<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:taxo="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/taxonomy/" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">
  <title>Communist Left's topics - tribe.net</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/threads/atom" />
  <subtitle>Tribe.net. Local Connections</subtitle>
  <entry>
    <title>Behind the Hunger Crisis: Capitalist Profits</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/fcf706cd-6385-4b46-8abb-d4a9cc48dc00" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/fcf706cd-6385-4b46-8abb-d4a9cc48dc00</id>
    <updated>2008-09-27T17:33:21Z</updated>
    <published>2008-09-27T17:33:21Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Behind the Hunger Crisis: Capitalist Profits
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Imperialism Starves World’s Poor
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;http://www.icl-fi.org/english/wv/919/hunger.html
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The astronomical price of food on world markets threatens to condemn additional millions of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable to death by starvation. The overall price of cereals on international markets increased 92 percent in the year ending in April. In the first five months of this year, the world price of rice, a staple for more than half the planet’s population, more than doubled. As prices peaked, the total bill paid by people in underdeveloped countries for imported food was almost double what it was in 2000. Today, the world’s poorest people spend 50 to 80 percent of their total household income on food. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Even before the current crisis, an estimated 850 million people suffered from chronic malnutrition, over half of them children. Today in impoverished Haiti, many residents of the vast slums like Cité Soleil survive on cookies make of dried mud mixed with sugar, salt and vegetable oil. In Egypt, at least eleven people died on breadlines in March and April—some were killed when fights erupted among frantic customers, others were pushed beyond exhaustion by the endless wait for food. In Afghanistan, a country devastated by U.S./NATO military occupation, grain prices reached such heights that many farmers have switched to growing wheat instead of raising poppies for the heroin trade.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In a number of countries, the surging food prices have sparked riots and demonstrations, sometimes backed up by striking workers. In northern Egypt, rioting broke out after a planned strike on April 6 at the Mahalla al-Kobra textile mills, the country’s largest industrial complex, was headed off by a massive show of police force. For two days, thousands clashed with police, who fired on protesters, leaving three dead. In Bangladesh, an explosion of rage by some 20,000 textile workers in Fatullah, south of the capital, culminated in a strike on April 15 by thousands of garment workers, many of them women, in the capital city, Dhaka. A sweater machine operator, who earns $30 a month, declared: “With our poor salary, it is now impossible to buy three meals a day” (Agence France-Presse, 12 April).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In April, the Haitian prime minister was sacked after more than a week of rioting in which at least six people died. At the same time, several days of food riots in Yemen left at least a dozen dead, as tanks were deployed against street barricades, and police stations and military vehicles were torched. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In sub-Saharan Africa, the food crisis has been compounded by years of drought, brutal communalist wars and the AIDS epidemic. Unions in Burkina Faso called a two-day general strike in April to protest soaring food and fuel prices; this came after widespread riots in February in which official buildings were burned and government representatives stoned. In Senegal, rioters last November torched municipal buildings and attacked the former headquarters of the ruling party, while in Mauritania rioters were dispersed by the police, leaving one dead. In February, at least six people were killed in protests in Mozambique, while in Cameroon the death toll in anti-government riots reportedly numbered at least one hundred. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Because they perpetuate the conditions of economic impoverishment and cultural backwardness, the imperialist powers are ultimately responsible for the horrific conditions in sub-Saharan Africa. The wholesale economic devastation of the African continent has been deepened by the destruction of the Soviet degenerated workers state in 1991-92. The existence of the Soviet Union, which acted as a counterweight to U.S. imperialism, had allowed maneuvering room for “Third World” capitalist rulers, who garnered economic and military aid by offering themselves as clients to Moscow or Washington (see “Imperialism Starves Africa,” WV No. 561, 16 October 1992, reprinted in Black History and the Class Struggle No. 10, February 1993). 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;With the world capitalist economy now entering a recession, global prices for agricultural products and a number of other commodities have slipped from their record highs. This is true of oil, whose skyrocketing price helped drive up the cost of fertilizer, fuel and many other goods and services. But this will not alleviate widespread hunger in Third World countries. Hundreds of millions of workers, peasants and urban poor will still not have the money to buy sufficient food for their families. A global recession will increase mass unemployment and drive down wages even as it dampens the current inflation of food prices.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The excruciating fact is that the terrible famines which are endemic to the capitalist Third World are not the result of food shortages. Figures published by the UN World Food Programme indicate that the amount of food currently produced is more than one and a half times what is needed to provide every person on earth with a nutritious diet (Tony Weis, The Global Food Economy: The Battle for the Future of Farming [2007]). But food is distributed according to the ability to pay. As with all commodities under capitalism, food is sold on the market in order to make a profit. Like any other business, agribusiness seeks to monopolize and control the market to keep prices as high as possible and maximize profits.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;That starvation has become the increasingly common condition of a large portion of humanity is rooted in the very logic of the capitalist system. As Lenin explained in Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916):
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“It goes without saying that if capitalism could develop agriculture...if it could raise the living standards of the masses, who in spite of the amazing technical progress are everywhere still half-starved and poverty-stricken, there could be no question of a surplus of capital.... But if capitalism did these things it would not be capitalism; for both uneven development and a semi-starvation level of existence of the masses are fundamental and inevitable conditions and constitute premises of this mode of production.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The country most cited as the “success” story for the development of commercial agriculture in the face of imperialist competition is Brazil. Starting in the 1960s, Brazil used state credits and tax breaks to create a livestock sector based on nationally produced grain, becoming in 1980 the world’s main supplier of soybean meal for cattle feed. Yet this “success” was achieved through the destruction of local food production, massive eviction of peasants from their land and ongoing destruction of the Amazon rain forest. After several decades of such “success” under capitalism, fully one-tenth of the Brazilian population suffered from malnutrition. Today, 3 percent of the Brazilian population controls some two-thirds of all arable land, while five million rural families remain landless.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The current food crisis cries out for an internationally planned socialist economy based on the most advanced levels of technology. Such an economic system would enormously increase agricultural output throughout the world while also greatly reducing transport costs, thereby facilitating a rational international division of labor. But how can a worldwide society of economic abundance be achieved? Only through proletarian socialist revolutions, above all in the advanced capitalist-imperialist countries of North America, West Europe and Japan where the productive wealth and technological resources of the world are now concentrated. Only then can production and distribution be based on social need rather than profit.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Tortilla Protests in Mexico, Strikes in South Africa
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In Mexico early last year, the soaring price of the main staple food, tortillas—which are made with corn—provoked a series of demonstrations, including a protest in Mexico City of 100,000 people called by the Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (National Union of Workers) and composed largely of labor and peasant organizations. A major factor in the impoverishment of the Mexican masses was the imposition in 1994 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which we Marxists have opposed as the “free trade” rape of Mexico by the U.S. imperialists.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In a 27 January 2007 leaflet titled “Mobilize the Working Class Against Hunger and Repression!” (reprinted in WV No. 886, 16 February 2007), our comrades of the Grupo Espartaquista de México, section of the International Communist League, raised a series of transitional demands seeking to link the immediate struggles and consciousness of the masses to the program of socialist revolution. The GEM demanded the expropriation of the corn magnates without compensation as part of a call for the working class to fight against the capitalist class as a whole. The GEM called for “labor strikes that demand a subsidy for tortillas so everyone can have them” which, together with the call for “the distribution of food for all under control of the trade unions, organizations of poor peasants and the urban poor,” aimed at ensuring food distribution among the workers and the poor. The leaflet declared: “The only way to end hunger is to seize the means of production from the capitalists through proletarian revolution and its extension internationally.” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In an underdeveloped capitalist country like Mexico, the national ruling class depends overwhelmingly on credit and investment from its imperialist masters. Because bourgeois populists, like the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) in Mexico, stand for the continuation of capitalism and defend the rule and interests of a wing of the national bourgeoisie, they inevitably reject in deeds the democratic demands they at times promise. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The road to national and social emancipation in countries of combined and uneven development (where modern industry exists alongside backward, traditional economy) was charted by Trotsky’s theory of permanent revolution, which was verified by the experience of the 1917 Russian Revolution. The only path forward is the fight for the dictatorship of the proletariat, standing at the head of all the oppressed, above all of the peasant masses. This would place on the order of the day not only democratic but also socialist tasks, such as collectivizing the economy, giving a mighty impulse to the international socialist revolution. Short of the international extension of the revolution, particularly to the advanced, industrialized imperialist centers, socialist construction will be arrested and ultimately reversed.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;While in most countries the recent food-price protests were spontaneous upheavals of the urban and rural poor, in South Africa mass anger over price hikes for food, transport and electricity has been channeled into protests organized by the powerful Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU). These included a series of one-day strikes in the country’s various provinces in July, culminating in a one-day nationwide work stoppage on August 6 that effectively shut down Johannesburg and other major cities as bus and taxi drivers joined the strike. Tens of thousands of trade unionists and township poor participated in protest rallies in Pretoria, Cape Town and elsewhere. Both the provincial and nationwide strikes had strong support from mine workers—a large percentage of whom are immigrants—who constitute that section of the working class producing South Africa’s main exports.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The COSATU bureaucracy felt pressure to call the protest strikes because its members are among those hardest hit by the skyrocketing prices of food, fuel and electricity. However these protest strikes were not directed against the capitalist government that enforces the brutal exploitation and immiseration of the predominantly black workers, rural toilers and township poor. Quite the contrary. The strikes and rallies were held with the explicit support of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) and were intended as a pressure valve to let off some steam and channel the discontent of the workers and poor into support for the ANC’s new, more populist leader, Jacob Zuma.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The leadership of COSATU is largely in the hands of the reformist South African Communist Party (SACP), which plays a major role in the government in its bloc with the bourgeois-nationalist ANC. COSATU itself also participates in the government, which is commonly called the Tripartite Alliance. We describe the Alliance as a nationalist popular front through which the SACP and COSATU misleaders tie the working class to the mainly white capitalist class and their black front men, who are committed to maintaining neo-apartheid capitalist rule.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;While the strikes and rallies were initially called over the escalating cost of food, fuel, transport and utilities, shortly before the first of the provincial strikes the COSATU tops announced that they were complying with a court injunction limiting the official demands to protest against the massive increases in electricity rates by the state-owned power company, Eskom, and any job losses resulting from the rotating power outages. In fact, this was a state-sanctioned COSATU “general strike.” Despite the official line, stickers, posters and banners at the Pretoria rally sought to address the broader crisis for the millions facing hunger across South Africa. “Away with high food prices,” was one of the most prominent slogans.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Spartacist South Africa, section of the ICL, intervened in the strikes and rallies, putting forward our revolutionary program. Along with Workers Vanguard and Spartacist South Africa, our comrades also distributed at the August 6 protest a leaflet issued in May as a wave of pogromist attacks against immigrants swept the country (see “South Africa: Mobilize Trade Unions Against Anti-Immigrant Terror!” WV No. 915, 23 May). The leaflet called for “Full citizenship rights for all immigrants!” and declared:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“It is the ANC/SACP/COSATU Tripartite Alliance government that oversees neo-apartheid capitalism, under which the overwhelming majority are locked in grinding poverty and black people remain on the bottom. The poor in this country, and hundreds of millions around the world, are faced with starvation from rising food prices, which are at bottom caused not by shortages but by price-gouging and other capitalist profiteering.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Above all, we explained to strikers and demonstrators that the working class, especially its most politically advanced and organized sector, must break with the Alliance in order to fight for a black-centered workers government that would seize the means of production from the conglomerates that dominate neo-apartheid capitalism. Only such a government can bring decent living conditions and national liberation to the exploited and oppressed black, coloured (mixed-race) and Indian masses. Among other measures, a proletarian regime would expropriate the large, white-owned commercial farms and promote collectivized and state-owned agriculture under the control of farm workers. The collectivization of agriculture is especially necessary to achieve social equality for the downtrodden immigrants from Zimbabwe and elsewhere in Africa who make up a good part of the farm labor force.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;South Africa is key for the sub-Saharan African population. The black population in South Africa has been partially absorbed into the bottom of a modern industrialized society that can, based on the revolutionary reorganization of society, provide a decent life for all who live there. Our call for a black-centered workers government is part of our struggle for a socialist federation of Southern Africa that would begin to lay the material foundations for social equality throughout the region. This can be fully realized only through the extension of socialist revolution to the most advanced capitalist countries and the establishment of a collectivized, planned world economy. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Biofuel and Other Rackets
