Struggle ★ La Lucha PDF – January 27, 2025

Get PDF here

  • STOP funding wars – FUND CLIMATE ACTION
  • Harriet Tubman Center of LA issues 10 demands
  • Racism and exploitation: Incarcerated firefighters and a burning city
  • Protest Trump’s coronation, fight billionaire oligarchy
  • ‘I’ve been to the mountaintop’ – A call to action then and now
  • Senate Democrats capitulate to racism on anti-immigrant bill
  • ‘Donald Trump is scared of us!’: Brooklyn says NO! to fascism
  • From Baltimore to New Orleans, workers fight back, hit the streets!
  • Baltimore revolutionaries say learn from Palestinian resistance
  • Annexation redux: Trump’s expansionist threats unmask longstanding policy
  • U.S. Senate votes unanimously to confirm warmonger Rubio
  • Oligarchy already rules: Top 0.1% gained $6 trillion under Biden
  • Straight line from David Duke to Musk’s Nazi salute
  • Like David Duke before him, Trump’s goal is to reverse hard-won rights
  • TikTok ban paves way for suppressing speech in anti-China crusade
  • Did Trump ‘fix’ TikTok? Users report censorship after outage
  • Open source vs. closed doors: How China’s DeepSeek beat U.S. AI monopolies
  • Nazi billionaires: Fascism in the Elon Musk family tree
  • Louisiana Gov. Landry kidnaps unhoused people ahead of Super Bowl
  • Cuba will win in the face of the imperialist onslaught!
  • Frente a la arremetida imperialista, CUBA VENCERÁ
Strugglelalucha256


Harriet Tubman Center of Los Angeles issues 10 demands for people’s recovery in wake of devastating fires

Money & support for fire victims and the people of Los Angeles, not war and genocide

Fires continue to rage; it is key that every possible effort, both local and national, is undertaken to STOP the fires. If the government can spend billions on wars abroad and genocide in Palestine, then it is urgent to turn our priorities around.  

 We demand of local, state & federal officials:

  1.  Stop landlord looting & end price gouging. Rollback rents now!
  2. Provide emergency housing and compensation for all. We need a rent and mortgage rollback across the Los Angeles region and an eviction moratorium. Provide 0% interest loans to workers, the poor, and small businesses to rebuild, and provide equal relief for renters who often have no insurance.
  3. Workers & people’s take-over of the greedy insurance companies. The insurance industry must pay up! No increase in rates.
  4. Reject racist & white supremacist policies. End disparities between Black, Brown, and poor communities with wealthy communities: Equal attention to historic Black communities like Altadena, California. Enact preventative measures such as converting to underground electrical power lines, fireproofing homes, and rentals in all neighborhoods, not just the wealthy.
  5. Convert military production from bombs and guns to air purifiers and PPE. Protect the health and lives in the Los Angeles region. Prioritize distribution to Black and Brown communities, families with children, seniors, and health challenges, and the broader poor community.
  6. Restore cuts and expand funding for firefighting capabilities in the region.  Levy a special tax on the banks, billionaires, and big businesses, including PG&E and the insurance industry in California, to expand services.  
  7. Suspend and halt ICE raids. People need food and shelter, not repression.
  8. Pay prisoners union wages & guarantee a path to employment in the fire department after incarceration. Presently, over 900 prisoners are risking their lives fighting fires. They are paid as little as $5.80 a day. 
  9. Elected “Workers and Peoples Commission” to guarantee preventative measures. This commission will be mandated to hold town halls and assemblies in neighborhoods and regions to hear people’s suggestions and grievances. It will have the power to call on scientific expertise and to implement changes.
  10. End the root cause of these catastrophes — capitalist climate crisis — by stopping the big oil companies, the Pentagon, and the capitalist profiteers who have created this crisis.

 

 

 

 

 

Strugglelalucha256


Struggle ★ La Lucha PDF – January 13, 2025

Get PDF here

  • Condemn the New Orleans assault: No attack on immigrants
  • Outrage in New Orleans: ‘Biden can’t condemn terror while funding it abroad’
  • Justice for Robert Brooks!
  • The erosion of third spaces in the U.S.
  • GAZA UNDER SIEGE: Kamal Adwan Hospital torched, patients and staff forced out
  • A new year of struggle for Palestine in NYC
  • Stop the genocide in Palestine! Arms embargo now!
  • Never forget that thousands of Black workers died building the Panama Canal
  • The Wilmington Massacre of 1898
  • Farewell to a revolutionary: Rochester’s Lydia Bayoneta
  • Fernando González, President of ICAP: ‘With Trump we can expect even more aggression’
  • Rudy Pisani – A life well lived
  • Sally O’Brien Solidarity between a Woman and an Island
  • Sally O’Brien solidaridad entre una mujer y una Isla
  • ¡Puerto Rico No se Vende, se Defiende!
Strugglelalucha256


Cuba’s Fernando González: “With Trump we can expect even more aggression”

As the island goes through one of its worst economic crises, the president of the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples, Fernando Gonzalez, believes that international solidarity is now “more essential than ever.”

