Socialists in the U.S. salute 60 years of the Cuban Revolution

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Graphic: Samuel Marrero Dubroc

On the 60th anniversary of the triumph of the great Cuban Revolution, led by Comandante Fidel Castro, Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo sends warm greetings and congratulations to the Cuban people, the revolutionary government and the Cuban Communist Party.

What glorious victories and tragic setbacks the workers of the world have experienced through these last six decades! But through it all, revolutionary Cuba has been a beacon — dynamic, vibrant, inspiring — for the workers and oppressed everywhere, from Venezuela to South Africa to Palestine to the United States. Cuba shows what socialism can achieve, even under the most difficult conditions, when it’s imbued with revolutionary leadership, fighting spirit and unity of the masses.

It would be impossible to list all the accomplishments of the Revolution. For those struggling here in the belly of the beast, a few stand out. Take, for example, the neverending fight of poor and working people in the U.S. to fund adequate health care, education and housing. In Cuba, these essential human needs are the rights of all, and the world acknowledges Cuba’s leadership in these fields beyond much larger and richer countries. Nothing so embodies the Revolution’s commitment to the people as its continuing strides in maternal health and reducing infant mortality.

We honor Cuba’s commitment to internationalism, from the heroic guerrilla missions mounted by el Che and his compatriots to the role of Cuban volunteers in aiding the triumph of African liberation forces at the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale. And, of course, the tens of thousands of Cuban doctors and health care workers who continue to provide vital assistance to people around the world.

Speaking of that — we recall with gratitude Cuba’s offer to provide health care workers to aid the victims of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, an offer that was rebuffed by the criminal George W. Bush administration, which abandoned thousands of Black, Brown and white working-class families to suffer and die. We cherish Cuba’s longstanding commitment to train doctors from oppressed and low-income U.S. communities at the Latin American School of Medicine.

We remember, too, how Cuba has provided sanctuary for persecuted activists and revolutionaries from the U.S. — from Robert F. Williams to Huey P. Newton, and, of course, our beloved comrade Assata Shakur, who was granted asylum by Fidel in 1984 and remains safe today from the clutches of racist cops and prisons.

Cuba demonstrates how socialism is the system that can redress the historic injustices rooted in capitalism and earlier class societies. In Cuba, women now make up more than half of the National Popular Assembly. The rights of Afro-Cubans are protected and respected, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans community has made enormous strides.

We also know that workers and revolutionaries in the U.S. carry a special responsibility to fight in defense of Cuba. From the attempted invasion of Playa Girón in 1961, to the six-decades-long criminal blockade, to Trump’s moves to reintroduce restrictions on travel, U.S. imperialism — under both Republican and Democratic administrations — has sought to undermine or outright destroy the people that dared to make a socialist revolution 90 miles from its shores.

That they have failed, time and again, is testimony to the continuing vitality of the Cuban Revolution and the loyalty and determination it inspires in progressive people around the globe.

We pledge to continue our efforts in 2019 to demand an end to the criminal U.S. blockade of Cuba and to return Guantánamo to the Cuban people.

¡Viva el pueblo cubano!

¡Hasta la victoria siempre!

Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo
January 1, 2019


Socialistas en los Estados Unidos saludan los 60 años de la Revolución Cubana.

Diseño gráfico de Samuel Marrero Dubroc

En el aniversario 60 del triunfo de la gran Revolución Cubana, liderada por el Comandante Fidel Castro, Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo manda cálidos saludos y felicitaciones al pueblo de Cuba, al gobierno revolucionario y al Partido Comunista de Cuba.

¡Cuantas victorias gloriosas y reveses trágicos han experimentado lxs trabajadores del mundo en estas últimas seis décadas! Pero en medio de todo, Cuba revolucionaria ha sido una luz— dinámica, vibrante, inspiradora — para lxs trabajadores y oprimidos por todos lados, desde Venezuela y África del Sur, hasta Palestina y los Estados Unidos. Cuba demuestra lo que el Socialismo puede lograr, incluso bajo condiciones muy difíciles, cuando está conducido por un liderazgo revolucionario, un espíritu luchador y la unidad de las masas.

Sería imposible nombrar todos los logros de la Revolución. Pero para aquellxs que luchan aquí en el vientre de la bestia, algunos sobresalen. Tomemos por ejemplo, la lucha interminable de lxs pobres y lxs trabajadores en los Estados Unidos para financiar una adecuada atención de salud, educación y vivienda. En Cuba, estas necesidades humanas esenciales son el derecho de todxs, y el mundo reconoce el liderazgo de Cuba en estos campos más allá de países mucho más grandes y ricos. Nada encarna el compromiso de la Revolución con el pueblo como sus continuos avances en la salud materna y la reducción de la mortalidad infantil.

Honramos el compromiso de Cuba al internacionalismo, desde las misiones heroicas de las guerrillas montadas por el Che y sus compatriotas, hasta el rol de los voluntarios cubanos que ayudaron al triunfo de las fuerzas de liberación de África en la Batalla de Cuito Cuanavale. Y por supuesto, lxs más de 10 mil médicos cubanos y trabajadores de salud que continúan dando asistencia vital a personas de todo el mundo.

Y hablando de eso — recordamos con gratitud la oferta de Cuba de proveer trabajadorxs de salud a las victimas del huracán Katrina in 2005, oferta que fue rechazada por la administración criminal de George Bush quien abandonó a miles de familias de clase obrera negras, latinas y blancas, dejándolas sufrir y morir. Apreciamos el prolongado compromiso de Cuba a entrenar doctores de comunidades oprimidas y de bajos ingresos en los Estados Unidos en la Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina.

Recordamos también como Cuba ha provisto santuario a activistas y revolucionarios perseguidxs de los Estados Unidos—desde Robert F. Williams hasta Huey P. Newton, y por supuesto a nuestra querida compañera Assata Shakur, a quien Fidel le dio asilo en 1984 y quien permanece a salvo hoy de las garras de policías y prisiones racistas estadounidenses.

Cuba demuestra cómo el Socialismo es el sistema que puede reparar las injusticias históricas arraigadas en el capitalismo y las anteriores sociedades de clases. En Cuba, las mujeres ahora componen más de la mitad de la Asamblea Nacional del Poder Popular. Los derechos de lxs afrocubanos son protegidos y respetados y la comunidad gay, lesbiana, bisexual y trans ha avanzado grandes pasos.

También sabemos que lxs obreros y revolucionarios en los Estados Unidos tienen una responsabilidad especial de luchar en defensa de Cuba. Desde la invasión de Playa Girón en 1961 y las seis largas décadas criminales del bloqueo, hasta los movimientos de Trump para reintroducir restricciones a los viajes, el imperialismo estadounidense — bajo ambas administraciones republicanas y demócratas — han tratado de socavar o destruir completamente al pueblo que se atrevió a hacer una revolución socialista a 90 millas de sus costas.

El que hayan fracasado una y otra vez, es testimonio de la continua vitalidad de la Revolución Cubana y la lealtad y determinación que inspira en los pueblos progresistas en todo el globo.

