Storms at the Summit of the Americas

June 7 was a bad day for Luis Almagro, secretary-general of the Organization of American States (OAS). During the ninth Summit of the Americas, a young man declared to him what he is: an assassin and puppet of the White House, instigator of the coup in Bolivia. He said that Almagro cannot come to give lessons on democracy when his hands are stained with blood. In another room at the summit in Los Angeles, Secretary of State Antony Blinken seemed to be doing no better: several journalists rebuked him for using freedom of the press to provide cover for the murderers of journalists and for sanctioning and excluding certain countries from this meeting. “Democracy or hypocrisy?” could be heard over the loudspeaker that day.

In reality, this stormy summit began with a large diplomatic stumble for the United States, when several Latin American presidents announced that they would not participate in the summit because of the exclusion of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, as dictated by the White House, while the U.S. State Department still claims the open and unrestricted nature of the meeting’s call. Its website says, “Throughout, the United States has demonstrated, and will continue to demonstrate, our commitment to an inclusive process that incorporates input from people and institutions that represent the immense diversity of our hemisphere, and includes Indigenous and other historically marginalized voices.”

Hypocrisy seems to be the glue of this summit, and mainstream U.S. media and analysts declared the June 6-10 meeting a failure before it even started. On June 7, the Washington Post assured readers that “This week’s Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles will be remembered for its absences rather than its potential agreements,” focusing its attention on Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who was the most mentioned political figure in U.S. networks and media on June 7 and 8, even more than U.S. President Joe Biden, according to statistics from Google Trends. Richard N. Haass, who was the adviser to former Secretary of State Colin Powell and director of policy planning for the State Department, summed up the disaster superbly in a tweet: “The Summit of the Americas looks to be a debacle, a diplomatic own goal. The U.S. has no trade proposal, no immigration policy, and no infrastructure package. Instead, the focus is on who will and will not be there. Unclear is why we pressed for it to happen.”

As can be expected of a meeting for which the invitation list had not been declared just 72 hours before it began, apathy seems to dominate the debate rooms, to which almost no one goes, according to witnesses. Even so, the United States government did not miss an opportunity to secure the appearance of participation by the civil society groups on which it bets, and it met with the envoys from Miami, paid for by USAID, and awarded them with more money. During the summit, Blinken promised a new fund of $9 million to support “independent journalism” to those who already receive $20 million a year for promoting “regime change” in Cuba.

This political pageantry is happening in what is essentially a bunker, because the Los Angeles Police received more than $15 million to police the summit and militarize a city famous for its homelessness and belts of poverty. The U.S. Democratic Party elite, meanwhile, remain out of touch with the reality of their own country, shaken by daily massacres, increasingly powerless to meet the expectations of citizens, and with most decisions and legislative projects stalled. They are replicating the clichés of the Monroe Doctrine—America for the Americans—and demonstrating what appears to be a commitment to isolationism with respect to Latin America.

The United States rarely takes into account the differentiating features of its Latin American neighbors: cultural, linguistic, religious, and traditional—in short, those that grant and promote a genuine way of understanding life and its miracles. It might seem incomprehensible at this point, but the U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America is articulated and carried out from exclusively ideological approaches, with simplistic decisions that end up harming everyone—including and especially the United States itself.

Defying the storm, the People’s Summit for Democracy has been installed at the doors of the meeting of the friends of the White House. Sponsored by some 250 organizations, most of which are local unions, the counter-summit is marching through the streets of Los Angeles on June 10, whether or not the authorities, who have done everything possible to silence the alternative meeting, give permission. But the media blockade is not having the expected success. Almagro and Blinken have gone viral on social media for reasons beyond their control, and they will not be the last to prove firsthand what the outrage of the excluded looks like.

This article was produced by Globetrotter and was first published on La Jornada. Rosa Miriam Elizalde is a Cuban journalist and founder of the site Cubadebate. She is vice president of both the Union of Cuban Journalists (UPEC) and the Latin American Federation of Journalists (FELAP). She has written and co-written several books including Jineteros en la Habana and Our Chavez. She has received the Juan Gualberto Gómez National Prize for Journalism on multiple occasions for her outstanding work. She is currently a weekly columnist for La Jornada of Mexico City.

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Cumbre borrascosa

Un día negro para Luis Almagro. En su cara un joven le canta lo que es: asesino y marioneta de la Casa Blanca, instigador del golpe de Estado en Bolivia. Que no venga a dar lecciones cuando tiene las manos manchadas de sangre. En otra sala de la novena Cumbre de las Américas en Los Ángeles, al secretario de Estado Antony Blinken no le va mejor: varios reporteros lo increpan por utilizar la libertad de prensa para arropar a asesinos de periodistas y por sancionar y excluir a países de esta reunión. ¿Democracia o hipocresía?, se escucha por el altavoz este martes.

