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Hospital bosses have no mercy for working-class patients

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04 December 2020 673 hits

CHICAGO, November 24—Over 35 multiracial workers and community members braved the wind and the rain today to protest the bosses’ racist proposal to close Mercy Hospital. Members of the communist Progressive Labor Party (PLP) spread revolutionary politics to help build the struggle against this racist attack. While distributing CHALLENGE and making conversation with workers, PLP asserted that a health industry under capitalism will always sacrifice workers’ lives for profit.
Workers around the world are facing another deadly surge in coronavirus cases, with thousands dying daily. Despite this, the billion-dollar Trinity Health system is looking to shut down this safety-net hospital whose patients are 72 percent Black and Latin.
We shouldn’t be surprised that the racist and sexist bosses want to close a hospital during a pandemic; they choose their profits over workers’ lives every day. That’s the logic of capitalism. But we should be angry over these attacks and organize a mass, militant fightback.
The international PLP is committed not just to keeping Mercy Hospital open, but building a communist revolution to destroy this racist capitalist system that has no regard for our lives. We fight for a world where workers run society collectively in our own interests, and where pandemics, racist police terror, unemployment and evictions are relics of the past.
We are who we need!
What had been promoted as a rally and car caravan by various unions was little more than a press conference. Religious leaders and politicians blew a lot of hot air for the media under a protected canopy while workers huddled in the rain.
Lifelong misleader Jesse Jackson Sr never one to refuse a photo opportunity – gave his standard hollow speech, then jumped in his truck to drive away. Likely he didn’t want to be called out on his opportunism, like when antiracist rebels in Ferguson, Missouri ran him out of town after he tried to quash the fightback there! As workers we must not be blinded by the bosses’ manipulation of identity politics and race. A Black manager of oppression is still a manager of oppression.
While the misleaders babbled on, PLP members talked with other workers about keeping Mercy open. We distributed copies of CHALLENGE newspaper, along with a Party flyer specifically about Mercy and the pandemic.
Workers agreed that the fight needed to grow, not just to include more healthcare workers, but also other workers and students. Many agreed that an attack on any worker is an attack on all workers.
Those of us in PLP here have been organizing to make this a bigger campaign in our other mass organizations and workplaces. We have given speeches, gotten signatures for petitions, and testified at the state review board that ultimately will decide whether the hospital can close.
We build this fight because ultimately it’s the masses of workers and students that move society forward, not politicians. Throughout this pandemic, it’s been the workers in hospitals, transport, and other industries who have saved workers’ lives and kept society from collapsing. Why do we need to accept living under these capitalist bosses’ awful system when we clearly have the interest and ability to run a far better society on our own?
Capitalist “healthcare” will never meet workers’ needs
Right on Trinity Health website’s main page, there’s a link to a video where CEO Mike Slubowski states, “eliminating racism is essential to our Mission.” Meanwhile, his company threatens to close a hospital in a city where the majority of Covid-19 deaths have been Black and Latin workers.
In fact, the bosses have treated hospitals and clinics as places of profit for decades. This has led to a major reduction in overall hospital beds and staff (Truthout, 3/31). In mostly Black and Latin working-class neighborhoods and rural areas, hospitals were closing at a rate of almost 30 per year prior to the pandemic (Bloomberg, 8/21/18). The bosses’ racist cost-cutting guaranteed that when disaster eventually struck, the system was overwhelmed and workers died unnecessarily.
Under capitalism, racist and sexist inequalities in workers’ health prevail . Racist and sexist unemployment and toxic pollution lead to average life expectancies that are at least four years less for Black workers than white workers in the U.S. (The Balance, 3/8/19).
These racist inequalities serve as the tip of the spear to then attack and drag down the standard of health for all workers. They can only be fought by mass, multiracial, working-class unity, ultimately with the goal of crushing capitalism and replacing it with a communist society that’s organized to put our needs first.
A revolutionary shot in the arm
As the pandemic rages on, the struggle over Mercy Hospital is critical. If we workers can keep it open, it’ll be a shot in the arm to lead more class struggle to improve all workers’ lives. And as communists in PLP, we can win more workers to understanding that this system will never serve our needs, and that it will take a revolution to create one that will. Save Mercy Hospital! Join PLP!

