The Next Five Targets for Take ‘Em Down NOLA

E.D. WHITE
As a Supreme Court Justice, White ruled with the majority in Plessy vs. Ferguson, legalizing the Jim Crow system. He was a member of the Crescent City White League, which murdered Black and white police officers in an attempted coup. He was a former Confederate soldier and segregationist.

ANDREW JACKSON
A genocidal, lying racist who owned 150 people as slaves, Andrew Jackson betrayed the enslaved people to whom he promised freedom after the Battle of New Orleans. He led military forces against the “Negro Fort” in Florida where 270 Black people were murdered in 1816. He authorized the Indian Removal Act of 1830 which caused the ethnic cleansing and forced migration of 60,000 Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, Seminole and other indigenous nations.

MCDONOUGH
The famed plantation owner whose name is on many local schools, McDonough’s statue in Lafayette Square serves as a monument to a man who owned slaves, fought to protect slavery, and wrote that slavery was good for African people. The money he donated to public education created the first separate and unequal schools in New Orleans.

BIENVILLE
Credited with founding New Orleans, Bienville brought the first enslaved people to the city in 1708. He used enslaved and convict labor to build the settlement after it was established in 1718 and stole millions of acres of land from Choctaw, Chickasaw, Chitimatcha, Natchez and other indigenous nations for France. He expelled Jews from the colony and restricted the rights and freedom of African people in Louisiana through the Code Noir colonial laws.

HENRY CLAY
A statue of South Carolina slave-owner Henry Clay stands in Lafayette Square, honoring a man who was responsible for the Missouri Compromise that upheld slavery until the Civil War.

Peoples’ Assembly Women’s Dinner Wednesdays

The New Orleans Peoples Assembly Organizing Committee meets every Wednesday. The first Wednesday of every month is dedicated to our monthly Women’s Dinner Wednesday. On Women’s Dinner Wednesday, we gather as working class women to connect, build in strength, and become informed about the specific systems that affect our lives most, and how to overcome oppression that hinders and harms our abilities to be healthy and whole. We are bold in the fact that we center working class women, which includes those impacted by homelessness.

During our first two meetings, we focused on the history of International Working Women’s day and what it means to us now, and also the “Work Week Ordinance” that the New Orleans Hospitality Workers Committee is advancing on behalf of the 88,000 hospitality workers and all other workers in the city. This is important because women make up such a large force of the working class, and the impact on our lives, children and families is straining and oppressive.

Audre Lorde said, “I am not free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are very different from my own.” This is why we call out to all working class women to join forces to organize on behalf of our collective liberation.

Contact us at:
Facebook.com/NewOrleansPeoplesAssemblyOrganizingCommittee/

Residents of Gordon Plaza Fight Decades of Environmental Racism

RELOCATION IS THE ONLY OPTION

By Sanashihla

Around the world, people are dealing with the impacts of environmental injustice. Of course, Black and Brown communities deal with it more, because these are the communities most vulnerable to being targeted for oil and other corporate plants. What used to be known as the plantation, is now too often the corporate plant, which come with their toxicity.

Whether dealing with climate change, or blatant disregard for the earth and communities across the United States, we never have to go far to come up close and personal with environmental injustice.

Let us examine the daily experience of the residents of Gordon Plaza, who are entire community of predominately Black residents who were sold homes built on a TOXIC dump. Periodically, they have seen trash work its way up from the depths of the soil, up through their grass into their yards. Their soil was tested, and over 100 high level TOXINS were found.

What is the story of the residents of Gordon Plaza?
“Residents of Gordon Plaza, Inc. is a group of neighbors that purchased houses in good faith only to find out that our houses were constructed on top of hazardous waste. We are New Orleans families, African American, trapped in homes built on the Agriculture Street Dump, a former city waste dump that was designated a Superfund site for high levels of contamination, including hazardous waste that can cause cancer. We suffer and some have died from cancer. We want to relocate.

From 1967 through 1984, city land use decisions approved residential developments on the Agriculture Street Dump. These developments included the Gordon Plaza single-family homes where we currently live, the abandoned Press Park townhomes built by the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO), and the abandoned Robert Moton Elementary School built by the Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB). The fact that homes and a school were built on the Agriculture Street Dump was not a concern for city officials. Families who bought homes in Gordon Plaza were never told that the land was a former city waste dump. Again, our families are predominantly African American.