En realidad, esta cumbre borrascosa comenzó con un duro traspié diplomático para Estados Unidos, cuando varios presidentes de América Latina anunciaron que no irían por la exclusión de Cuba, Venezuela y Nicaragua dictada desde la Casa Blanca, mientras la página del Departamento de Estado todavía declama el carácter abierto y sin restricciones de la convocatoria al encuentro. Dice que “Estados Unidos ha demostrado, y seguirá demostrando, su compromiso con un proceso inclusivo que incorpora las aportaciones de las personas que representan la inmensa diversidad de nuestro hemisferio e incluye las voces indígenas y otras históricamente marginadas” (sic).

Pero si la hipocresía es el pegamento de esta Cumbre, los principales medios y analistas estadunidenses declararon fracasada la reunión antes de que comenzara. Ayer, The Washington Post aseguró que “la Cumbre de las Américas de esta semana en Los Ángeles será recordada por sus ausencias más que por sus posibles acuerdos”, centrando su atención en el presidente López Obrador, que ha sido la figura política más mencionada en redes y medios estadunidenses el martes y el miércoles, por encima de Joe Biden, según las estadísticas de Google Trends. Richard Hass, quien fue asesor de Colin Powell y director de planificación de políticas del Departamento de Estado, ha resumido el desastre de modo insuperable: “La Cumbre de las Américas parece ser una debacle, un gol diplomático en puerta propia. Estados Unidos no tiene una propuesta comercial, una política de inmigración ni un paquete para infraestructura. En cambio, la atención se centra en quién estará y quién no estará allí. No está claro cómo hicimos para que esto sucediera”.

Como se esperaba de una reunión que 72 horas antes de comenzar no había declarado aún a quiénes había cursado invitaciones, la apatía domina las salas de debate a los que no va casi nadie, según testigos. Aún así, el gobierno de Estados Unidos no pierde oportunidad para asegurar la ficción de sociedad civil a la que apuesta y se reúne con los enviados de Miami, pagados por la USAID, y premiados con más dinero. Blinken ha prometido en Los Ángeles un nuevo fondo de 9 millones de dólares para apoyar el “periodismo independiente” a los mismos que ya reciben 20 millones de dólares al año para el “cambio de régimen” en Cuba.

Es la política-ficción en un búnker, porque la policía de Los Ángeles recibió 15 millones de dólares para militarizar una ciudad célebre por sus carpas de indigentes y sus cinturones de pobreza. Fuera de la realidad de su propio país, sacudida por masacres diarias, cada vez más impotente para satisfacer las expectativas de los ciudadanos y con la mayoría de las decisiones y proyectos legislativos paralizados, la élite demócrata replica los clichés de la Doctrina Monroe –América para los americanos– y muestra lo que parece ser su vocación de aislacionismo respecto a América Latina.

De cara a nuestro continente, los estadunidenses raras veces tienen en cuenta los rasgos diferenciadores vecinos: los culturales, los idiomáticos, los religiosos y las tradiciones; en definitiva, aquellos que conceden y propician un modo genuino de entender la vida y sus milagros. Podría parecer incomprensible que a estas alturas de los tiempos se articule y protagonice una política exterior con la región desde unos planteamientos exclusivamente ideológicos y con decisiones simplistas que perjudican al final a todos y, en primer lugar, al propio Estados Unidos.

Desafiando la borrasca, la Cumbre de los Pueblos por la Democracia se ha instalado a las puertas de la reunión de los amigos de la Casa Blanca.

Con el auspicio de unas 250 organizaciones, la mayoría sindicatos locales, la contracumbre marchará el viernes por las calles de Los Ángeles, den o no el permiso las autoridades que han hecho todo lo posible por silenciar el encuentro alternativo. Pero el bloqueo mediático no está teniendo el éxito esperado. Almagro y Blinken se han vuelto virales en las redes por razones ajenas a su voluntad y no serán los últimos en probar en carne propia a qué sabe la indignación de los excluidos.

Este artículo fue producido para Globetrotter y publicado primero en La Jornada.

Rosa Miriam Elizalde es una periodista cubana y fundadora de Cubadebate. Es vicepresidenta de la Unión de Periodistas de Cuba (UPEC) y de la Federación Latinoamericana de Periodistas (FELAP). Es autora y coautora de varios libros, incluyendo Jineteros en La Habana y Chávez Nuestro. Por su destacada labor, ha sido merecedora en varias ocasiones del Premio Nacional de Periodismo Juan Gualberto Gómez. Es columnista semanal de La Jornada, México.

