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Fightback for Kyam’s Justice Inspires New Generation

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12 December 2015 386 hits

BROOKLYN — Twenty-nine months into the struggle for Kyam Livingston, murdered in 2013 by Brooklyn cops’ racist medical neglect in Central Booking Jail, an increased presence of high school students in the monthly rally represented an important step forward.  This advance didn’t happen spontaneously. Earlier in November, Kyam’s mother, Anita Neal, joined Natasha Duncan—whose sister, Shantel Davis, killed in 2012 by the New York Police Department—in visiting a local high school. Along with a focused effort by Progressive Labor Party youth clubs in Brooklyn, the two women helped introduce a new generation of young working-class fighters to this anti-racist fight.
This struggle is a fight against sexism on two fronts: exposing the racist, sexist murder of Black working-class women in Flatbush, and the fierce leadership given by women in the streets, as demonstrated by Anita, Natasha, and PLP.
Carrying signs and balloons, the protesters flooded into the center of Church Avenue and East 18th Street. The chants rang out: “We want Justice for Kyam Livingston, killed in a Brooklyn cell!”  All traffic stopped as CHALLENGEs and leaflets were distributed. Two or three police officers came running to the group to shoo us back to the sidewalk, but the protesters would not be moved. A sympathetic crowd gathered on the sidewalks, excited to see business as usual stopped by the demonstration.
Students from Brooklyn Tech, John Jay and Tilden high schools spoke at the rally.  A teacher painted a picture of life under capitalism, pointing out the deaths caused by this racist system. The teacher emphasized the common interests of the working class, and how we need a communist society to benefit working people and not just the wealthy.
Worker-Student Unity
As another speech was given in Spanish, many people stopped to listen to the words of unity.  Church members, neighbors, welfare workers, and retirees all spoke at the rally, attacking a capitalist system that allows workers to die slowly because we are denied the resources to save our lives.  We saw a worker-student alliance emerging in this fight.
Anita Neal spoke three times to describe her anguish and loss.  This is the third year, she noted, that she has suffered through Thanksgiving without her daughter. Money was collected for future leaflets and sound permits. People donated their nickels, dimes and dollars; the working class is ever ready to support the struggle against racism.  Many speakers thanked Anita for giving them the leadership that allows them to fight back. They understood that the death of one worker is an injury to all.
After the speeches in the center of the street, we let go of our balloons and watched them waft up into the clouds.  The demonstration then marched back to the corner for another 45 minutes of speaking and chanting. We will demonstrate again on Monday, December 21.  The struggle will continue!

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Venice Beach March Builds Anti-Racist Organizers

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12 December 2015 419 hits

LOS ANGELES—Three racist murders by the Los Angeles Police Department over the past six months were protested on the Venice boardwalk by 30 members of two Unitarian churches, along with members of Progressive Labor Party. The killings of Brendon Glenn, Jason Davis, and Jascent-Jamal Lee “Shakespeare” sparked chants of “Black, Latin, Asian, White! To Smash Racism We Must Unite!”
Now more than ever, we must publicly denounce the bosses’ racism and accelerating drive toward fascism, as the capitalist profit system moves inevitably toward broader inter-imperialist war. All of us must struggle with one another and within ourselves to become leaders in the class struggle.
From Marchers to Organizers
These protests are important not because we think reforms can fix the problems of capitalism, but because taking to the streets shows the power of a united, militant working class. During the pre-march rally, a comrade called on marchers to become organizers: “If everyone on the Westside of Los Angeles who agreed with us about racist cops were here today, we’d have 10,000 people marching.”
Another speaker reminded us how important it is to stand up and protest police murders and the other atrocities of capitalism and imperialism. Through multiracial unity and international workers’ solidarity, PLP is building a mass revolutionary communist movement to smash racist police terror and this entire racist capitalist system. Every time the working class has stood up and fought back, the capitalist ruling class trembles in fear. Now is the time for workers to rise again!
Communist Leaders Serve the Working Class
After the march, a member of one church said she had “never done anything like this before.” For years, PL’ers and friends have been inspired by this woman’s dedication to feeding homeless workers and her concern for fellow workers in the church. Today marked her first demonstration, a qualitative advance in her commitment to the class struggle. A comrade said, “If you can change, so can lots of other people. And you know some of them.” She smiled and nodded. The implication was clear: Through continued struggle we can win workers to become the leadership our international class needs, communist leaders to help build a movement of millions and liberate the working class from capitalism.
Our work is cut out for us: to create more organizers and more communists. We have invited several new people to our monthly PLP study group and added them to our CHALLENGE mailing list.    
We continue to struggle with our friends, coworkers, neighbors and fellow churchgoers to come out and protest. As the anniversary of Tamir Rice’s death and the non-indictment of Mike Brown’s killer kkkop approaches, there will be another rally followed by a “Protesters Potluck.” Stay tuned for more articles!

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In Rekia Boyd’s Memory, Smash Racist KKKops

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12 December 2015 388 hits

CHICAGO, November 17 — Rekia’s brother led the crowd in, “I am Rekia Boyd!”  Outside the hearing, PLP led, “Racist cops you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide.”
More than a hundred people protested at the monthly Chicago Police Board hearing against the March 2012 murder of Rekia Boyd, a young Black woman, by off-duty kkkop Dante Servin yet to be fired. We distributed CHALLENGE and a leaflet about the Paris attacks. We exposed how the police terrorize workers to maintain the boss’s system.
Servin fired into a crowd in a West Side alley and killed Rekia. He was found not guilty because Cook County Judge Dennis Porter ruled he should have been charged with murder instead of manslaughter. Rekia’s brother said she would have been 26 years old this month and demanded to know why her killer had not been fired in the three years since the murder.
This case illustrates how the police get away with murder, and especially racist murder of Black and Latin women and men. In just three cases of racist murder, the city of Chicago has paid $8 million dollars to the families of the slain victims.
Some protesters were Black nationalists, who advances the idea that Black workers and students have more in common with Black bosses and politicians than with non-Black workers and students; and therefore should ally with bosses and politicians of the same color rather than their class. Nationalism is a ruling class idea to try to divide the multi-racial, multi-ethnic working class. It is a way to divert the communist internationalism PLP fights for. We will organize more workers to attend the next hearing to expose the racist cops and their nationalists.

