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Vaccination Wars: Capitalist Mysticism vs. Science
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- 26 February 2015 61 hits
Because of the recent outbreak of measles among some children who visited Disneyland, the mass media have focused on parents who are afraid to have their children vaccinated. Measles can kill, but many parents have been fooled by widespread disinformation that measles vaccinations may lead to autism. This is a blatant lie. No one knows what causes autism, but we have voluminous proof that vaccines do not.
The lie was raised to prominence by Andrew Wakefield, a British surgeon who profited hugely by submitting a fraudulent paper in 1998 to the leading medical journal Lancet. Beforehand he had been hired by lawyers trying to sue vaccine companies to prove their case, and the journal paper was the result. His paper reviews the cases of 12 children, claiming that they all developed autism within two weeks of receiving the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine. It was later shown, however, that some of these children had signs of autism prior to the vaccinations and others never had autism. Wakefield’s medical license was subsequently revoked.
Every study since then has rejected Wakefield’s attribution of autism to the vaccine, any vaccine. But his murderous lie lives on through self-serving celebrities like Jenny McCarthy, the Playboy model, who refuses to vaccinate her children. Wakefield himself has built a following in his adopted home of Texas, where he continues to claim he is the victim of government collusion with vaccine manufacturers. One doesn’t have to support either government or vaccine makers to conclude that Wakefield is responsible for crimes against the working class.
When unvaccinated children catch the measles, or other potentially deadly contagious diseases, they expose other children. When too few children in a community (less than 90 percent) have been vaccinated, all are at risk of epidemics, even those who have been vaccinated. Measles was once virtually eradicated in the U.S. and Europe, even if not everywhere in the world, due solely to the vaccine. Of every thousand children who contract measles, one or two will die. But no children will develop autism from the vaccine.
Laws passed by pandering and ignorant politicians in many places allow vaccination exemptions for parents on the grounds of religious or simply “personal” beliefs. But what if someone has a “personal” belief that it’s all right to steal? Stealing, though enforced by capitalist conditions, is still a violation of working-class morality. And incidentally it’s against the law, unless committed by huge banks and corporations. The stunning hypocrisy of vaccine exemptions in turn supports the spread of anti-scientific mysticism and superstition — useful tools for the reigning capitalist class to keep workers divided and subjugated.
Most parents who fail to vaccinate their children out of fear are simply trying to protect them. But it’s not the motivation that counts; it’s the effect. Despite opposition by the American Pediatric Society, some pediatricians refuse to accept children as patients whose parents won’t have them vaccinated, on the grounds that exposure to unvaccinated children raises the disease risk for their other patients. Likewise, some school districts refuse to allow children to attend school until they are vaccinated. Both of these measures represent a scattered approach that does not solve the problem for the children or their parents.
Only a centrally planned cooperative system, based on the best that science can offer — i.e., communism — will be capable of stemming the effects of mysticism and disinformation and be able to protect children as well as adults. Communism is a system that will encourage families, friends, and neighbors to help each other with childcare and other needs. Communism raises science to a premium while eradicating mysticism and superstition. Under communist leadership, with the Progressive Labor Party having grown to include millions of workers, the working class will see to it that all parents have the wherewithal to feed, clothe, and shelter their children, and to be guided only by science rather than be confused by superstition.
New York CITY, February 18 — “A Little Cold, A Little Pain, That Won’t Stop This Justice Train!” That was the chant today as about 150 workers and professionals held a very spirited picket line on the coldest day of the year, in support of the 56 attorneys, paralegals and secretaries who are on strike at Mobilization For Youth (MFY) Legal Services. They are represented by the Legal Services Staff Association (LSSA)/UAW Local 2320. After almost four weeks on strike in record-breaking cold weather, on February 24, MFY’s union signed a new contract with their bosses.
The strikers demanded increased staffing with affirmative action to reduce workloads and better reflect the they serve, and family leave and pay-equity for the lowest-paid workers.
The millionaire Wall Street lawyers who sit on the Board had basically told the strikers, “We can afford to meet your demands. We just don’t think it‘s worth it!” The bosses also brought in scabs, a temp clerical worker and some contract attorneys.
What they don’t think is “worth it” is quality legal help for the poor, mostly Black, Latin, immigrant and women workers who need help with housing and family court, bankruptcy, benefits for the elderly and many other issues. They want to turn MFY and all legal services for the poor into a McDonald’s type operation, cheap and fast, and a workforce with a huge turnover.
PLP salutes the MFY strikers. Their militancy and solidarity during the bitter cold weather is a model for all workers to follow! But the struggle has only begun. Under capitalism, the living conditions of those MFY serves will only worsen and become more desperate. We call on the MFY strikers to take it to the next level and join PLP!
From the moment the vicious murders of the Ayotzinapa teachers took place, PLP members in Mexico have participated in the massive protests. At these protests, we distributed flyers criticizing the Mexican government, and every reformist and electoral “alternative” group being promoted among workers. The attack, which took place in Iguala, Guerrero State last September 27, is a reflection of the violence that the ruling class is willing to use to enforce its plans against the working class as the bosses consolidate and assert their power. Six other people, three of them students, were killed in a police and paramilitary attack. To this day, 57 youth are still missing.