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Mobilizing opposition to the imperialist Summit of the Americas

On June 5, the Black Alliance for Peace hosted a powerful panel discussion on the topic of “Defending Our America: Building Resistance to Imperialism and Militarism.” The event was held at the Harriet Tubman Social Center for Social Justice in Los Angeles. 

The gathering started with a poster and banner making session in preparation for the mobilization against the Ninth Summit of the Americas. A special film screening of a documentary on SouthCom (the U.S. Military Command in Central America and the Caribbean) opened the forum, which was followed by a powerful panel that addressed the expansion of U.S. military bases worldwide, working class struggles, connecting our struggles, and building international solidarity specifically with Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti and other nations occupied by SouthCom. 

Carlos Sirah of the Black Alliance for Peace chaired the discussion and Dr. Jemima Pierre, Black Alliance for Peace’s Haiti and Africa Coordinator, introduced the panelists.

In closing, John Parker, Coordinator of the Harriet Tubman Center and on the ballot for U.S. Senate on the California Peace and Freedom Party ticket, emphasized that the purpose for running in the primary election is to raise awareness, to address issues that are not talked about by the Democratic or Republican parties, and to give the people an alternative. The increasing numbers of people who choose socialist candidates shows our movement is moving forward and people are developing an understanding of socialism.

Videos of the program may be viewed on Black Alliance for Peace Facebook at tinyurl.com/2p8c4dha 

No compromise! No defeat!

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Peoples Summit opens with a resurgence of solidarity

On its first of 3 days, the Peoples Summit for Democracy in Los Angeles opened by surpassing expectations in numbers attending and unity. The significant organizational challenges of the event being held at the LA Trade Tech College went smoothly thanks to a committed group of mostly young volunteers who organized everything from the 9 panels that were presented to a large tented area set up to accommodate many of the over 250 organizations that represented social justice groups, veterans, students, community-based artisans, unions, women’s rights, Latin American solidarity groups and many more.

Organizers reported that of the 1000 people who had registered over 750 showed up on the first day. In the opening plenary entitled, “Democracy for Who” it was obvious that this was a serious crowd who had come to learn and connect with others. The urgency connected to the decline of the US in the eyes of the world and its inability to meet even the most basic of needs of the majority of people was obvious. Manolo De Los Santos, a key organizer of the Peoples Summit, reminded the crowd that, “this cannot be a one-time event. We have to keep in mind that we must forge unity with all those who are oppressed, exploited and victimized by this system whose time is up.”

Cuba who, like Venezuela and Nicaragua was not invited to Biden’s Summit of exclusion was brought up time and again as an example of a collective society that, despite the over 60 years of blockade and a mountain of sanctions that are now Biden’s responsibility, continues to stand up to empire unified and never wavering dignity. In most panels, the dignity of Cuba was intertwined in the discussion regardless of the topic.

In the panel entitled, Let Cuba Live: Young Voices against the Blockade, moderated by Cheryl LaBash, co chair of the National Network on Cuba, 3 young women who had recently returned from Cuba explained not only how heartwarming their experience was but how much they learned. There was a separation of belief from everything that they had been told from the official US narrative against Cuba their entire lives and the rich experience of cooperation in sharing and commitment for the common good that they witnessed on the island. The forming of this critical view will now extend to everything else they have been told about the so-called greatest democracy ever.

Danaka Katovich, national co-director of Code Pink expressed the sentiment of the panel by pointing out, “The US never consults with me about my rights as a woman, I can’t even vote on it, where in Cuba women are involved on every level. The whole point of the US blockade against Cuba is based on cruelty so the US has no right to lecture us about human rights and democracy.”

Perhaps the area where the most discussion and organizing was taking place was on the informational tables outside where people were signing up and getting into lively conversations about activism and strategies. On our Resumen Latinoamericano table, people were signing up eagerly as one woman said, “I just need to get information from new sources.”

Source: Resumen Latinoamericano – English

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The real ‘great replacement’

The most dangerous poison is racism. This toxin filled Payton Gendron’s bloodstream as the gunman went to Buffalo, New York, to kill Black people.

The latest version of this poison is the claim that white people are being “replaced.” Tucker Carlson tells his Fox News audience that they’re being pushed aside by immigrants as well as by all Black, Brown and Asian people.

This lie was emphasized by the murderer Gendron in his 180-page “manifesto.”

It wasn’t immigrants that closed nine of the ten GM plants in Flint, Michigan, destroying more than 70,000 union jobs between 1980 and 2006. Capitalism committed this mega job theft.