Nos comprometemos a continuar nuestros esfuerzos en 2019 para exigir el fin del bloqueo criminal de los Estados Unidos hacia Cuba y a que regresen Guantánamo al pueblo cubano.

¡Viva el pueblo cubano!

¡Hasta la victoria siempre!

Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo
1 de enero de 2019

Strugglelalucha256


Socialistas en los Estados Unidos saludan los 60 años de la Revolución Cubana.

English

En el aniversario 60 del triunfo de la gran Revolución Cubana, liderada por el Comandante Fidel Castro, Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo manda cálidos saludos y felicitaciones al pueblo de Cuba, al gobierno revolucionario y al Partido Comunista de Cuba.

¡Cuantas victorias gloriosas y reveses trágicos han experimentado lxs trabajadores del mundo en estas últimas seis décadas! Pero en medio de todo, Cuba revolucionaria ha sido una luz— dinámica, vibrante, inspiradora — para lxs trabajadores y oprimidos por todos lados, desde Venezuela y África del Sur, hasta Palestina y los Estados Unidos. Cuba demuestra lo que el Socialismo puede lograr, incluso bajo condiciones muy difíciles, cuando está conducido por un liderazgo revolucionario, un espíritu luchador y la unidad de las masas.

Sería imposible nombrar todos los logros de la Revolución. Pero para aquellxs que luchan aquí en el vientre de la bestia, algunos sobresalen. Tomemos por ejemplo, la lucha interminable de lxs pobres y lxs trabajadores en los Estados Unidos para financiar una adecuada atención de salud, educación y vivienda. En Cuba, estas necesidades humanas esenciales son el derecho de todxs, y el mundo reconoce el liderazgo de Cuba en estos campos más allá de países mucho más grandes y ricos. Nada encarna el compromiso de la Revolución con el pueblo como sus continuos avances en la salud materna y la reducción de la mortalidad infantil.

Honramos el compromiso de Cuba al internacionalismo, desde las misiones heroicas de las guerrillas montadas por el Che y sus compatriotas, hasta el rol de los voluntarios cubanos que ayudaron al triunfo de las fuerzas de liberación de África en la Batalla de Cuito Cuanavale. Y por supuesto, lxs más de 10 mil médicos cubanos y trabajadores de salud que continúan dando asistencia vital a personas de todo el mundo.

Y hablando de eso — recordamos con gratitud la oferta de Cuba de proveer trabajadorxs de salud a las victimas del huracán Katrina in 2005, oferta que fue rechazada por la administración criminal de George Bush quien abandonó a miles de familias de clase obrera negras, latinas y blancas, dejándolas sufrir y morir. Apreciamos el prolongado compromiso de Cuba a entrenar doctores de comunidades oprimidas y de bajos ingresos en los Estados Unidos en la Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina.

Recordamos también como Cuba ha provisto santuario a activistas y revolucionarios perseguidxs de los Estados Unidos—desde Robert F. Williams hasta Huey P. Newton, y por supuesto a nuestra querida compañera Assata Shakur, a quien Fidel le dio asilo en 1984 y quien permanece a salvo hoy de las garras de policías y prisiones racistas estadounidenses.

Cuba demuestra cómo el Socialismo es el sistema que puede reparar las injusticias históricas arraigadas en el capitalismo y las anteriores sociedades de clases. En Cuba, las mujeres ahora componen más de la mitad de la Asamblea Nacional del Poder Popular. Los derechos de lxs afrocubanos son protegidos y respetados y la comunidad gay, lesbiana, bisexual y trans ha avanzado grandes pasos.

También sabemos que lxs obreros y revolucionarios en los Estados Unidos tienen una responsabilidad especial de luchar en defensa de Cuba. Desde la invasión de Playa Girón en 1961 y las seis largas décadas criminales del bloqueo, hasta los movimientos de Trump para reintroducir restricciones a los viajes, el imperialismo estadounidense — bajo ambas administraciones republicanas y demócratas — han tratado de socavar o destruir completamente al pueblo que se atrevió a hacer una revolución socialista a 90 millas de sus costas.

El que hayan fracasado una y otra vez, es testimonio de la continua vitalidad de la Revolución Cubana y la lealtad y determinación que inspira en los pueblos progresistas en todo el globo.

Nos comprometemos a continuar nuestros esfuerzos en 2019 para exigir el fin del bloqueo criminal de los Estados Unidos hacia Cuba y a que regresen Guantánamo al pueblo cubano.

¡Viva el pueblo cubano!

¡Hasta la victoria siempre!

Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo
1 de enero de 2019


Socialists in the U.S. salute 60 years of the Cuban Revolution

On the 60th anniversary of the triumph of the great Cuban Revolution, led by Comandante Fidel Castro, Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo sends warm greetings and congratulations to the Cuban people, the revolutionary government and the Cuban Communist Party.

What glorious victories and tragic setbacks the workers of the world have experienced through these last six decades! But through it all, revolutionary Cuba has been a beacon — dynamic, vibrant, inspiring — for the workers and oppressed everywhere, from Venezuela to South Africa to Palestine to the United States. Cuba shows what socialism can achieve, even under the most difficult conditions, when it’s imbued with revolutionary leadership, fighting spirit and unity of the masses.

It would be impossible to list all the accomplishments of the Revolution. For those struggling here in the belly of the beast, a few stand out. Take, for example, the neverending fight of poor and working people in the U.S. to fund adequate health care, education and housing. In Cuba, these essential human needs are the rights of all, and the world acknowledges Cuba’s leadership in these fields beyond much larger and richer countries. Nothing so embodies the Revolution’s commitment to the people as its continuing strides in maternal health and reducing infant mortality.

We honor Cuba’s commitment to internationalism, from the heroic guerrilla missions mounted by el Che and his compatriots to the role of Cuban volunteers in aiding the triumph of African liberation forces at the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale. And, of course, the tens of thousands of Cuban doctors and health care workers who continue to provide vital assistance to people around the world.

Speaking of that — we recall with gratitude Cuba’s offer to provide health care workers to aid the victims of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, an offer that was rebuffed by the criminal George W. Bush administration, which abandoned thousands of Black, Brown and white working-class families to suffer and die. We cherish Cuba’s longstanding commitment to train doctors from oppressed and low-income U.S. communities at the Latin American School of Medicine.

We remember, too, how Cuba has provided sanctuary for persecuted activists and revolutionaries from the U.S. — from Robert F. Williams to Huey P. Newton, and, of course, our beloved comrade Assata Shakur, who was granted asylum by Fidel in 1984 and remains safe today from the clutches of racist cops and prisons.

Cuba demonstrates how socialism is the system that can redress the historic injustices rooted in capitalism and earlier class societies. In Cuba, women now make up more than half of the National Popular Assembly. The rights of Afro-Cubans are protected and respected, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans community has made enormous strides.