Hurricanes, earthquakes, economic crisis and soon the return of the extreme right-wing Republican to the White House… The situation seems very worrying for Cuba and its revolution. For the president of the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples (ICAP), Fernando Gonzalez, who foresees four years of even harsher policies against his country, “international solidarity is now more essential than ever.”

However, there is no room for despair for the island, which has always been able to reinvent itself and defy all obstacles. Interview with the former Cuban intelligence agent, one of the “Cuban Five” awarded the title of “Hero of the Republic of Cuba” after serving sixteen years in prison in the United States for infiltrating paramilitary circles planning attacks against his country.

What is the situation in Cuba after the last hurricanes that hit the island?

The situation in Cuba is very complex. We have had two hurricanes and an earthquake, which have caused considerable damage. But the government, at all levels, is trying to implement all the necessary structural measures to correct the situation. Some issues, such as power, water and telephone outages, have already advanced at a good pace in their recovery, while others, such as damage to buildings or homes, will take longer, not for lack of will, but because of the limited resources we have.

It is worth remembering that these calamities occur at a time when the Cuban economy is in an extremely complex situation. It has not had the capacity to grow in recent years, which is due in part to the very limited availability of resources. In spite of this, the government’s desire continues to be to provide solutions and not to leave anyone in difficulties.

What are the factors that explain the failures of the electrical system, apart from the impact of natural disasters?

The issue of the electrical system is very complex. Even before the cyclones, we had already experienced an episode in which the entire electrical system was down due to technical problems. Today, we can say that a big part of it has been restored, but there is still a fundamental problem: the production capacity at the national level still does not cover the total demand of the population.

In Cuba, the demand is about 3,000 megawatts per day, so if we only produce 1,700 megawatts, we will have a deficit that we will not be able to cover. For now, the only way to solve this problem is to schedule power outages. Clearly, the situation means that at certain times of the day, the population has to suffer power cuts. And that translates into discomfort for people, irritation.

To what extent does the U.S. blockade affect the Cuban electrical system?

Our thermoelectric power plants are more than 30 years old. It is not always possible to carry out the necessary repairs, for various reasons, among which is precisely the high and constant demand for electricity. And, of course, there are all the issues related to the blockade which, for example, prevents us from accessing the spare parts or materials needed to carry out the required repairs in the power plants.

There is also the question of dependence on oil to fuel these power plants….

In fact, this is in addition to the problems I just mentioned. Our country does not always have all the fuel needed to produce this electricity. Once again, at the root of this fundamental problem is the ruthless economic war waged against us by the United States.

Because it is very difficult for Cuba to buy oil abroad, not only because of our financial limitations, but also because of the barriers that the U.S. government has erected to prevent our supply from arriving.

Often, even if you have the funds, it is very difficult to bring oil tankers to Cuba, because the companies that trade with us (from shipping companies to insurance companies) are persecuted and can be subject to sanctions by U.S. authorities simply for carrying out a common business transaction afforded most countries in the world. Very few people are willing to send fuel to Cuba. This is a direct consequence of the blockade.

What role can international solidarity with Cuba play, if not to remedy, at least to mitigate the effects of the U.S. blockade?

It is essential. Cuba is a small country, which does not have many resources, but which proposes an alternative form of society, organized in a different way that is not only around the profits of certain interest groups.

It is a society organized around the human being, and I think it offers an alternative to individualism, while everywhere else the benefits are reserved only for certain sectors in the hands of the private sector, leaving aside the vast majority of the population. And I believe that this is the origin of the war that is being waged against Cuba: the objective is to try to erase this example of another model of society that we offer.

Far be it for me to pretend that everything in Cuba is perfect, there are many things we could have done better, and also things we have done that in the long run we have realized were mistakes.

Sometimes things do not go as we intended, however, everything that is done here is aimed at serving the majority of the population. No measure is adopted in pursuit of a particular interest, or because a sector of the economy has been able to buy the vote of deputies or members of the government. Everything that is done in Cuba is done with the human being and the improvement of the living conditions of the majority of Cubans in mind.

We think above all of the collective, we try to build a society that seeks the common good and, through this common good, the individual good of the citizens.