Because of the United Auto Workers union, Flint used to have the highest average wages in the United States. Now because of plant closings, 60% of Flint’s children live below the miserably low official poverty level.

To save money, children in the Black-majority city were deliberately lead-poisoned. Heavily polluted water from the Flint river was substituted for the clean drinking water that had come from the Great Lakes.

That’s a real replacement that Tucker Carlson won’t talk about.

It isn’t Black or Latinx people who are responsible for the inflation-adjusted wages of over-the-road truck drivers falling 55% between 1980 and 2021. It was government deregulation and union-busting attacks against the Teamsters union that committed this crime.

The last 50 years has been one long holiday for the rich. Real average wages rose just 3% between 1979 and 2018. Meanwhile productivity has zoomed. While there are 735 billionaires in the U.S., 40% of people can’t afford $400 for an emergency expense. 

It wasn’t Muslims who forced 60 million people in the U.S. to use food banks and pantries in 2020. Transgender people aren’t responsible for folks being forced to buy food at dollar stores because they can’t afford to shop at supermarkets.

Shoplifters didn’t make meat prices skyrocket by as much as 20% in the last year. It was the greedy meat monopolies that committed the crime.

Even the White House admits that “four large meat-packing companies control 85% of the beef market. In poultry, the top four processing firms control 54% of the market. And in pork, the top four processing firms control about 70% of the market.”

Who’s hurt most?

Poor and working people in the United States are suffering. Capitalism destroyed nearly 7 million manufacturing jobs ― many of which were union jobs ― between 1979 and 2019.

White workers were hurt by this job destruction. Black people were devastated.

White families in the Midwest saw their median income drop by 7.1% between 1978 and 1982. That’s a great recession.

But Black families in the region saw their median income fall by five times as much. Their 35.8% income drop amounted to a great depression.

Conditions were so bad that the Black median family income in the Midwest dropped below that of the South. (Census Bureau, historical income figures-families) A “reverse migration” began southwards.

This was a real great replacement. The banksters and billionaires were determined to get rid of their dependence on Black labor in heavy industry.

Back in 1968, a quarter of all auto workers and steel workers in the U.S. were Black. That was double the Black percentage of the population. (“Organized Labor and the Black Worker, 1619-1981” by Philip S. Foner.) 

Among them were thousands of Black workers employed at Bethlehem Steel’s Lackawanna works located just outside Buffalo. Almost all of these jobs were destroyed. Buffalo’s Black Community never recovered from the loss.

Using a bankruptcy to make a profit of $300 million, Trump’s Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross robbed Bethlehem Steel retirees of their medical benefits.

White workers were a majority of those cut off.

Tucker Carlson, who takes home $35 million per year, won’t mention this robbery. 

Capitalism continually replaces workers through automation. The number of railroad workers fell from 1.5 million in 1947 to just 145,000 today. 

Black workers are often the first victims of automation. In New York City alone, installing automatic elevators following World War II threw 20,000 workers out of a job.

Throughout the United States, operating elevators was considered a “menial occupation” and was generally reserved for Black men. A. Phillip Randolph attempted to organize them in New York during the early 1920s.

The 1934 organizing drive of building workers in New York City was sparked by African American elevator operator Thomas Young being fired for not saying “down, please.” The two-million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU) was born in this struggle. (“Local 32B-32J: Sixty Years of Progress”)

The biggest replacements of all time

Telling poor people that they’re being replaced by other poor people is old and stale. In the 1790s, Federalists in Philadelphia blamed Irish immigrants for their election losses. (“Philadelphia ― The Federalist City,” by Richard G. Miller)

Catholics were accused of wanting to replace a Protestant majority. In the 1920s, bigots claimed that immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe were replacing “old American stock.”

Italians, Poles, Hungarians and other immigrants were blamed for being union supporters in the strike wave that followed World War I. A special target of the 1924 immigration act were Jewish people. Africans and Asians were entirely excluded.

The Tucker Carlsons of the 1930s weren’t usually attacking Islam. They were instead fighting to keep Jewish refugees out of the United States. Anne Frank died in a Nazi concentration camp because her family was denied a visa to come to the United States.

Never forget that land belonging to Indigenous nations was stolen by one massacre after another, started by the Pilgrims. That’s a real replacement.

Joe Biden needs to replace Leonard Peltier’s jail cell with freedom. The American Indian Movement leader has spent 45 years in jail.

The African Holocaust is a centuries-long replacement that along with the Indigenous Holocaust jump-started the capitalist world market. Wall Street became the financial center of the United States because it was the banking house of the slave masters.

