Brooklyn, May 21—Today marked the 22nd monthly anniversary of Kyam Livingston’s death while held in a Brooklyn holding cell and denied medical attention. Led by her mother, neighbors, friends and PL’ers, demonstrations against the racist murder of Kyam at the hands of her NYPD jailers have been held every month since.
In this struggle, as well as in the campaigns for justice for Shantel Davis, Kiki Gray and too many more, our message has been consistent. We have called for working-class unity — for men and women, Black, Latin and white — to join this fight against racist police terror. We have brought this message into unions, churches, schools and other organizations, securing support for the struggle and bringing out members of those organizations to participate in the demonstrations and other activities. Our message that we all have a stake and obligation to fight back has been well received.
We have explained that racist murders by the police are not the actions of “a few bad apples” but are caused by the capitalist system’s need to terrorize working-class communities and dampen fightback against the exploitation all workers face. This occurs most often in Black, Latin and immigrant neighborhoods. The systemic nature of this violence is shown by numerous cases where no charges are brought against the kkkops, or they are simply let off by a judge.
We’ve drawn two lessons: capitalism must be overthrown with communist revolution if we want to end this police terror, and we must build working-class fighting unity to do this. At the rallies, hundreds of Challenges are distributed to workers on their way home and or those stopping to listen to the speeches. Our 2015 May Day March through the heart of this Flatbush neighborhood was well received, as thousands of CHALLENGEs were distributed and thousands saluted our march and joined in our chants.
But even within a positive struggle, bad ideas can surface. Today’s rally was attended by a group from “Black Women’s Lives Matter.” They argued that white men shouldn’t have spoken at this rally, and that they benefit from their white skin and gender. They also said that fighting sexism is more important than fighting racism. In fact, they spent more time attacking the white male committee members than they did attacking Kyam’s murderers. The “identity politics” of this group divides the working class. After they spoke, Kyam’s mother spoke, saying she was heartened by support, but felt the need to name and thank the members of the Justice for Kyam Committee after the verbal attack by this group.
Many people are drawn to the fight against police terror. This is a good thing. Each brings their understanding of the world to this fight. PLP and CHALLENGE have been fighting this issue since our birth, 50 years ago. “Police War on Harlem” was the headline of our first edition! Our members walked the walk and talked the talk in the Harlem Rebellion, as we have in countless struggles since. We welcome the exchange of ideas. Communist revolutionaries have long said we have nothing to lose but our chains, we have a world to win!
Indiana — A group of students got together and organized an anti-police terror rally on campus. The rally was organized by three student organizations, Students for Social Change, Black Student Union, and the Latin Cultural Club, where PL has a solid base.
The aim of the rally was to show solidarity with Walter Scott in Charleston, South Carolina, Justus Howell in Zion, Illinois, and Freddie Gray in Baltimore. PL’ers and friends gave speeches detailing the injustices of capitalism and how it needs racism and police terror to sustain itself. Connections with the struggle in Ayotzinapa and Palestine were made as well.
Building Leadership
In the initial planning of the rally, there were some questions as to how the university, which is very bureaucratic, would respond to an unplanned protest. Despite this uncertainty, we continued with having the rally and dared the administration to stop us. They never did.
The number of students at the rally was small. Initially there were about seven, but that number grew to fifteen after some students passing by decided to join.
We managed to get out about 30 CHALLENGEs even though the area we selected (mistakenly) wasn’t as highly trafficked as we had at first thought. Even though we didn’t find as many passersby as we wanted, friends who are new to giving leadership were strengthened and politicized by organizing the event.
After the rally, they were already saying, “When are we organizing the next one?” and “The next one should be at City Hall, so we can call out the mayor.”
Communism: A Long-term Struggle
Campus work in Indiana is very modest and is rebuilding itself. But even with these slow gains, the work is solid and has a sound foundation. We have learned first-hand that quality is primary over quantity, and that students can be won to multi-racial unity. We are continuing the struggle to win our base to communism, not just in theory or practice, but in both.