Beginning in 1999, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) dug up, piled, and hauled off a portion of the contaminated soil on the Agriculture Street Landfill Superfund Site, while our families still lived in our homes. Public health and environmental experts criticized the EPA for jeopardizing the health of residents and failing to provide an effective and humane solution. Although the EPA detected 17 feet of highly contaminated soil, the agency removed only two feet. Today, at least 15 feet of the contaminated soil remains beneath homes, yards, streets, and other areas of the former Agriculture Street Dump.

There was a class-action lawsuit that ended with a $14.2 million settlement award in which the lawyers and a court-appointed administrator were paid $7.1 million, one-half of the settlement award. The remaining half was distributed among the 5,053 people represented in the lawsuit, resulting in an average pay-out of less than $2,000. With a few thousand dollars, the families living in Gordon Plaza cannot relocate from this toxic neighborhood. We cannot purchase new homes, nor can we sell our current homes for what our homes would be worth if we were not on a toxic Superfund Site.”
The city of New Orleans is responsible for giving permission to developers to build these homes on the Agriculture Street Landfill, and now take no responsibility. THIS is an inhumane environmental injustice, Black Lives Matter, lack of equity issue. The New Orleans Peoples Assembly organizing committee stands with the residents of Gordon Plaza in their call for complete relocation.

This is a Complete Injustice

We Stand with the Residents of Gordon Plaza

Police Murders Continue Non-Stop. We Must Demand Justice.

By Gabriel Mangano

The police murders of working class and oppressed people continues without end, rising to 277 by early April.

Especially targeted are African Americans who are 31% of police murder victims but 60% of unarmed victims. In Brooklyn, 4 police shot Saheed Vassel, a mentally ill Jamaican immigrant, 10 times within 10 seconds of confronting him. He was holding only a showerhead and was known as harmless and helpful to people throughout his neighborhood. Demonstrators demanded justice and condemned the lack of mental health services.

In late March, police in Sacramento, CA shot Stephon Clark, a 22-year old father of two, 8 times in the side and back in his grandmother’s back yard. He was holding a cell phone. Thousands demonstrated against this murder blocking freeways and forcing the cancellation of two NBA games. And in Louisiana, right-wing state Attorney General Jeff Landry refused to indict the cop who murdered Alton Sterling. Even after a video shows Officer Salamoni telling Mr. Sterling that he would murder him if he moved, he was not jailed, just fired.

As of yet none of these murderers have been indicted.

In California, state legislators proposed a law that would change when lethal force can be used to “only when necessary” from “when reasonable”. All this will change, however, is the language the police will use to justify their killings.
Since the murder of Trayvon Martin, millions of people have demanded justice for these police and vigilante killings. And many reforms have been proposed and put into practice. However, all of these reforms are doomed to failure. For example, civilian review boards have been highly touted as a way to control brutal “bad apples”. Yet after years of struggle, the Newark, New Jersey civilian review board was effectively broken by a judge’s injunction restricting its subpoena and investigatory powers. Body cameras are another minimal solution that has proven unworkable as police routinely turn them off. As well, district attorneys often fail to indict, and juries rarely convict those who are indicted despite overwhelming graphic evidence of what would clearly be murder for anyone but a cop.

These reforms and other false cures cannot succeed because they are based on the lie that the police are here to serve and protect everyone equally. The role of the police is to serve and protect the ruling class, the owners and their property. And they can only do this by reigning terror on working class and minority communities. The rich know they stole their wealth from our labor, and they will use every means to keep us down.

While the revolutionary workers know that these reforms, although they may save a few lives, will not solve the problem of police terror and that the murder of working class men and women will continue unabated, we still fight for these reforms. Only in this way can we expose the rottenness of the capitalist system and the murderous thugs who help protect it. Only the overthrow of capitalism can finally end this plague on working and oppressed people.

Black mothers and babies die at more than double the rate of white mothers and babies.

Criminal racism, cuts to healthcare are to blame.