We also know that workers and revolutionaries in the U.S. carry a special responsibility to fight in defense of Cuba. From the attempted invasion of Playa Girón in 1961, to the six-decades-long criminal blockade, to Trump’s moves to reintroduce restrictions on travel, U.S. imperialism — under both Republican and Democratic administrations — has sought to undermine or outright destroy the people that dared to make a socialist revolution 90 miles from its shores.

That they have failed, time and again, is testimony to the continuing vitality of the Cuban Revolution and the loyalty and determination it inspires in progressive people around the globe.

We pledge to continue our efforts in 2019 to demand an end to the criminal U.S. blockade of Cuba and to return Guantánamo to the Cuban people.

¡Viva el pueblo cubano!

¡Hasta la victoria siempre!

Struggle for Socialism ★ La Lucha por el Socialismo
January 1, 2019

Strugglelalucha256


The Kurds, Turkey and U.S. troop withdrawal from Syria

Donald Trump‘s recent announcement that he is withdrawing 2,000 troops from Syria and half of the 14,000 troops currently in Afghanistan has opened a fissure in the imperialist ruling class.

Secretary of Defense Gen. James “Mad Dog” Mattis resigned over the issue. Brett McGurk, the presidential special envoy for the global coalition to counter ISIS, also resigned. Reuters news agency reports that U.S. military commanders planning the withdrawal are now recommending that Kurdish fighters be allowed to keep their U.S.-supplied weapons and equipment after the withdrawal from Syria — another rebuke to the U.S. president.

To a lesser or greater degree, all the major media and a significant portion of the political establishment have been calling Trump’s plan an abandonment of U.S. allies and a surrender to the Syrian Arab Army.

The allies that they are referring to are not only the armies of other countries and the mercenaries that they’ve hired. They are also referring to the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), at the center of which is the People’s Protection Units (YPG) — the primarily Kurdish fighters that have been one of the main U.S. proxies in the war to overthrow the elected Syrian government.

Trump’s erratic presidency has frayed the nerves of many in the ruling class, but the military seemed to have been more comfortable with him. After all, he stacked his administration with military figures. And within a couple of months of moving into the White House, he fired Tomahawk missiles at Syria and dropped the largest non-nuclear weapon in existence in Afghanistan, as if to prove his imperialist warmaker chops.

But the uproar from the military is significant. Whether or not their differences will be patched up remains to be seen, but it’s clear that their squabble is based on a crisis for imperialism — the fact that the Syrian Arab Army, with assistance from allies Iran, Russia and Hezbollah of Lebanon, have regained much of their country. Signs are emerging of international recognition that Syria has won.

ISIS a convenient cover for U.S. intervention

The stated reason for the multiple ongoing U.S. wars in the Middle East and Africa is to fight the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, popularly known as ISIS, which had taken over huge portions of the Middle East. But even as the U.S. coalesced with other countries’ armies to drive ISIS out of the areas they’d taken over, the U.S. military at times aided ISIS’s operations. The war against ISIS has been a convenient cover for Washington’s real goal of destroying Syria.

The use of the YPG as a proxy army has been a balancing act in Washington’s relationship with fellow NATO member Turkey. The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Turkey has been fighting against the Turkish regime for self-determination since the 1980s and has faced brutal repression, assassinations, massacres and prison sentences in that struggle. Turkey says that the YPG in Syria is an extension of the PKK in Turkey.

The U.S., Turkey and the European Union all consider the PKK a terrorist organization, but, in order to justify using the YPG against Syria, Washington distinguishes between the PKK and the YPG.

The U.S. has ignored Turkish attacks on the Kurdish fighters for the duration of the war. During the fighting to retake Raqqa in northern Syria, Turkey focused more on fighting the YPG than fighting ISIS. From January to June 2018, a Turkish invasion of Syria drove the Kurdish fighters out of the city of Afrin. In both cases, Syrian anti-Assad rebels backed by the U.S. helped in the attacks on the YPG, even as the U.S. was arming the YPG.

Turkey is now massing troops and equipment preparing to move on Manbij, which is still held by the YPG. Manbij is on the western bank of the Euphrates near the area of Deir ez-Zor, where most of Syria’s oil reserves are located.

But alliances are shifting fast. The YPG has appealed to the Syrian government to defend it against the Turkish military. According to the December 28 Guardian, the Syrian Arab Army has already sent forces to the outskirts of Manbij. Additionally, Hezbollah, the progressive fighting force in Lebanon, has offered more military assistance.

Struggle-La Lucha recently published a 1991 article by Marxist leader Sam Marcy in which he wrote about the first attempt at a Kurdish state that came about in 1945 in northern Iran when the strength of the Soviet Union emboldened revolutionary movements in Asia and throughout the world.

“The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad existed from December 1945 to December 1946 in the northern part of Iran. … What happened to it?” asked Marcy. “The Truman administration, in collaboration with the British, gave notice to the Soviet Union that its troops had to evacuate Iran. It was one of the first salvos of the Cold War. After their withdrawal, the Shah, armed by U.S. imperialism, opened a military struggle to destroy the Kurdish republic.”

The Kurdish people have been used and betrayed by imperialist forces in the past. Trump’s plan to throw the Kurdish fighters under the bus again should come as no shock. The outcry from military leaders isn’t genuine concern about the safety of Kurds at all. Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger famously said, “America has no permanent friends or enemies, only interests.”

Kurdish people and all those fighting for self-determination will win by joining in solidarity with their natural allies — revolutionary, working-class and progressive forces, in the struggle to end U.S. imperialism.

Strugglelalucha256


Decisive question in France 1968: Revolutionary or reformist leadership?

The year 2018 marked the 50th anniversary of the May 1968 uprising of workers and students in France. In light of the Yellow Vests protest movement shaking France today, and the continued relevance of the lessons of 1968 for anti-capitalist struggles, Struggle–La Lucha is publishing a series of articles written at that time by Sam Marcy, one of the leading Marxist thinkers of the second half of the 20th century. This piece originally appeared in the June 6, 1968, issue of Workers World newspaper.

June 4, 1968: The key question in the French Revolution of 1968 is the role of the leadership of the working class in the unfolding events. All other questions really merge into this one.

As these lines are written, press reports indicate a back-to-work movement of the French workers following President Charles de Gaulle’s ultimatum and his threat to use force.

Nevertheless, all the basic conditions for the success of the revolution still exist. In fact, a more favorable political situation for a proletarian revolution during peacetime could scarcely be hoped for.

It is fully two weeks since the workers began to take over the large plants — which is a long time in a revolutionary situation. Almost all of the economic arteries of French national life are still in the hands of the working class.

De facto power of workers

Despite the admonition to the workers by the General Confederation of Labor (CGT) trade union leaders to accept the government’s wage offer; despite Gaullist threats of force and violence, military conspiracy, parliamentary trickery; despite all these factors, the de facto power, as of today, rests squarely in the hands of the working class.

Even at this late date, the much touted back-to-work movement which the capitalist press throughout the world has hailed with so much advance publicity appears to be a trickle against the vast number of strikers.

The fundamental political problem in France concerns the relationship between the general strike and proletarian revolution.