Capitalism is cooking the earth. We need to replace it with socialism.

The first step towards a revolution is to replace the lies of Tucker Carlson and every other racist with working class truth.

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Orgullo Gay 2022: resistir la estrategia capitalista del “pánico trans”

El Partido de Socialismo Unido/ Socialist Unity Party y el periódico Struggle-La Lucha saludan a la comunidad lesbiana, gay, bisexual, transgénero, queer y de dos espíritus en el marco del 53º aniversario de la heroica Rebelión de Stonewall. El espíritu de lucha exhibido en Stonewall se necesita hoy más que nunca.

En primer lugar, ofrecemos nuestra solidaridad a la comunidad negra de Buffalo, Nueva York, donde un supremacista blanco masacró a 10 personas afroamericanas el 14 de mayo. Y extendemos nuestra mano a la comunidad latinx de Uvalde, Texas, donde el dolor del trágico tiroteo en la escuela el 24 de mayo se ve agravado por el intento del gobernador Greg Abbott de explotarlo para su cruzada contra los inmigrantes.

A medida que ingresamos al Mes del Orgullo Gay de 2022, Estados Unidos se sume en un “pánico trans”. Al igual que los “pánicos homosexuales” que se han producido antes, este es un intento de dividir a trabajadores y oprimidos en un momento en que el sistema capitalista está en crisis.

La campaña anti-trans está impulsada por los ricos y poderosos, que están desesperados por mantenernos divididos utilizando a los más vulnerables como chivos expiatorios, convenciendo a quienes carecen de conciencia de clase de que las personas transgénero, no binarias y de género no conforme son la raíz de sus problemas – no el sistema de ganancias que nos explota a todos.

Entre ellos se encuentran oligarcas “ilustrados” y empresas como Elon Musk y Netflix, Jeff Bezos y Starbucks. Temen al movimiento de trabajadores para sindicalizarse y las comunidades que exigen responsabilidades a sus imperios. Las personas queer juegan un papel importante en estas luchas.

Pánico trans = más violencia

Las legislaturas estatales por todo el país han adoptado más de 300 proyectos de ley anti-LGBTQ2S en lo que va del año, la mayoría de ellos dirigidos a personas trans y especialmente a niños y jóvenes trans.

La autonomía corporal, en el corazón de la capacidad de las personas trans para vivir bajo este sistema, está en juego, ya que los tribunales y las legislaturas buscan hacer retroceder el reloj para reforzar las normas capitalistas patriarcales que tratan los cuerpos de las mujeres, los niños, las personas de color y las personas LGBTQ2S como propiedad de los hombres cis blancos y ricos.

Cuando el gobernador de Texas Abbott no logró que se aprobara una ley para criminalizar la atención de afirmación de género para niños trans, emitió una orden ejecutiva para abrir investigaciones penales contra padres, proveedores de atención médica, maestros y cualquier otra persona que apoyara a los jóvenes trans. La gobernadora de Alabama, Kay Ivey, firmó una ley para exponer a la fuerza y ​​retirar el proceso de transición a niños trans.

En Florida, la ley “No digas gay” defendida por el gobernador Rick DeSantis prohíbe la discusión sobre la existencia LGBTQ2S en las aulas estatales. Otros estados han prohibido a los jóvenes trans participar en deportes o usar los baños escolares. Los maestros pueden verse obligados a informar a los padres y madres sobre los estudiantes trans o se les permite cambiarles el género al llamarles.

Esto ha llevado a un aumento de las amenazas y la violencia  contra las personas trans en los EUA, desde el transporte público hasta las redes sociales. En 2021, al menos 57 personas transgénero o no conformes con el género fueron asesinadas a tiros o asesinadas por otros medios violentos, y 2022 ya está en camino de superar esa horrible cifra. La gran mayoría de las víctimas de violencia mortal son mujeres trans de color.

Las medidas que atacan la atención de afirmación de género contradicen directamente las recomendaciones de los expertos médicos. Un estudio reciente de la Universidad de Washington encontró que los jóvenes trans que recibieron tratamiento de afirmación de género experimentaron en promedio una disminución del 60 % en el riesgo de depresión y una disminución del 73 % en los pensamientos suicidas. El acceso a la atención de afirmación de género salva la vida de los jóvenes trans.

En medio de esta crisis, la Corte Suprema lanzó otra bomba: el plan de la mayoría para anular la histórica decisión Roe V. Wade que protege el derecho al aborto, y hacerlo de una manera que abra la puerta a ataques similares contra la anticoncepción, el matrimonio entre personas del mismo sexo, la protección de las llamadas leyes de sodomía y otros derechos ganados a través de décadas de ardua lucha.