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Colombia: for Javier, shut this racist system down!

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04 December 2020 660 hits

BOGOTÁ, COLOMBIA, December 2—The brutal murder-by-cop of Javier Ordoñez was the last straw. The video of their initial interaction, which was widely shared on social media, shows Javier Ordoñez pleading "please, no more" as cops repeatedly electrocuted him with a stun gun. He later died of head injuries while in police custody.
Outraged youth attacked the police and the CAI (Immediate Attention Command), and destroyed everything in their path, in various sectors of the city, some took the opportunity to loot, vandalize, and destroy. The police shot indiscriminately, killing 11 civilians in the capital Bogotá and three in Soacha and in other cities in the country. Not unlike the protests following the murder of George Floyd in the U.S., the rebellion spread throughout the nation here.
In Colombia, a corrupt paramilitary narco political class has governed for more than 60 years, where all kinds of atrocities are committed by the rulers and the bourgeois class. Everything goes unpunished and is getting worse every day. Capitalism is in crisis and is not capable of solving the minimum basic conditions for the survival of the working class. To maintain itself, capitalism uses all its vicious tools, typical of the system: sexism, racism, individualism, persecution, imprisonment, murder, etc. These conditions for our class in Colombia and in the world are terribly similar.
The U.S. is the champion of racism, individualism, sexism, persecution, torture, imprisonment, murder among other barbarities, especially against Black, immigrant, and Latin workers throughout its history. Lately, we have seen the frequent killings of many Black workers by the police going unpunished by the state. The Colombian police, reproducing the same patterns of behavior of the U.S. bosses, are systematically applying brute force, torture, massacres, and disappearances of all kinds of leaders and of young people in many parts of the country. The government of President Iván Duque is a faithful student of the former president, former Senator Álvaro Uribe Vélez, a pioneer of all barbarities known to all for many decades. Uribe has yet to pay for any of his murderous crimes against the working class.
The police are professionals in the art of infiltrating protests. They use many of their members to unleash chaos and to delegitimize any lawful action, so the state can prosecute. This is how high-ranking police officers speak of the connection of young people with groups outside the law such as the ELN (urban guerrillas), the FARC (rural guerrillas). These cops are laying a smoke screen to unleash the persecution and prosecution against these young fighters. The “indignant” mayor of Bogotá and the general population ask for reforms to the police. Then the defense minister and the congress, to appease the growing anger, agree to endlessly debate the matter.
Indigenous workers  mobilized against the massacres, and on Tuesday the workers' union confederations, teachers, students, and social groups also mobilized in various parts of the country, for possible labor and pension reform, among other demands.
The events of September 9, the day of Javier’s murder, which occurred after the death of Javier Ordoñez, were not  prepared, organized, well thought, but rather occurred out of indignation, repudiation,  and spontaneity. Spontaneity, a phenomenon that is not subject to any preparation or direction, is driven by reacting to heat of the moment and circumstances. Spontaneity does not give time to think, to discuss:is it anti-Marxist and anti-dialectical? Thus it can lead to political mistakes.
The Progressive Labor Party does not bet on this type of phenomenon that does not have any political and ideological sharpness, that has no future. Everything that is not prepared in advance, that is not subject to analysis, to discussion, will be doomed to failure, and this is what happened. To advance the working class must carefully prepare its political acts.

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Mohawk Update: No such thing as a neutral state

