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    Cadre school: grasp & own communist ideas

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    27 August 2021 256 hits

    CHICAGO, August 15—Communist ideas belong to the working class, not a few special people. Our local collective held a communist cadre school this weekend to strengthen our political understanding and organizational unity. A dynamic mix of members of Progressive Labor Party (PLP) and close friends came together over two days to socialize, engage in rich political discussion, and share in collective responsibilities such as food preparation and cleaning.
    Cadre schools are one of the main ways the Party develops communist mass organizers, guided by a dialectical materialist (scientific) understanding of history and the Party’s collective experience. Without regular evaluation and struggle, the political line that guides our work can risk stagnating and becoming diluted. By discussing key aspects of the Party’s political analysis, we reach a higher level of understanding which allows us to be sharper fighters for communist revolution and the international working class.
    The three main political subjects that we covered over the weekend included:
    Nationalism, a weapon used to divide our class. There is no such thing as revolutionary or progressive nationalism. Any idea dependent on treating one set of workers as special over another group of workers undermines our inherent interest in internationalism. For more, see PLP’s document, “Revolutionaries Must Fight Nationalism.”
    Democratic centralism, the way decisions get made in the interest of the whole working class. It is the best expression of the most freedom for the working class of the world, and it is the best form of human relations—making an agreement and sticking to it. For more, see PLP’s document, “For Communist Economics and Communist Power.”
    Revolutionary violence, a necessity to abolish capitalism. Under this system, “non-violence” means the working class accepts violence by the state and is not allowed to retaliate. We are against individualistic violence. We cannot destroy capitalism and liberate our class without an organized violent revolution. See PLP’s document, “Reform and Revolution” and Lenin’s “State and Revolution.” All PLP documents are at www.plp.org under the “Key Documents” column.
    Our choices for discussion were directly guided by our conversations and political work in recent months with new Party members and close friends. While capitalism relies on ignorance and complacency, PLP has confidence that workers can be won to the highest level of understanding and commitment. We need everyone to own these ideas and fight to make them a reality.

    Here are four impressions from the weekend:
    As someone who's been around the Party my whole life, joining seemed like an easy step to take. But after attending a few meetings and joining a book club, I realized I had many questions about what the Party is and does. How are decisions made? How is the Party structured? The cadre school did a great job at starting to answer these questions, and gives you a good foundation to start to help you feel more confident in being involved in the Party.
    I've been a part of PLP for over a year now and this was my first cadre school ever. I didn't know what to expect coming in, but it was a very much needed experience. Not only were we able to take a deep dive, discussing politics but we also got to build unity and camaraderie within our party through these discussions. It didn't matter if you've been a member of the PLP for 20 years or two months, your voice and opinions were heard and that's something I always appreciate about Progressive Labor Party. Overall, the cadre school provided me with the tools to become a better communist and Party member and I'm eager to take my learnings and spread them within my community.”
    “I wasn't sure what to expect with my first cadre school. Discussions in other settings can be hit or miss. However, it didn't take long for the group to get involved in the discussions. The term “school” seems wrong because we weren't just sitting down taking notes, but having challenging conversations and working together to understand the subject more. The cadre school was an open place for us all to share our thoughts and participate. I've learned a lot from the facilitators but also my other comrades, and have a new appreciation for having a space where we can all talk in person and work together to formulate our ideas.
    The recent cadre school proved that our political and social interactions with new and potential comrades continues well after the event. The camaraderie during our time together strengthened the existing relationships in our local collective. It showed that our line and dedication to the Party is beyond the collective with whom they most typically interact. The cadre who attended are continuing the conversations initiated there and are raising the struggles that happened. Additionally, our mass work involving those who were present can be positively affected and increased. The discussions also helped to renew the political involvement of existing comrades, which is always necessary.

    The Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong said, “We should check our complacency and constantly criticize our shortcomings, just as we should wash our faces or sweep the floor every day to remove the dirt and keep them clean.” Cadre schools and active struggle build stronger communists and a stronger PLP.