¿Por qué ahora? Los políticos de ultraderecha y detrás de ellos, muchos de los bancos y corporaciones más grandes, están utilizando el ataque a los derechos trans y reproductivos para impulsar el crecimiento de un movimiento neofascista. Su objetivo es proteger la propiedad privada y las ganancias destruyendo los derechos de todos los trabajadores. Están dispuestos a sacrificar la vida de niños trans, migrantes y refugiados, personas embarazadas o cualquiera que sea un objetivo conveniente.

La única forma en que los movimientos fascistas han sido derrotados es mediante la unión y la lucha del pueblo. No es suficiente confiar en las elecciones o esperar que los políticos amigos nos salven. No lo harán. El Partido Demócrata está atado por un millón de hilos a la misma clase capitalista que exige estas medidas antipopulares. Joe Biden y Nancy Pelosi seguirán diciendo cosas inofensivas junto a las vías del tren sin hacer nada para detener el tren que se desboca.

Pelea como Sylvia Rivera y Marsha P. Johnson

¿Cómo podemos contraatacar? Hay muchos ejemplos recientes de unidad y lucha, especialmente por parte de estudiantes y jóvenes.

En toda América del Norte, desde Salt Lake City, Utah, hasta Des Moines, Iowa, hasta Terranova y Labrador, los estudiantes se han manifestado en gran número para protestar contra las leyes y las medidas represivas dirigidas a las personas trans.

Necesitamos urgentemente una protesta nacional masiva como la Marcha en Washington de 1987 por los derechos de lesbianas y gays, celebrada en medio de la crisis del SIDA cuando la administración Reagan estaba atacando a los hombres homosexuales, o la Marcha en Washington de 1993 por la igualdad de derechos y la liberación de lesbianas, gays y bisexuales de más de un millón de personas.

Pero simplemente salir en grandes cantidades no es suficiente. Debemos aprender del ejemplo de la ocupación del Capitolio del Estado de Wisconsin en 2011 por parte del movimiento sindical y sus aliados en las comunidades. Esta ocupación para resistir la legislación antisindical energizó a los trabajadores de costa a costa, muchos de los cuales viajaron a Madison o recaudaron dinero para apoyar a los manifestantes.

Si bien la ocupación no ganó en el corto plazo, sentó las bases para la ola de huelgas de docentes que se extendió por el país en 2018-2019 y el aumento de la organización de hoy en Amazon, Starbucks y otros gigantes antisindicales.

¡Imagínese el poder de las personas LGBTQ2S y sus aliados de la lucha por los derechos reproductivos, el movimiento Vidas Negras Importan, los inmigrantes y los trabajadores, ocupando el capitolio en Texas, Florida u otro estado que ataca las vidas trans!

También debemos reconocer que las guerras y sanciones reaccionarias de EUA en todo el mundo alimentan los ataques anti-LGBTQ2S en casa.

Cada bomba que el Congreso envía a Ucrania, Israel y Arabia Saudita para las guerras de poder de EUA estalla aquí, como dijo el Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. durante la Guerra de Vietnam. Cuanto más se desvían hacia la expansión del imperio estadounidense en el exterior los recursos desesperadamente necesitados aquí, más nos convierte el sistema en chivos expiatorios para garantizar que los trabajadores permanezcan divididos e impotentes.

Nuestra comunidad no puede luchar eficazmente contra la ofensiva anti-trans y anti-personas en casa mientras apoya la agresión estadounidense en el exterior. Cuando las personas que luchan contra la dominación estadounidense en todo el mundo ganan, nuestros movimientos por los derechos se fortalecen. Cuando extendemos nuestra solidaridad a quienes resisten al imperialismo estadounidense, abrimos la oportunidad de una mayor comprensión y participación de las personas LGBTQ2S en todas partes.

Abracemos el legado de ACT UP, Queer Nation y aquellos que lucharon militantemente contra el “pánico gay” de la década de 1980. Inculquemos nuestro movimiento con el espíritu de unidad que impulsó la Rebelión de Stonewall, un levantamiento liderado por los jóvenes más oprimidos negros y marrones, de clase trabajadora, revolucionarios trans y queer.

¡Resistamos la estrategia de pánico trans del capitalismo! ¡Luchemos por el socialismo, un sistema que prioriza las necesidades de las personas!

Strugglelalucha256


Support Baltimore Library Workers & Join Poor Peoples Campaign March & Welfare Rights Union

 

Urgent! Support Baltimore City Library Workers this Wednesday!
Sign up for the Baltimore City Poor Peoples Campaign March & Caravan to D.C. &
Welfare Rights Union National Conference.

