- Information
Bronx OWS: ‘Positive Thinking’ Won’t Halt Cops’ and Bosses’ Attacks
- Information
- 03 December 2011 413 hits
BRONX, NEW YORK, November 28 — For the past month, Occupy the Bronx, one of the offshoots of the main Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, has met every Saturday morning, providing further evidence that the anti-Wall Street sentiment is shared by large sections of the working class. The largely black and Latino group here expresses the same outrage and anger at bankers and bosses that is found on Wall Street. PL has been participating in the group’s activities, attempting to bring communist analysis and leadership into the darkness of reform and pacifism that limits this movement.
Perhaps the primary weakness in OWS is its lack of understanding of how racism is essential to capitalist inequality. In the Bronx, the links between racism and unemployment, poor education, and inadequate health care are more obvious. But even here, the task of bringing communist or even anti-racist ideas to the forefront is not necessarily any easier. For one thing, the leadership of the Bronx group is straight from OWS, and they’ve brought the same organizational style with them. Called “direct democracy,” it is actually a strategy to block radical motions and stifle revolutionary ideas. Also prominent is vague, idealistic thinking, typified by slogans like “the power of the people” and “This is what democracy looks like.” While they sound good, these slogans leave the working class unprepared to confront our class enemy.
Idealism versus Materialism
Idealism says that thoughts and ideas are the most important things, and that they determine our material reality, the way we live. The opposite of idealism is materialism, which says that the way we live (including social relationships between workers and bosses or protesters and cops) determine the ideas that we have. To put it simply: Positive thinking, by itself, will never stop the police from attacking us. It will never stop capitalists from exploiting us. Materialist philosophy calls for a deep understanding of the role played by the police and politicians in maintaining capitalism — and the extent to which the ruling class will go to maintain its class rule.
It is unclear how the recent attack by Mayor Bloomberg and the cops to clear OWS from Zuccotti Park will affect Occupy the Bronx and other offshoots in New York. Whatever happens, we will continue to participate in the group. Our first goal is to correct our major weakness: to begin to distribute CHALLENGE to the Occupiers.
We are involved in various “working groups,” including one on education and another called the “think tank,” where we try to bring communist ideas into the group. We are meeting people who are completely fed up. They are looking for answers and finding reformist, dead-end, idealist solutions. CHALLENGE will help us transform the idealistic struggle against Wall Street and corporate greed and into the materialist struggle against the profit system and for communism.
The main weakness of Occupy Wall Street is its implication that only a tiny minority, mainly bank presidents and Fortune 500 CEOs, benefit from the gross inequalities of capitalism, and the rest of us need to unite to make things fairer.This idea hides the class nature of the capitalist profit system and all the agents it uses to enforce the exploitation of the working class. The Occupy slogan, We Are the 99%, distorts people’s understanding of the ranks of our class enemies.
Have you ever been directly supervised by Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, David Koch, or any other billionaire? Hardly. In fact, many corporate vice presidents, human resources directors, managers, administrators and supervisors are links in the chain that binds us to the capitalist system.
Bosses’ Flunkies Not On Our Side
For example, an assembly-line worker has a foreman, the foreman’s supervisor, a plant manager, and so on up the line. All of these people are responsible for extracting surplus value (the source of all profits) from our labor. None of them are on our side. Similarly, a schoolteacher must answer to various assistant principals, a principal, a district superintendent, and the people elected or appointed to the board of education. All of these flunkies are on the bosses’ side, unless and until they demonstrate otherwise by such actions as supporting a strike or joining Progressive Labor Party.
One Percenters Have Millions of Agents
Other tools of the capitalist class include politicians (Democratic and Republican); political appointees (judges, district attorneys, commissioners, regulators); high-paid lawyers, money managers and other professionals; media hacks; entertainment performers and executives; religious leaders; and professors and think tank fellows, both liberal and conservative, who are charged with churning out capitalist ideology and strategy. And don’t forget highly paid national and local union leaders, whose job is to work together with the bosses to get workers to submit to layoffs and cuts in wages, working conditions, health benefits and pensions.
Then there are those charged with violently maintaining capitalist power in the U.S. and internationally the armed forces officer corps, the police, the prison guards. The cops and prison guards have proven time and again that they are corrupt, racist and sexist. They will follow any orders to attack workers, and dream up more on their own.