Black Lives Matter

The State Can’t Tax the Rich, But It Can Suffocate Our Colleges?

By Nathalie Clarke and Dylan Borne

In spite of his 2015 campaign promises to reallocate savings to health services and education, Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat who supposedly has our best interests at heart, showed himself willing to slash education before anything else. To compensate for a $1 billion deficit, he declared on January 22nd that he would cut the Louisiana state budget by $994 million.
On January 31st his office announced that he had cut the budget by $672 million since being elected, cutting $11.9 million from higher education—a success in “fiscal responsibility.” Since Bobby Jindal was elected in 2008, funding for public colleges has been cut and tuition has persistently increased, going from 39% of universities’ revenue to 71% in 2015.

This cut is just the continuation of capitalist politics: it targets working families that cannot afford out-of-state or private universities. In 2016, when Edwards threatened the Louisiana Legislature with a $131 million budget cut, SUNO declared that 50% of adjunct faculty would be released, eliminating certain courses. In 2010 UNO faced $13 million in cutbacks. As a result, multiple programs were eliminated.

The cuts will destroy TOPS, a scholarship that covers tuition for hundreds of thousands of students. Although TOPS has its own problems (it’s based on ACT scores, and because of how expensive ACT training is, privileged kids almost always do better), it’s better than nothing, and the new budget cuts will probably cut it by 80%. The last shred of hope for many working families to send their children to college is gone. Costs of attendance have continuously been increasing; LSU now costs $30,000.

We call these cuts “capitalist” because they never fail to benefit the rich at the expense of workers. When the government of Louisiana decides to cut the budget, it never affects the military, the growing prison system, or the NOPD and their surveillance cameras, because those are “mandatory spending.” Schools, mental health services, Medicaid, youth programs, and daycare are all “discretionary,” or optional. While the rich contribute only 4.2% of their income in taxes to these programs, the working class pays 10%. So not only do workers see our programs cut, but because of the regressive tax code that steals wealth from the poor and redistributes it to the rich, we may not be able to afford private services to replace them. In 2012, a study by the Revenue Study Commission found that the top 2.3% of taxpayers raked in 55% of tax credits. These tax credits alone could refund TOPS—film industry tax credits totaled $231 million.

In the past, students and faculty from public universities around New Orleans have fought back against the budget cuts. In 2010 and 2015 at UNO, SUNO, McNeese, and LSU alike, students and professors have rallied to defend the right to higher education. While the government is slow to respond, the 2015 protests led to a partial renewal of TOPS funding. The state doesn’t have our interests at heart, but it gives us what we deserve when we hold its feet to the fire. Only a powerful student movement, with the support of working communities, will solve our education crisis.

Dr. Barnwell Brings Fellowship and Harmony to New Orleans with Community Sing

By Antranette Scott, Peoples’ Assembly Organizer

On April 7, the Community Sing, headed by Wendi Moore-O’Neal, hosted a weekend of events that featured Dr. Ysaye Maria Barnwell. The weekend started with a welcoming dinner for Dr. Barnwell. Wendi and The Heart Team broke bread and fellowshipped with Dr. Barnwell; sharing the work that various members of the Heart Team and each individual’s passion for our collective liberation from white supremacy and freedom for all people in the city of New Orleans and around the globe.

The Community Sings acts as a bridge between the front lines of struggle and a way to recharge and energize ourselves for the work ahead. By focusing on songs of struggle, liberation, and freedom, we connect the past with our present day fight. These songs give us a type of technology that can be used to flex our collaborative muscles, practice intentional vulnerability, and realize that there is no safe space, only spaces that we step into courageously.

On Saturday, at the White Buffalo Community Center (CORE USA), Wendi and Dr. Barnwell lead a workshop centered on Singing in the African American Tradition and Organic Harmonizing. Voices were lifted and attendees were given a sweet sample of the power of communal sound. Black Swan Food Experience prepared a lunch that fed everyone body and soul. After lunch attendees worked with a song written by local freedom fighter and songwriter Rodneka Shelbia “I Am the Prize”. By utilizing her phenomenal understanding of sound, Dr. Barnwell transformed the community singers in ways they had never imagined and brought out the power of Rodneka’s song in new ways.
Later that evening Dr. Barnwell closed out Tulane’s “What is the Sound of Freedom?” concert. Dr. Barnwell was joined by Dr. Courtney Bryan, Dr. Tyshawn Sorey, as well as William and Patricia Parker.