This takes a long-term outlook on revolution, because even after the eventual seizure of state power, the actual revolution is just beginning. Taking power will be a hard task to complete, but reorganizing society will be an even harder one. However, it is what is to be done if we wish to have a world free from exploitation, wars, racism, sexism, and any other obstacle that oppresses the working class.
NEW YORK CITY — A group of PL’ers recently went with a coalition of community groups to call on New York State legislators to save a “rent stabilization” law at risk of being gutted by the local bosses in favor of “mixed”-income neighborhoods. The current law limits rent increases for workers on short-term leases (one and two years) to those determined by a Rent Stabilization Board, with a cap on how much landlords may increase rent.
Landlords and others who support throwing poorer workers out to attract wealthier tenants insist that “mixed”-income neighborhoods are necessary to bring in services. These filth use racist code words, like making Black and Latin-majority neighborhoods “cleaner,” or “safer,” or “reducing crime.” They support changing the laws to better suit their profit agenda. Liberal rulers would like to put power into the hands of the Warren Buffets who can “take care of poor people” while pretending that the reality of this racist capitalist dictatorship over the working class doesn’t exist.
Mayor Bill de Blasio has promised to find or build 200,000 “affordable” housing units. “Affordable” is out of reach for many families whose annual income is $16,000 to $23,000. For example, new buildings will be built in East New York, Brooklyn. The city will provide incentives and tax breaks to the developers so that 20 to 30 percent of the apartments will be “affordable,” with around 10 percent meeting the definition of “low” income. This will guarantee swollen profits for the real estate industry, dramatically increasing overall rents by squeezing out low-rent apartments.
New York City has long been in a major housing crisis. It has lost 400,000 “low” and “moderate” rent housing units, including 55,000 rent-stabilized apartments where rents rose above $2,500 a month and were de-regulated by the law. Working-class tenants,including the elderly, already pay 50 percent or more of their income for rent. Gentrification of working-class communities in all five boroughs has progressed rapidly, displacing thousands of families and changing entire communities.
Landlords routinely flout the law and ignore repairs, leave buildings in dangerous conditions, and commit deliberate criminal acts and harassment to force tenants to move. Government-owned housing projects languish for lack of repairs, such as the building where the NYPD murdered Akai Gurley. Small buildings and private houses for rent are not covered by any rent laws at all, and rents rise almost overnight and transform entire blocks into upper-income housing. Working-class tenants have nowhere to go, so some leave the city to face long and difficult commutes to work. Tenant success stories in the courts, welcome as they are, are extremely few in number.
PL’ers at the rally argued that the working class needs to understand that bankers, bosses and the real estate industry hold class power. Politicians who thrive on the cheers while chanting empty slogans don’t have a magic wand to change “bad landlords.” Their bosses are the capitalists! It is dangerous for workers to be lulled by the liberal politicians into having false hopes about capitalism. We argued for moving beyond short-term limited reforms, however necessary, to overthrow capitalism and fight for workers’ power under communism. United by an international PLP, we can build real housing for all, in a system based on workers sharing what we have so that we can meet the needs of the working class worldwide.
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Students, Profs Fight Back Against Racist College Cuts
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- 04 June 2015 331 hits
BOSTON — Chants rang out across the Roxbury Community College (RCC) campus “Hands off RCC, this is our community,” and “No more top down management, no more lies, we want a college where students thrive.”
It was the day after faculty and staff voted “no confidence” in the new administration, and 25 faculty, staff, and students rallied in front of the administration building.
The strong statement was the latest step in the battle by students and teachers to keep alive an idea that grew out of the Civil Rights Movement, specifically the struggle to win higher education for Black students who had been excluded by inferior schools and poverty. Now the rulers’ agenda for community colleges is to “vocationalize” them to serve area businesses’ need for workers. Just like K–12 education reform, this bosses’ reform is a response to an intensifying capitalist crisis.