By all accounts, the general strike is the strongest, most widespread and best organized of any in the history of the modern working-class movement. Indeed, it has few parallels.

The great French strikes of 1936 encompassed at most about three million. As of yesterday, it was 10 million and probably more. It exceeds in numbers, depth and revolutionary intensity the only other general strike in Western Europe which brought a country to an almost complete standstill. And that was the British General Strike of 1926.

Although no one doubts the power of the present French General Strike, until just a few days ago it was questioned as to whether it had any revolutionary significance. By now, however, it is almost universally admitted that the strike has posed a revolutionary threat to the regime.

In fact, it has put on the order of the day the proletarian revolution. What is a proletarian revolution? It is a transfer of power from the bourgeoisie to the proletariat. Is this what is happening in France?

Capitalist state helpless

The New York Worker of June 2 [publication of the Communist Party USA] stated flatly that there were “ten million strikers who held in their hands the actual power of the French Republic, having paralyzed economic life and rendered the state helpless.” The account in the Worker is based on reports from Paris. We quote the Worker because it is a close friend and political ally of the French Communist Party.

If, as the Worker states, “the strikers hold in their hands the actual power of the French Republic and render the present capitalist state helpless,” is this not a proletarian revolution in the making? But even if we were to disregard the conclusions of the Worker, there are literally scores of reports in the capitalist press which substantiate the same conclusions.

For instance, [journalist] Max Lerner, who was in Paris at approximately the same time, states that “the rebellion which was sparked by the students became a revolt when the unions seized the factories, and it became a full-fledged revolution when they decided to turn down the general strike settlement which their own union leaders had reached with the government and other employers.” (New York Post, June 3)

But aside from any and all assertions and analyses, the objective facts speak for themselves — the workers, the farmers, the students are in a state of utter rebellion. The sea of red flags that hang over the factories is clear and unambiguous evidence of a desire not merely for economic change but for proletarian revolution.

The key question relates to the role of the leaders of the working-class organizations. From the very beginning, they were taken completely by surprise when the workers seized the plants.

It is entirely possible that even the most revolutionary leadership could be taken by surprise by a spontaneous revolutionary outburst of the working class such as in France.

Revolutionary or reformist leadership?

But a revolutionary leadership is distinguished from a reformist, bourgeois type in that it would welcome the revolutionary situation and seek to turn it into a full-scale assumption of proletarian power.

Indeed, if the capitalist “state is rendered helpless,” does it not follow as night follows day that the workers should set up their own state, since they already have de facto power in their hands?

Instead, however, the leaders are desperately trying to reduce the struggle to a narrow economic one, and, while seeking some concessions from the government and the employers, they are in reality desperately trying to abandon the revolutionary struggle of the workers for state power.

Parallel with British General Strike

The general strike is often regarded as a mere economic weapon launched for economic objectives and not as a revolutionary struggle aimed at the regime and social system itself. The apologists for the Communist Party-CGT leadership in France are trying hard to draw on the tragic experience of the British General Strike of 1926 to bolster their reformist thesis.

The parallel with the British General Strike is indeed instructive, but it thoroughly refutes their thesis.

In 1926, the British working class tied up the country when three million workers walked off their jobs in protest against a government recommendation which would have cut the wages of the coal miners. As in France today, all dock workers, steel workers, building workers were out. Everything was down — all transportation by rail or bus, all shipping and all newspapers with the exception of those published by the British workers for the workers.

Prime Minister Baldwin and General de Gaulle

Like the de Gaulle-Pompidou government, Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and Winston Churchill launched a monstrous red-baiting campaign. It did not measurably influence the workers. On the contrary, it strengthened their resistance. Like de Gaulle, Prime Minister Baldwin launched a series of maneuvers, including the calling up of the army reserves, demonstrations of the armed forces in London, followed by a series of arrests.

Nevertheless, the strike continued strong. It was the leadership, fearing for the existence of the capitalist system, that suddenly caved in and surrendered. Thus was ended the most revolutionary initiative of the British workers since the Chartist Movement of 1848.

This is the true lesson of the British General Strike. There has been nothing like it since. But there are important differences between the 1926 strikes and the great French sit-downs in 1936, and the present strike, which clearly shows how much more favorably situated is the present leadership in France than were the British leaders in 1926 or the French in 1936. In Britain there was no revolutionary movement of the students that generally reflected the discontent of vast middle-class elements. Equally important was the absence of a parallel protest movement in the rural areas and towns of Britain, unlike present-day France.

Nevertheless, all historical accounts of the Great General Strike of 1926 by working-class observers put the failure of the strike on the shoulders of the leadership.

The British General Strike came in the midst of a general political awakening of the British working class. There were evident signs that the empire was beginning to crack. According to the ruling class, the way to salvage the empire and save Britain’s position in the world as a great imperialist power was to take it out of the hides of the workers, just the way de Gaulle and his cohorts want to do. Prime Minister Baldwin was, like General de Gaulle, trying to preserve the grandeur of British imperialism’s world position.

One of the lessons of the general strike was that while its origins and objectives were economic and while it didn’t necessarily aim to go beyond the confines of the capitalist system, its very scope and momentum posed a revolutionary threat to the power of the ruling class.  Because it successfully tied up the economic life of the country, it also showed the workers that their economic strength could, under the circumstances of a general strike, turn into political power for the working class. This was an objective to which the leadership of Cooke and Purcel of the General Council of the British Trade Union were wholly opposed — just like the present CP-CGT leadership.

French peasant rebellion

How different is the situation today in France! It is scarcely possible to find a more favorable political situation. For the first time in many decades the working-class struggle coincides with the profoundest and deepest discontent of the rural population. Take the demonstration in Auch, France, on May 24, just to give one of many examples. Thousands demonstrated in the farming area of southwestern France. Riot police used tear gas grenades to stop the demonstrators from breaking into the capitol building. Their slogan was “down with de Gaulle.” “We are the serfs, the slaves of the modern era,” shouted a young farm leader from the lowland hamlet of Carbonne. Many of the marchers sang the Internationale.

Under these circumstances it is easy to see that the objective conditions for an alliance between poor peasants and workers is all but guaranteed, if the leadership of the working-class organizations has the courage and determination to take advantage of it while the opportunity lasts.

One of the fundamental objective conditions for the failure of the Paris Commune of 1871 was the lack of support from the countryside. Now, the countryside is seething with rebellion. De Gaulle’s common market scheme has meant misery for the rural poor no less than de Gaulle’s anti-labor policy has meant increasing deprivation for the broad masses of the working class.

After the Paris Commune, Marx said that what would be needed for the victory of the French proletariat was “another edition of the Peasant War” of the preceding century. As one reads about how the peasants are now waving pitchforks and chanting “Pompidou resign,” the situation seems to be ready made for a true revolutionary alliance between peasants and workers.

Action Committee

L’Humanite of May 24, organ of the French CP, reports the existence “in many Departments of Action Committees for setting up a government that would rely on the alliance of all Left forces and be guided in its activity by a program meeting the interests of the mass of the people.”