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The record food prices crushing the world’s poor are occurring at a time of booming global agricultural output. Last year’s total cereals crop of 1.7 billion tons was the largest in world history; it was 89 million tons more than 2006, another bumper crop year. What then explains today’s sharp increase in food prices? 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;A confidential study by the World Bank last April, “A Note on Rising Foods Prices” by Donald Mitchell, was leaked to and published by the London Guardian. Its summary conclusion:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“The World Bank’s index of food prices increased 140 percent from January 2002 to February 2008. This increase was caused by a confluence of factors but the most important was the large increase in biofuels production in the U.S. and EU [European Union]. Without the increase in biofuels, global wheat and maize stocks would not have declined appreciably and price increases due to other factors would have been moderate.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The study estimated that 75 percent of the price increase between 2002 and 2008 was due to the massive diversion of food grains and cooking oils into biofuels. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In the U.S., the biofuels bill passed by Congress in the summer of 2005 mandated the use of ethanol in motor fuels, granting generous subsidies and tax credits for its production, on top of pre-existing tariffs on the cheaper and more efficient ethanol produced in Brazil from sugar. The bill passed with strong bipartisan support, including from Barack Obama, an early champion of the biofuel racket. His state, Illinois, is a leading corn producer, and he has received support from ethanol magnates. The biofuel bonanza has, in part, been sold as a means of achieving “energy independence” from Near Eastern oil as part of the reactionary “war on terror.” Most biofuels are also touted for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but a study in Science (4 January) noted that the main biofuels “have greater aggregate environmental costs than do fossil fuels” and concluded that “multibillion-dollar subsidies for U.S. corn production appear to be a perverse incentive from a rational cost-benefit perspective.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This year, an estimated one-third of the corn crop produced by the U.S., by far the world’s largest exporter of corn, is being withdrawn from the food market to be used for biofuel production. In turn, this deliberately provoked shortfall in the food grain harvest is driving up the prices of other grains as they are used to replace corn—or as their cultivation is cut back to free up land for growing corn. The UN’s Special Reporter on the Right to Food earlier this year denounced using food crops to produce biofuel as a “crime against humanity.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;That crime has paid off handsomely for U.S. capitalists in the form of record profits. The family-owned agribusiness giant Cargill is so awash in earnings that the personal fortunes of the two family heirs more than doubled last year to $4.4 billion each. In the first three months of this year, the net income of grain conglomerate Archer Daniels Midland (the country’s largest ethanol producer) soared 42 percent, while seed and herbicide giant Monsanto has reported earnings up almost 300 percent. That didn’t stop Congress, with liberal Democrats in the lead, from passing a new farm bill this spring containing huge subsidies to wealthy farmers and agribusinesses.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;West European imperialists are just as involved as their U.S. counterparts in the worldwide biofuel scramble and in colossal land grabs for biofuel cultivation at the expense of food. If the Americans have devastated the rural and urban poor in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America, the Europeans are responsible for seemingly endless lines for previously available basic foodstuffs in much of East and South Asia and Africa. It is not corn that has been shifted to biofuel cultivation in Malaysia, for instance. It is palm oil, an important source of calories in Asia, that has been diverted to produce biodiesel, particularly for use in Europe. In Indonesia, the world’s largest producer of palm oil, where 110 million people live on less than $2 a day, the sharp rise in the price of cooking oil is devastating. “The Other Oil Shock: Vegetable Oil Prices Soar” headlined the International Herald Tribune (19 January). The article pointed out that edible oil prices have increased more than any other category of food prices. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;While U.S. agribusiness moguls are shifting production into corn-based ethanol to replace gasoline in automobiles, European countries have been subsidizing biodiesel (though some have cut back as the exaggerated claims of biofuels’ environmental benefits have been exposed). In addition, Germany now has 1,800 combined heat and power plants using palm, soy and rapeseed oil, and Britain has similar plants in the works. Since European agriculture does not grow all of the feedstocks necessary for biofuels used in the EU, parts of Africa and countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia, India and the Philippines are being enlisted to provide such feedstocks at the expense of food. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The worldwide scramble for biofuels takes place in the context of competition between the main imperialist states. Finance capital flows into the construction of fully integrated biofuel networks, involving cultivation, shipping, processing and distribution. Substantial sums go to countries that sign special deals or have preferential trade access to the U.S., the EU or Japan. The competition for feedstock resources is an element of the imperialists’ moves to redivide control of the world’s semicolonies.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Also contributing to the skyrocketing prices for foodstuffs has been a shift of speculative money capital into primary products of all kinds. Commodities as diverse as crude oil, gold, lead, uranium, cattle and cocoa were trading at or near record prices earlier this year. The slide of the dollar against other world currencies has buoyed the prices of raw commodities in dollar terms. This, in turn, prompted a wave of buying by large banks, hedge funds and other financial institutions seeking “hard assets” as a hedge against inflation—or as simply speculation on further price increases. One hedge fund manager told a May 20 Senate hearing that such “institutional investors” had poured some $55 billion into speculative commodities trades in just the first 52 trading days of this year. He asked rhetorically: “Doesn’t it seem likely that an increase in demand of this magnitude...could go a long way in explaining the extraordinary commodities price increases in the beginning of 2008?” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In contrast to the capitalist biofuel producers, the People’s Republic of China, the world’s third-largest producer and consumer of ethanol, has an official policy of prohibiting biofuel production from competing with food cultivation. Initially, China produced significant quantities of ethanol from corn, but this drove up domestic corn prices. Worried that surging food prices might cause urban proletarian unrest, the Chinese government in December 2006 decreed that biofuel production would not be undertaken by utilizing arable lands and food grains. Instead, China has moved to produce ethanol from stale grains in the national reserve and from non-grain crops. A Chinese official declared: “In China the first thing is to provide food for its 1.3 billion people, and after that, we will support biofuel production” (Fengxia Dong, “Food Security and Biofuels Development: The Case of China” [October 2007]). This is just one illustration of how China is a fundamentally different type of society from the capitalist countries. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;China is not a capitalist but a workers state, albeit one that was bureaucratically deformed from its inception. The overthrow of capitalist rule in China by the 1949 Revolution, leading to the building of a collectivized economy, represents a historic gain for the working class internationally. While the U.S. and other imperialists aim to destroy the Chinese workers state and restore bourgeois rule, we stand for the unconditional military defense of China against imperialist attack from without and counterrevolution from within. At the same time, we call for proletarian political revolution to oust the parasitic and nationalist Stalinist bureaucrats and to establish a regime based on workers democracy and revolutionary internationalism.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The U.S. achieved its dominance as the world’s premier exporter of grains and other foodstuffs in the post-World War II period through a policy of massive government assistance to U.S. agriculture and forcing world grain prices down in order to drive out the competition. Grain prices on the world market were kept low by dumping U.S. grain at artificially low prices and by massive food aid (through the so-called “Food for Peace” program). In the late 1950s and early 1960s, U.S. aid accounted for more than a third of the world wheat trade.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The result was a fundamental shift in the world food trade. Before World War II, Europe was the only continent that was a net importer of food. Most territories in Europe’s colonial empires produced almost all the foodstuffs they consumed, little as it was. By the 1960s, this situation had been fundamentally altered as the newly independent semicolonies of Asia and Africa as well as much of Latin America became dependent on imports for their food. By 1978, Third World countries bought more than three-quarters of U.S. wheat exports. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;At bottom, U.S. policy was a continuation and intensification of that followed previously by the colonial powers, which sought to eliminate subsistence farming in favor of cash crops for the market. Only in this way could the labor of the colonial subjects be transformed into profit to fill the colonialists’ coffers. The colonial powers seized vast tracts of land and turned them into plantations. Peasants who retained their land were constrained to stop producing food for their own consumption by such measures as taxation (which required cash crop production in order to have money to pay the tax), stark coercion and even subsidizing food imports. By imposing cash crops, often to the exclusion of staple foods, colonialism sowed the seeds of famine.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;To be sure, precolonial societies in Asia and Africa based on rudimentary subsistence agriculture also suffered periodic famines and mass starvation resulting from drought and other natural disasters. But in the capitalist-imperialist era, starvation in this part of the world is man-made to bolster the profits of the masters of Wall Street, the City of London and the banks of Frankfurt and Tokyo. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Many semicolonial countries are caught in the blind alley, inherited from colonialism, of concentrating their agriculture on tropical cash crops for sale on the world market. The market for tropical commodities is characterized by chronic over-supply. Many suppliers compete with each other while a few giant trading companies centered in the U.S., West Europe and Japan, often having a near-monopoly, drive down world prices by playing suppliers off against each other. Until the record price boom of the past few years, prices for tropical exports fell steadily because of the imperialist stranglehold on the world market. Chronically obliged to borrow to finance food and other imports, semicolonial countries are forced by the imperialists and their agents in the International Monetary Fund and World Bank to increasingly concentrate on cash crops to “export” themselves out of the debt crisis—simply pushing them further into the red.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;When the heroic struggle of the Vietnamese workers and peasants knocked the U.S. from its position of hegemonic imperialist power—a decline that included the devaluation of the dollar in August 1971—agriculture was slated to play a key role in shoring up the declining U.S. economy. In 1972, U.S. leaders engineered a world “food crisis” which drove food prices to then-unprecedented levels by taking over 50 million acres out of production and cutting U.S. grain reserves. Despite famines in Africa and Bangladesh in 1974, the U.S. cut food aid to one-third its 1972 level. As a result of Washington’s drive to slash food aid and boost agricultural export earnings, by 1980 U.S. exports of grains and feeds had jumped to eight times the 1970 level. Today, after years of deindustrialization, the importance of agriculture to the U.S. economy can be seen in the fact that, while exports in the first half of this year increased over 7 percent (helped by the declining dollar), commodities accounted for 41 percent of the increase while manufactured products accounted for just 12 percent. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition to seeking profits, the U.S. imperialists used their power to drive poor countries into starvation as a way of furthering Washington’s anti-Soviet Cold War. President Lyndon Johnson repeatedly interrupted food aid to India, as it was suffering from the terrible famine of 1965-66, in retaliation for criticisms of the U.S. war in Vietnam. In 1974, as a million people in Bangladesh perished in a famine, the U.S. cut off food aid because Bangladesh sold jute to Cuba. In 1982, when famine struck Ethiopia, the U.S. held up relief assistance because Ethiopia was a Soviet ally. The cutthroats in Washington have turned death by starvation into a routine instrument of foreign policy.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The “Green Revolution” and Its Effects
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The development of world food production has been prodigious, outstripping population growth since the 1960s as a result of the “Green Revolution” in agricultural technology. Yet under capitalism even such gains have translated into increased hunger and misery. They have also translated into vast profits for agribusiness giants who can patent hybrid strains of food crops and monopolize the seed market. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The “Green Revolution” was launched in 1943 in Sonora, Mexico, where Norman Borlaug (who received the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize), with the backing of the Rockefeller Foundation, used genetic selection to develop “miracle” strains. Since they were introduced in the mid 1960s, hybrid strains of wheat, rice and corn have provided spectacularly increased yields. India went in five years from severe famine to being self-sufficient in grains. Indonesia, which had been the world’s largest rice importer, became self-sufficient in two years. The new hybrid strains were touted as solving the problem of world hunger. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In fact, the hunger of the world’s poor has increased as a result of the “Green Revolution.” Hybrid strains will grow only if they have irrigation, fertilizer and insecticides which require enormous capital outlays. Only the largest landowners can profit from the new technology, and small peasants, unable to compete, are driven from their land. (Indeed, part of the impulse behind investing in the “Green Revolution” in the early 1940s was a ruling-class backlash against the policies of the previous Mexican president, the bourgeois populist Lázaro Cárdenas. In order to head off social upheavals in the turbulent period of the 1930s, he had distributed substantial tracts of land to the rural population—in addition to nationalizing the Rockefeller Standard Oil subsidiary.)