RCC President Valerie Roberson’s job is to carry out this agenda. In 16 months, the administration has forced out 55 workers, increased class size, forced teachers to teach classes outside their field, and cut back on support services. The teaching of critical reading, writing, and thinking is being sacrificed and policy changes are allowing fewer students into four-year colleges.
Although RCC was plagued for decades by dysfunctional administration and underfunding, it became known as a socially conscious community that empowered students to achieve their aspirations. Now, as U.S. capitalism declines, the rulers need the public schools and colleges to help them improve our competitiveness with rival capitalists. This development is part of growing fascism when the bosses must rule with an iron fist, clamping down on workers as they militarize society and prepare for world war.
Although we may not be able to stop this development, by fighting back we can slow it down, building unity and a spirit of resistance for the bigger struggles to come. This requires a long-term outlook, which faculty, staff, and students need to develop. Their fear was offset by the unity we built between the two unions and students as well as their anger at how they are being treated. The biggest weakness was our failure to mobilize students. As of today, the vast majority of RCC students remain in the dark about why they need to fight back. Their passivity is a weakness in our class, created by decades of ruling-class strategy to depoliticize youth and win them to individualism and patriotism.
Worried that activism and dissent will deepen at RCC and spread beyond it, the Department of Higher Education has stepped in to negotiate with the unions. For us, these on-going meetings are an opportunity to maintain momentum and win some gains — but the real gain is the growth of the revolutionary communist movement. PLP has played a crucial role sharpening up the class struggle, but we need to do more. More young people reading CHALLENGE, more meeting with us, and more workers and youth understanding our struggle—those are the steps we need to build a communist revolution.
Indiana — Progressive Labor Party’s political work here has become immersed in the Black Lives Matter Movement. We have begun to merge our campus and community bases in Indiana to focus collectively on organizing in the Black Lives Matter (BLM) struggle. The political line in the BLM movement is very nationalist at times and reformist in nature, but it is filled with many workers who want to fight against injustice. Moreover, it is our job to win these workers. If Black workers are a key revolutionary force, then the Party must organize in these struggles and provide revolutionary leadership to them.
In our local BLM movement, Party members provide key leadership. We struggle within the organization to pull it further to the left, and to keep the focus from becoming sucked into an electoral campaign. We fight against reactionary ideas like “Black Lives Matter” or “All Lives Matter” and instead assert that “Workers’ Lives Matter,” regardless of whether they are Black, Cambodian, or Palestinian. Being involved in this mass organization has given us the opportunity to unite workers in northwest Indiana, with the focus being the economically devastated and super-oppressed workers there.
‘Stop These Racist Sweeps’
Black workers here, like others in majority Black cities in America, are targets of traffic “sweeps” which have resulted in predatory fines, and mass stop-and-frisk tactics. Indiana police target youth for jaywalking. This has become a moneymaking tool in a number of cities, and Black Lives Matter, with leadership of PL’ers, has fought these polices.
Our fightback led to a town hall meeting with the community, where many workers told their stories of racist police encounters. The mayor and police chief were in attendance and spoke. People in the audience, however, saw through their lies and called them out. A comrade gave a speech that called out capitalism as the culprit, and ended with, “stop these racist sweeps.” A criticism was that there was no open PLP speech made. However, some contacts were made and two young Black women workers have been invited to a study group.
We must lead the struggle
With the recent struggle in Baltimore heating up, it can only make us wonder: Could places like Detroit and other super exploited cities be next? Building a base in high-unemployment areas is a critical task for the Party. Ferguson and Baltimore are great examples of this.
When we get involved in these mass struggles, the Party becomes stronger. Younger comrades learn how to lead and veteran comrades are sharpened as well. We also get a glimpse of communism. Through organizing rallies, marches, and events, we see how workers can and will eventually organize a society where everyone has a say and uses their skills to contribute to the collective need.
But with this look at collectivity, we also get a glimpse of fascism. The continued militarization of police shows us that the bosses in the U.S. are getting workers ready for complete fascism. But it also shows that workers are ready to fight against it. The Progressive Labor Party must be ready and in position to lead this fightback.