The same is true, with few exceptions, of the officer corps of the armed forces. Rank-and-file soldiers and sailors, however, are workers in uniform. They can be, have been, and will continue to be won to defy the brass and turn imperialist wars into a communist revolution against the ruling class.
In short, We Are the 99%, underestimates the number of people whose job it is to maintain inequality and who are committed to doing so. As our Party develops deeper roots in the working class, a segment of lower-level supervisors undoubtedly will join us. Nevertheless, that leaves a lot of people who are paid to support and fight for the capitalist class. At the same time, the 99% equation unites us with many bosses and their agents, in one great progressive, American mass including the cops who beat up Occupy Wall Streeters. The bosses plan for that movement is to march together, under the U.S. flag, in support of imperialist war.
“We Are the 99%,” however, contains one important aspect of truth. Whatever the actual percentages, the working class is immensely larger than the capitalist class and all its flunkies put together. We need real class consciousness based on the understanding that workers produce all value, most of which is stolen by the bosses. We need to build anti-racist, anti-sexist, international unity of all workers against all bosses and their servants. This will enable us to overthrow them and build a society based on equality and collectivity — communism.
- Information
Russian, Chinese, U.S. Rulers Vie for Control of Syria
- Information
- 03 December 2011 399 hits
The current struggle in Syria is between a U.S. empire in decline and rapidly rising Russia and China. Inter-imperialist rivalry is being played out as the hypocritical Obama and his Arab League lackeys condemn the “butcher” Al-Assad regime for cracking down on his protestors. The rulers’ press shows how the U.S. empire and allies want to use the Libyan blueprint of a no–fly zone enforced by massive bombing raids to foment regime change in Syria. But what is missing is exactly why the U.S. is desperate to place their own puppet on the Syrian throne.
Syria and Libya have parallels in the U.S. desperation to invade and control. In Libya, though, the U.S. mainly is concerned with the threat of Chinese and Russian economic investment in Libyan oil. In Syria the U.S. wants to try to solidify its military and economic control over the entire Middle East by weakening Russia, Iran and China who use the Al-Assad fascists as their proxy. Russia has a fundamental strategic interest to preserve its military base in Syria and is in the process of sending warships to Syria as part of a drive to revive itself as an imperialist empire.
Iran Emerges Winner of Iraq War
Iran was a real winner of the U.S. war in Iraq. It still maintains its ability to arm and fund its proxy forces like Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Palestine, and has now developed the ability to influence Iraq’s government to a great extent. It is Iran, to the U.S.’s chagrin, that has facilitated Iraq making an agreement with pseudo-state “Kurdistan” (see CHALLENGE 11/30/11) that challenged Exxon/Mobil’s outright conquest of an Iraqi oil field. Iran supports Syria against the Free Syrian Army (FSA) — the Sunni-based puppet force of Syrian Army deserters that is seeking protection from Turkey and Saudi Arabia in order to topple the Assad’s primarily Alawite, Christian, and Druze regime.
Sellout remnants of the old communist movement in the Middle East try to play up Assad’s Nasserite roots of a pseudo-socialistic outright fascist state as standing up to imperialism. To them, allying with “lesser-evil” bosses includes getting into bed with dictators who espouse and arm religious fundamentalists to carry out sexist and racist massacres against working class-women, men, and children.
All Bosses Are Workers’ Enemies
PLP in the Middle East consistently struggles with our friends to understand that while the U.S. continually brutalizes and murders the working class in order to advance U.S. Imperialism (all the while condemning Syria), Russian Imperialism and Iranian hegemony are not alternatives that can serve our needs.
Neither Syria, Russia, China, Hezbollah, Iran, nor the myth of a “Welfare State” is the answer the working class needs in the Middle East. Only a communist revolution to smash Israeli apartheid, Iranian fundamentalism, Syrian dictatorship, as well as Russian, Chinese and U.S. imperialism will end the brutalization of the protestors and the working class as a whole.
Russia will block NATO’s attempt at a no-fly zone because it is in its strategic interest to do so, and China will continue to fund and arm Iranian proxies in order to challenge the U.S.’s favorite thug, Israel, but it will continue to be the children of the working class who are sacrificed to allow the imperialists to pursue their power struggle.