Being in solidarity with Cuba is not only a humanitarian question, there is a political and ideological question….

It is important to defend the right to life of Cubans and through this the right to exist as an alternative society that we propose, especially in the current circumstances when the United States is waging a war against Cuba in an attempt to suffocate its economy, in the hope that the people will withdraw their support for the revolutionary government.

Solidarity with our country, with our revolution, has always existed, but today it is even more important, and even essential in these difficult times we are going through.

Broad diplomatic support is not enough?

The moral victory obtained at the United Nations shows, once again, that Cuba is far from being alone at the international level, quite the contrary. But we know very well that this support does not mean the end of the blockade. Today’s slogan is to demand with all our might that Cuba be removed from the infamous State Sponsors of Terrorism (SSOT) created by our northern neighbor. Together, Cuba and its supporters must find the formula that will allow us to reach out to the U.S. government and reverse this absurd measure.

We are in an extremely complex scenario, and we say it clearly: today more than ever we need international solidarity. We need new voices to denounce the injustice committed against Cuba and to find new ways to defend international law.

What can we expect from the United States now that Republican Donald Trump is about to return to power?

Some of their administrations have been more aggressive, others not so much, but at the end of the day, we know that there is a consensus within the political class in this country, whether they are Democrats or Republicans, on how to deal with Cuba. They have always sought, in one way or another, to stifle our economy in an attempt to get our people to withdraw their support for their government.

We do not expect much from the new U.S. presidency. Our flag is and will always be to defend our independence and sovereignty, tooth and nail, whatever it takes.

If we look at the results of Donald Trump’s four years in the White House, we can imagine what awaits us: four years of even harsher policies against Cuba. He will surely try by all means to continue limiting as much as possible the little room for maneuver we have to stay afloat economically.

The appointment of Marco Rubio to the Foreign Affairs post does not bode well.

Indeed, Donald Trump’s arrival will be aggravated by the fact that his likely Secretary of State is a person who has a personal vendetta to take against Cuba. For any other secretary of state, Cuba might be, for example, a footnote. But not for this person.

Therefore, we can expect the aggressiveness and efforts of the U.S. government, which have been going on for 60 years to try to suffocate the Cuban economy, to intensify in the next four years. They will pursue their unattainable dream: that the Cuban people will blame their government for the calamities and needs they suffer. We will face this new scenario with the support and help of international solidarity.

We know that we have many friends around the world, millions of people know the reality of our country and support us, which gives us strength to continue fighting. There is no room for despair. Cuba reinvents itself every day, with its own effort and with the precious company of activists from all over the world. The Trump administration is about to arrive, and then it will move on. The Cuban revolution will always be there.

Source: Resumen Latinoamericano – Buenos Aires

Strugglelalucha256


Film Screening – World Beat Cultural Center – San Diego, Dec 21, @ 5 pm

Join D0-For-Self, The San Diego Coalition to Free Mumia and All Political Prisoners, Saturday, December 21st – 5PM @ World Beat Cultural Center as we Screen the Film- Mumia:- Long Distance Revolutionary and Discuss the continued Fight to Release Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier, Aman Al-Amin (formerly H. Rap Brown, and All Political Prisoners. We must Free all of our Elders and End Death By Incarceration.
Doors Open @ 5PM – Books by Mumia, Leonard, H. Rap Brown and other Political Prisoners on Display- Enjoy Vegan Soul @ ONEWorldBeat Cafe – Film Screening begins @ 6:00 PM. Film is 2 hrs long.
Strugglelalucha256


Struggle ★ La Lucha PDF – December 16, 2024

Get PDF here

  • Class hatred erupts
  • An open letter to President Joe Biden: Free LeonaRd Peltier
  • The Biden crime family
  • Justice for Jordan Neely!
  • Free Mumia Abu-Jamal!
  • A veteran activist on Jena 6 and beyond
  • From Jena 6 to Wisconsin State Capitol occupation
  • Ruling class imprisons youth abandoned by capitalism
  • Jena 6 legacy
  • Jena showed necessity of class-conscious unity against racism
  • From the Jena 6 to immigrant rights
  • Trans rights activists hold sit-in at Capitol
  • SYRIA: U.S., Israel, & Turkey behind terrorist takeover
  • Thousands march in NYC for Palestine
  • U.S. War Drive Against China book launch
  • Born Jewish in Nazi Europe: My Journey to Become Anti-Zionist
  • Vistas de transición de la corrupción
  • Korean community in U.S. stands up against martial law
Strugglelalucha256