Events like this become more frequent as the global capitalist crisis deepens and imperialist rivals, the U.S., Russia and China, get ready to fight World War III. We place all blame for the murders on the capitalist system, and call for the working class to organize for communist revolution.
A group of Party members participated in a demonstration of striking IPN (National Polytechnic Institute) teachers and students, who are fighting the consequences of the Mexican bosses’ education reforms. They distributed 2,000 flyers.
Ruling Class Needs Behind Ayotzinapa Massacre
The Mexican ruling class needs to discipline the workers’ and other ruling class rivals in controlling tax revenue and educational policy.
Energy reform allows the U.S. to have more control over energy resources like oil, which is vital to the U.S. military in the event of war. The education and labor reforms are designed to a cheap labor force. They represent more oppression and exploitation for workers.
The changes that the bosses are trying to put in effect at IPN are part of the education reforms, which are designed to suppress political participation in the polytechnic community, to make higher education more technically oriented and to reduce teachers’ benefits. These reforms respond to the needs of the capitalist system to reduce enrollment in public education to benefit the business of private education. It also turns public schools into cheap labor factories, where trained and docile workers don’t require the training of a highly qualified technician.
The approval of these reforms was framed by terror against the working class by the army, the police and the crime cartels. Against this terror, all of the electoral political parties to encourage passivity of the working class, while helping build unity of the most powerful ruling class groups in Mexico and the U.S. Due to their deep unpopularity with the workers, the bosses resort to using terror to blunt the workers’ resistance, which has a rich history in Mexico, especially in 1968, when IPN students played a key role in the anti-imperialist student movement.
Under capitalism, education is a business, and one of the most important means to indoctrinate youth with nationalist, sexist, individualist, and racist ideology. The attacks confronted by IPN teachers and students will not end as long as there is a capitalist system. It is essential for capitalism to destroy the living conditions of the working class because that’s one of the ways they maximize their profits. Capitalists will try, by any means, to cut salaries, retirement pensions, health and education services.
Growing Worker-Student Unity Key as PLP Strengthens
Under these conditions, the massive protests of the IPN students against changes to administrative regulations and curriculum is very significant. This struggle is part of the entire working class resistance to the reforms imposed by the ruling class.
The struggle of the Polytechnic students is developing unity with workers and students in other schools like UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico), UAM (Autonomous Metropolitan University), and UAEM (Autonomous University of Mexico State). This uity will be crucial to defeating attacks by school authorities and the ruling class.
We need to keep organizing the international revolutionary communist PLP, not an electoral party, to lead millions of workers in a communist revolution to abolish the oppressive capitalist system and build a new communist society. Workers’ power is the goal that in the last century inspired millions of workers around the world, including many of those who were part of the worldwide 1968 movement against imperialism. We honor their memory by renewing our commitment to the fight for a just and egalitarian society.
Our flyers were written collectively among our comrades and friends following lively debates about the causes of these attacks and their relation to global imperialist rivalry. Our friends participated in the discussion and helped distribute literature during the demonstrations.
One of our weaknesses was not quickly developing a plan for this struggle, which has already lasted months. We could have involved our friends in more than just passing our flyers. We plan to organize a group to participate more actively in the demonstrations with banners and flags, and organize conferences to put forward PLP’s position. From Ayotzinapa to Ferguson, the struggle of the working class for its liberation will put an end to capitalist oppression!
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Workers’ Power in Greece? Not So Fast, Says Socialist!
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- 26 February 2015 64 hits
Our club recently discussed the election of Syriza (Coalition of the Radical Left) to lead the government of Greece. In the last few years, Greek workers have been hit with a 25 percent unemployment rate, and a one-third average reduction in household income. It therefore isn’t surprising that many supported a party that promises to lessen the pain — reduce austerity conditions by raising the minimum wage, shifting property taxes to the wealthy, and beginning a jobs program.
To be able to afford these social programs, the Greek government must convince the other European Union (EU) capitalist governments and their institutions (the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund) to allow Greece to reschedule payment of the $373 billion it owes. (A relatively better demand, for debt cancellation, was never on the table.) Many of our friends are optimistic that Syriza will win the battle over the debt, allowing it to improve conditions a bit for Greek workers.
The situation in Greece is a study in contradictions. The other European capitalist nations, led by Germany, have tremendous leverage over Greece, as they have the power to bankrupt the Greek banking system and cause an economic collapse. Yet a collapse of the Greek economy would deepen the recession in Europe and lead to political chaos, which they dread. The Syriza-led government, aware of this dilemma, is hoping to negotiate some flexibility in debt payments so that it can finance a government stimulus program.
Yet EU leaders are playing hardball, because they don’t want to set a precedent that other debtor countries will jump to take advantage of. They have taken steps to weaken Greece’s ability to borrow money, and ultimately they have the power to cut off loans altogether. The capitalist rating agency, Standard & Poor’s, has already downgraded Greek bonds to junk status (high-risk because there is little to back them up), making it harder for the country to borrow.