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Moreover, the “Green Revolution” has not been self-sustaining. Over time, the hybrid strains developed and introduced in the mid-late 1960s and ’70s have become increasingly susceptible to plant diseases and crop-killing pests. For example, when the rice variety IR8 was introduced in 1966, it produced almost ten tons per hectare (2.5 acres); now it yields barely seven (Economist, 19 April). Throughout the Third World, yields not only of rice but also of wheat and maize have fallen steadily in recent decades. Moreover, commercial agriculture now depends on a limited number of plant varieties; the lack of genetic diversity of the seed stock means that one pest or disease could quickly wipe out a significant portion of world production. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;India, the country in which “Green Revolution” technology has been applied on the widest scale, is often cited as the archetype of its “spectacular success.” That “success” drove so many poor peasants from their land that, over the past two decades, the country’s urban slum population has more than doubled and now exceeds the entire population of Britain. By one estimate, some 150,000 poor peasants, driven to desperation by poverty and crushing debt, have committed suicide. Poverty is so entrenched that almost 46 percent of India’s children under the age of three suffer from malnutrition—a higher rate than in sub-Saharan Africa (London Times online, 22 February 2007).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Peasant Agriculture in the Chinese Deformed Workers State
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;An explanation for rising world food prices put forward by U.S. agribusiness corporations, the Bush administration and others is that a raised standard of living in India and China has led to increased meat consumption, in turn boosting the demand for cereals to be used as animal feed. The defense minister of India, where per capita meat consumption is one twenty-fourth that in the U.S., aptly called President Bush’s “explanation” of high food prices a “cruel joke.” In China, it is true that per capita meat consumption has increased prodigiously—it is now ten times that of India—but as the Economist (6 December 2007) pointed out: “Because this change in diet has been slow and incremental, it cannot explain the dramatic price movements of the past year.” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In fact, China and India are two fundamentally different kinds of states and societies, a fact highlighted by the current food crisis. India, a capitalist regional power that is nonetheless dominated by imperialism, exports foodstuffs such as rice and wheat for profit on the world market. Meanwhile, according to UN estimates, India has more hungry people than any other country in the world.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The People’s Republic of China is a bureaucratically deformed workers state and has been since the 1949 Chinese Revolution overthrew capitalist/landlord rule and ripped the world’s most populous country out of the clutches of the imperialist powers that had long held China in their grip. Despite the bureaucratic parasitism and mismanagement by the Stalinist Chinese Communist Party (CCP), the collectivization of the economy has resulted in enormous social gains for workers, peasants and women—not least an end to centuries of chronic starvation in the countryside.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Smashing the Chinese workers state is a strategic goal for the capitalist powers, particularly the American and Japanese imperialists, who seek to turn China into a vast sphere of untrammeled exploitation and super-profits. To that end, they are increasing the military pressure on China while pursuing a policy of internal economic and political subversion, including promoting counterrevolutionary provocations, as in Tibet in the name of “human rights.” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The economic slowdown in the U.S. has been accompanied by increasing calls for chauvinist protectionism that are pushed by both Democratic politicians and the trade-union bureaucracy. Protectionism is deadly poison for workers in the U.S., not least because it is based on the lie that their enemies are the workers of other countries, while serving to conceal the fact that it is the capitalists and their system that are responsible for the destitution of the working class. During the Cold War era, the AFL-CIO bureaucracy was among the most rabid supporters of American imperialism against the Soviet Union. Today, these labor misleaders are directing their virulent hostility toward the People’s Republic of China in the name of “workers’ rights.” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As Trotskyists (i.e., genuine Marxists), we stand for the unconditional military defense of China against imperialist attack and internal counterrevolution, just as we stand for the military defense of the other remaining deformed workers states—Cuba, North Korea and Vietnam—including their need to develop and possess nuclear weapons. Defense of the Chinese workers state is undermined by the rule of the nationalist Stalinist bureaucracy whose policies are encapsulated in the anti-Marxist dogma of “building socialism in one country” and “peaceful coexistence” with world imperialism. We call for a proletarian political revolution to oust the venal and oppressive CCP regime and replace it with a government based on democratically elected workers and peasants councils, a government committed to the program and perspective of international proletarian revolution.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Following the death of Mao in 1976, the regime of his successor, Deng Xiaoping, introduced a series of market-oriented policies in the name of modernizing the economy. One of the first economic “reforms” was the decollectivization of agriculture and its replacement by the so-called “household responsibility system,” family farms based on long-term leases (currently 30 years). Land, however, was not reprivatized and restrictions were imposed on the transfer of leaseholds. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Some 700 million of China’s 1.3 billion people are still engaged in agriculture, working small plots 90 percent of which are less than one hectare. Production techniques remain extremely labor-intensive, while China also uses three times as much chemical fertilizer per unit of land as does American agriculture (Paul Roberts, The End of Food [2008]). By international standards, China’s cropping intensity is among the highest in the world. In southern China, two or even three crops are produced on the same piece of land within a year. To achieve this, China has developed varieties with a shorter period of growth. Through such means China has to date maintained effective self-sufficiency (over 90 percent) in basic food grains—wheat, rice, maize. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;However, in recent years China has experienced a steady decline in the arable land while the average size of a farm becomes ever smaller. Two years ago Beijing government officials warned that the country was fast approaching the “red line” of 120 million hectares, the minimum amount of land necessary for “grain security” (Economist, 19 April). A major reason for this shrinkage of farm land has been the illegal seizure of peasant leaseholds by local CCP officials who then turn the land over to industrial or commercial enterprises. Such illegal seizures and other bureaucratic abuses have provoked widespread unrest in China’s countryside, at times igniting pitched battles between rural toilers and the police. We defend peasant families against the seizure of their farms and demand full compensation by the government for their loss of livelihood.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Nonetheless, social and economic modernization requires that China move from peasant smallholding to large-scale mechanized farming. The question is how. A government based on workers and peasants councils would not only prohibit or restrict the hiring of labor and leasing of additional land by rich farmers but would also promote the voluntary recollectivization of agriculture. This does not mean reverting to the rural communes of the Mao era, which were basically an aggregate of backward peasant holdings. For the mass of Chinese peasants to give up their own holdings in favor of collective farms, they must be convinced that this will result in a higher standard of living for themselves and their families. Thus a government based on workers and peasant councils would offer, among other incentives, reduced taxes and cheaper credits to peasants who joined collectives.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;A rational collectivization and modernization of Chinese agriculture would signify a profound transformation of the society. The introduction of modern technology and the whole complex of scientific farming into the Chinese countryside would require a qualitatively higher industrial base than now exists. This is a vital necessity in order to overcome the fact that with 21 percent of the world’s population, China has only 9 percent of the arable land (and an even smaller share of the world’s fresh-water resources). 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In turn, an increase in agricultural productivity would raise the need for a huge expansion of industrial jobs in urban areas to absorb the vast surplus of labor no longer needed in the countryside. Clearly, this would involve a lengthy process, particularly given the limited size and relatively low level of productivity of China’s industrial base. Both the tempo and, in the final analysis, the very realizability of this perspective hinge on the aid that China would receive from a socialist Japan or a socialist America, underlining the need for international proletarian revolution. This perspective is counterposed to that of the nationalist Stalinist bureaucracy, from Mao to the current Chinese leaders.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Agriculture and the Imperialist Offensive Against China
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Agriculture has in recent years been an arena of conflict between American imperialism and the People’s Republic of China. In the negotiations leading up to China’s joining the World Trade Organization (WTO) in December 2001, the Beijing regime effectively resisted pressure from Washington to open its domestic food supply to a flood of cheap imports from heavily subsidized, highly mechanized agribusiness in the U.S. and other advanced capitalist countries.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The WTO agreement allowed China to protect its agriculture through a system known as tariff rate quotas (OECD Review of Agricultural Policies: China [2005]). As long as the total quantity remains below a certain limit (referred to as a “quota”), imports of basic food grains—wheat, maize and rice—were subject to a nominal tariff of 1 percent. For imports above that level the tariff became quite steep (65 percent). The quota limit for imports at world market prices was and remains low relative to China’s domestic grain production (less than 10 percent). 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Since then, the American and European imperialists have sought to break down the barriers protecting China’s agriculture mainly through the Doha round of trade talks launched in Doha, Qatar, under the auspices of the WTO. More generally, these negotiations were an effort by the Western capitalist powers to use food as a weapon in gaining even greater control over the semicolonial world. The U.S./European Union bloc attempted to shackle efforts by “developing nations” to use tariffs and other trade policies to protect their own agriculture, rather than increasing their dependency on food imports from heavily subsidized U.S. and European agribusiness. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Fearing the massive unrest that has already erupted from soaring food prices, Third World governments pleaded with the Western imperialists to reduce such government subsidies, a measure the U.S. categorically rejected. The talks collapsed in late July when China, supported by India, refused to submit to the demands of the U.S./EU bloc to cripple defensive Third World tariffs. Lu Xiankun, a spokesman for Beijing’s WTO mission, defended his country’s efforts to shield cotton, sugar and rice from Western capitalist agribusiness by pointing to the hundreds of millions of farmers in China earning around $2 a day (New York Times, 29 July).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As a result of the breakdown in the WTO talks, many bourgeois commentators have raised the spectre of increased interimperialist economic conflict. American and European capitalists are now more likely to compete for separate trade agreements with dependent Third World countries at one another’s expense. Economic analysts commented that the collapse of the WTO talks “could symbolise an end to multilateral trade agreements” (BBC News online, 29 July).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;We opposed China’s entry into the WTO because it undercut the state monopoly of foreign trade. It potentially opens the Chinese economy to greater imperialist penetration and pressures. We wrote: “The actual economic effects of entry will be determined by the struggle of the Chinese working class and rural toilers against the privations caused by the ‘market reforms’ instituted by the ruling Stalinist bureaucracy” (“Workers Protests Shake China,” WV No. 782, 31 May 2002). By the same token, fear of the growing unrest in the countryside is a major factor explaining the Chinese bureaucracy’s resistance to making concessions during the Doha round of trade talks.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Toward a World Without Hunger
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;It has become commonplace among leftists, including professed Marxists, to praise peasant-based, petty-bourgeois radicals like the Mexican Zapatistas and also bourgeois-nationalist regimes like that of Hugo Chávez in Venezuela for propping up small-scale farming. Along similar lines, the South African government of the African National Congress, South African Communist Party and COSATU trade-union federation has been calling for more emphasis to be placed on small farms, proclaiming that the use of every inch of possible farm land could solve the problem of hunger. Such pronouncements come in the context of the regime’s much vaunted, and quite stillborn, “land reform” program by which 30 percent of the white-owned farmland, concentrated in large-scale commercial farms, is supposed to pass into the hands of black smallholders. It is truly grotesque to place the burden of overcoming hunger, caused by the capitalists’ manipulations of the market for food, on capital-starved black small farmers.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The idealization of small-scale peasant farming by many self-styled leftists is a reactionary utopia. World hunger can be eradicated only through large-scale farming, utilizing the most advanced industrial technology and scientific research, and based on an internationally planned socialist economy.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The qualitative superiority of socialist economic planning over capitalist anarchy was proven in practice by the historical experience of the Soviet Union. The Russian Revolution demonstrated the ability of the proletariat to seize the reins of state power and construct a modern industrial society in which workers have access to medicine, science, education and culture. To deny the historic gains of the Russian Revolution, social democrats, anarchists and liberals point to the Stalinist bureaucracy, which in fact grew out of the isolation of the Russian Revolution in a single, economically backward country. Even given the tremendous bureaucratic distortions due to the parasitic Stalinist bureaucracy, the Soviet Union was able to construct an advanced industrial economy almost from the ground up. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The destruction of the USSR in 1991-92 through capitalist counterrevolution, prepared by decades of Stalinist misrule and lies as well as imperialist pressure, led to a catastrophic social and economic collapse in Russia, Ukraine and other former Soviet republics unprecedented in the history of any other modern industrial society except in wartime. A striking index of the resulting social pathology has been the sharp decline in life expectancy.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Marxists understand that the qualitatively higher level of industrial productivity of socialist society compared to capitalism will lay the basis for overcoming the division between manual and intellectual labor, agricultural and industrial labor. As we wrote:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“The development of communism will be accompanied by a corollary downward drift in the present population hypertrophy. Evidence of this can already be seen under capitalism in the industrially advanced countries of the world—e.g., Japan, North America and Western Europe—where economic and technological advancement has effected, not through fiat, a substantial reduction in the birthrate. Under communism, both the division between town and country and economic dependence on the family will virtually disappear. No longer will poor peasants or agricultural workers be compelled to have more children in order to ensure enough manpower to work the land. Human beings will have far greater mastery over both their natural and social environments. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Additionally, communist society will be based on a thoroughly different set of social values from those that exist today. The liberation of women from patriarchal domination will mean complete and unhindered access to birth control and contraception. Communism will elevate the standard of life for everyone to the highest possible level. By eliminating scarcity, poverty and want, communism will also eliminate the greatest driving force for the prevalence of religion and superstition—and the attendant backwardness, which defines the role of women as the producers of the next generation of working masses to be exploited. A prolonged, mild population shrinkage based on increasing material abundance and progressive social ideals will go a long way toward ensuring that there are enough resources to guarantee the well-being of all.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;—“In Defense of Science and Technology: An Exchange on Eco-Radicals and HIV Denialists,” WV No. 843, 
&lt;br/&gt;4 March 2005
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The basic goal of Marxist socialism is, by destroying class society and eliminating want, to lay the material basis for liberating the creative powers of humanity, which have been shackled by the capitalist system and earlier forms of class-divided society. Marxists regard the development of the productivity of human labor power as the prime mover of social evolution and the underpinning of historical progress. We look to a qualitative increase in the application of known science and the development of new technology. Ultimately this will liberate the productive capacities of mankind, eliminating economic scarcity—while laying the basis for the disappearance of classes and for the withering away of the state. As Marxist historian Isaac Deutscher remarked in his 1966 speech, “On Socialist Man”: 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“We do not maintain that socialism is going to solve all predicaments of the human race. We are struggling in the first instance with the predicaments that are of man’s making and that man can resolve. May I remind you that Trotsky, for instance, speaks of three basic tragedies—hunger, sex and death—besetting man. Hunger is the enemy that Marxism and the modern labour movement have taken on.... Yes, socialist man will still be pursued by sex and death; but we are convinced that he will be better equipped than we are to cope even with these.”