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    Fight anti-student attacks & anti-working-class ideas

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    27 August 2021 300 hits

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA, August 16—A small but committed group of workers seized the opportunity to distribute Progressive Labor Party (PLP) leaflets in protest against a fundraiser hosted by the Board of Trustees’ President at the City College of San Francisco (CCSF). PLP have been active with campus groups that have been critical of the massive program cuts at CCSF and the following Monday, on the first day back to school, a similar contingent of workers and students attended a press conference to call out the CCSF administration for their lack of health preparations as students, faculty, and CCSF staff return amidst a raging pandemic. The CCSF cuts further demonstrate that capitalism and its education system was not designed for working class students.
    Our main contribution to the struggle was to raise our political line and deliver a speech with a message that would inspire students to demolish capitalism  and fight for communism to secure their future. The main lesson we learned today is that capitalist education is not about “educating” students to think critically, solve interpersonal or societal problems, nor does it help them become well-rounded and better human beings; instead it is the total opposite. Not only is university education a diploma mill designed to extract tuition and in debt students, but it drills anti-working class ideas and other harmful ideologies into our students.
    On the other hand communist education not based on profit or competition means that  lifelong education and learning be available to everyone. It would be an education where we support and learn from each other so we can build lives that better not just ourselves but also for the collective health of fellow workers and society.
    Class politics are in session
    With about 28 percent of the CCSF students returning to in-person classes, our group distributed PLP literature at both events, getting out 50 leaflets and 60 copies of CHALLENGE. Hitting the pavement as a collective gave us the opportunity to meet fellow workers and classmates that we had only previously met on Zoom screens.
    Much of our club’s work on campus has been directly tied to the shifting course offerings. CCSF used to have programs for LGBT workers, senior citizens, ex-felons, ex-soldiers, and the mentally challenged. The school promoted a curriculum that treated workers and their education a little more than just capitalist programming. It provided a bit of a supportive community for people and had a history of successfully preparing university bound students.
    But today, it is a shadow of its former self. CCSF used to have 90,000 students, but now has 35,000. Its prior 90 classes for senior citizens have now been cut to just nine. Its faculty is mostly composed of part-time teachers (called adjuncts) who have all the qualifications of a full-time professor but who receive less pay, have no health care, fewer classes, no offices and no job security. They often have to teach classes at different colleges to pay their bills. (That is why they are called “freeway flyers.”)Members of our Study Group attended both actions and gave political leadership. A PL’er delivered a speech in an effort to bring some politics to the forefront of this struggle. In our speech we highlighted that one of the most important roles of capitalist education is to inculcate our students with liberal ideas about the market being the only solution to human progress, and that all other alternatives, including communism are misguided fantasies. The CCSF’s Board of Trustees’ decision to slash these programs is a reflection of this role. The latest attacks against CCFC students is a teachable moment, revealing that students must uphold the capitalist agenda of austerity, privatization, and exploitation in order to prosper under capitalism.
    Thankfully today’s demonstration shows that students and teachers protesting these cuts not only reject the bosses' solutions, but they also reject the bosses’ toxic market ideologies undergirding these attacks. The Party member closed out the speech by calling for communist revolution as the only solution to transforming our unequal, and mediocre education system.
    PLP members active in this fightback understand that our struggle right now is one of reform, but until we are able to wave the red flag high and smash this racist, sexist, capitalist system our working-class sisters and brothers must be supported.
    Now our task is to continue to build the fightback, to deepen our relationships with the people in our group and those we connected with this month. We will continue to distribute CHALLENGE consistently and to meet students at school with the aim of inviting them to join our study groups and ultimately PLP. Join the revolution for communism!

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    Racist exploitation baked into capitalism—Nabisco strikers need communism