This is incontrovertible evidence of the embryonic existence of proletarian power. These Action Committees in alliance with other elements of the rebellious population can function as organs of workers’ power, especially if they can ally themselves with the students and rural poor.

To effectuate the transition to proletarian power by the Action Committees and other revolutionary forces, it is necessary to make a complete break with bourgeois parliamentary trickery. It is a foregone conclusion that the type of election scheduled by the Gaullist dictatorship to take place late in June is merely a maneuver calculated to divert the attention of the masses and make them oblivious to the fact that they already have power in their hands and oblige them to transfer it back to the bourgeoisie.

The masses already have spoken by their deeds. The CP and CGT and whatever other allies they have should boycott the elections as a fraudulent device, calculated to deprive the masses of the fruit of their victory. By admonishing the masses to accept the wage agreement in the first place, the leadership showed that they were entirely out of touch with the masses. Fortunately the negotiations were broken off with the government and the employers.

Resort to naked military threats

When de Gaulle announced that he would schedule a referendum, the hostile reception he got from the general population further enhanced the revolutionary mood of the popular masses. From this a section of the ruling class drew the conclusion that perhaps de Gaulle ought to resign. So great was the clamor that a virtual split took place in de Gaulle’s own cabinet.

Under the revolutionary pressure of the masses, the bourgeoisie became more isolated and sought to overcome the crisis by resort to naked military threats and conspiracy with the reactionary military camarilla.

All of this was designed to intimidate the CP-CGT leadership and get them to drive the masses back to work and return the plants to the exploiters.

While, on the one hand, rumors of de Gaulle’s resignation were carefully planted, on the other hand, military maneuvers were widely publicized to intimidate the leaders in the hope of paralyzing the masses.

Then came de Gaulle’s carefully planned counteroffensive. This was an open appeal to the anti-communist, anti-working-class and pro-fascist elements, with a strong threat of open civil war, which was meant to serve as an ultimatum to the revolutionary masses to accept still another parliamentary fraud in the form of general elections.

As of now, June 4, the apparent agreement of the Communist Party leaders to participate in the election and the reported agreement of the CGT leaders to recommend negotiations with the de Gaulle government, especially after both organizations made the resignation of the government a demand of the workers, indicates a capitulation to the threat of the use of force and a surrender of the revolutionary struggle of the workers in favor of the same old fraudulent bourgeois parliamentary hoax.

As the New York Times of May 31 pointed out, “de Gaulle’s present tactics are designed to cover his defeat at the hands of the workers.” What a revealing admission! De Gaulle’s aim, this Times editorial affirms, “is to get the strikes ended and the French middle class activated to vote the Gaullist ticket.” Then the Times significantly adds, “the electoral system will help.”

Role of middle class

Indeed! So far as the middle class is concerned, it is well to remember Marx’s classic analysis of it which remains true to this very day. It is a socially heterogeneous and politically divided social formation. It is torn by a thousand inner contradictions, but it has no independent standing in bourgeois society. It stands in the middle, between the two great classes in contemporary society, the proletariat and the bourgeoisie.

In time of acute class struggle between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat such as is taking place now in France, the middle class continually vacillates between the two great class camps. Invariably as throughout all its history, its decisions will be made on the basis of which class shows the greater determination and the greater power in the struggle. If matters are left to be decided by bourgeois parliamentary methods and not by a decisive bid to reconstruct society on the basis of the power the workers hold now, unquestionably a large section of the middle class will line up with Gaullism.

Every strike an embryo revolution

The occupation of the plants and all industries by a phenomenally successful general strike is only a transitional step to the next phase of the struggle. Every strike is an embryo revolution. The occupation of the plants is a threat to private property. The occupation of the plants on a nationwide scale is a threat to the entire bourgeois social order and is a precursor to collective ownership by the proletariat.

The bourgeoisie cannot help but recognize this. The occupation of the plants is a symptom of dual power between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie. Such a state of affairs cannot endure indefinitely.

Either the proletariat takes over the plants completely, expropriates the bourgeoisie and sets up an alliance with the students, the rural poor and the white-collar workers in the urban centers for the purpose of transforming society, or the bourgeoisie may well crush the working class. The rock-bottom issue in France is proletarian power or ultimately an anti-labor, reactionary bourgeois dictatorship with a military clique to rule over all of France.

Bourgeois vs. proletarian democracy

According to L’Humanite as quoted in the Worker of May 28: “Conditions are rapidly ripening to end the Gaullist power and create a real democracy conforming to the interests of the French people.”

But democracy does not exist in the abstract. There is bourgeois democracy based on a bourgeois parliamentary system as it exists in France today — or a proletarian democracy based upon the popular masses, the working class, the rural poor, the students and the white-collar workers. Nothing could do more to deceive the French working masses than to put up such a fraudulent formulation of democracy.

Alongside this formulation L’Humanite adds: “This democracy will open the road to socialism.” A proletarian democracy based on the proletarian ownership of production and the expropriation of the bourgeoisie will indeed open the road to socialism, but a bourgeois democracy based upon a bourgeois parliament where the bourgeoisie is sure to predominate as it always has is nothing but a new name for an old fraud.

That this nonsense about democracy in general opening the road to socialism, which is being spouted by L’Humanite, should emanate from the land of the Paris Commune, is the worst of all ironies. For it was the Paris Commune which showed that a democracy under Thiers (i.e., de Gaulle) was really a bourgeois dictatorship, while the class rule of the Paris Communards was a proletarian democracy.

Popular Front coalition – on what class structure?

L’Humanite’s solution to the present crisis is a Popular Front. This is a coalition with the leftist section of the bourgeoisie such as with François Mitterand and others of his stripe. A coalition with capitalist politicians, on the basis of the present parliamentary system, which is based on the bourgeoisie as the possessing class, is a class betrayal of proletarian interests. It will simply be a modern version of the coalition between the liberals and the Labour Party of Britain and will mean that leaders of the working-class parties will hold office (even high office) in the cabinet. But they will only be office holders.

This is the most important of all the important distinctions between bourgeois democracy and proletarian democracy. In a bourgeois coalition based on a bourgeois parliamentary system the cabinet ministers are mere office holders. Power — real power — rests with the class that owns and controls the means of production — in this case, the bourgeoisie which runs the social system and determines the destiny of society as a whole.

But it would be altogether different if the CP and CGT proposed that the Mitterands and colleagues first help the workers expropriate the bourgeoisie and let the workers not merely possess but own the means of production, the peasants the land, the students and teachers the schools and universities and so on and so forth. If the Mitterands and Pierre Mendes-Frances accept this kind of coalition on the basis of proletarian rule, that might serve a progressive purpose. It might in fact be a step in the direction of socialism and a transitional stage to the abolition of all social classes and exploitation of man by man.

It would be wrong to say that we are against a coalition with the Mitterands under any and all circumstances. A coalition with them on the basis of the class rule of the proletariat and its allies may serve a useful purpose, especially if they join in disarming the bourgeoisie and dismantling its military and police apparatus.

