Nov. 23, Los Angeles — The Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice launched the book “The U.S. War Drive against China.”
The book features articles from Struggle-La Lucha. The writers and a labor leader from Nigeria attended the meeting.
Writing contributors Sharon Black, Scott Scheffer, Apryle Everly, and John Parker discussed the implications of the U.S. war drive against China for the lives of working people around the world.
Scott Scheffer talked about the numerous contributions of China in fighting climate change.
Sharon Black exposed how the austerity and wars of the U.S. directly target the livelihoods of working people in the U.S. and abroad.
Writer and youth organizer Apryle Everly from Baltimore touched on the opportunities China provided in addition to the study abroad programs.
Featured guest Owei Lakemfa, a labor union national leader and coordinator of the International Decolonization conference in Nigeria spoke about the implications of the IMF and World Bank directly affecting the youth who were targeted for simply protesting against the IMF’s austerity measures in Nigeria.
John Parker welcomed the well-attended meeting participants to the Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice. Parker focused on the opportunities provided by China’s Belt and Road projects, especially in Africa, which went contrary to the IMF and World Bank’s negative effects on developing infrastructure on the continent.
Black, Everly, Scheffer, and Parker are all members of the Socialist Unity Party and contributors to the Struggle-La Lucha magazine.
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