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    27 August 2021 292 hits

    CHICAGO, August 21—As the deadliest pandemic in history continues to wreak havoc on the international working class, U.S. food bosses seized the opportunity to capitalize on our classes’ despair, churning out sugary and salty goods, while raking record profits on the backs of overworked and underpaid workers.
     The latest example is the Nabisco factory workers strike. As many workers worldwide know from direct experience, racism, sexism and exploitation are baked right into this profit system. Just as dough needs yeast to rise, capitalism needs exploitation and racist divisions to function. Communists from the international Progressive Labor Party (PLP) brought revolutionary politics to striking workers outside the Nabisco factory on the city’s southwest side. We distributed CHALLENGE newspapers, held signs, made conversation, and brought food to the multiracial group of picketers.
    Our message to the striking workers is that regardless of what temporary crumbs the union can wrest from the bosses filthy bargaining table, it’s not enough. In the end, exploitation and its attendant ills- racism, sexism, long hours and ill health- are necessary for the capitalists in their quest for maximum profits.
    PLP is proud to stand with striking workers in Chicago and everywhere in order to reject the sell out unions, toxic nationalism, capitalist misleaders and pitiful reforms in favor of an international communist future.
    Exploitation under capitalism is how the cookie crumbles
    Here at the Chicago plant, 300 workers have refused to keep enduring the grinding, racist, and deadly exploitation of the capitalist bosses. They are joining with hundreds of other Nabisco workers in other U.S. cities such as Richmond, Virginia and Portland, Oregon who are fighting back against unpredictable and long shifts, increased health insurance costs, and dangerous understaffing.
    The relentless competition of their system forces the bosses to squeeze us as much as possible, at the cost of immeasurable worker suffering. During a pandemic, the company recorded profits of over $3 billion as a number of plants closed, while at others workers were forced to put in 16-hour shifts (CBS News, 8/20). Many worked six to seven days a week for several months. Now, they are being forced to give up overtime pay and concede to a two-tier healthcare system, which will reduce benefits for new workers and cut overall wages.
    A number of workers view cutting wages and benefits as a betrayal, but for the bosses, these are necessary decisions based on profit. Under capitalism, all wage work is theft (see letter, page 6). This wage slavery must be abolished.
    Pandemic exposes racist horrors
    The ongoing coronavirus pandemic has further exposed the horrors of the capitalist system. On top of the millions of mainly Black and Latin workers who have already died from a mostly preventable illness, we have seen some of the world’s wealthiest capitalists and companies collectively add $1 trillion to their total net worth since the pandemic began (Washington Post, 1/21). This sickening calculus demonstrates that bosses wealth is made possible by racism and sexism.
    Horror stories of inhumane working conditions have surfaced in media reports. They paint a picture of how workers are treated amid a traumatic pandemic: from an injured Nabisco worker falling off her chair and being forced to work with a broken ankle (The Grio, 8/21), to Frito Lay workers dying of heart attacks on the factory floor (Washington Post, 7/21).
    The strikers that we met on the picket line today, many of whom were Latin, Black, and women workers, shared their own personal stories of racist and sexist attacks from the bosses. They also shared their strong commitment to maintaining the strike and fighting on.
    Labor fakers bake a toxic recipe
    The union that officially represents the Nabisco workers, the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers, and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM) has some of the most reactionary politics that have come to represent the boss-led unions. They could hardly be bothered to mobilize the rank and file as the bosses shuttered plants, eliminated pensions and laid off hundreds.
    They waited until the workers were on the ropes to finally call for a strike (Common Dreams, 8/20).They are also spreading the poison that is nationalism by painting Nabisco workers in Mexico as rivals who “took jobs” from workers in the U.S. Pitting workers from different countries against one another for the problems the profit system creates is a completely racist ideology that only serves the ruling capitalist class. Workers have every interest in uniting across the bosses’ artificial borders in a global fight against capitalist exploitation.
    BCTGM or any other union will never call for this internationalism because they all seek to work within the confines of the capitalist system. To advance the needs of our class everywhere, we need a clean break with bosses, misleaders, and reformists. We need a mass PLP, fighting for communism and workers’ power!
    Fight like Stella D’Oro, join PLP
    PLP has supported and given leadership to countless strikes in our history because we understand them to be potential schools for communism. It is in the act of refusing our exploitation - withholding our labor from the bosses - building working-class unity that we grasp our own power and the vision of a worker-run society. Strikes also reveal the need for a revolutionary communist Party. We urge Nabisco workers to join us to help build the Party into a mass fighting force capable of destroying this rotten, crumbling system once and for all.
    Supporting the Nabisco workers in their fight against racist and sexist attacks brings back memories of another strike that the Party supported, that of Stella D’Oro bakery workers in New York between 2009-10.
    Majority immigrant and women workers maintained a two-front fight for 11 months against both bosses who wanted to close the factory and the treachery of the same BCTGM union hacks.
    We don’t know how long the Nabisco strike will last, but we do know the PLP will continue to fight alongside our class to advance our struggle for a communist world where workers run things, and never need to settle for the bosses’ crumbs.

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    CUNY students: Welcome back, fight back, join PLP!