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Aids Day Rally Attacks Racist Profiteering Drug Companies

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12 December 2015 325 hits

Washington, DC, December 1 —Chanting “Pills Cost Pennies, Greed Costs Lives” a spirited picket line challenged the pharmaceutical lobby, PhRMA at noon on World Aids Day. Friends and members of Progressive Labor Party, Metropolitan Washington Public Health Association and DC Fights Back attacked the exorbitant prices charged by Gilead Sciences for curative Hepatitis C medications, which hit Black workers the hardest (see article in Challenge, (date)). Protesters also attacked international trade agreements that will deny many HIV medications to countries such as Vietnam, and the profits made by drug companies on the back of workers who pay taxes for government drug development and then have to watch more tax dollars given back to the companies from Veterans Affairs, Medicaid and Medicare funding. Protesters also attacked the tax dodges (“inversion”) when companies like Pfizer merge with Allergen in Ireland to avoid paying U.S. taxes, declaring “Inversion Is Perversion”!

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Worker-Student Alliance Fights Back in The Bronx

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12 December 2015 381 hits

THE BRONX, December 2 — Students worldwide are raging at the exploitation and racist oppression of capitalism. From South Africa — where tens of thousands demanded and won a cancellation of fee increases — to the University of Missouri — where the president was forced to resign after repeatedly ignoring racist attacks on campus — students are rising up. While these actions should rightly be championed for challenging the ruling class’s racism, we must also be aware that militant reform movements will neither end capitalism nor fundamentally change its racist foundations. Only a mass revolutionary party--Progressive Labor Party—can accomplish that. Still, reform actions can be a training ground for communist revolution.
Student fightback on a smaller scale recently played out at a community college. Thirty-five students and professors, including members of Progressive Labor Party, demonstrated against a planned tuition hike throughout the City University of New York. The CUNY bosses’ plan, coming on the heels of five straight years of tuition increases, is clearly racist, as the CUNY system serves primarily Black, Latin, Asian, and immigrant students.
The demonstration was bold as we marched through campus and into the cafeteria. For many, it was their first protest, yet they loudly chanted and held up signs as other students and faculty looked on. Many observers gave thumbs-up in approval and nodded their heads, boosting our confidence to fight back. The protest showed that people are open not only to fightback, but to being trained in class struggle with communists.
Model of Student-Worker Alliance
Students also attacked injustices to the CUNY faculty, who have worked five years without a contract. “The professors have waited long enough!” they chanted. This reflected an understanding that students and faculty and staff are all on the same side, and that the same factors driving up tuition are also driving down wages. Students spoke about having adjunct instructors who need to rush off to teach at another school immediately after class. Many adjuncts live in poverty or are on government assistance. As the faculty fights for a new contract, it is vital to build a student-worker alliance, and to demand that any raise for workers not be funded by a student tuition hike.
Cutbacks for War
After we marched to picket at the college’s front gate, PL’ers injected a communist perspective. One comrade exposed the root cause of the cutbacks attacking the working class worldwide: inter-imperialist rivalry. The U.S. ruling class is raising tuition and cutting financial aid because they need to funnel money to their military war machine to prop up their failing empire. As China and Russia increasingly challenge the U.S. worldwide, as in Syria, we can expect even more racist cutbacks.
The battle against ISIS, a group formed out of the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq that the U.S. ousted in 2003, reflects the increasingly dire situation facing U.S. imperialism. The money U.S. bosses need to wage this fight is being stolen from our class in the form of racist and sexist cutbacks in healthcare, childcare, education, housing, jobs and social services. In their attempt to pacify and neutralize the working class, the capitalist rulers are trying to exploit workers’ fears to build all-class unity for an escalated war in the Middle East.
Calling Out the Prez
Finally, we marched to the administration building. Our volume forced the college president to emerge from his office. Campus cops came running down as well, exposing their fear of student-professor power. He offered the usual platitudes about taking our message to the CUNY chancellor and “being on our side.”
One student called out the president’s bluff and took out his cellphone, demanding that Marti call the Chancellor then and there. Of course, that didn’t happen. Under capitalism, at all levels, it’s the job of politicians and administrators to pacify workers and students. While some students seemed to take Marti by his words, there were many looks of healthy skepticism. Most people knew the president’s promise wasn’t worth a damn.
This growing skepticism is an opportunity for PLP to raise our ideas, above all the need for communist revolution and the making of a new society. Over recent years, the fighting spirit of the working class may have burned more dimly than in the past. But the fire is far from extinguished! From South Africa to the Bronx, students and workers are rising up in ways large and small. Their fighting spirit, combined with PLP’s communist politics, will pave the way to a future without bosses, racism, capitalist exploitation or imperialist wars.

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  2. Lessons From 1949 CCNY Strike
  3. 30th Annual Anti-Racism Feast: Celebrate Multiracial Fightbacks!
  4. Habtom Zerhom: Lynched by Israeli Fascism

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