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-09-27T17:33:21Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>DNC Protest, Split, and the Principled Stand of Cynthia McKinney</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/c884787e-a01b-496d-879b-effc41bee458" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/c884787e-a01b-496d-879b-effc41bee458</id>
    <updated>2008-08-17T18:58:22Z</updated>
    <published>2008-08-17T18:58:22Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;DNC Protest, Split, and the Principled Stand of Cynthia McKinney
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;By Steven Argue
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Protest plans have been in the works against the Democratic National Convention (DNC) for some time now, with organizers opposing the Democrat Party’s policies of war and occupation, backing of continued corporate policies that cause global warming, and their attacks on immigrants. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The people who have been organizing the protest schedule formed a coalition called Recreate ‘68.  A rightward split has occurred in this coalition, and another group has also been formed called the Alliance for Real Democracy.  The Alliance for Real Democracy is organizing their own separate events, one of which is a reception for Democrat Party delegates complete with drinks and BBQ.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Alliance for Real Democracy is made up of the Colorado Green Party, Code Pink, United for Peace and Justice, the Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center, the American Friends Service Committee, Iraq Veterans Against the War, Colorado Street Medics, and Students for Peace and Justice.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;While the Alliance for Real Democracy consists largely of white liberals who are trying to influence the hopelessly corporate run Democrat Party, Recreate ‘68 is made up primarily of minorities, socialists, anarchists, communists, and other radicals who have fewer illusions in reforming the Democrat Party and who instead want to organize the power of the people. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Glen Spagnuelo, spokesperson of Recreate ‘68, says he’s not bothered by the formation of the Alliance for Real Democracy, because both groups oppose the war in Iraq and neither is advocating a violent protest.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Yet, the Alliance for Real Democracy has gotten extensive coverage in the corporate media of Colorado for their violence baiting of Recreate ‘68.  The stand of Recreate ‘68 is, however, one where they simply explain that they are not planning violence, but if the police attack them, they do not disavow the right of protesters to self-defense.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As Benjamin Whitmer of Denver explained in the letters column of the Rocky Mountain Times in a June 5, 2008 letter entitled, “Re-create 68 members aren't violent extremists”:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“I’m a little confused as to the media’s portrayal of Glenn Spagnuolo and the members of Re-create 68 as violent extremists. Though Mr. Spagnuolo is getting painted as Vlad the Impaler with a bag full of severed heads, I’ve yet to hear of him engaging in a single act of violent protest. Moreover, I’ve attended several Re-create 68 meetings – meetings which, it’s worth noting, are never without a media presence – and have yet to hear a single suggestion of violent protest from him or from anyone else attending.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“The controversy seems to stem from Re-create 68’s refusal to disallow the right to self-defense to its members. Re-create 68’s explanation of this refusal is clear. There will be people protesting with Re-create 68 arm-in-arm with their children and elders. In large part, these will be representatives of communities which have most suffered from the never-ending betrayal of the Democrats. To attempt to deny them the right to defend themselves is to deny a fundamental human right.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Yet, the Alliance for Real Democracy is demanding everyone roll over and die when and if they are violently attacked by the police, and painting those who do not have such a commitment as “violent”.  The coverage their denunciations have received in the corporate media play into the hands of government attempts to deny permits, and, ultimately plays into the hands of police violence if the government does decide to physically attack these protests.  In fact, the Alliance for Real Democracy’s denunciations of the right to self-defense and denunciations of Recreate ‘68 as “violent” creates a ready made excuse for the police and government that may actually cause police violence.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, the Green Party of Colorado has issued false statements to the press and all over the internet claiming that Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney will not be participating in the Recreate ’68 events.  Here is one such statement from Dave Chandler, co-chair of the Colorado Green Party, Green Party candidate for U.S. Congress in the Seventh Congressional District, and supporter of a Denver ballot measure that would seize the vehicles of illegal immigrants:  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Cynthia McKinney, Green Party candidate for President, and Rosa Clemente, Green Party candidate for Vice President are NOT participating in any Recreate ‘68 activities.  Both candidates, and the Green Party of Colorado, are refuting this announcement and are stating that neither candidate, nor the Green Party of Colorado, are in any way associated with Recreate ’68, nor will any of their candidates be speaking at or attending any event, nor are they in any way associated with the group Recreate ’68.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is a blatant lie.  Cynthia McKinney and Rosa Clemente will be speaking at the Recreate ’68 events.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Liberation News does not endorse the Cynthia McKinney campaign, partly because she is running on the Green Party ticket, a capitalist party.  Yet, she has the right positions on many issues, and does show what a candidate who is not beholden to corporate interests can speak out on, such as for single payer healthcare, immediate withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan, and for freeing political prisoners in the U.S. like Mumia Abu-Jamal. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;It is for these reasons, and the good principled stand that McKinney is taking on the protests at the Democrat National Committee, standing up to the leadership of the Green Party of Colorado, that Liberation News prints Cynthia McKinney and Rosa Clemente’s statement on the DNC in full:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;*******
&lt;br/&gt;Open Letter from Cynthia McKinney
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As the United States activated Navy ships and the Air Force to begin an airlift of non-specified goods into the former Soviet state of Georgia, and military exercises began in the Persian Gulf near Iran, I received communications from certain individuals among the Colorado Greens who were organizing campaign support events there, suggesting that I not participate in an anti-war program being organized by other individuals in Colorado.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Perplexed, I began to do my research to understand the nature of the fissure that I seemed to be placing myself in the middle of.  The communications to me about not participating in one of the scheduled events became more and more shrill.  The events ran through August 26th.  When the lineup of speakers, including Rosa and me, was announced for the events in question, I received multiple communications stating in various ways that the sender from the Green Party of Colorado, was on the verge of desperation over the latter. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Within a few hours, I was reading messages stating that the Green Party of Colorado would be ruined if I participated in the End the Occupations/End the War march and rally slated to take place on the morning of August 24th on the steps of the Colorado State Capitol, or if Rosa participated in a Freedom March and Rally for Human Rights and Political Prisoners at Civic Center Park the following day.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;An article appeared in a local Colorado newspaper stating that Rosa and I would not appear at the events for which we had been scheduled. Rosa responded to our Colorado Green Party contact that yes, indeed, we were appearing at the two events.  Both Rosa and I then received messages demanding to know by a time certain what our plans were, and asserting that the Green Party of Colorado would be totally ruined if we associated with the group sponsoring the events.  In addition, we were told that at least one resignation and sustaining membership would be tendered to the Party, and that Rosa and I could expect no support on the ground in Denver from the Green Party of Colorado, including a planned fundraiser and a place to stay.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Without receiving any additional response or information from either Rosa or I, the correspondent sent a message informing us that all Green Party of Colorado events previously scheduled for us had been canceled.  Further, the message stated that ballot access petitioning by Green Party of Colorado would cease in neighboring Wyoming and that all efforts would be made to remove Rosa's and my names from the ballot in Colorado. The message also noted that the Colorado delegation overwhelmingly supported Elaine Brown at the Green Party Convention.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;With the e-mail messages flying "fast and furious," I hope I have mentioned the highlights of this episode in somewhat chronological order. What Rosa and I would like to address now, is the ideological and rational order that produced this outcome.  At the very first Green Party debate held in San Francisco earlier this year, I pleaded for unity of action and purpose as we face the challenges that confront us as a country.  Rosa and I are proud to join with others who are sick and tired of war, occupation, human rights abuses, and the continued incarceration of our political prisoners.  We are proud to join with others who are willing to do something about it.  In the context of activities in Denver, that means cooperating with some organizations new to us and others with which Rosa and I have had a long-standing relationship. Let me explain some of those relationships.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;I am proud to have received a Backbone Award from the Backbone Campaign, one of the co-participants of the anti-war, anti-occupation events in question, according to the organizers.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Rosa and I are pleased to have received the endorsement of M-1 of Dead Prez, who put out a video of endorsement and is rallying other conscious Hip Hop, Generation X voters to the Green Party with Rosa and I as its nominees.  Rebel Diaz was on the stage with Rosa as she accepted her Green Party nomination for Vice President.  Both Dead Prez and Rebel Diaz are participating in the events in question, according to the organizers.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Fred Hampton, Jr.'s mother, a victim of COINTELPRO, came to Georgia in the mid-1990s to help me gain reelection after a malicious redistricting case that went all the way up to the Supreme Court. Ward Churchill has traveled to my Congressional district to educate my former constituents on the COINTELPRO of yesterday and the COINTELPRO of today.  Natsu Saito introduced me to other victims of COINTELPRO.  I asked Kathleen Cleaver to co-author a report that was submitted to Mary Robinson, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights at the time of the World Conference Against Racism, on the unsolved murders of Black Panther Party members who were victims of COINTELPRO.  Fred Hampton, Jr., Ward Churchill, Natsu Saito, and Kathleen Cleaver are all participating in the events in question, according to the organizers.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As a Member of Congress, I supported the release of all political prisoners and welcomed information from the American Indian Movement about Leonard Peltier.  I have at many times in my political career been allied with the ACLU, and have always supported Pam and Ramona Africa and the MOVE Organization.  The American Indian Movement of Colorado, King Downing of the ACLU, and Pam and Ramona Africa of MOVE are all participating in the events in question, according to the organizers.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Mumia Abu Jamal has endorsed the Power to the People Campaign and my Green Party candidacy.  According to the organizers, Mumia will transmit a message to all of us participating in the events in question.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Finally, I have appeared on various stages with many Palestinians; I have proudly spoken at rallies organized by Larry Holmes.  Debra Sweet with World Can't Wait was among the very first to my knowledge to organize around impeachment as an imperative and I support hers and all other impeachment groups in their efforts.  And finally, I have known Ben Manski for a long time as a socially conscious activist who is also a member of the Green Party. According to the organizers, a Palestinian refugee is slated to speak at the events in question, as well as Larry Holmes, Debra Sweet, and Ben Manski.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Rosa and I have not been given any rational, ideological, or strategically-acceptable reason by the Green Party of Colorado to dissociate ourselves from the movement that this country so desperately needs and that these individuals and organizations participating represent, as we all attempt to hold the Democratic Party accountable for its complicity in all of the crimes of the Bush Administration.  Therefore Rosa and I will keep our appointments in Denver and we hope that the members of the Green Party of Colorado will attend our sessions and listen to what we have to say.  I have faith that by taking principled stands against war and occupation, human rights abuse, the prison-industrial complex, and in support of freedom for political prisoners, the Green party will emerge stronger.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Cynthia McKinney
&lt;br/&gt;Green Party Nominee for President of the United States
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Rosa Clemente
&lt;br/&gt;Green Party Nominee for Vice President of the United States
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;*******
&lt;br/&gt;Liberation News endorses and encourages people to attend:
&lt;br/&gt;Recreate ‘68 Protest: Speakers and Free Concerts Schedule
&lt;br/&gt;http://recreate68.com/?p=135
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;FYI:
&lt;br/&gt;Alliance for Real Democracy: drinks and BBQ for Democrat Party delegates and their other scheduled events:
&lt;br/&gt;http://slapstickpolitics.blogspot.com/2008/07/alliance-for-real-democracy-dnc.html
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is an article of Liberation News, subscribe free:
&lt;br/&gt;https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/liberation_news&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-08-17T18:58:22Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>New tribe against the occupation of Afghanistan</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/727b9a03-0019-40bf-80e4-d56c7fe65f2b" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/727b9a03-0019-40bf-80e4-d56c7fe65f2b</id>
    <updated>2008-07-27T06:30:34Z</updated>
