Bigot Trump’s Military Ban Won’t Stop Fight for Trans Rights

By Sally Jane Black

The Supreme Court voted in January to uphold the Trump regime’s ban on transgender people serving in the imperialist U.S. military. The ban is an attack on the trans community, designed to whip up transphobia and continue the process of forcing trans people back into the closet. This has been the administration’s agenda since they took office. This move baits people into promoting the idea that those who are fighting for trans rights should also aspire to serve the U.S. military, reinforcing the lie that the U.S. military is a force of progress for oppressed people. The truth is, the U.S. military is the armed wing of the U.S. capitalist class, destroying other countries that stand up to the exploitation and destruction of imperialism. Even with access to the military, trans people would not be made equal in society, nor would participation in imperialist violence bring liberation for any oppressed people.

LGBTQ people consistently experience a higher rate of sexual and physical assaults, arbitrary and outdated restrictions for trans service members, and other forms of control and abuse that are meant to force them to submit their own interest to the interests of U.S. imperialism. The military has preyed on LGBTQ people and our lack of access to healthcare and other basic needs in order to convince us it’s in our interest to bomb and kill our fellow workers in other countries. The answer to this ban is not to demand trans people be allowed to serve, but to demand healthcare, housing, education, and jobs, anti-discrimination rules, and solidarity with the working class worldwide. The answer to the transphobia fueling this ban is solidarity among the working class and the oppressed people of the world.

Stop Imperialist U.S./ CIA Intervention In Venezuela

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro addresses his supporters at a rally on January 23.

U.S. Is Trying to Seize Venezuela’s Oil

On Jan 10, Pres. Nicolás Maduro was inaugurated for a second term as President of Venezuela with three times the votes of the opposition candidate. In response to Maduro’s overwhelming democratic victory, Trump and his Wall St. coalition are ramping up the war drive against Venezuela. The US State Department have imposed sanctions, blocking Venezuela from the oil trade. U.S. sanctions against Venezuela have already cost its people $20 billion. Sanctions are an act of war whose purpose is to impoverish the people to attempt to turn them against the government. They have failed. For three days in a row, massive rallies of workers and youth in support of the Bolivarian revolution have take place. Protests against U.S. intervention have been held all around the world.

The U.S. government bribed a few officers and encouraged them to attempt a coup. They failed. The vast majority of the military are loyal to the people, refusing to become puppets for the super-rich.  Now Trump is talking about “a military option.” All this is done to seize the oil and make Venezuela another country that is bled to death by foreign banks and owned by foreign capitalists.

“In our country, there’s the largest certified oil reserves in the world. Those who lead the empire in the United States want to put their hands on it as they did in Iraq and Libya. That wealth belongs to us.”
—President Nicolás Maduro

Against the will of the people, Trump & Co. handpicked their own candidate who went to George Washington University, a school known as a CIA nursery.  They picked Juan Guaidó, the candidate of the rich, oil companies and a C.I.A. puppet.  The U.S. attempted to get a United Nations resolution against Venezuela.  They have failed. For years the CIA has underestimated the determination of the Venezuelan working class that wants justice, independence and sovereignty.

The Maduro government has not only loyalty among the military but also has the support of popular militias in working class and poor neighborhoods. Pres. Maduro grew up in a poor neighborhood. He was a bus driver and president of their union. He is a man of the people and is Mestizo/Indigenous/African.

His government built 2.5 million affordable homes and directly delivers 6 million food boxes to families every 3 weeks. Healthcare and education are free in Venezuela. Where do the funds for this come from? The Venezuelan government pays for these programs with money from their oil industry. U.S. oil corporations hate this because money is going to the people instead of into their wallets.

Trump, his advisor John Bolton, V.P. Pence, Sec. of State Pompeo, and other cronies all have ties to the oil industry, including Exxon-Mobil. The for-profit weapons industry (companies like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon) are also thirsty to cash in on Trump’s war drive.