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04 December 2020 559 hits

CHICAGO, December 2—We are currently seeing workers fight back by cooperating in a mass way to take on the racist capitalist bosses. Members of the international communist Progressive Labor Party (PLP) are helping build a citywide antiracist support network, because the only defense we can count on is a unified and fighting working class.
We’re seeing more organizations come together to fight against the system. The newly-created Chicago Protester Defense Committee looks to unify different organizations and initiatives within Chicago so that we can all come together as a united front from below. Some of our efforts include raising funds to help those arrested make bail, supply and food drives for unhoused workers, building social media campaigns, and arranging legal representation.
We want to fight in defense of our fellow workers, specifically those facing felony charges and racist and sexist violence while protesting against the state terror committed by Mayor Lori Lightcop and her gang, the Chicago Police Department (CPD). The goal is to meet regularly and put in the collective work in order to advance the protection and strength of our class. As the capitalists increase their racist and sexist attacks on us and get closer to war with China and/or Russia, we will need a strengthened working class to build a revolutionary, communist movement to get rid of these parasites once and for all.
Bring the antiracist fight
Throughout most of this year we’ve been reminded just how vicious and ruthless the kkkops can be when the bosses’ power is threatened. We’ve seen them smash cameras, phones, and eyeglasses, confiscate bikes and backpacks, and regularly call protestors by racist and sexist names. These racist thugs often turn these encounters into violent situations for the protestors through taunts, shoves, and pushes which quickly turn into brutal hits with batons, strikes to the head, kicking and dragging protestors through the streets, even sometimes using chemical agents.
On November 19, there was a lawsuit filed against the city bosses on behalf of 60 people who joined protests over this summer. They were fighting to bring national attention against the racist murder of Black workers like George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Tony McDade. The 17-count suit alleges violations of protesters' so-called “constitutional” rights and names Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown, along with 20 officers (USA Today, 11/19).
From the end of May to early June, there were at least 3,000 arrests in Chicago alone (BlockClub Chicago, 6/9). Many arrests have turned into felony charges, including federal cases. The cops have targeted antiracist fighters such as Mohawk Johnson, a Black artist/activist who was arrested at a protest in August and remains on house arrest with eight aggravated assault charges. The bosses try to make an example out of our class sisters and brothers, instilling fear into the rest of us so that we’re hesitant to fight against their state violence.
This is by no means limited to the United States. The bosses in France recently tried to ram through a new law that would criminalize workers for filming cops. Thankfully, workers and students there fought back in the streets and on the job and the bosses were forced to back down (Reuters, 11/30).
The state is never neutral—fight for communism
In the class struggle between the working class and the capitalists, we must never expect the courts and cops to be neutral. They all serve the role of defending and upholding this racist and sexist capitalist state. The bosses’ whole apparatus of “law and order” above all protects property and profits, over workers’ lives.
Those of us in PLP are ready to fight to build this defense network, as it is through the mass movement that we grasp our power to protect ourselves as a class. But ultimately, our collective liberation and justice will only be served when we build a mass Party capable of crushing this capitalist system and replacing it with a worker-led communist one.

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Homeless workers displaced again:Trash the bosses and their courts

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04 December 2020 604 hits

NEW YORK CITY, November 29—About 80 protesters in the Upper West Side opposed Mayor Bill de Blasio’s plan to forcibly relocate workers from The Lucerne (hotel-turned-men’s shelter) to the financial district. Out of this struggle, workers and Progressive Labor Party members are learning two things: the potential power of working-class unity and the inability of this system to provide housing for all.
We demanded that the 5,500 homeless people currently in unsafe crowded shelters be placed in the empty hotel rooms for the duration of the pandemic. Today’s action came three days after we distributed hundreds of Thanksgiving meals to our Lucerne brothers, and four days after losing the legal battle. When the City sought to relocate workers, they sued the City to block the relocation. On November 25, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Debra James ruled in favor of the relocation, paving the way for the forcible eviction of the nearly 200 homeless men from the hotel.
Displaced by the profit motive
The rising homeless numbers in NY State and the U.S. parallel the 70 million displaced refugees around the world. It is a sure sign that the racist profit system can never meet the needs of the international working class. And the enthusiastic support for the men at the Lucerne by people on the Upper West Side reflects that if given the chance, people give what they can to create a more equal and egalitarian world.
But such a world is impossible under capitalism, a system based on racist and sexist exploitation of the working class, rising inequality and wars for profit. Where there is profit, there is exploitation and where there is exploitation, there is no equality. We need communism where the many skills of the working class are harnessed and organized to meet people’s needs and potential. Out of this month’s long campaign, we are slowly building friendships that will build the Progressive Labor Party and the movement for communist revolution.
As one of the leaders of this struggle said after the NY State Supreme Court ruled against the Lucerne residents, “We won whether the City admits it or not because… the [Dept. of Homeless services] has been served notice. If you violate our humanity, we will fight you…we will keep fighting until we beat you, and until your broken system is replaced.”
This capitalist system in crisis has nothing to offer our class. Join the Progressive Labor Party and help us fight for a better world.