    <published>2008-07-27T06:30:34Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;New tribe against the occupation of Afghanistan
&lt;br/&gt;http://tribes.tribe.net/outnow#
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Massive U.S. intervention in Afghanistan began in 1978 and continues to this day. The ongoing war in Afghanistan continues to kill thousands of Afghan civilians and cause extreme suffering due to horrendous injuries, the displacement of people from their homes and livelihoods, home invasions, sexual abuse, arbitrary arrests and torture, and the general humiliation of the Afghani people. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As this author stated for Liberation News on September 12, 2001: 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Americans watched in horror as the World Trade Center collapsed. Yet it was a horror no different from what the U.S. government has done with it's bombing of civilian populations in Iraq, Yugoslavia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Korea. The U.S. bombings of just these countries, not to mention many other U.S. acts of war, murdered millions of civilians. Terror against civilians is never justified… 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Today the clerical fascists of the Taliban rule Afghanistan. The CIA put them in power with billions of dollars in U.S. military aid. This massive U.S. intervention in Afghanistan was in opposition to the revolutionary PDPA government that came to power in 1978 on issues of promoting women’s rights and land reform. Literacy campaigns began teaching the poor and women how to read and write. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Foreign religious fanatics and wealthy defenders of the old feudal system came together in a terrorist organization called the Mujahideen. With billions of dollars in assistance from the U.S. [starting under the Jimmy Carter presidency] these fanatical cutthroats waged a holy war that included killing women for teaching little girls how to read and write and throwing acid into the faces of women who had become liberated from the veil. The Taliban came to power as a result of this U.S. intervention. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Will a U.S. war now against the Taliban and former CIA aid recipient Osama Bin Laden set things straight? No. It will be the people of Afghanistan who suffer death and destruction from war as the U.S. attempts to install a puppet government friendly to U.S. corporate [oil pipeline] interests.” Steven Argue, Liberation News, September 12, 2001
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Taliban was put in power by U.S. intervention. U.S. occupation today is a cause for war and continues to keep an extremely reactionary religious government in power. Afghanistan had secular governments with much wider women's rights before the U.S. began its massive intervention in Afghanistan in the 1970's. All U.S. imposed governments have been religious and anti-women. In Afghanistan, the Afghanis are better qualified to solve the problems caused by U.S. imperialism than U.S. imperialism is.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Yet rather than get out of Afghanistan Obama and McCain are proposing more troops, more helicopters, and more war.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO THE BIPARTISAN OCCUPATION OF AFGHANISTAN!!!!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA and MCCAIN'S PROPOSED SURGE IN AFGHANISTAN!  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. OUT OF AFGHANISTAN NOW!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;http://tribes.tribe.net/outnow#&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-07-27T06:30:34Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>July 25-27, NYC, TROTSKY LEGACY CONFERENCE</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/1b90f37c-3c55-4cdd-aedc-f39581e97560" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/1b90f37c-3c55-4cdd-aedc-f39581e97560</id>
    <updated>2008-07-24T06:27:54Z</updated>
    <published>2008-07-24T06:27:54Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;[While I consider myself to be to the left of the speakers at this conference, and I do have some differences with Trotsky, I would attend if it were closer, so I thought it might be interesting for like minded people in NYC.  -Steven Argue]
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;July 25-27, NYC, TROTSKY LEGACY CONFERENCE
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Start: 07/25/2008 - 11:00
&lt;br/&gt;End: 07/27/2008 - 14:30
&lt;br/&gt;Timezone: Etc/GMT-5
&lt;br/&gt;July 25-27. Fordham University, NYC
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;SCHEDULE FOR THE TROTSKY LEGACY CONFERENCE
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;FRIDAY
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;11:00 AM – 1:00 PM: Registration and LUNCH
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;1:00 – 1:15 pm: Opening/Greetings
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;1:15 – 3:15 PM: Permanent Revolution and the Evolution of World
&lt;br/&gt;Realities Since the 1960s
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Ahmed Shawki, ed., International Socialist Review
&lt;br/&gt;· Suzi Weisman, author, Victor Serge: The Course is Set on Hope
&lt;br/&gt;· Alan Benjamin, ed., The Organizer
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;3:15 – 3:30 PM: BREAK
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;3:30 – 5:30 PM: Workshops
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;5:30 – 7:00 PM: DINNER
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;7:00 – 8:15 PM: James P. Cannon and U.S. Trotskyism
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Bryan Palmer, author, James P. Cannon and the Origins of the
&lt;br/&gt;American Revolutionary Left
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;8:15 – 8:30 PM: BREAK
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;8:30 – 8:45 PM: Introductory Remarks (to the film) – Esteban Volkov
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;8:45 – 10:15 PM: "Trotsky in Mexico" (new documentary – U.S. Premiere)
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;SATURDAY
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;8:00 – 9:00 AM: BREAKFAST
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:00 – 9:30 AM: Registration
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:15 – 9:30 AM: Opening Remarks
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:30 – 10:00 AM: Reflection on the Legacy of Leon Trotsky – Esteban Volkov
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;10:00 – 11:30 AM: Lessons of the SWP Experience: 1960 – 1980
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Robin David
&lt;br/&gt;· Kipp Dawson
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;11:30 AM – 1:00 PM: LUNCH
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;1:00 – 2:30 PM: What Happened to the SWP?
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Linda Thompson
&lt;br/&gt;· Paul Le Blanc
&lt;br/&gt;· David Walters
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;2:30 – 3:45 PM: Workshops
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;3:45 – 4:00 PM: BREAK
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;4:00 – 6:00 PM: Social Movements and Class Struggle in the U.S.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Kwame Somburu
&lt;br/&gt;· Marilyn Vogt-Downey
&lt;br/&gt;· Dan Kaplan
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;6:00 – 7:30 PM: DINNER
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;7:30 – 9:30 PM: Revolutionary Struggles in Latin America
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Celia Hart (video)
&lt;br/&gt;· Eloise Linger
&lt;br/&gt;· Martine Sanchez
&lt;br/&gt;· Gerry Foley
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:30 – 11:00 PM: July 26th Celebration
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;SUNDAY
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;8:00 – 9:00 AM: BREAKFAST
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:00 – 9:15 AM: Opening Remarks
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;9:15 – 10:45 AM: Building the Revolutionary Party
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Sharon Smith, International Socialist Organization
&lt;br/&gt;· Steve Bloom, Solidarity (for id only)
&lt;br/&gt;· Workers International League Speaker
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;10:45 – 11:00 AM: BREAK
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;11:00 AM – 12:30 PM: Revolutionary Socialists and the Antiwar Struggle
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;· Gus Horowitz
&lt;br/&gt;· Tom Bias
&lt;br/&gt;· Chris Gavreau
&lt;br/&gt;· CAN Speaker
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;12:30 – 12:45 PM: BREAK to get box lunches
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;12:45 – 2:15 PM: Workshops and BOX LUNCH
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;2:15 – 2:30 PM: Closing&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-07-24T06:27:54Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Obama Lays Out Plans for Continued War</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/77460a45-18d7-4a19-a092-5d987c90071d" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/77460a45-18d7-4a19-a092-5d987c90071d</id>
    <updated>2008-07-15T16:13:59Z</updated>
    <published>2008-07-15T16:13:59Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Obama Lays Out Plans for Continued War
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;By Steven Argue
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In a July 14, 2008 New York Times Op Ed, Barack Obama says:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"As I’ve said many times, we must be as careful getting out of Iraq as we were careless getting in. We can safely redeploy our combat brigades at a pace that would remove them in 16 months. That would be the summer of 2010 — two years from now, and more than seven years after the war began. After this redeployment, a residual force in Iraq would perform limited missions: going after any remnants of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, protecting American service members and, so long as the Iraqis make political progress, training Iraqi security forces."
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In other words, he does not plan to get all of the troops out of Iraq and he will only get most of the troops out in two years.  And what does he explain he will do with these troops?  Redeploy them.  Redeployed where?  His rhetoric has been clear: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Obama goes on to call for a surge in Afghanistan as well as war in Pakistan:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"Ending the war [in Iraq] is essential to meeting our broader strategic goals, starting in Afghanistan and Pakistan [...] As president, I would pursue a new strategy, and begin by providing at least two additional combat brigades to support our effort in Afghanistan. We need more troops, more helicopters [...]"
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. intervention has also been very bad for the people of Pakistan. It is US intervention that has kept a long series of dictators in power there. The US has no right to intervene against those fighting that dictatorship that it labels "terrorists". Likewise, it is US intervention in support of a long series of Pakistani dictators that is the cause of Bhutto's death, brutal repression against the majority, exploitation, and poverty, all of which has resulted in rebellion against the Pakistani government. The US has already harmed the Pakistani people enough with massive aid to dictators and would do more harm by sending in troops. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA’S PROPOSED MILITARY INTERVENTION IN PAKISTAN!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Massive U.S. intervention in Afghanistan began in 1978 and continues to this day. The ongoing war in Afghanistan continues to kill thousands of Afghan civilians and cause extreme suffering due to horrendous injuries, the displacement of people from their homes and livelihoods, home invasions, sexual abuse, arbitrary arrests and torture, and the general humiliation of the Afghani people. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As this author stated for Liberation News on September 12, 2001: 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Americans watched in horror as the World Trade Center collapsed. Yet it was a horror no different from what the U.S. government has done with it's bombing of civilian populations in Iraq, Yugoslavia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Korea. The U.S. bombings of just these countries, not to mention many other U.S. acts of war, murdered millions of civilians. Terror against civilians is never justified… 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Today the clerical fascists of the Taliban rule Afghanistan. The CIA put them in power with billions of dollars in U.S. military aid. This massive U.S. intervention in Afghanistan was in opposition to the revolutionary PDPA government that came to power in 1978 on issues of promoting women’s rights and land reform. Literacy campaigns began teaching the poor and women how to read and write. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Foreign religious fanatics and wealthy defenders of the old feudal system came together in a terrorist organization called the Mujahideen. With billions of dollars in assistance from the U.S. [starting under the Jimmy Carter presidency] these fanatical cutthroats waged a holy war that included killing women for teaching little girls how to read and write and throwing acid into the faces of women who had become liberated from the veil. The Taliban came to power as a result of this U.S. intervention. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Will a U.S. war now against the Taliban and former CIA aid recipient Osama Bin Laden set things straight? No. It will be the people of Afghanistan who suffer death and destruction from war as the U.S. attempts to install a puppet government friendly to U.S. corporate (oil) interests.” Steven Argue, Liberation News, September 12, 2001
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Taliban was put in power by U.S. intervention. U.S. occupation today is a cause for war and continues to keep an extremely reactionary religious government in power. Afghanistan had secular governments with much wider women's rights before the U.S. began its massive intervention in Afghanistan in the 1970's. All U.S. imposed governments have been religious and anti-women. In Afghanistan, the Afghanis are better qualified to solve the problems caused by U.S. imperialism than U.S. imperialism is.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Yet rather than get out of Afghanistan Obama is proposing more troops, more helicopters, and more war.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA”S PROPOSED SURGE IN AFGHANISTAN!  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. OUT OF AFGHANISTAN NOW!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, at AIPAC, Obama’s speech laid the groundwork for war with Iran: 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“The Iranian regime supports violent extremists and challenges us across the region. It pursues a nuclear capability that could spark a dangerous arms race and raise the prospect of a transfer of nuclear know-how to terrorists. [...] The danger from Iran is grave, it is real, and my goal will be to eliminate this threat.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;A war on a major oil producing nation under the imperialist excuse of weapons of mass destruction.  Sound familiar?  Bush would have a good case for a charge of plagiarism against Obama.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;And what will the Iranians think of more imperialist intervention?