The current attempt by the ultra-right wing to illegally seize control of the government has been cheered on by Wall St. Reuters News writes “the excitement has spread…to the trading rooms of Wall Street, where investors have driven up the prices of the country’s defaulted bonds on hopes for a new government that will be more likely to resume debt payments.” They want the government treasury to be turned over to them rather than to peoples’ needs.

U.S.-LED CHILEAN COUP LED TO A BLOODBATH OF THE PEOPLE, POVERTY AND RULE OF THE GENERALS

The US military has attacked Latin American and Caribbean countries 56 times since 1945, and once in 2002 in Venezuela. Elliot Abrams, who was appointed US special envoy to Venezuela on January 25 played a leading role in the attempted 2002 against Chavez. He also helped to arm the right-wing death squads responsible for mass murder in Nicaragua and El Salvador. The U.S. has carried out many coups against other elected governments such as Chile in 1973 and Honduras in 2014 after which dictators were installed to destroy social benefits. There is not one democratic goal in U.S. intervention, that’s just the lie to cover up their evil intentions.

January 29: Protesters at a demonstration in solidarity with the Venezuelan people, called by the New Orleans Workers Group. Photo: Mya Ebanks

STAND UP NOW WITH MADURO AND THE PEOPLE!

The Venezuelan people and working class New Orleanians have a common enemy: the ultra-rich who are suffocating communities here. The military buildup against Venezuela is at the expense of food stamps, schools, and other social programs at home. Oil companies and arms dealers are out to make profits no matter who suffers.

Republicans and Democrats Hate Any Government That Puts Workers & Poor First.

Once again, we see that the feud between the Republican Party and the Democratic Party is superficial.  Just like the European imperialists who criticize Trump but unite against Venezuela, these two parties of Wall Street come together to pursue imperialist intervention on behalf of the oil companies and military profiteers.

WORKERS HERE AND IN VENEZUELA HAVE COMMON NEEDS AND A COMMON ENEMY – U.S. IMPERIALISM

We workers here in the U.S. have no interest in supporting a CIA intervention in Venezuela or anywhere else, but a lot to gain when workers anywhere can liberate themselves from imperialism and the rule of the super-rich like they have done in Venezuela.  Hands off Venezuela! U.S/CIA out of Latin America!

Indian Women’s Militant Protest Spans 300 Miles

On Jan. 1, 5.5 million women in the India state of Kerala formed a human wall in an act of defiance against gender oppression. The immediate inspiration came from growing protests happening around the Sabarimala hill temple which prohibits women of childbearing age from entering. Back in October, India’s Supreme Court had declared the ban unconstitutional.

Mobilizations began occurring after several women were denied their right to enter into the temple by priests and their far-right defenders. A fightback was organized by the Communist Party of India (Marxist), which co-governs the state of Kerala as part of the Left Democratic Front. Most participants in the ensuing movement were not women who necessarily wanted to visit the temple themselves. They participated in the action because they recognized it as part of the broader struggle for women’s rights.

The chain was 386 miles long, coursing through the 14 districts from Kasargod in the north to Thiruvananthapuram, the state capital, in the south. Men formed a parallel human chain in a show of support to the women.

Brinda Karat, a leader in the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and former general secretary of the All India Democratic Women’s Association said, “Today’s wall of women was aimed at strengthening gender equality; women should no longer be pushed into dark corners.”

End U.S./Saudi Genocide in Yemen

Graphic by Emory Douglas

Genocide is being waged on the Yemeni people by the Saudi monarchy and the US government. On January 27, the US/Saudi coalition dropped US-made bombs on a camp for displaced people in Yemen’s northwestern Hajjah, killing at least 8 civilians and wounding many more. The bombing of refugee camps is a crime against humanity. In an attack on the Yemeni people of Hodeida just 2 days prior, the Red Sea Silos which house 51,000 metric tons of wheat were struck with mortar shells laying waste to critical food supplies while Yemen is facing “the worse famine in 100 years,” according to U.N. officials.