Support Baltimore City Library Workers!

Workers need union power!

Wednesday, June 8, 5:45 pm sharp in front of the downtown Pratt Library

400 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201

The Peoples Power Assembly is asking everyone to come out to support the workers at the Baltimore City libraries who are petitioning for a union.

They will be going to the Pratt board meeting this Wednesday to demand union recognition. Your support is very important. We will meet outside at 5:45 pm sharp.

For more info go to https://www.prattworkersunited.org/


Poor People’s Campaign Caravan & March from Baltimore

Don’t forget to sign up so that we can make sure there is enough food and housing for everyone who will be traveling with us to Washington D.C.

We gather at 10 am, Friday, June 17th for a rally & launch at City Hall, 100 Holliday Street, Baltimore, MD 21202. Please join us for this rally regardless of whether you can join the full caravan.

Here is a video of the press conference & rally on May 12, the anniversary of the start of the original Poor People’s Campaign.

https://youtu.be/kaVy0kTZK5g

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Welfare Rights National Conference in Baltimore from June 15 to 16

@ St. Vincent de Paul Church 120 North Front Street, Baltimore 21202

Wed. 11 am to 8 pm & Thurs 10 am to 8 pm

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Summit of the Americas: Imperialist domination and exclusion

Statement by the Revolutionary Government

Havana, June 6th, 2022.- The US Government, abusing its privilege of being the host country, decided at a very early stage to exclude Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua from the 9th Summit of the Americas to be held in the city of Los Angeles this month of June.  It has refused to attend to the just claims of many governments to change that discriminatory and unacceptable stand.

There is no single reason that justifies the anti-democratic and arbitrary exclusion of any country of the hemisphere from this continental meeting, as warned by the Latin American and Caribbean nations at the 6th Summit held in Cartagena de Indias in 2012.

President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez announced last May 25 that he would not attend the meeting.  This was Cuba’s final decision if all countries of the hemisphere were not convened on an equal footing.

Arrogance, fear of inconvenient truths being voiced, determination to prevent the meeting from discussing the most pressing and complex issues in the hemisphere, and the contradictions of its own feeble and polarized political system are behind the US government’s decision to once again resort to exclusion in order to hold a meeting with no concrete contributions yet beneficial for imperialism’s image.

It is a well-known fact that the US Government has engaged in intensive high-level efforts with governments of the region seeking to reverse the intention of many of not attending the meeting unless all countries are invited. Such efforts included immoral pressure, blackmail, threats and dirty deceptive maneuvers.  These are all common practices that reflect imperialism’s traditional disdain for our countries and deserve the strongest rejection.

Cuba appreciates and respects the honorable, brave and legitimate stand of many governments in defense of the full and equal participation of all countries.

The leadership of Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador deserves special recognition. We highlight the clear stand of CARICOM member countries from the outset against such exclusions, as well as the firm stance of Bolivian president Luis Arce Catacora and of the president of Honduras Xiomara Castro. The position of Argentine as chairman of CELAC expresses the majority view of the region against a selective Summit, as expressed, both publicly and in private, by many governments of South and Central America.

Such genuine and spontaneous solidarity in reaction to this US discriminatory action against countries of the region reflects the sentiment of the peoples of Our America. The United States underestimated the support Cuba enjoys in the region, when it attempted to impose its unilateral and universally rejected hostile policy towards Cuba as a consensus regional position, however, the debate on the invitation process proved them wrong.

The 21st ALBA Summit held in Havana last May 27, showed the unequivocal repudiation of exclusions and discriminatory and selective treatment.

Such exclusions confirm that the United States conceived and uses this high-level dialogue mechanism as an instrument to further its hegemonic system in the hemisphere, just like the Organization of American States (OAS), the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance (TIAR) and other bodies established in the 20th century to curb independence, limit the sovereignty of nations in the region and thwart Latin American and Caribbean unity and integration aspirations.

They are part of the efforts to implement the Monroe Doctrine and promote exclusion as a dividing strategy for clear political, electoral and domination purposes.

One cannot speak of “The Americas” without including all the countries of the hemisphere.  Our region demands cooperation, not exclusion; solidarity, not meanness; respect, not arrogance; sovereignty and self-determination, not subordination.

It is known that the documents to be adopted at Los Angeles are completely divorced from the real problems facing the region and that beyond the effort to grant the OAS supranational prerogatives to decide upon the legitimacy of electoral processes and to compel Latin American and Caribbean governments to impose repressive, discriminatory and excluding actions against migrants, these documents are useless and vague.