Arming the workers

All of this is well and good, we are told, but there is one element that we have consistently left out of the situation and that is the role of the military and the fact that the French proletariat is not armed. It is basic to Marxist-Leninist strategy that no proletarian revolution can succeed without having arms in its possession.

It is true that the French working class is not armed in the sense that it does not now have a formal armed workers’ militia. But the workers are armed in the sense that they control the means of transit, the means of communication and the plants that produce arms and ammunition. Furthermore it is not really true to say that the French working class is totally disarmed.

Thoughtful revolutionary young leaders have undoubtedly given much consideration to just such a revolutionary situation as exists today. The army, that is to say, the army and police as presently constituted, is a small percentage of the population and can exercise great power only if the working class and its allies are apathetic and politically indifferent, confused and without perspective.

But an aroused proletariat having vast popular support among nonproletarian masses, as does the French proletariat, will succeed in arming itself and will disarm the bourgeoisie and its mercenary forces. Those leaders that seek to scare the people with frantic shouts that the workers aren’t armed should be asked why the leaders didn’t arm them. Some of these very same leaders acquiesced in the disarming of the French Partisans at the request of this very same de Gaulle they are now fighting. They should be made to answer rather than to ask questions about arming of the masses.

At any rate, the true answer to the arming of the workers and the prosecution of the proletarian revolution lies in the old maxim, “Whoever wills the objective must will the means thereto.” For a revolutionist that is the best answer.


Part 1 – Revolutionary situation in France 1968: Which road for the mass struggle?

Strugglelalucha256


Mumia Abu-Jamal case reopened as court ruling admits bias

World famous political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal won an opportunity to reopen his case when a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge ruled on Dec. 27 that his appeal can be reargued before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The appeal opens the possibility of a retrial where the racist frame-up of Mumia can be exposed.

Judge Leon Tucker found that “if a judge served as a prosecutor and then the judge, there is no separate analysis or determination required by the court, there is a finding of automatic bias and a due process violation.”

This ruling overturns a 2012 decision by Chief Justice Ronald D. Castille because of the racist bias he exhibited when acting as a prosecutor. Evidence includes racist campaign speeches and letters advocating the issuance of death warrants in cases where a police officer was killed. Despite a convincing body of evidence supporting Mumia’s claim of innocence, Castille’s ruling denied Mumia further appeals, condemning him to serve a life sentence without parole.

In the second part of Judge Tucker’s ruling ― made in a courtroom packed with police ― Tucker said Abu-Jamal’s lawyers failed to present evidence that Castille had a significant personal involvement in a critical decision over Abu-Jamal’s case while Castille was district attorney. The judge did note that the evidence of Castille’s bias in Mumia’s case was missing because the state failed to produce two documents that it was obligated to preserve while Abu-Jamal’s appeals were active.

Mumia was on death row from 1981 until 2008, when a U.S. appeals court threw out the death sentence because of flawed jury instructions. The appeals court was forced to respond to the worldwide campaign for freedom for Mumia. Protests focused on the racist U.S. courts and prison system. As an internationally renowned political prisoner and journalist, Mumia had become “the voice of the voiceless” and a symbol of injustice in the U.S. prison system.

Journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal had served as Black Panther Party minister of information and reported on racist Philadelphia police attacks ― especially the attacks on the organization MOVE and the police bombing of the MOVE house in 1985, a terrorist act that flattened an entire neighborhood in the oppressed community of Philadelphia.

During four decades in prison, Mumia was celebrated for his writing on the U.S. system of injustice. He wrote about the racist bias he saw in the makeup of juries and the inequity of the number of people of color on death row. Despite his vulnerable position, Mumia has never flinched from protesting injustice wherever he has seen it, from Palestine to racist police brutality in the U.S. to President Trump’s murderous persecution of im/migrants.

In recent years, Mumia suffered a life-threatening illness from hepatitis C. After angry protests led by supporters like Pam Africa, he was granted the right to receive a curative treatment. In a well-known display of courage, he would not accept the lifesaving medicine until it became available for other prisoners too.

Now is the time to be in the street for Mumia. It is support for his courage that has kept his case in the forefront of the struggle against racism. It is possible now to build the kind of protests that will find resonance in the courts, to fight for justice that cannot be denied.

Stay tuned: www.freemumia.com #FreeMumia

Strugglelalucha256


Hundreds protest media whiteout as video exposes murder by racist LAPD

Los Angeles 

At the CNN building in Hollywood, hundreds gathered Dec. 23 to condemn what they called the network’s “whiteout” of protests of police killings, including the weekly actions against Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey, who refuses to prosecute killer cops. The protest was called by Black Lives Matter Los Angeles.

According to an August 24 article in the Guardian, Los Angeles has “one of the country’s deadliest police systems.”

Referring to the many families whose loved ones have been killed, the article states: “They face an uphill battle in the most secretive state in the U.S. for police misconduct, in a region where officers who shoot are never prosecuted.”

The Los Angeles Police Department has a long history of brutal and racist policing. It was telling that the rally and march were held in Hollywood, given the plethora of police dramas produced there glorifying the LAPD.

Protesters marched through Hollywood from CNN to a 24 Hour Fitness gym where Albert Ramon Dorsey, a Black man, was shot and killed by cops on Oct. 29.

There, a lawyer for Dorsey’s family explained that the LAPD killed an unarmed man who, after coming from the shower in the fitness center, was faced with police who did nothing but escalate the situation. The police were responding to a trespassing complaint from a manager of the center.

“I can say that it was a violation of the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and I would be right, but what it really is, is a failure to recognize his humanity,” the attorney said.

That characterization of police conduct was confirmed by LAPD Public Information Director Josh Rubenstein, who introduced a police-approved video of the incident to the public in December. Cops narrated each scene and set up the incident captured on video to somehow tell us: “Don’t believe your lying eyes.”

According to the police, Dorsey was homeless and had a record of allegedly unprovoked and violent encounters with staff at the fitness center, which somehow justified his killing — what most people would call premeditated murder on the part of the cops.

We are expected to ignore these simple facts shown in the video: Dorsey was just taking a shower with no one around him and listening to his music. He was calm, noncombative and basically just ignoring the two cops who confronted him. When told to leave, he continued to ignore them until they decided to put their hands on him and scream at him to stop “tensing up” while they bent his arm in ways that are unnatural and painful.

We’re also told to ignore the fact that all they had to do was wait and get a health care professional to talk him out of the facility. All they had to do was nothing — just wait for someone who knows how to de-escalate, not threaten and humiliate.

In that regard, perhaps sending a woman cop into a men’s locker room was unnecessary and not really appropriate, unless your intent was to pile on your racism with a blatant show of disrespect, since Dorsey was naked.

And, finally, we’re told to ignore the fact that, miraculously, both cops’ body cameras fell off before the violence ending in death occurred. The primary justifications for the shooting are explained, not shown.

We’re told by one of the cops narrating the incident that Dorsey, after being tasered twice, grabbed a taser and pushed the female cop to the ground, repeatedly hitting her, before he was shot. We hear what hauntingly sounds like an automatic weapon that continually spits out bullets at a rapid pace, a weapon seemingly more suited for a battlefield.