We, the workers and oppressed of New Orleans, must show solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Yemen. We must speak out against these atrocities and demand that the US government withdraw all military aid and cancel all arms sales to the murderous Saudi regime.

Emory Douglas: Black Panther, Revolutionary Artist

While in youth detention in San Francisco, Emory Douglas found his art.  After meeting Huey Newton and the Black Panther Party, Douglas put his talents at the service of the organization and the people. Douglas was bold in his cartoons.  He moved your heart and your mind depicting the suffering of Black people in capitalist white America.  Through his cartoons which appeared in every issue of the Black Panther Party Paper, Douglas fearlessly portrayed the right of Black America to self defense against racist police terror.

Emory Douglas is a giant among artists who used their talent in the service of the workers and the poor in their revolutionary struggle for justice.  He put this above money and fame. Young progressive artists of today should seek to emulate his contributions.

 

The Black Panther Party Led the Way for Black Liberation

By Malcolm Suber

“The BPP members made sacrifices for our collective liberation that can never be repaid short of the overthrowing the capitalist ruling class and ushering in the rule of the working class.”

The year 1968 was a high point of the Black Liberation struggle in the USA. The oppressed Black masses had decidedly turned away from the non-violent, assimilationist civil rights movement.  The passage of the civil rights bill in 1964 and the voting rights bill of 1965 had to some extent marked the end of civil rights demands.  The Black masses were seeking an end to government and extra-governmental oppression characterized by constant police terror.  They also wanted better living and working conditions and a brighter future for their children. Especially in the northern, mid-western and west coast ghettos the Black masses were seeking a new vision of what genuine liberation would look like. Desegregation would not satisfy their thirst for genuine freedom and self-determination.

The Black Liberation Movement (BLM) in the early 1960s had been about organizing and mobilizing the masses of Black people and their allies to demand political and social equality for Black people, especially in the apartheid-like conditions of the South. The 1960’s were also the era of the anti-imperialist national liberation movements by the peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Countless people were moved to become part of this worldwide fightback.  Many of them embraced the clarion call for revolution!

By 1963, the Black masses in the ghettos of US cities began to explode in righteous indignation to the wretched conditions that existed in their neighborhoods.  They began to see clearly that the white capitalist ruled USA was not going to own up to its racism and discrimination and voluntarily change these conditions.  It would take the resistance of the Black people themselves to force the ruling class to improve their conditions.

The civil rights leaders of the NAACP, the SCLC and CORE had rallied people around the slogan- “free by 63”.  They told the masses that it was possible that the formal political and social equality of Black people could be accomplished by 1963, the hundredth anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. This was part of the energy that produced the August 1963 March on Washington.

Stepping into the political landscape of the early 1960s were the Black Muslims whose chief spokesman, Malcolm X, challenged the civil rights movement as being too assimilationist and not having tactics that would mobilize the Black working-class masses in the ghettos of America. Malcolm X and other Black nationalists lambasted “non-violence” as a brake on the BLM and instead advocated identifying with national liberation movements that were taking up armed struggle for their freedom.

By 1965 “Black Power” had eclipsed “we shall overcome” as the slogan that captivated the imagination of revolutionary minded freedom fighters.

Stepping into this rapidly developing BLM, the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded by Bobby Seal and Huey P. Newton in Oakland, CA in October 1966.  They began a campaign of arming themselves and monitoring police activity.  They relied on California laws that allowed open carry of weapons. They openly confronted police who were brutalizing Black residents.  They modeled themselves after the armed self-defense of Black communities in the South that had been led by Robert Williams in North Carolina and the Deacons for Defense in Louisiana.

The BPP became a fixture in everyone’s consciousness after they marched into the California state capitol bearing arms in 1967.  This action shocked the white capitalist government and brought pride to the oppressed Black masses. Finally, an organization was emerging that would stand up to capitalist Amerikkka and organize the Black masses for revolution.