We know that, like in the past, the voice of Latin America and the Caribbean will resound during those days in Los Angeles with the admirable and principled absence of relevant leaders who enjoy political and moral authority and the recognition of their people and the world.

We are also fully confident that the leaders of the region, who choose to attend, will argue with dignity that the United States cannot treat our peoples as they used to in the 20th century.

Cuba supports the genuine efforts to promote integration throughout the hemisphere based on civilized coexistence, peace, respect for diversity and solidarity. Cuba has a widely acknowledged record of unreserved support and contribution to all legitimate proposals for actual and concrete solutions to the most pressing problems faced by our peoples. The reality we are presented with today is far from such aspirations.

(Cubaminrex)

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Solidarity with Cuba, trans people at Queens Pride

 

Thousands of people gathered in the multinational immigrant neighborhood of Jackson Heights in Queens, New York, for the 25th Queens Pride Parade June 5. For the past two years the event was held virtually because of the pandemic. 

Significantly, coming during the nationwide “trans panic” aimed at dividing the working class, solidarity with trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming people was very visible at the march. This included a contingent carrying a massive Trans Pride flag. Parade organizers also handed out small trans flags along with rainbow flags to the crowd. 

Supporters of the Socialist Unity Party and Struggle-La Lucha marched with the NY-NJ Cuba Si Coalition contingent. The response from those lining the streets was overwhelmingly positive, with many chanting “Viva Cuba!” or running up to take photos with the coalition’s banner. 

Activists distributed leaflets for the monthly Cuba solidarity caravan calling for the end of the U.S. blockade. On June 25, New York’s caravan will be held in Jackson Heights for the first time. For info visit US-CubaNormalization.org

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Pride Month announcement from Struggle-La Lucha co-editor

Following is a special announcement from the co-editor of Struggle-La Lucha, formerly known as Greg Butterfield.

Happy Pride Month! I have some personal news to share with Struggle-La Lucha readers.

I’m proud to say that I am coming out as a trans woman. My name is Melinda. My pronouns are she/her/hers.

There’s a particular quote from revolutionary leader V.I. Lenin that has always appealed to me. According to Romanian poet Valeriu Marcu, he said this during a conversation at a cafe in Zurich, Switzerland, shortly before the Russian Revolution began. 

Perhaps it’s apocryphal or embellished, but it has the flavor of something Lenin might have said: “I don’t know how radical you are, or how radical I am. I am certainly not radical enough. One can never be radical enough; that is, one must always try to be as radical as reality itself.”

I have always tried to hold myself to that standard politically. But personally it was another matter. Until last year, I hid the “radical reality” of who I am even from myself. But now I’m finally ready to share it with the world.

Several things converged last year that forced me to seriously reckon with my gender after a lifetime of denial. That denial was rooted in an abused adolescent’s attempt to survive in a time and place where there were no words for what I was, and no chance of being accepted. I did such a thorough job of burying the real me that by the time I went to New York in my late teens and was befriended by trans revolutionary Leslie Feinberg, I had no clue that I was trans myself.

What I realized in 2021, after several months of intense introspection and learning, was that I needed to acknowledge my truth – first to myself, and then to the world.

A trans sister and comrade recently told me, “You picked a hell of a time to come out.” It’s true. The situation for trans, non-binary and gender-nonconforming people in the U.S. today is grim and increasingly dangerous. But for me, the hardest part has been resisting the urge to shout it from the rooftops during this awful “trans panic” and ongoing legislative attack on trans kids and youth.  

I hope that by speaking about this, it might help others like me to see that they are not too old to embrace their own “radical reality,” whatever that may be. More than ever, the world and especially the youth who are under attack need us to raise our voices and organize, organize, organize.

It’s always been my conviction that the best way to grow solidarity is to show solidarity, and I believe that is true for LGBTQ2S people in the U.S. Our existence has been exploited by U.S. imperialism as a bludgeon against other countries, while the rulers here fight tooth and nail to deny us every hard-won right. 

The truth is, our struggles need each other. We are all part of the same historic, diverse, multifaceted global struggle of the working class against capitalism and imperialism. I’m committed to doing whatever I can to help unite our class in the fight to elevate us all.

I’m very proud to be part of the Socialist Unity Party and Struggle-La Lucha, a communist organization and publication in the tradition of Sam Marcy, Dorothy Ballan and Leslie Feinberg, which has always been in the vanguard of trans liberation and LGBTQ2S solidarity. 

My name, pronouns and appearance may change, but my commitment to the revolutionary victory of the workers and oppressed will not.

Thank you for reading. 

Solidarity forever,
Melinda Butterfield

Strugglelalucha256
https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2022/06/page/4/