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In 1953 the CIA overthrew the democratically elected government of Mohammed Mossadegh in Iran and put the brutal dictatorship of the Shah in power.  Mossadegh had plans to nationalize the Iranian oil fields, a plan that would have taken a good chunk of the oil profits out of the private control of major international oil companies.  Such nationalizations have greatly helped people in other countries, such as Venezuela, where oil wealth is used to better the conditions of the poor and provide needed programs like healthcare.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The CIA sponsored overthrow of the Mossadegh government paved the way for 26 years of dictatorship under the U.S. backed Shah.  Freedom of speech did not exist under the Shah, and the CIA participated in the torture of political opponents to the Shah.  Meanwhile, U.S. oil corporations made massive profits from Iranian oil while the vast majority of the Iranian people lived in extreme poverty and did not benefit from the oil wealth. 
&lt;br/&gt;   
&lt;br/&gt;The Iranian people rightly saw the Shah as a puppet of U.S. imperialism, and finally overthrew his dictatorship in 1979.  Unfortunately, repression was so bad under the Shah that the only place that people could organize opposition was in the Mosques.  This gave the Mullahs a tremendous advantage in taking control of the revolution.  The Islamic nature of the revolution led to a deterioration of women's rights and socialists, many of whom had naively supported the Islamic Revolution, were executed by the clerical fascist state.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Despite the brutal nature of the new Iranian government, in that respect the same as the old regime the U.S. had supported, the U.S. was not satisfied.  The new regime nationalized the Iranian oil fields under government control.  In addition, the new government was full of anti-imperialist rhetoric and took American hostages; a natural result of 26 years of U.S. imposed dictatorship and exploitation.  The U.S. government hated the Iranian revolution most for nationalizing the oil, and they feared that the Iranian Revolution may become an influence for similar anti-imperialist revolutions in the region.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As a result, the U.S. encouraged then ally, Saddam Hussein, to send Iraqi troops to invade Iran.  During the war, the U.S. armed both sides, but most armed Iraq and provided Iraq with military intelligence.  The Iraqi invasion of Iran began on September 22, 1980 and the war continued until 1988.  As a result of the war, between half million and a million and a half people died.  This U.S. support to Iraq also helped enable Iraq to murder between 50,000 and 100,000 Kurds in the Anfal campaign of 1988.  At the time, the U.S. corporate media was silent about this crime, and only exposed it later when U.S. alliances changed.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;So U.S. intervention against Iran imposed decades of dictatorship, repression, war, exploitation, poverty, and, just in the Iran-Iraq war alone, the deaths of around a million Iranian people.  Like Iraq, U.S. troops on the ground in Iran will not be treated as liberators.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Iranian working class has many scores to settle with their Iranian rulers, but as bad as the current regime in Iran is, Iranians need only look across the border into Iraq to see that U.S. occupation will be much worse.  War, a puppet capitalist regime, a million dead, torture, millions of refugees, and an occupier mainly interested in privatization to loot resources.  As Iraq shows, there is no liberation at the hands of U.S. occupation.  And as the CIA’s Shah showed; there is no liberation under a U.S. imposed puppet.  Only anti-imperialist socialist revolution can begin to solve the problems faced by women, ethnic minorities, and the working class of Iran. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA’S THREATS AGAINST IRAN!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. HANDS OFF IRAN!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;On Iraq, Obama has never promised to fully withdraw.  In a debate in September 2007, when asked if he would have U.S. troops out of Iraq by 2013 Barack Obama said "I believe that we should have all our troops out by 2013, but I don't want to make promises not knowing what the situation's going to be three or four years out." ("The Democratic Presidential Debate on MSNBC", New York Times 9/26/07).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The U.S. must leave by air, sea, and land as quickly as possible. U.S. imperialism has created a horrible situation, but that is no excuse to stay, and U.S. troops, Halliburton, etc. are only making matters worse. Over a million Iraqis are dead. These deaths are not just caused by the civil war that the U.S. has ignited, nor are they just caused by the death-squad government that the U.S. has put in power. U.S. guns and bombers are also the direct cause of a large number of deaths. Iraq needs to be turned over to the Iraqi people through immediate withdrawal.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, Obama has directly supported the U.S. war and occupation of Iraq by voting in the Senate to fund it.  If it were not for the Democrat votes in congress, the recent $162 billion dollars for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would have never passed. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This most recent New York Times Op Ed from Obama continues on with a pro-war position.  Obama is clear.  He wants a gradual redeployment of the majority of troops to fight other wars while calling for continuing to keep some troops fighting in Iraq. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;On Blackwater mercenaries fighting in Iraq, Obama also refuses to support a ban, and promised to continue to use Blackwater when he becomes president (Democracy Now!, June 2, 2008).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The US government has no right to be in Iraq murdering, torturing, and humiliating their people while making massive profits for the military industry and other contractors.  The U.S. is attempting to privatize Iraqi oil to eliminate Iraqi control over this most important resource and give U.S. and British oil companies control over the oil.  The puppet government the US has set up is a death squad government that should not be protected by U.S. troops.  Continued occupation of Iraq is a continued attempt to subvert the national will of the Iraqi people and it must end immediately, yet Obama's plan is to only leave, partially, after a couple years, and this, assuredly, only after the oil law has been passed and oil ownership handed over to the multi-nationals.  This, as Obama's own use of the term "redeployment" indicates, will free U.S. troops up for other oil wars.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA’S “PHASED REDEPLOYMENT”! 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. OUT OF IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN NOW!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;U.S. HANDS OFF THE WORLD!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Another major cause for war in the Middle East is U.S. military support to the racist regime in Israel.  Obama promises to continue this practice.  At AIPAC Obama promised:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;“Defense cooperation between the United States and Israel is a model of success, and must be deepened. As president, I will implement a Memorandum of Understanding that provides $30 billion in assistance to Israel over the next decade — investments to Israel's security that will not be tied to any other nation. First, we must approve the foreign aid request for 2009. Going forward, we can enhance our cooperation on missile defense. We should export military equipment to our ally Israel under the same guidelines as NATO.”
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This despite Israel’s recent war of aggression against Lebanon, a war that, if it were not for the heroic resistance of Hezbollah fighters, would have ended in another Israeli occupation like Israel’s brutal occupation of Lebanon that took place in the 1980’s.  That occupation included crimes against humanity committed by Israeli and allied Christian Phalangists when they massacred thousands of Palestinians in cold-blood at the Sabra and Chatila refugee camps.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, Obama’s speech made no reference to the suffering faced by the Palestinian people as a result of the creation and continuation of the Jewish state.  Israel is a state that created a homeland for one people, through force and violence, by denying the homeland of Palestine’s original inhabitants.  Also missing from Obama’s speech was the brutal blockade currently being carried out against Palestinians in Gaza.  Obama expressed zero sympathy for the Palestinians and other Arabs, only promises to supply Israel with the weapons to kill more Arabs.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Massive U.S. military aid helps keep the repressive governments of Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia in power.  Instead of promising more U.S. military aid, that aid should be cut off to better allow the people of the Middle East to decide their own future.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;NO TO OBAMA’S PROMISE OF BILLIONS TO ISRAEL!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Another indicator of where Obama stands on imperialist war is how he sees the past wars of the United States.  Of H. W. Bush and his war on Iraq Obama recently stated, "I have enormous sympathy for the foreign policy of George H. W. Bush. I don't have a lot of complaints about their handling of Desert Storm." (Barack Obama, from David Brooks article, "Obama Admires Bush, NY Times, May 16, 2008)
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Leading up to that war, Kuwait was slant drilling into Iraqi Ramaila oil fields. Iraq saw this as theft. In addition, the Kuwaiti monarchy went against OPEC quotas and increased oil production by 40%, bringing down the price of oil on the world market, something Saddam Hussein called economic warfare. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Before Iraq invaded Kuwait, Saddam Hussein was, at that time an ally of the United States in the wars against Iran and the Kurds.  He had received massive U.S. military backing in those wars.  When he assembled troops on the Kuwaiti border, US ambassador April Glaspie met with Saddam Hussein and told him, "We have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait." 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Saddam Hussein saw this as a green light from his powerful U.S. ally to invade Kuwait. Soon after, he did. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;But Saddam Hussein was set up by the United States because the U.S. wanted a war. The reason for this was to prop up the profits of the military industrial complex. The Soviet Union had just fallen, and the military industries needed an excuse to keep spending billions of dollars of our tax dollars on the military. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Saddam Hussein was the perfect boogie-man to meet their needs. The U.S. corporate media pointed out that he had murdered tens of thousands of Kurds, never mentioning why they were silent when the operations were taking place with weapons supplied by the United States. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The U.S. corporate media also claimed that premature babies in Kuwait had been taken out of incubators and left to die so that the incubators could be shipped back to Baghdad. The whole story was a complete fabrication, and the corporate media even admitted it after the war, but the lie served its purpose in swaying many people who otherwise questioned going to war for the repressive Kuwaiti monarchy. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, President H.W. Bush claimed as reason for war, "Within three days, 120,000 Iraqi troops with 850 tanks had poured into Kuwait and moved south to threaten Saudi Arabia. It was then that I decided to act to check that aggression." This was based on supposed Pentagon satellite photos. Yet, from commercial satellite photos acquired by the St. Petersburg Times, this was proven to be a lie, the desert Bush senior and the Pentagon referred to was nothing but empty desert. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;While playing up false stories of baby killers and the new Hitler that was going to march across the Middle East, the U.S. corporate media ignored Kuwait’s theft of Iraqi oil as well the historic claim of Iraq to Kuwait, with Kuwait being a construct of British imperialism to divide the territory and limit Iraqi access to the sea. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, the U.S. corporate media completely ignored the repressive nature of the Kuwaiti monarchy that U.S. troops were sent to fight and die for. The vast majority of those living in Kuwait were denied the right to vote and other more basic rights. This included women and people labeled foreigners, many of whom had been in Kuwait for generations. Some who had ancestors in Kuwait prior to 1920 were even denied Kuwaiti citizenship. Palestinian workers built modern Kuwait, but they were kept in second class status. This situation was so bad that many Palestinians aided the Iraqi troops and saw them as a liberation army. After the U.S. re-installed the monarchy, most Kuwaiti Palestinians were driven out of Kuwait. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;For women in Kuwait the Iraqi invasion also brought hope. Unlike all of the US supported governments and forces in the Arab World, Iraqi women have many rights found nowhere else in the Arab World except in the Asian republics of the former Soviet Union. Under Saddam Hussein, over 50% of Iraqi doctors were women. Iraqi women were allowed to walk unescorted in the streets. They were allowed to drive. Iraqi women could even freely criticize men. In addition, Iraqi women had the right to work and control their own funds. This was in stark contrast to the treatment of women under the repressive monarchy of Kuwait where women had / have no rights what-so-ever.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In carrying out the war to defend the Kuwaiti monarchy the U.S. used depleted uranium (DU) weapons that have contaminated Iraqi water, soil, and food with radiation.  This radiation has caused large numbers of birth defects and other diseases for the Iraqi people.  In addition, U.S. soldiers were not given protection and, as a result, became ill in massive numbers with the symptoms of radiation poisoning.  Like Agent Orange poisoning in Vietnam, the military brass pretended they had no clue to the cause of this illness that became dubbed “Persian Gulf War Syndrome”.  Yet this was later exposed as a lie when reports were made public warning the military brass of the health risks of DU weapons before the war.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Government demographer Beth Osborn Duponte lost her job when she estimated the civilian loss of life in Iraq to be around 83,000, 13,000 directly from U.S. bombing and another 70,000 civilians dead as a result of U.S. targeting of civilian necessities such as water treatment facilities, medical facilities and supplies, and the electric power grid.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, Duponte estimated deaths of Iraqi troops to be around 40,000.  Many of the Iraqi troops killed were buried alive.  In defense of U.S. actions Col. Lon Maggart said, "People somehow have the notion that burying guys alive is nastier than blowing them up with hand grenades or sticking them in gut with bayonets, well it's not." 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;So Obama has no problems with Bush targeting civilians, irradiating U.S. troops and the Iraqi people, burying people alive, lying to the American people, and re-installing a repressive monarchy in Kuwait.  In addition, Obama wants to escalate the war in Afghanistan, send troops into Pakistan, is already threatening Iran with war, will never fully pull out of Iraq and only promises to pull out most troops in two years after an extended gradual re-deployment of troops to other wars, will continue to use murderous Blackwater mercenaries in Iraq, and promises billions in military aid to Israel.  Enough said.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Obama will be nominated the presidential candidate of the Democrat Party on August 24-28 at the Democrat Party National Convention (DNC).  