- Information
Nationwide Fascist Assault Occupiers Resist Bosses’ Raids
- Information
- 18 November 2011 467 hits
NEW YORK, November 15 — At one o’clock this morning, a thousand cops made a mockery of capitalist “freedoms” by raiding the Occupy Wall Street encampment here in Zuccotti Park. The lower Manhattan raid was apparently coordinated with those in more than a dozen other cities, as the bosses used their state power to attempt to squash the Occupy movement nationwide. As Oakland Mayor Jean Quan told the BBC, “I was recently on a conference call with 18 cities across the country who had the same situation.”
The NYC fascist cops arrested more than 220 protesters, forcibly evicted the rest, and confiscated or destroyed their belongings. Six reporters were also arrested, and other media and legal observers were barred from witnessing the attack. The cops then staged their own occupation of the park, forcing protesters onto the sidewalks around it.
Hours after the cop invasion, the New York State Supreme Court ruled that protesters must obey the “park rules,” even if those rules were concocted after the protests began. This shows how the bosses use the cops and courts to crush any opposition. This is their “democracy,” a dictatorship of the capitalists where the “1%” (the bosses) do whatever they like, while the “99%” (the working class) face police brutality and arrests if they resist. Meanwhile, the hypocritical capitalist media painted the protesters as hooligans who were abusing their “first amendment rights” — a stark contrast to their fawning treatment of the Arab Spring, when the U.S. bosses sought to maintain control of Middle East oil by forging ties with the new rulers there.
The New York bosses’ aggression, however, has failed to break the fighting spirit of the OWS activists, mostly young workers and students. Hours after their forced eviction, they were back in Zuccotti Park (though without sleeping gear, which was barred by billionaire Mayor Bloomberg), renewing their protest against Wall Street.
The weakness of the Occupy movement is that its leaders—many of them beholden to the Democratic Party — stand for electoral and legislative reform of capitalism. This thinking plays into the hands of the rulers, who need to funnel workers’ anger into a vote for one capitalist politician or another.
Several PL’ers joined today’s struggle, distributing CHALLENGE and calling for the overthrow of this rotten system that makes the 1% rich by exploiting the 99%. Our call for communism, a society where the working class rules, was met with much interest, with many rank-and-file protesters open to new ideas about how to combat the racist inequalities of capitalism.
- Information
Oakland Workers Swell the Protests: General Strike Hits Capitalist Horrors
- Information
- 18 November 2011 478 hits
OAKLAND, November 16 — The Occupy movement continues to explode here. After, the November 2 General Strike briefly closed the Port of Oakland, protests continue and are focused more sharply on the devastation that capitalism brings to the working class. Front and center are the issues of economic inequality, institutional racism, and the need for international unity to link our struggles with those of workers around the world.
The intensification of Occupy Oakland was sparked by the general strike, which was a great step forward from earlier events. It aimed, if still symbolically, at shutting down the whole capitalist economy. A march that started under a “Death to Capitalism” banner temporarily closed several downtown Oakland banks. Teachers, the most visible group of unionized workers at the strike, brought students to the protest. Some schools also shut down, and hundreds of students marched at Laney Community College to challenge racist inequalities and corporate control of education.
Medical workers, particularly in the California Nurses Association, had already mobilized to support the first-aid needs of the encampment in what is now called Oscar Grant Plaza. The multiracial participants were young and old, students and workers, marching together in social groups of families or friends. Conspicuously absent from the general strike were contingents organized by unions or mainstream churches and community groups. While the rank and file of these groups turned out, participation by the Alameda Central Labor Council was limited to serving food.
The general strike ended in a march of 15,000 to shut down the Port of Oakland, with the sympathy of many in the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), a union with militant communist roots, and the trucker sub-contractors who haul the cargo. The ILWU has led job actions against apartheid, and in April it marched in solidarity with state workers in Wisconsin to protest union-busting there. Three years ago, the mostly immigrant and non-unionized truckers helped shut down all California ports on May Day over the issue of immigrant rights. (One trucker took our poster and CHALLENGE during the general strike, and asked why we had not come at 6 a.m. to really shut the Port down.) This collective history was a big reason that Occupy Oakland focused on Oakland’s economic center, the Port.