Besides the contradiction within European capitalism, there is also the contradiction within Syriza. Although it is a coalition of left parties, including those that call themselves communist or socialist, the leadership has made it very clear that they are not trying to implement socialism, but are instead trying, in their words, to “stabilize capitalism.” The second most powerful leader of Syriza, after Prime Minister Tsipras, is the Minister of Finance, Yanis Varoufakis, who refers to himself as a Marxist. Varoufakis wrote an essay last year in which he set out the goals of Syriza:
… it is Left’s historical duty, at this particular juncture, to stabilize capitalism; to save European capitalism from itself and from the inane handlers of the Eurozone’s inevitable crisis.
He goes on to say that if Greek capitalism is not stabilized, it will likely lead to a rise in support for the Golden Dawn fascists, who in alliance with the police and the military will seize power as similar forces did in Europe in the 1930’s, and as they did in Greece in 1967. This fear of fascism and the violence it would unleash upon the working class, is used by Syriza to justify propping up a capitalist system that is abhorred by most of the radical coalition’s members!
However, even if Greek capitalism were to rebound and experience new growth, it would not put an end to destructive economic crises, which occur regularly and are intrinsic to capitalism. It would not put an end to the exploitation of workers, or the gross inequality we see in every capitalist country, or the vile racism endemic to capitalism, or the mistreatment and abuse of immigrant workers, or even the rise of fascism, which develops out of capitalist decay and can only be crushed by an armed working class. Moreover, if the EU capitalists do agree to restructure Greek debt, it will demand significant concessions in return, including a continuation of austerity policies and new rules making it easier to fire workers.
It is certainly true that revolution is not on the immediate horizon, either in Greece or the U.S. But as we actively take part in a thousand reform battles, we remember what Marx and Engels wrote in The Communist Manifesto:
The Communists fight for the attainment of the immediate aims, for the enforcement of the momentary interests of the working class; but in the movement of the present, they also represent and take care of the future of that movement. … The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be attained only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions.
Taking “care of the future” means building a revolutionary communist party with the understanding that capitalism needs to be replaced, even if it takes decades.
We are hoping to have many conversations with our friends, including those from Greece, about the struggle against capitalist austerity and the need for revolution rather than just reform. We hope to make contact with Greeks who share our anti-capitalist vision. We’ll begin by urging all our friends and students to march on May Day to celebrate the fighting spirit of workers from Greece to Ferguson and call for the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism.
Los Angeles, February 21 — While 13,000 West Coast dock workers returned to work today, another 1,350 oil refinery workers walked out at the Motiva Enterprises refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, the largest refinery in the U.S.
The dock workers, members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) have been waging a work-to-rule campaign against the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), in a nine-month contract fight. Once a communist-led union, the ILWU remains the most militant, left-wing union in the U.S. They struck the docks during the Occupy movement and again over the issue of racist police terror and the killing of Oscar Grant. They also refused to unload Israeli ships during the bombing of Gaza last summer.
The contract covers all West Coast dock workers, leaving the bosses little wiggle room when there is a dispute. A deal was finally reached after Obama ordered U.S. Labor Secretary Thomas Perez to San Francisco to get the docks back up and running. The new contract covers docks at 29 seaports that handle about $1 trillion worth of cargo annually. The amount of cargo trailers waiting to be unloaded at just the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, if stacked one on top of the other, would reach the International Space Station. U.S. exports are also waiting to reach Asian markets, from agricultural goods to auto parts.
The details of the agreement have not been released, but the PMA’s “last, best and final” offer included continuing fully paid health coverage, an $11,000 increase in the maximum pension benefit, and a $1/hour wage increase over each of the next five years.
On Strike!
Meanwhile, the first nationwide oil refinery strike in more than 30 years is growing. The United Steelworkers union represents over 30,000 workers at refineries, terminals, petrochemical plants and pipelines across the country that produce more than 60 percent of U.S. oil. The Unfair Labor Practice strike over health and safety issues began on February 1, at nine strategic sites in Texas, California, Washington, and Kentucky and has spread to sites in Indiana and Ohio. The Motiva refinery is a joint venture between Shell and Saudi Refining Inc. that produces over 600,000 barrels per day. The walkout there raises the strike level from 10 percent to 20 percent of the workforce, with the rest of the workers poised to go out at any time.
The union called the strike after rejecting proposals from Royal Dutch Shell, the lead negotiator for Tesoro Corporation, Exxon Mobil, Marathon Petroleum, and LyondellBasell Industries. The U.S. oil industry made almost $90 billion in profit in 2014.
No Blood for Oil
Workers are demanding the hiring of hundreds of new workers for safe staffing levels, an end to the use of outside contractors on daily maintenance work, and increased time off between shifts to combat fatigue. This strike shows that the slogan “No Blood for Oil,” rings true whether in the U.S., Iraq or Syria.
These strikes reflect the potential power of the industrial working class. Nothing moves without workers. The slightest stirring strikes fear among the war makers and strikebreakers, especially coming on the heels of the Ferguson rebellion and nationwide upsurge. As May Day approaches, we fight for the day when that power is unleashed to build a communist world, based on equality and meeting the needs of the international working class.