In opposition to the DNC convention, protests are being organized, with organizers stating:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"On August 24-28, the ruling elite and their defenders will converge in Denver Colorado, in an attempt to recuperate the gains of global social movements and produce another myth of progress. Lip service to global warming, the economic crisis and the war will endow them with the magic to spread amnesia across the hearts and minds of North America... Outside those doors, however, so many will exclaim, smash and sing a harmonious ‘no.’...” 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, there will be protests at the equally pro-war Republican National convention being held September 1-4 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Although virtually ignored by the corporate press, there are other presidential candidates who are running in opposition to the Democrats and Republicans who are for immediate withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan.  These include Cynthia McKinney running on the Green Party ticket, Brian Moore of the Socialist Party, Gloria La Riva on the Party for Socialism and Liberation ticket, and Róger Calero on the Socialist Workers Party ticket.  Corporate controlled elections and media assure that these authentic anti-war candidates will not get elected, but these candidacies do help expose people to positions of politicians not controlled by corporate interests and the pro-war Democrat Party machine.  In addition, through some of these campaigns, more people become exposed to socialist ideas and the ideas of class struggle methods to bring about change. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;A vote for Obama or McCain is a vote for war!  So that's what, in active terms, you're really voting for when you vote Democrat or Republican. Those of us voting for third parties in order to try to help build the kinds of parties and ideas that would really bring change, and those of us refusing to vote in order to not participate in such a blatantly rigged system, neither will change the country through these up-coming elections either, but at least we won’t be dumb enough to vote for own oppressors and exploiters that are waging imperialist war.  And we will not be drawn into making apologies for imperialist war politicians like Obama.  Instead, we will have the sense to be working for something different.  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;And those of us in unions should be angry that our hard earned union dues are being squandered on the Democrat Party when that money should instead be put into stronger strike funds to strengthen our ability to fight for better contracts, for socialized medicine, and for bigger strikes against the wars.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Build the Anti-War Movement!  For More Strikes for Immediate Withdrawal Like the May 1st ILWU Anti-War Strike That Shut Down 29 Ports!  Support Soldiers Refusing to Fight Including the 10,000 U.S. Soldiers Who Have Gone AWOL!  Build the Socialist and Anti-Imperialist Movements!  U.S. Hands off Iran!  U.S. Out of Iraq and Afghanistan Now!   
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is an article of Liberation News, subscribe free:
&lt;br/&gt;https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/liberation_news
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Join the Cool Earth Party
&lt;br/&gt;http://tribes.tribe.net/coolearth&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-07-15T16:13:59Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>US longshore union leader : "don't vote for Obama"</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/b43f6e65-21bf-4a39-822f-16ae33e9f6a7" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/b43f6e65-21bf-4a39-822f-16ae33e9f6a7</id>
    <updated>2008-07-12T19:24:05Z</updated>
    <published>2008-07-12T19:24:05Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;US longshore union leader : "don't vote for Obama"
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;SHORT VIDEO OF JACK HEYMAN'S COMMENTS ON OBAMA AT PERMANENT REVOLUTION WEEKEND SCHOOL IN LONDON
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Try either of the links below for the video 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;http://www.permanentrevolution.net/?view=entry&amp;amp;entry=2202  
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;http://www.permanentrevolution.net/entry/2202
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Also from Jack Heyman, see:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Longshoremen to close ports on West Coast to protest war 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;http://uspolitics.tribe.net/thread/0de5539d-06be-406e-a4a8-e45eaef28b9f
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;****************************************** 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Distributed by Liberation News: 
&lt;br/&gt;https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/liberation_news 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Cool Earth Party 
&lt;br/&gt;http://tribes.tribe.net/coolearth 
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-07-12T19:24:05Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Unionists Protest Uribe Venezuela Visit</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/9ff246f7-e441-451e-990e-6d9f047fb329" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/9ff246f7-e441-451e-990e-6d9f047fb329</id>
    <updated>2008-07-11T15:26:35Z</updated>
    <published>2008-07-11T15:26:35Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Uribe visit to Venezuela
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;STATEMENT OF CCURA UNION TENDENCY ON URIBE VISIT
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;July 6--The Corriente Clasista Unitaria Revolucionaria y Autonoma of the National Union of Workers (U.N.T.) rejects categorically the visit that has announced of Alvaro Uribe to Caracas, top representative of the bloody Colombian oligarchy.  Venezuelan workers have shown that we are anti-imperialist fighters in fact and not just in words.  We do not share the judgment issued by President Chavez when he referred to the Colombian president as a "brother" and "friend" in the opening event of the Non-Aligned Ministers Conference,  We know he represents the drug traffickers and paramilitarists that kill Colombian workers and peasants. He can never be a friend or brother of our people.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Venezuelan government has announced a meeting between Chavez and Uribe on July 11th.  It will be one month since the infamous act of President Chavez, together with representatives of the Venezuelan bourgeoisie, announced "the productive reimpulse" through a strategic alliance with the exploiters. Just as the class enemies of Venezuelan workers form alliances with the government, now the maximum representative of imperialism in South America, Alvaro Uribe, will visit Caracas to give a "reimpulse" to relations with the Venezuelan government.
&lt;br/&gt;  
&lt;br/&gt;But the workers know who Uribe is and no government can fool us and present him as a friend or ally.  Our class brothers are persecuted and murdered by the paramilitaries headed by Uribe, as Colombia has been the country where the largest number of trade unionists in the world have been murdered.  This year several activists and worker fighters were murdered because they participated in a national march against the paramilitaries and state terrorism.  Our brothers and friends are those who are carrying the democratic struggles against the fascist government 
&lt;br/&gt;of Uribe.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;We salute the action of community radio ECOS 93.9 of Merida and other revolutionary collectives to organize a massive mobilization in repudiation of the visit of Uribe, and our organization will join this action which will class struggle, revolutionary and anti-imperialist.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;(translated by Earl Gilman)
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Distributed by Liberation News
&lt;br/&gt;https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/liberation_news
&lt;br/&gt; 
&lt;br/&gt;Cool Earth Party
&lt;br/&gt;http://tribes.tribe.net/coolearth
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-07-11T15:26:35Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>NYT: Obama admires Bush Sr.: ''no complaints about handling of Desert Storm"</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/7380a6f6-3099-4413-b811-b1875ee6d01d" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/7380a6f6-3099-4413-b811-b1875ee6d01d</id>
    <updated>2008-07-08T14:04:10Z</updated>
    <published>2008-05-17T18:36:09Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Support for Empire is support for Empire -- any way you cut it. There's a reason Corporate American bankrolled Obama's campaign 
&lt;br/&gt;...
&lt;br/&gt;**************
&lt;br/&gt;"I have enormous sympathy for the foreign policy of George H. W. Bush. I don't have a lot of complaints about their handling of Desert Storm."
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Source:
&lt;br/&gt;- Barack Obama, from David Brooks article, "Obama Admires Bush, NY Times, May 16, 2008
&lt;br/&gt;http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/16/opinion/16brooks.html?em&amp;amp;ex=1211169600&amp;amp;en=1577a90ae5048a04&amp;amp;ei=5087%0A
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;See:
&lt;br/&gt;Clinton and Obama: Failures on War and Global Warming
&lt;br/&gt;by STEVEN ARGUE 
&lt;br/&gt;http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/02/10/18478172.php&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 1 reply
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-05-17T18:36:09Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Police Break 60 Year Old Homeless Woman's Arm</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/651d55dc-a95e-4499-8e7c-39875e593be7" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/651d55dc-a95e-4499-8e7c-39875e593be7</id>
    <updated>2008-07-08T13:52:11Z</updated>
    <published>2008-05-10T19:00:32Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;[Donna Deiss is a politically active homeless woman in Santa Cruz, who was also an advocate for tenants rights before she was unfairly evicted.  The homeless in Santa Cruz, as well as activists who criticize the local government, are often victims of police harrassment, false arrests, and police violence.  -Steven Argue]
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;60 Year Old Homeless Woman Says Police Broke Her Arm
&lt;br/&gt;by Robert Norse
&lt;br/&gt;Saturday May 10th, 2008  
&lt;br/&gt;Donna Deiss called in last night to report that yesterday around 5 PM, Officer La Moss (Badge #114) assaulted her, broke her arm, and then put her in handcuffs when he attempted to question her at Three Tree Lot near Lighthouse Field. Deiss was taken to the Watsonville hospital, had to wait hours for x-rays, whichconfirmed her arm was broken. 
&lt;br/&gt;Deiss reported the following to me in a phone message last night and an e-mail this morning: 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;She was talking with friends yesterday on Westcliffe Drive near her RV.  An undercover police officer, whom she later identified as Officer LaMoss, arrived in a black unmarked car and said he wanted to talk to her and others in the group. She read La Moss a statement from the ACLU about the rights of community members vis a vis the police and walked to her RV. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The cop followed her. She got in and tried to close the door. Le Moss, not saying she was under arrest or detained, reached in and grabbed her right arm, pinching the skin as he twisted it behind her back, breaking it. She screamed her arm was broken, but his response was to call for backup. 4 more police cars arrived. She continued screaming for 911 and finally paramedics showed up. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The police said they were impounding her RV, which she lives in. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;She was taken to Watsonville hospital, waited hours for x-rays and painpills. She is charged with battery and an additional charge. X-rays confirm her arm was broken. She needs an attorney and community support. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is an account from Donna Deiss (with someadditions from her friend Shane). Donna has previously been harassed by rangers as part of the 'clear out the hippies' campaign at Three Tree Lot and the other lots around Lighthouse Fields. Recently the City's Parks and Recreation Department had its 'No RVs' signs painted over by state Rangers, for apparently violating state law and policy regarding parking (i.e. RVS are allowed to park). 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;See related stories: 'Harassment of Homeless in RVs, a Letter from Donna Deiss' at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/10/08/18452903.php , 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;'Superintendant Hammack Stonewalls on RV Ban in Coastal Parking Lots' at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/09/12/18447267.php , and 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;'Coastal Access Denied to Motorhomes and Trailers in Santa Cruz' at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/08/30/18444952.php for related stories. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;HOMELESSNESS AND POLITICAL REPRESSION, THE GREEN PARTY FAILS THE TEST IN SANTA CRUZ by Steven Argue
&lt;br/&gt;http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2001/12/5085.shtml&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 1 reply
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-05-10T19:00:32Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Cuba approves free sex-change operations</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/afca92ea-c6f8-44b4-a62b-934ac693e56a" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/afca92ea-c6f8-44b4-a62b-934ac693e56a</id>
    <updated>2008-06-07T05:47:03Z</updated>
    <published>2008-06-07T05:47:03Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Cuba approves free sex-change operations 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;By WILL WEISSERT, 
&lt;br/&gt;Associated Press Writer 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;HAVANA - Cuba has authorized sex-change operations and will offer them free for qualifying citizens, an official said Friday. The move is the latest in a series of changes implemented by President Raul Castro since he succeeded his elder brother, Fidel, in February. Raul Castro's daughter, Mariela, heads Cuba's National Center for Sex Education, which strongly backs the new policy. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Health Minister Jose Ramon Balaguer signed a resolution approving sex-change surgery, said an official at the center who spoke on condition of anonymity because the measure has not been formally published. The resolution will be posted on the Internet on Saturday, the official said.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The procedure would be available to Cubans for free as part of their country's health-care system.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The sex education center has said previously that 28 transsexual Cubans have asked to undergo the surgery and that Cuban doctors have trained with physicians from Belgium to prepare for the procedures.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;According to the center, a clinic for transsexual health will be created to perform the procedures, but it was not clear when it will start operating.&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://communistleft.tribe.net"&gt;Communist Left&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>steveargue2</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-06-07T05:47:03Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>ILWU to Shut Down Ports May 1 Demanding End to War in Iraq, Afghanistan</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/1e58817c-d002-44ac-863f-b88d13f047af" />
    <author>
      <name>steveargue2</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://communistleft.tribe.net/thread/1e58817c-d002-44ac-863f-b88d13f047af</id>
    <updated>2008-05-02T20:59:12Z</updated>
    <published>2008-03-02T18:22:00Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;[Liberation News is in agreement with the following article of the Internationalist Group and both have also actively advocated these kinds of industrial actions.]