The BPP grew rapidly and had chapters all across the USA.  They openly declared themselves to be revolutionary nationalists and elaborated their aims in the famous 10-point program.  The BPP characterized itself as an armed propaganda unit spreading revolution in the USA.  They took an anti-imperialist stance in support of the national liberation struggles, especially in support of the National Liberation Front in Vietnam.

The BPP created a weekly newspaper that was widely circulated all over the USA. The BPP paper captured the mood of the Black masses.  Of special universal interest were the powerful cartoons drawn by Emery Douglas that graphically portrayed the fight for liberation and the oppression of the pigs (the police).

The BPP grew swiftly and soon attracted the ire of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI. Hoover declared the BPP as the greatest threat to domestic tranquility.  All police forces, from the federal to the local level were ordered to harass and eliminate the BPP.  Many BPP members were assassinated and many others arrested.

Government repression and the heavy infiltration of agent provocateurs ultimately caused the demise of the BPP as chapters pursued their own agenda. Whatever the shortcomings of the BPP, it was founded as a revolutionary organization and inspired the BLM.  The BPP members made sacrifices for our collective liberation that can never be repaid short of overthrowing the capitalist ruling class and ushering in the rule of the working class.

 

MLK’s Radical Legacy

As we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day we will hear and see a whitewashed version of the life and works of Dr. King. We will be bombarded with the narrative that King was the peaceful negro who had a dream, a watered down activist who got equality for his people by leading a march. We will be told that his dream has become a reality. That King’s Civil Rights Movement was successful and so now we have a day off from work. We must be wary of narratives that portray Dr. King in this light.

We must look back to the things that King was fighting for, particularly in the years before he was assassinated, to get a better picture of the radical spirit that was emerging. MLK Jr. was not just a leader, he was a product of the struggle. A man whose stance and methods of struggle were in the process of evolving. King was awakening to the destructive effects of the US war machine and how war was not only being waged against the Vietnamese but also against workers and oppressed people right here in America.

In April 1967 at Riverside Church, King spoke boldly against the imperialist war on Vietnam: “When I first decided to take a firm stand against the war in Vietnam, I was subjected to the most bitter criticism, by the press, by individuals, and even by some fellow civil rights leaders. There were those who said that I should stay in my place, that I was a civil rights leader and that these two issues did not mix, and I should stick with civil rights. Well, I had only one answer for that and it was simply the fact that I have struggled too long and too hard now to get rid of segregation in public accommodations to end up at this point in my life segregating my moral concerns. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

Dr. King also fought alongside the Memphis sanitation workers as they demanded better wages, safer working conditions, and freedom from racial discrimination. King supported the strike of the workers, marching defiantly through the militarized streets of Memphis. King knew that if we did not fight for workers against the Capitalist Class structure, that true freedom was not won. He knew that the battle must be waged until every worker had access to housing, a good job, and a government devoted to the betterment of its citizens and not trumped up democracy used to justify imperialist wars! That we who believe in true freedom cannot rest until we win the Workers Struggle.

On this day we the working class salute Dr. Martin Luther King for his commitment to fight for workers’ rights. We lift up King’s name and recognize his deeds as an example of how we must fight the evils of racism, economic injustice, and imperialist war. We must all wage relentless struggle until our collective dream of freedom is realized.

Read here a collection of his words:

“There are three major social evils . . . the evil of war, the evil of economic injustice, and the evil of racial injustice.”      

“When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.”

“When I first decided to take a firm stand against the war in Vietnam, I was subjected to the most bitter criticism, by the press, by individuals, and even by some fellow civil rights leaders. There were those who said that I should stay in my place, that I was a civil rights leader and that these two issues did not mix and I should stick with civil rights. Well, I had only one answer for that and it was simply the fact that I have struggled too long and too hard now to get rid of segregation in public accommodations to end up at this point in my life segregating my moral concerns.  And I made it very clear that I recognized that justice was indivisible. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. ”

“It is disgraceful that a Congress that can vote upward of $35 billion a year for a senseless, immoral war in Vietnam cannot vote a weak $2 billion dollars to carry on our all-too-feeble efforts to bind up the wound of our nation’s 35 million poor. This is nothing short of a Congress engaging in political guerrilla warfare against the defenseless poor of our nation.”

