism has gained you prestige with the world Communist movement. The Soviet people value highly your tireless efforts in the name of peace, disarmament, understanding and peaceful cooperation between the peoples of the United States and the Soviet Union.

‘We wish you, dear Comrade Winston, good health and success in your work for your people, peace and progress.’…

Henry Winston received messages of congratulations from other Communist parties, progressive organizations and individuals. Among them was a message from Fidel Castro:

‘On your 70th birthday, we wish to extend greetings from our Party and reiterate the admiration of our people feel for a life dedicated to the Communist cause.

‘We Cuban Communists heard in your voice the message of solidarity from the most just people in North America at the Second Congress of our Party. We wish you knew success in your indefatigable struggle for social justice and peace.’

And another message:

‘On the occasion of your 70th birthday, please accept the Portuguese Communists’most sincere wishes of good health, fruitful work and personal happiness, as well as our tribute to a lifetime wholly dedicated to the cause of liberation of the working people.
Alvaro Cunhal
General Secretary
Communist Party of Portugal’…
Gus Hall… had written in an article to mark Winston’s 60th birthday: ‘the bonds that unite us are something more than political ties. We are brothers in regard each other with particular wants, typical of soldiers fighting for a, and in just cause. In this sense we happen to represent the common destiny which unites white and black workers in a close brotherhood of class, in a union for national liberation and working-class struggle. They are involved together in a single worldwide revolutionary process which embraces all nations and all races and which is aimed at freedom and prosperity for all mankind.'” (pps. 130-132)

Two more tributes can be found on the back cover of this book:

“The life of Comrade Henry Winston is a proud page in the history of our Party. It is an illuminating page in the history of the working-class, in the history of Black Americans fighting against racial and national oppression. It is a page of leadership, of courage, of dedication. It is commitment to the full measure.”
Gus Hall
General Secretary, CPUSA

“The spirit that animates Henry Winston infuses the courageous and beautiful people who are fighting imperialism. It is the spirit of people who know deep down within themselves which side they are on, and who know, to, that their side-our side-is invincible.”
John Abt