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;For Workers Strikes Against the War!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;ILWU to Shut Down West Coast Ports May 1 Demanding End to War in Iraq, Afghanistan
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In a major step for the U.S. labor movement, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) has announced that it will shut down West Coast  ports on May 1, to demand an immediate end to the war and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the Middle East. In a February 22 letter to AFL-CIO president John Sweeney, ILWU  International president Robert McEllrath reported that at a recent coast-wide union meeting, "One of the resolutions adopted by caucus delegates called on longshore workers to stop work during the day shift on May 1, 2008 to express their opposition to the war in Iraq."
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is the first time in decades that an American union has decided to undertake industrial action against a U.S. war. It is doubly important that this mobilization of labor's power is to take place on May Day, the international workers day, which is not honored in the U.S. Moreover, the resolution voted by the ILWU delegates opposes not only the hugely unpopular war in Iraq, but also the war and occupation of Afghanistan (which Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama and Republican John McCain all want to expand). The motion to shut down the ports also demands the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the entire region, including the oil sheikdoms of the strategically important Persian/Arab Gulf.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Internationalist Group has fought from the moment U.S. troops invaded Afghanistan in September 2002 for American unions to strike against the war.  Despite the fact that millions have marched in the streets of Europe and the United States against the war in Iraq, the war goes on. Neither of the twin war parties of U.S. imperialism - Democrats and Republicans - and none of the capitalist candidates will stop this horrendous slaughter that has already killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. The only way to stop the  Pentagon killing machine is by mobilizing the power of a greater force - that of the international working class.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The action announced by the powerful West Coast dock workers union, to stop work to stop the war, should be taken up by unions and labor organizations throughout the United States and internationally. The ILWU should be commended for courageously taking the first step, and it is up to working people everywhere to back them up. Wherever support is strong enough, on May 1 there should be mass walkouts, sick-outs, labor marches, plant-gate meetings, lunch-time rallies, teach-ins. And the purpose of such actions should be not to beg the bourgeois politicians whose hands are covered with blood, having voted for every war budget for six and a half years, but a show of strength of the working people who make this country run, and who can shut it down!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Now is the time for bold class action. Opposition to the war is even greater in the U.S. working class than in the population as a whole, more than two-thirds of which wants to stop the war but is stymied by the capitalist political system. In his letter to Sweeney, the ILWU president asked "if other AFL-CIO affiliates are planning to participate in similar events." Labor militants should make sure the answer to that question is a resounding "yes!"
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;There should be no illusions that this will be easy. No doubt the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) bosses will try to get the courts to rule the stop-work action illegal. The ILWU leadership could get cold feet, since this motion was passed because of overwhelming support from the delegates despite attempts to stop it or, failing that, to water it down or limit the action. And the U.S. government could try to ban it on the grounds of "national security," just as Bush &amp;amp; Co. slapped a Taft-Hartley injunction on the docks during contract negotiations in the fall of 2002, saying that any work stoppage was a threat to the "war effort," and threatened to occupy the ports with troops!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The answer to every attempt to sabotage or undercut this first labor action against this war, and against Washington's broader "war on terror" which is intended to terrorize the world into submission must be to redouble efforts to bring out workers' power independent of the capitalist parties and politicians. If the ILWU work stoppage is successful, it will only be a small, but very important, beginning that must be generalized and deepened. It will take industrial-strength labor action to defeat the imperialist war abroad and the bosses' war on immigrants, oppressed minorities, poor and working people "at home."
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;ILWU in the Forefront of Labor Action Against the War
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Workers strike action against imperialist war isn't new - it just hasn't happened here for a long, long time. During World War I there were huge mass strikes in Germany against the battlefield carnage, culminating in the downfall of the kaiser in November 1918. A year earlier in Russia, working-class opposition to the war led to the overthrow of the tsar and the October Revolution led by Lenin and Trotsky's Bolsheviks. The Internationalist Group and League for the Fourth International call today for transport workers to "hot cargo" (refuse to handle) war shipments. In the early 1920s, Communist-led French dock workers did exactly that, boycotting ships carrying war materiel to suppress a colonial rebellion in the Rif region of Morocco, as they
&lt;br/&gt;also did during France's war in Indochina in the 1950s.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In the U.S., the ILWU struck in 1948 amid Cold War hysteria and in defiance of the "slave labor" Taft-Hartley Act to defend its union hiring hall against the bosses and government screaming about "reds" in the union leadership.  In 1953, at the height of McCarthyite witch-hunting, the ILWU called a four-day general strike in Hawaii of sugar, pineapple and dock workers over the jailing of seven union members for being communists. During the Vietnam War, socialist historian Isaac Deutscher said that he would trade all the peace marches for a single dock strike. The ILWU was the first U.S. union to oppose the Vietnam war, but during war and especially during the 1971 strike union leader Harry Bridges refused to stop the movement of military cargo. (Ship owners made use of this by falsely labeling cargo as "military" to evade picket lines and undermine the strike.) This betrayal went hand in hand with a "mechanization and modernization" contract that slashed union jobs.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As the U.S.-led imperialist invasion of Iraq was looming, in January 2003 train drivers in Scotland refused to move a freight train carrying munitions to a NATO military base. The next month, Italian railroad unionists and antiwar activists blocked NATO war trains by occupying the rails. In the United States, ILWU dock workers were a target of "anti-terrorist" government repression, as police fired supposedly "less than lethal" munitions point blank at an antiwar protest on the Oakland, California docks, injuring six longshore workers and arresting 25 people (who eventually won their legal case against the police).  And every year since the war started, the San Francisco/Oakland ILWU Local 10 has voted for motions for labor action against the war. Usually they were voted down at caucuses and conventions of the ILWU, but not this time.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Last May, Local 10 longshoremen and Local 34 ships clerks refused to cross picket lines set up by the Oakland Teachers Association and antiwar activists, defying arbitrators' orders by refusing to work ships of the notorious antiunion outfit, Stevedoring Services of America (see "Oakland Dock Workers Honor Picket, Shut Down War Cargo Shipper," The Internationalist No. 26, July 2007). In the aftermath of that action, the union issued a call for a Labor Conference to Stop the War that would "plan workplace rallies, labor
&lt;br/&gt;mobilizations in the streets and strike action against the war." The Call to Action stated:
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"ILWU Local 10 has repeatedly warned that the so-called 'war on terror' is really a war on working people and democratic rights. Around the country, hundreds of unions and labor councils have passed motions condemning the war, but that has not stopped the war. We need to use labor's muscle to stop the war by mobilizing union power in the streets, at the plant gates and on the docks to force the immediate and total withdrawal of all U. S. troops from Afghanistan and Iraq."
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As the conference date approached, the union was the target of several police attacks, including a vicious cop assault on two black dock workers from San Francisco working in the port of Sacramento. Some 250 demonstrators from every ILWU local in Northern California rallied in their defense outside the courthouse. Their trial to be set march 18 at a hearing will encounter even larger demonstrations.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The Internationalist Group and its union supporters helped build and attended the October 20 conference, along with some 150 labor and socialist activists from the Bay Area, elsewhere in California and across the country. At the meeting, a particular focus was resistance to the Transportation Workers Identification Card (TWIC), which threatens minority workers and the union hiring hall, and which the Democratic Party in particular has been pushing in order to carry out a purge of dock workers in the name of the "war on terror."
&lt;br/&gt;Not long after that conference, a federal judge ordered Local 10 elections canceled and replaced by a Labor Department-run vote, on the eve of 2008 contract bargaining. Federal agents even invaded the union hall to enforce their order. This action is a threat to the independence of all unions.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This set the stage for the recent longshore-warehouse caucus, which voted a motion for a 24-hour "No Peace, No Work Holiday" against the war. The resolution was introduced in Local 10 by Jack Heyman, who also presented the motion for the 24 April 1999 coast-wide port shutdown demanding freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal, the former Black Panther and renowned radical journalist who has been on Pennsylvania's death row for the last quarter century.  Although the union tops maneuvered to prevent Heyman from being elected as a delegate to the Coast Caucus, the motion passed in Local 10. At the Caucus, the delegate from Local 34 referred to the October Labor Conference to Stop the War as the origin of the motion. 
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;At the close of the Caucus on February 8, there was a vigorous debate on the resolution. The union tops tried to stop it, to no avail. They kept asking, "are you sure you want to do this action." The delegates overwhelmingly said "yes." Even conservative trade unionists, including veterans of the Vietnam War, were getting up saying the government is lying to us, we've had it with this war, we've got to put a stop to it now. So instead the bureaucrats tried to gut the motion, which was cut down from 24 hours to 8, and changed into a "stop-work" meeting (covered by a contract clause) instead of a straight-out shutdown, thinking that this would lessen opposition from the employers. In the end there was a voice vote and only three delegates out of 100 voted against.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The efforts to undercut the motion continue, as is to be expected from a leadership which, like the rest of the pro-capitalist labor bureaucracy, seeks "labor peace" with the bosses. In his letter to Sweeney, ILWU International president tried to present the action as an effort to "express support for the troops by bringing them home safely," although the motion voted by the delegates says nothing of the sort. Playing the "support our troops" game is an effort to swear loyalty to the broader aims of U.S. imperialism. It aids the warmongers, when what's needed is independent working-class action against the system that produces endless imperialist war. Yet despite the efforts to water it down and distort it, the May 1 action voted for by the ILWU delegates is a call to use labor's muscle to put an end to the war.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Mobilize Labor's Power to Defeat the Bosses' War!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;For the West Coast dock workers union to shut down the ports against the war means a big step forward in the class struggle. The Internationalist Group has uniquely fought for workers strikes against the war, when all the popular-front "peace" coalitions dismissed this and even some shamefaced ex-Trotskyists refused to call for it, saying it had "no resonance" among the workers (see our October 20007 Special Supplement to The Internationalist, "Why We Fight For Workers Strikes Against the War [and the opportunists Don't]"). With signs, banners and propaganda we have sought to drive home the central lesson that it is necessary to defeat the imperialist war abroad and the bosses' war "at home" by mobilizing the power of the workers movement independent of and against the capitalist parties.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;That means fighting the war mobilization down the line. First and  foremost, this means actively joining the struggle for immigrant rights as the government turns undocumented working people into "the enemy within." Class-conscious workers should demand full citizenship rights for all immigrants. Last year, San Francisco Local 10 voted to stop work and join marches for immigrant rights on May 1, but this was opposed by the employers PMA and sabotaged at the last minute by the union tops. Shamefully, Local 13 in Los Angeles, a majority Mexican American port, made no protest when police attacked immigrant rights protesters that same day. Today, as the ICE immigration police stage Gesta