“The users of naval guns, millions of tons of bombs, and revolting napalm cannot speak to Negroes about violence. Only those who are fighting for peace have the moral authority to lecture on nonviolence.”

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”

“All over the globe men are revolting against old systems of exploitation and oppression and out of the wombs of a frail world new systems of justice and equality are being born. The shirtless and barefoot people of the land are rising up as never before. “The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light.” We in the West must support these revolutions.”

“A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: “This is not just.” It will look at our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America and say: “This is not just.” The Western arrogance of feeling that it has everything to teach others and nothing to learn from them is not just.”

“The fact is that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor.  It must be demanded by the oppressed—that’s the long, sometimes tragic and turbulent story of history. And if people who are enslaved sit around and feel that freedom is some kind of lavish dish that will be passed out on a silver platter by the federal government or by the white man while the Negro merely furnishes the appetite, he will never get his freedom. ”

“We can all get more together than we can apart; we can get more organized together than we can apart. And this is the way we gain power. Power is the ability to achieve purpose, power is the ability to affect change, and we need power. What is power? Walter Reuther said once that “power is the ability of a labor union like UAW to make the most powerful corporation in the world—General Motors—say yes when it wants to say no.” That’s power.  And I want you to stick it out so that you will be able to make Mayor Loeb and others say yes, even when they want to say no.”

“Whenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth. One day our society must come to see this. One day our society will come to respect the sanitation worker if it is to survive, for the person who picks up our garbage, in the final analysis, is as significant as the physician, for if he doesn’t do his job, diseases are rampant. All labor has dignity. ”

“Now our struggle is for genuine equality, which means economic equality. For we know now that it isn’t enough to integrate lunch counters. What does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesn’t earn enough money to buy a hamburger and a cup of coffee?”

“We look around and we see thousands and millions of people making inadequate wages every day. Not only do they work in our hospitals, they work in our hotels, they work in our laundries, they work in domestic service, and they find themselves underemployed. You see, no labor is really menial unless you’re not getting adequate wages. People are always talking about menial labor. But if you’re getting a good wage . . . that isn’t menial labor. What makes it menial is the income, the wages. ”

“I do not come to you as a prophet of doom; I come to you as one who has accepted the challenge of our urban ghettos. This is a more difficult challenge than the one we face in the South, for we will not be dealing with constitutional rights; we will be dealing with fundamental human rights. It is a constitutional right for a man to be able to vote, but the human right to a decent house is as categorically imperative and morally absolute as was that constitutional right. It is not a constitutional right that men have jobs, but it is a human right.”

“It is a bitter and ironic truth that in today’s prosperity, millions of Negroes live in conditions identical with or worse than the Depression thirties. For hundreds of thousands there is no unemployment insurance, no social security, no Medicare, no minimum wage. The laws do not cover their form of employment. For millions of others, there is no employment or under-employment. In some ghettos, the present rate of unemployment is higher than that of the thirties. Education for our children is second class, and in the higher levels, so limited it has no significance as a lever for uplift. The tenements we inhabited thirty years ago, which were old then, are three decades more dilapidated. Discrimination still smothers initiative, and humiliates the daily life of young and old. The progress of the nation has not carried the Negro with it; it has favored a few and bypassed the millions.”

“Do you know that most of the poor people in our country are working every day? And they are making wages so low that they cannot begin to function in the mainstream of the economic life of our nation.”

“…it is criminal to have people working on a full-time basis and a full-time job getting part-time income.”

“Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak…”

“I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today — my own government. For the sake of those boys, for the sake of this government, for the sake of hundreds of thousands trembling under our violence, I cannot be silent.”