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    27 August 2021 249 hits

    NEW YORK CITY, August 25—For the past 18  months students, faculty, and staff at the City University of New York (CUNY) have been fighting racist conditions on our campuses– conditions worsened by the Covid-19 crisis. Our administrators have used the pandemic as an excuse to implement even more racist austerity: firing almost 3,000 adjuncts, or part-time professors; leaving campus offices severely understaffed; and increasing class sizes. In their latest attack, the CUNY bosses are demanding that workers and students return to unsafe campuses even as the Covid-19 Delta variant rages across the world.
    As we return to our campuses, the Progressive Labor Party (PLP) calls all CUNY students and workers to get involved in the fight against the racist conditions on campus. Consider that the fight at CUNY must be part of a bigger battle—a revolutionary battle to rid the world of the racist capitalist system that treats the lives of workers as disposable, from the Bronx to Palestine to Haiti. We need a communist revolution.
    Fight bosses, reject union hacks
    During the pandemic we have encountered students and workers who are very open to the idea that only communist revolution can create a world where educating the working class is a priority. We are involved in several campus organizations that have been agitating against the campus administration and the go-slow, sell-out union misleadership. We have been influential in winning several small victories (see CUNY, page 4). At the same time, we have robust Party-led study groups where we discuss how these small reform gains will never lead to liberation for our class and that any gain we might make will be met with a racist-cutback elsewhere. For example, CUNY recently announced that they would use a portion of the more than $800 million in federal bailout funds they received to cancel a small portion of student debt. But at the same time, not only did they increase tuition and added a new $120 “Health and Wellness” fee, but they have also done nothing to reduce class size, one of the most critical factors in student success.
    Fall curriculum: smash racism, CUNY bosses
    This fall semester, members and friends of PLP will continue to work towards turning CUNY into a cauldron of revolutionary politics and action. We will have a teach-in on Haiti, exposing the racist abuse the workers there have suffered for centuries and the heroic efforts of workers and students there to fight back. We will have a forum on the Israeli apartheid regime and the need to reject all forms of nationalism. And we will continue to call out the racist CUNY administration for their racist attacks on our campuses.
    If you’re a CUNY student or worker or you would like to be involved in advancing the struggle against CUNY’s racist administration and would like to learn about the need for communist revolution at the same time, we welcome you! Contact us at desafio.challenge@gmail.com for more information.