Homeless workers displaced again
Trash the bosses and their courts 
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Red memoir: A life of labor and love

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04 December 2020 667 hits

In A life of Labor and Love: A Red Memoir, Wally Linder reminds us of both the power of a united working class to fight the capitalist bosses, and of the special people that make up our class. He interweaves the political and the personal as he chronicles his 89 years of life. He shares the joys and the tragedies, and we get a glimpse of the heart and soul of this ordinary but extraordinary man.
Born in 1930, Wally grew up as a New York working-class kid who loved baseball and was curious about the world. At 19, he participated in a strike at City College against two racist, anti-Semitic professors. At 23, he supported the Rosenbergs, two communists who were falsely accused of giving atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. He later helped “shut down the waterfront” by organizing teamsters and railroad workers to respect tugboat workers’ very sparse picket lines (600 workers had to cover hundreds of stations). We learn not only about these militant actions, but also about the people in Wally’s life.
Multiracial unity strengthens 1960s transit workers
In the early 1960s, the railroad workers unions were still racially segregated, but Wally had been working to bring the two unions together since he first became a steward in the late 1950s. Wally was a Communist Party (CP) member when he started working on the railroad, but would soon join a dissident group—which later became Progressive Labor Party (PLP)—organized around militancy and open advocacy of communism. PLP’s approach was in contrast to that of the CP, which, in response to the McCarthy witch hunts, hid their politics and blended in with activist liberals.
As a member of the Brotherhood Railway Clerks and Freight Handlers, the first thing Wally did was to develop relationships among stewards from both the two racially divided unions. This laid the basis for suggesting that both Black and white stewards represent any worker brought up on disciplinary charges. Their unity allowed for a stronger defense for every worker and as the union kept winning cases, the bosses stopped disciplining so many workers. These victories built support for the idea of one local with multi-racial leadership. The CP’s position had been that members should tell no one that they were communists. Wally discovered, however, that all the workers knew that he and his 65 other comrades working on the railroad were CP members. The FBI told the union leaders, and the union leaders told the workers.
In 1963, when the railroad laid off all its unionized workers, Wally, now a member of PLP, organized a multiracial Railroad Workers Unemployment Council. He inspired many with his fighting spirit, his antiracism, and his communist politics, which he no longer kept “secret”.
The personal is political
Throughout the book, we meet the people Wally loved. We learn about his first wife, Esther, the mother of his two children Anita and Andrew. Like many women, Esther was Wally’s rock. When he feared getting fired for his railroad organizing and not having a job, Esther said, “So, you’ll get another one”. Esther was friends with Stokely Carmichael, loved to dance and go camping, and was a mother figure to many.  She was also an active member of PLP, and was out with a group of her comrades selling the Party’s newspaper, CHALLENGE, when she was tragically struck by a car and killed in 1983.
Wally’s good friend Gus is someone else we meet in this book. Gus worked at a wholesale shoe market, but was so much more than what some might assume from his occupation. Gus was an accomplished cook, carpenter, gardener, fisherman, creator of ceramics and stained glass, voracious reader, world traveler, and a loving husband and father. Wally’s several stories about Gus are a delight and reminder that people are so much more interesting than the stereotypes we might develop of them.
Wally has led an amazing life, and continues to do so! We learn many details about this fascinating person, the historical periods he’s lived through and helped influence, the people in his life who have loved and been loved by him, and the joys and tragedies of his 89 years of life. This book is highly recommended, especially for those participating in today’s antiracist movements and for those wanting to learn about what it means to be a communist.

Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for a copy.

  1. Biden’s victory buys time for bosses—workers still lose!
  2. It’s a lethal system: SMASH THE BOSSES AND THEIR KKKOPS
  3. The scourge of capitalism
  4. APHA: Racism is a health crisis; revolution is the cure

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