Day of Mourning protest against genocide and theft of land

2024 National Day of Mourning was commemorated on Nov. 28 at Cole’s Hill in Plymouth, Massachusetts. United American Indians of New England have kept this annual tradition since 1970 to mourn their ­ancestors. As shown in the photo above, it was a protest against genocide and the theft of lands here and in Palestine. Photo: UAINE.org

Strugglelalucha256


Uruguay – Conversatorio con Carlos Alejandro

Strugglelalucha256


Struggle ★ La Lucha PDF – December 2, 2024

Get PDF here

  • Anti-trans campaign incites violence
  • COVID-19 denier and other quacks chosen for top public health jobs
  • WAGE STAGNATION: The real threat to Social Security
  • San Francisco State College 1968: On strike, shut it down!
  • From sanctions to sabotage: U.S. backs loser in Venezuela
  • Dutch fascism revisited: From Nazi collaboration to defending Zionist-led pogrom
  • People over profit: How China tackled climate change
  • Biden escalates NATO war on Russia
  • Ten things to know about Māori MP Hana’s haka
  • Las armas secretas eran de Trump
Strugglelalucha256


2024 National Day of Mourning, Nov. 28

2024 National Day of Mourning

Thursday, November 28, 2024 at 12:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.EST
Cole’s Hill, Plymouth, MA

Join us as we continue to create a true awareness of Native peoples and history. Help shatter the untrue image of the Pilgrims, and the unjust system based on white supremacy, settler colonialism, sexism, homophobia and the profit-driven destruction of the Earth that they and other European settlers introduced to these shores.

Solidarity with Indigenous struggles throughout the world!
From Turtle Island to Palestine, Colonialism is a Crime!
Free Leonard Peltier! www.freeleonardpeltiernow.org

While many supporters will attend in person, we will also livestream the event from Plymouth.

United American Indians of New England (decolonizing since 1970)
info@uaine.org * UAINE website * UAINE Facebook Group

Facebook event

Watch the 2024 National Day of Mourning Livestream on Youtube

Donate

#NDOM2024 #NoThanksNoGiving
No sit-down social, but box lunches will be available.
Masks required!

2024 orientation

What Is National Day Of Mourning?

An annual tradition since 1970, National Day of Mourning is a solemn, spiritual and highly political day. Many of us fast from sundown the day before through the afternoon of that day (and have a social after NDOM so that participants in NDOM can break their fasts). We are mourning our ancestors and the genocide of our peoples and the theft of our lands. NDOM is a day when we mourn, but we also feel our strength in action and solidarity.

When and where is day of mourning?

Thursday, November 28, 2023 (U.S. “thanksgiving” day) at Cole’s Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts, 12 noon SHARP. Cole’s Hill is the hill above Plymouth Rock in the Plymouth historic waterfront area. The rallies and marches will last until approximately 3 pm (sometimes later).

Will there be a march?

Yes, there will be a march through the historic district of Plymouth. Plymouth agreed, as part of the settlement of 10/19/98, that UAINE may march on National Day of Mourning without the need for a permit as long as we give the town advance notice.

PROGRAM: Although we very much welcome our non-Native supporters to stand with us, it is a day when only Indigenous people speak about our history and the struggles that are taking place throughout the Americas. Speakers are by invitation only. This year’s NDOM will be livestreamed from Plymouth.

-Note that NDOM is not a commercial event, so we ask that people do not sell merchandise or distribute leaflets at the outdoor program. We might have UAINE t-shirts available for sale following the march.

-We also ask that you do not eat (unless you must do so for medical reasons) at the outdoor speak-out and march out of respect for the participants who are fasting.

-Dress for the weather!

SOCIAL: There will be box lunches available, but we will not have a full sit-down social due to ongoing health concerns.

TRANSPORTATION: If you cannot get to Plymouth, you can watch our livestream! We will also post information about buses and carpools from NY (Brooklyn and Bronx), CT, western MA, Boston, Maine and elsewhere if applicable at the UAINE facebook event.

ELDERS/DISABLED PEOPLE: We have some chairs available for any Elders and others who need to sit during the initial rally on Cole’s Hill. We also will have ASL interpreters on-stage.

FOR UPDATES: Please join and check out the UAINE facebook group https://www.facebook.com/groups/UAINE for updates on National Day of Mourning this year. Our website uaine.org will be updated, but not as quickly or frequently.

Facebook event: https://bit.ly/NDOM2024

UAINE on Twitter & Insta: @mahtowin1

COVID-19 has hit Indigenous communities very hard, and we want to ensure that no one gets sick from attending National Day of Mourning. Please wear a mask!

#NDOM2024 #nothanksnogiving

 

Strugglelalucha256
https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/author/strugglelalucha_im4mi5/page/11/