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    Letters of Sept 8

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    27 August 2021 243 hits

    How I use CHALLENGE
    I’m an immigrant worker from Mexico living in the United States. I have been a member of the Progressive Labor Party for some years. I joined because I learned how to fight back together with the Party. PLP is like family.
    For me, it’s important to read and circulate DESAFIO-CHALLENGE. You can learn the communist analysis about what is happening in the world from Brooklyn to Mexico to Colombia. Every issue, I circulate 25 papers to my close friends and family. They ask me questions when they visit me in my home. The rest, I give to people in my laundromat or in the street.
    Recently, my sons and family visited me for my birthday. When my nine year old grandson saw CHALLENGE he said, “wow! What is PLP?”
     I said, “It’s a communist Party.”
     My nine and 14 year old grandsons asked me important questions like why the rich don’t pay taxes and why do they exploit the workers. My grandson said, “I’m reading about this [exploitation] with my father and I don’t like it!”
    My PLP club plans to work with young workers and students. I want to ask my family to participate in the fightback. My grandsons agreed to join our study group with their mother. Their father can’t participate because he works six days a week, 12 hours a day.                                                 
      If you are not reading CHALLENGE, I invite you to read it and join PLP.
    *****
    Anti-vaccination is anti-working class
    Being anti-vaccination is an anti-working class position. It is also racist since Black and Latin workers are contracting and dying from Covid-19 at higher rates.Since capitalism values profits over workers’ health, there are over 130 countries that still don’t have access to the vaccine and others that only have limited access. It is important that everyone who is medically able to get the vaccine receives it promptly to help slow the spread and stop further, dangerous mutations.
    Amid a pandemic, those who recognize that getting vaccinated isn’t a personal choice, but, actually, is a social responsibility to their fellow workers to keep the vulnerable from dying are serving the working class, whether it is conscious or not.  This is an early form of political commitment that mirrors the adage “from each according to political commitment and to each according to need.”
    The combination of the Big Fascists’ [see Glossary], represented by President Joe Biden, continued mismanagement of the pandemic and the Small Fascists’ gutter racist and anti-science propaganda are serving to divide the working class of the United States. Teachers and nurses who don’t want to get vaccinated because it is “my body, my choice,” — thereby belittling the very real struggle women have over their own means of production — are a danger to their students and patients, as well as their families and themselves.
    The history of racist and sexist medical experiments worldwide rightly sows distrust in the medical establishment and the government. However, this vaccine hesitancy ultimately will cause our Black and Latin students and their families to suffer more. The bosses have their own reasons for wanting to get us to sacrifice for the social good, like protecting their profits and building for war, but we need to fight for workers to serve their own interests.
    It is not “segregation” to quarantine potential disease carriers during a global pandemic! The Small Fascists want to weaken the terms that represent the brutality of racism that our class has felt for centuries. They want to silence us by turning a rational and scientific response to a deadly disease into a personal choice under the guise of freedom. Freedom is actually the understanding of necessity, so let’s do what needs to be done and help our friends develop a scientific worldview.
    *****
    ALL wealth is theft, value comes from labor power
    It’s great to hear in the 8/4 issue of CHALLENGE that the Newark summer project discussed political economy and how capitalism is built on the theft of workers’ wealth, but let’s be clear: the end game for the working class is not higher wages or a shorter workday. The article stated that “the labor and pay that an employee receives is not an equal transaction because most of [that worker’s] workday is free labor,” but Marx’s distinction between labor power and labor itself is missing here. Today’s capitalism is based on wage slavery, not chattel slavery, meaning we are all forced to sell our ability, not our actual bodies, to add value to the bosses’ tools in exchange for a wage. That exchange can never be fair or just; it is, by definition, an act of robbery.
    Capitalist theft is reliant on one fundamental commodity above all others: workers’ labor power. In Das Kapital, Marx explained how, in capitalist markets, buyers and sellers exchange commodities of the same value by using money, another commodity, to facilitate exchange. Where does exchange value come from? The value of any commodity is equal to the amount of labor time required to produce it. Human labor-power, which is potential energy —our capacity for work–is sold to the capitalists by workers–commonly based on a set amount of time– in exchange for wages.
    But wages are ALWAYS theft. Why? Our labor power changes the material that we work on. Workers therefore create value which is added to that material (provided by the capitalist). The value we add rises above the value of what we were promised for our labor-time. Bosses MUST pay us less than the value of our labor power or else they don’t profit. A waiter, an information tech specialist, a delivery person or a public transit worker, “participates” in a business where the collective output of the workers produces wealth for a specific boss or set of bosses who profit from that work. A teacher’s labor power is used to produce ideas that train the working class to stay in their place under capitalism. A soldier’s labor power is used by the capitalist class to protect its class interests in the field of war.
    So why do we “agree” to sell our labor power, no matter the wage? If we don’t, we starve. Capitalism’s true freedom for the working person is the freedom to starve. The capitalist is free to decide what is done with our labor power, and in the process our class, as a whole, is enslaved into a series of jobs and tasks that ultimately serve the purpose of making the capitalist class wealthy rather than contributing to the social, political, economic and cultural progress of the human race and planet.
    Even though workers no longer have our physical bodies bought and sold on the slave market (barring human trafficking), we must now reach the point in history where we use our labor power to smash this system rather than selling it to the bosses for a wage—any wage!
    *****
    Capitalism, a social disease
    I was listening to news broadcasts about how “human induced” climate change was causing irreversible world damage and that the governors of Texas and Florida were banning masks for school children and advocating loss of pay for teachers who permit them. Then I tuned in to a radio talk show where a psychologist was describing that capitalism causes social mental diseases, describing Trump as a sociopath. The moderator asked for discussion of how capitalism relates to mental disease.
    I called in and luckily got on to say, “We must realize that we are living in a capitalist world that creates people who are no longer human, because they put profits before people's lives.” I said that the discussion of the idea that capitalism causes social mental disease is correct and that a working class revolution for communist equality and collectivity was needed.
    The real big lie is that capitalism masks itself as the champion of “democracy” and “human rights” to cover the fact that it is creating an environment that will accept the destruction of humanity for personal gain and privilege. This ‘what’s in it for me’ environment is destroying true world humanity.
    *****

    1. Hiroshima and Nagasaki, bombed to save U.S. Imperialism
    2. ‘Profiled’ screening: anti-police fightback raises class consciousness
    3. The Olympics: spectacle for a dying system
    4. Free Mohawk: Racist state terror means fight back!

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