A Step Toward Waking the Sleeping Giant
PL’ers spent the weeks before and after the General Strike bringing the Occupy movement to our jobs, especially at transit. Alameda-Contra Costa Transit (AC) and MUNI workers joined us at the noontime activities on the day of the general strike. The absentee rate doubled at one garage in Oakland. During the rally, we talked with coworkers about the strategic importance of mass transit workers. As one worker put it, “Transit workers move the Bay Area economy just like the ILWU in the Port.” Several spoke on an open mike. One ended his speech: “When I say workers, you say power!” The chant of “workers’ power” echoed throughout the crowd.
As we marched to the Port, we had a long discussion about communist economic and social relations. One Municipal Transportation Agency (MUNI) coworker asked us, “what do you mean, abolish wages? How can we live without money to buy things?” Wages represent our enslavement by the capitalists; they distort our relationships with other workers and the working class as a whole. Under communism, we won’t need money to fulfill our needs. We will produce and share according to need and commitment.
At a monthly Union meeting of Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU), PLP members made a motion to donate money to Occupy Oakland. We argued that workers have the Occupy movement to thank for refocusing anger away from public worker pensions and toward the 1%, the finance capitalists who are attacking all of us. The motion failed because the union is broke from paying lawyers (instead of organizing workers’ action) to fight the financial capitalists. We did, however, raise $340 from individual workers. It was an example of the class-conscious platform we are advancing in the union elections.
We Teach and We Learn
On the day of the General Strike, PLP members and friends marched as a contingent with flags, posters and chants. We distributed hundreds of CHALLENGEs.
The call for communism leads to talk about what it takes to make a revolution, and what we need to do next. A typical response came from one young black man: “You can’t get more upfront than that.” He took the CHALLENGE and gave us contact information. Another said, “That’s right, capitalism has to be overthrown, we need a different society.” Similar responses followed from many younger workers and students.
We also learned from others. For example, we modified one of our chants to make it more international and militant:
‘Black, Latino, Arab, Asian & White,
United for Equality We Must Fight!’
Even more so than the budget cuts, Occupy Oakland has opened doors for political struggle at a local high school. One teacher helped a younger teacher conduct a teach-in on unemployment and distribution of wealth. After the General Strike and arch, a student told others at the school that she liked the poster her teacher was carrying. As a result, another teacher asked about the poster (see front page).
As this struggle advances, we will continue to bring lessons and experiences from the Occupy movement to jobs and community organizations.J
Recent California Developments:
• Racist police terror remains in the spotlight, with marches for justice for Oscar Grant, the unarmed young black man who was executed two years ago by a transit cop, and to protest the military operations planned for shutting down the camps of demonstrators. Mayor Jean Quan and the Oakland City Council manipulated last week’s fatal shooting of a young man near the downtown Oakland encampment in an attempt to justify their cops’ clearing the Occupation from Oscar Grant Park (with dozens of arrests) early on Monday, November 14. But other encampments fed marches back to the Plaza, where new General Assemblies were held.
• On Veterans Day, vets marched to the police station to protest the attacks on two Iraq War veterans: Scott Olson, whose skull was fractured by a projectile shot by the police, and Kayvan Sabehgi, who suffered a lacerated spleen after the cops beat him while he was walking alone in central Oakland. The vets linked this brutality to racist unemployment and the long history of racist and criminal police actions against black, Latino and immigrant youth in Oakland. As one vet who spoke at the demonstration put it, “I did not serve and protect you, the 99%. I protected corporate America’s profits around the world.”
• The general strike inspired and escalated existing battles on California campuses to protest the banks, budget cuts, and racist inequality. Police attacked protesters at the University of California-Berkeley, brutally dismantling a tent camp there. In response, Berkeley faculty and students called a campus-wide strike on November 15, with a march (joined by Occupy Oakland) of 2,000 through the city and a rally at Berkeley High School. In solidarity, students at several Cal State campuses have staged walkouts. Cal State faculty voted to strike two campuses that serve the black and Latino communities in the East Bay and Los Angeles. The UC regents canceled their November 16 meeting for fear of being confronted by the Occupy movement.
• A march on Wells Fargo Bank protested profiteering by private-sector immigrant detention centers around the country. Bilingual chants emphasized the racist attacks on immigrant and black workers.
• Other marches have focused on the devastation of public services. These actions dovetail with a confrontation between the Okland Board of Education and a group of parents, teachers and students who oppose the closing of five public schools.
• Workers and community groups are continuing to organize to challenge evictions and prevent bank foreclosures. In Stockton, California, the Occupy movement has shut down several banks.