Of course, we can’t see any of this.

Dorsey died after being shot multiple times because he was a Black man who ignored the orders of police. Said the family’s lawyer: “He had not hurt anyone, there was no victim, there was no gun. He was just a naked man who was not following their commands. …

“I can tell you it was a complete abrogation of their policies and their procedures to see a man in crisis and fail to de-escalate the situation. Through their commands and actions and demeanor, all they did was escalate the tension and violence, culminating in a hail of gunfire on an unarmed man. It was completely unnecessary.”

Melina Abdullah of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles urged everyone to participate in a boycott of the 24 Hour Fitness facility, which sparked a loud and resonating chant of the word “Boycott!” that reverberated off the surrounding corporate office walls.

The fact that the LAPD feels their video showing how they are responsible for murder somehow vindicates them should be a lesson to everyone fighting police terror. It tells us that they don’t see Black and Brown people as human.

It tells us that appealing to the humanity of the police, from the cop on the street to the highest pig in the chain of command, is fruitless and in fact hides an important truth: They will not change until we’ve built a movement that forces them to, utilizing any means necessary.

Strugglelalucha256


West Bank rises after Israeli terror raids

Throughout 2018, Gaza’s struggle for survival has embodied Palestinian resistance to the world: from frequent Israeli bombings of homes, schools and hospitals inside the world’s largest open-air prison, to the now 11-year-long blockade that prohibits importing medicines and other basic human needs, and of course, the heroic Great Return March and weekly Friday protests at the militarized “border” of Gaza and the part of Palestine claimed by the apartheid settler state.

According to the Gaza Health Ministry, since the beginning of the Great Return March on March 30, Israeli soldiers have shot and killed 240 Palestinians in Gaza and wounded 25,000 more. (Gaza Post, Dec. 14)

Yet, as the year comes to a close, the people of the West Bank, too, are rising in a new wave of fightback to remind people everywhere that Palestine will never die.

On Dec. 13, Israeli occupation forces staged a series of raids in the West Bank, executing three Palestinians suspected of planning or carrying out attacks on Israeli soldiers: Saleh Barghouthi, Majd Mteir and Ashraf Na’alwa. They also executed 60-year-old businessman Hamdan Arda in his car as he was driving home. (Samidoun, Dec. 13) Dozens more were arrested.

The occupation raids were meant to strike a blow at the morale of the resistance as well as taking militant fighters off the chessboard. The assassinations were carefully timed, coming one day after the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) celebrated its 51st anniversary on Dec. 12, and three days before the commemoration of the 31st anniversary of the founding of the Islamic resistance movement Hamas on Dec. 16.

But if the apartheid regime in Tel Aviv and its sponsors in Washington thought Palestinians would end 2018 demoralized and immobilized, they guessed wrong.

In retaliation for the extrajudicial murders, Palestinian fighters shot and killed two occupation troops and wounded two others near the illegal Israeli settlement of Ofra, north of Ramallah in the West Bank. (Ma’an News, Dec. 13) Then, the people came into the streets.

“Today Palestinians from the river to the sea, from Gaza to Ramallah to Nabi Saleh to Hebron to Tulkarem to Nablus confronted occupation forces and held demonstrations to condemn the Israeli offensive, mourn yesterday’s martyrs and reassert the right of Palestinians to resist by any means necessary,” declared Within Our Lifetime – United for Palestine on its Facebook page Dec. 14.

The Israeli occupation forces responded to mass demonstrations in the West Bank with tear gas, rubber-coated bullets and live ammunition. Eighteen-year-old Mahmoud Nakhleh was killed by Israeli fire in Ramallah. Troops opened fire on a Palestinian ambulance in al-Bireh City.

Israeli forces sealed off Ramallah and raided the city and nearby refugee camps with hundreds of troops. They destroyed the home of 73-year-old activist Latifa Abu Hmeid and forced hundreds of her neighbors into a nearby open sports field despite freezing cold. This is an example of the collective punishment against the families of political prisoners and resistance fighters carried out by the U.S. and Israel.

Abu Hmeid said that the demolition “will not break our will,” vowing to rebuild. “All my sons have either been martyred or imprisoned, and that didn’t break me.” (Al-Jazeera, Dec. 16)

The Israeli military also aided and defended armed Zionist settler attacks over the weekend of Dec. 15-16, targeting schools in al-Lubban al-Sharqiya, a village south of Nablus, and civilian homes. (Middle East Monitor, Dec. 16) On Dec. 18, settlers rampaged through Bethlehem, hitting a Palestinian youth with a car and raiding a Greek Orthodox monastery. (Ma’an News, Dec. 18)

The so-called state of Israel is a U.S. military enterprise, weaponized and funded by Washington and Wall Street as a bastion of U.S. imperialist power and white supremacy in the Middle East. Its ideological project, Zionism, is meant to divide Jewish people from their Arab siblings and fellow workers.

U.S. imperialist politicians, from reactionary Donald Trump to “liberal” Democrat Chuck Schumer, seek to destroy Palestinian resistance through force of arms and withdrawal of humanitarian aid. They enact censorious laws to try to silence solidarity with Palestine at home.

But increasingly, even here in the belly of the beast, the mask is being torn away, and people of all nationalities are demanding: Free Palestine!

Strugglelalucha256


Stop the U.S. Base in Okinawa!

Dec. 18 — Thirty people braved the cold wind in front of the Japanese Consulate on New York City’s swanky Park Avenue today to protest the building of a new U.S. military base on Okinawa. People from Okinawa were joined by U.S. supporters, including members of the Granny Peace Brigade and Veterans for Peace members.

The 466-square-mile island of 1.4 million people already hosts “19,000 U.S. Marines as well as the largest U.S. Air Force base in the Asia-Pacific.” (Washington Post, Sept 28)

All these forces are aimed at the People’s Republic of China and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. They are a tripwire for World War III.

Protesters were also concerned about the ecological damage caused by the base construction, which was scheduled to begin on Dec. 14.

A leaflet addressed to President Trump states, “Earlier this year the Okinawan people overwhelmingly elected Gov. Denny Tamaki on the premise of STOPPING the construction at Henoko/Oura Bay. The Bay is a CRUCIAL part of the Okinawan ecosystem. However the Japanese government & U.S. military have so far IGNORED the democratic will of Gov. Tamaki & the Okinawan people.”

People are urged to sign a petition to the White House demanding that construction be stopped until a referendum can be held. Go to https://bit.ly/2SF0eMT

Strugglelalucha256


Greetings to the Communist Party of the Philippines on its 50th anniversary

“Struggle for Socialism/La Lucha por el Socialismo,” a newly-established Marxist-Leninist publication in the U.S., congratulates the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) on its 50th anniversary. We send our warmest revolutionary greetings and deepest solidarity to all members and supporters of the CPP in their struggle for peace and liberation in the Philippines.