Amazon Warehouse Workers Push for Unionization

New York workers at Amazon’s Staten Island fulfillment center have publicly launched a campaign to unionize. Employees backing the union have come forward with many concerns about wages and work conditions. These include safety issues, inadequate pay, grueling 12-hour shifts with unreasonable hourly quotas and insufficient breaks, as well as humiliation and abuse.
Warehouse worker, Rashad Long, said, “They talk to you like you’re nothing—all they care about is their numbers. They talk to you like you’re a robot.”

This push comes at a time when Amazon is expected to get more than $1 billion in tax breaks and grants from New York City as part of the Long Island City deal. Tax breaks for corporations come at the expense of the mass of working people. A city’s budget should reflect the pressing needs of the people for affordable housing, childcare, education, health care, and more. Working class New Yorkers (as elsewhere) are struggling to pay rent and put food on the table. Amazon, on the other hand, already enjoys massive profits gained from the sweat of its global workforce (and an army of workers in the U.S. Postal Service, USPS, etc); Amazon CEO, Jeff Bezos, is the richest man in the world.

As the Retail Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU) president, Stuart Appelbaum recently said, “If the taxpayers are giving Amazon $3 billion, then taxpayers have the right to demand that Amazon stop being a union-busting company.” The RWDSU is the union that the Staten Island workers are organizing with. The union has also backed the organizing push among workers at Whole Foods, which Amazon acquired last year. As of now, Amazon’s U.S. workforce is not unionized. These initial organizing efforts are, therefore, highly significant.

We Demand Working Class New Orleanians Get Free Tickets and Parking for Saints Games

WE PAID FOR THEM ALREADY!

The Bensons Have Gotten Hundreds of MILLIONS of our tax dollars
We pay the taxes! We won’t be locked out!

Tickets for Saints/Steelers game $400-$2,000

The Benson family, the richest in all of Louisiana (oil companies take their profits out of state) has received hundreds of millions of dollars in state subsidies out of public funds paid for by working class New Orleanians. In 2018 alone, $52 million went to the Superdome from hotel taxes instead of going to the budget of the city.

The Bensons collected $94 million from 2009 to 2012. The state used $85 million in tax money to upgrade the Superdome which the Bensons used rent and tax free. The state guaranteed the Bensons $12.5 million yearly in revenue as a result. Champions Square, owned by the city, brought the Bensons more millions, even though they are currently behind on funds to the city for the property.

Saints’ games alone bring in $63 million in revenue and another $14 million for parking. Incredibly the state even gave them $2.8 million in a tax refund from taxes the state collects from out of town players’ salaries.

We’re happy for the few folks whose lay-away was paid off by Gayle Benson at the Walmart on Tchoupitoulas. Tons of media were there to record this act of holiday “generosity.” But its purpose was anything but wonderful. This was just a stunt to make Benson look good while she rips off the people of New Orleans.

Charter School Workers Strike, Get New Contract

In December, teachers and other employees in Chicago’s Acero charter school network went on strike for five days. Acero encompasses 15 campuses across the city. The workers are members of the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU).
Over the five days, hundreds of teachers and other Acero workers took to the streets along with parents, students, and other allies. The strikers demanded a contract that would guarantee better conditions for teachers and students.

On December 14, the union vote for the new contract took place across all 15 schools. Union members voted overwhelmingly for the new contract (98%).
The contract provides for smaller class sizes, a reduced school year and equal pay with district [non-charter] teachers.

Significantly, the new contract also includes sanctuary school language, which bans Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from school property, denies ICE access to student records without a legal mandate, and more.

The wave of teacher strikes that spread through many states (and Puerto Rico) earlier in 2018 affected mainly public schools. The strike in Chicago, however, is the first example of a charter school worker strike in the country. This should send a message not just to charter school executives in Chicago, but to charter school employees all over the U.S. that they can organize just like public school employees, and with the support of students, parents, and other community members, they can win.