The CPP was founded on Dec. 26, 1968, in order to continue the unfinished revolution started by the Katipunan in 1896 and to continue the struggle for national liberation and democracy against U.S. imperialism and the local reactionary classes of big compradors, landlords and bureaucrat capitalists.

Today, the CPP holds broad support among a significant section of Filipino people. This is in part because of its ability to convince the masses of people of the correctness of its program — specifically, genuine land reform and national industrialization. The workers and peasants of the Philippines understand that these are real solutions to the problems of poverty, joblessness and exploitation. This support from the Filipino people is what has allowed the CPP to grow and strengthen for so long.

As a neocolonial client of U.S. imperialism, the Rodrigo Duterte regime enjoys material and political support from Washington, especially in the form of funds for the Philippine army and police. These are the same military and police forces that have been given free reign by Duterte to kill anyone they suspect of being subversives. Duterte has refused to continue the peace talks with the CPP that began with his presidency, thus removing the possibility for a peaceful solution. He has opted for an all-out war on Filipino workers and peasants.

In its 50 years, the Communist Party of the Philippines has achieved incredible victories for the workers and peasants. Under the direction of the CPP, the National Democratic Front, consisting of 18 allied organizations, has ousted two reactionary regimes: first, the fascist Marcos dictatorship in 1986, and then the corrupt Estrada regime in 2001.

Additionally, the growth and strength of the New People’s Army (NPA) has allowed for the building of local organs of political power nationwide, meaning that there are territories throughout the Philippines operating under a people’s government. The NPA is assisted by tens of thousands of people, operating in more than 110 guerrilla fronts in 17 regions and 73 out of 81 Philippine provinces.

Revolutionaries in the U.S. can help to further the struggle in the Philippines by opposing the U.S. war machine and toppling imperialism via a strong and broad anti-war, anti-imperialist movement here.

Happy 50th anniversary and deepest solidarity to the Communist Party of the Philippines. Struggle onward!

Strugglelalucha256


Stock market decline worst since 1930s. Where is this going?

The Wall Street stock market closed December 21 with its worst weekly drop in more than seven years. The fall continued on December 24, losing more than 650 points.

The S&P 500 ended a brutal week down 7 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 414 points. The Nasdaq fell 3 percent.

Major U.S. stock markets are now 16 percent to 26 percent below the peaks they reached in the summer and early fall, according to the AP. The Bloomberg Billionaires Index dropped $511 billion this year.

This will be the worst December for stocks since the 1930s.

The economic landscape looks much like 1937, when an apparent economic recovery from the Great Depression came to a sharp stop ― after the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates, triggering a new downturn. And throughout this year, the Fed has been hiking interest rates ― with the latest rise this week ― while the stock market is falling and economic growth is slowing, says Marxist economist Michael Roberts.

Looking behind the curtain

What happens in the stock market reflects the conditions of capitalist production. The mysterious gyrations up and down may appear to be like a disappearing act in a Las Vegas magic show, but they represent the anticipated direction of the economy. And a fall in the stock market can have wide repercussions.

The losses in a stock market downturn directly hit millions of workers and middle-class people through the loss of their savings, pensions and other retirement funds, insurance funds and other institutions, all of which are invested in the stock market.

Engels on the stock exchange

What is the role of the stock market? As long ago as 1895, Frederick Engels, in supplementary notes updating Volume 3 of Capital, said:

“[The stock exchange] tends to concentrate all production, industrial as well as agricultural, and all commerce, the means of communication as well as the functions of exchange, in the hands of stock exchange operators, so that the stock exchange becomes the most prominent representative of capitalist production itself.”

Engels also noted the relation of foreign investment to the stock exchange:

“Now all foreign investments [are] in the form of shares. … [Colonization] is purely a subsidiary of the stock exchange, in whose interests the European powers divided Africa a few years ago, and the French conquered Tunis and Tonkin. Africa [was] leased directly to companies (Niger, South Africa, German South-West and German East Africa), and Mashonaland and Natal [were] seized by [Cecil] Rhodes for the stock exchange.”

The stock exchange is the concentration of all industry, agriculture, commerce and the means of production into the hands of stock exchange operators, that is, the financial industry. That includes not just the Wall Street brokerages and hedge funds, but also the heads of the biggest banks — particularly the central banks such as the Federal Reserve. Of course, not every stock market plunge results in a capitalist economic crisis.

Crisis of overproduction

Left out of most reports on the stock market is the so-called trade war against China and the tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump — as though they were unrelated.

On the steel and aluminum import tariffs, the root cause of the problem is being ignored. That problem, according to an article in Forbes, is global metal overproduction.

The tariffs have meant higher car prices and the auto industry predicts the result will be two million fewer cars sold annually. That’s around 10 percent of the market. That’s overproduction.

China’s soybean imports from the United States dropped to zero in November, a result of the U.S. trade war, leaving U.S. agribusiness with a massive “oversupply.”

Overproduction is the outgrowth of capitalist production, notwithstanding all the research, the sophisticated data, computerization and digital communications at the disposal of the capitalists ― important potential tools for planning.

Anarchy reigns in capitalist production, as Engels explained in “Socialism: Utopian and Scientific,” because:

“No one knows how much of his particular article is coming on the market, nor how much of it will be wanted. No one knows whether his individual product will meet an actual demand, whether he will be able to make good his cost of production or even to sell his commodity at all.”

In Volume III of “Capital,” Karl Marx described the nature of capitalist crises this way:

“The contradiction of the capitalist mode of production … lies precisely in its tendency towards an absolute development of the productive forces, which continually come into conflict with the specific conditions of production in which capital moves, and alone can move. There are not too many necessities of life produced, in proportion to the existing population. Quite the reverse. Too little is produced to decently and humanely satisfy the wants of the great mass.”

This “crisis of overproduction” is the defining feature of a capitalist crisis, according to Marx. Unemployment rises as workplaces are shut down. People go hungry while food sits unsold in warehouses or rots in the fields. Homes stand empty although millions lack an affordable place to live.

The deep-going causes of crises arise from the contradictory nature of the capitalist system, which idolizes private ownership of the means of production and yet has developed the productive forces to the point where they have outgrown private ownership and are really social in character. That is, private property cannot be separated from competition and the ups and downs of capitalist anarchy, while jobs, food and housing are necessities for human beings that should not be disrupted by the drive for capitalist profits.

Profit is the motor-force of capitalist production. The capitalists must always expand production and dominate their market. Expand or die is the law of the marketplace. It is the competition for the market that continually drives expansion to the point of overproduction.

Falling rate of profit

Because capitalists are under constant pressure to invest in ever-greater amounts of machinery and equipment, computers and robots, there is a long-term tendency for the rate of profit to fall. The reason for this is that labor is the source of the surplus value that capitalists keep as profit. The rising proportion of machinery, including computerization, replacing workers creates a downward pressure on the rate of profit over the long run.

That doesn’t mean that capitalism will collapse on its own as profit rates fall. Marx pointed out that capitalist crises actually clear the way for a revival of growth by bankrupting unproductive capitalists and devaluing capital in general.

Strugglelalucha256
https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2018/12/