The highlight of her visit, was when Dr. Barnwell led a Community Sing held at Southern University’s Dr. Millie Charles Building of Social Work. Over 200 folks were in attendance to learn of Spirituals as Storytellers. Dr. Barnwell harvested the power of our vocal community and truly transformed the space. The Peoples’ Assembly presented a call to action for equity and equality of the working class people of New Orleans by recognizing we have to wage relentless struggle against symbols and systems of oppression.

We are forever grateful to Dr. Barnwell for answering the call and sharing her knowledge with the Community Sing. Also thank you to Wendi Moore-O’Neal, Jaliyah Consulting and The Heart Team.

Westbank Walmart Truck Unloader

You may have heard or seen in the news recently that the corporate leaders of Walmart have generously decided increase the minimum wage from $10 an hour to $11 and give a one time bonus that is determined by length of employment. President and CEO Doug McMillon has stated that this is an investment into us as employees, but the majority of us see it for what it is, extra scraps thrown to the workers, who are mostly black, for the same backbreaking work that keeps this evil machine running day after day. They condescendingly announce this to as if they’re doing us a favor, while most employees continue to rely on food stamps, public housing, second jobs, and medicaid (our benefits don’t even cover the full cost of a teeth cleaning) to survive. Several of my coworkers have even returned to selling drugs on the side to make ends meet.

To briefly sum up who I am: I’m from the Westbank and my family is mostly made up of the proletariat. After my parents’ divorce and my dad suffering a near fatal accident on the job, I lived with him to take care of him. His only income at the time was $850 a month from social security. To keep food on the table and the lights on I began selling drugs to pay whatever bills I could. I barely passed high school, and college was a fairytale for someone like me. So after two years of unemployment out of high school I couldn’t be picky and was hired on at Wal-Mart as a truck unloader at $8.40, which later became Cap-2 after the first wage increase. The first thing you are shown in orientation is a cheesy 90’s anti-union video and they make it clear that organizing will get you fired on the spot.

To start, the workload and expectations are impossible for the amount of people on a crew. Eight hours of work (unloading the truck onto pallets and carts then pulling them to the sales floor) is expected to be done in four and a six person crew is supposed to do a fourteen person job. On top of this the air conditioning is too weak for the size of our backroom, constant harassment from management about not pushing our bodies to the limit, bathroom breaks are treated as slacking off and lunch breaks usually don’t come until six or seven hours into our shift with one fifteen minute break until then. Managers act as constant reminders that your job can be gone in an instant, yet they routinely break rules such as smoking near propane tanks and driving forklifts inside the building. The tension causes tempers to flair, arguments and even fights between workers constantly happen.

One night there was an attempted robbery, so from then on managers had to lock all doors after the store closed at 12 am. At the time our crew got off at 1 am, so a manager had to let us out to re-lock the door behind us. If we left without a manager letting us out we faced termination. Several of them took advantage of this by refusing to open the door for us if our job wasn’t finished (the rules clearly state they can’t hold us after our scheduled time), threatening to fire us if we didn’t stay past our time. Surprising we reported this to the labor board and a long time Co-Manager (the store manager’s assistant) was demoted and transferred. So far this is the only “victory” we’ve had when we fought for our rights.

Once the first wage increase to $10 an hour happened, the company decided to create Cap-2. We still unload both general merchandise and grocery trucks, but now we also act as a second maintenance team, forklift operators, stockers, occasional buggy pushers. Basically anything management wants to throw on us because we’re in no position to argue. They also began to cut the hours and positions of the overnight shift, expecting us to finish all of grocery, chemicals, paper goods, pharmacy, infant supplies and pet supplies by the end of shift. Basically after killing ourselves to unload the trucks in impossible times we have to stock everything from half the store. We have never had enough people on the crew to do this on a normal day and we’re frequently chewed out for not meeting these ridiculous expectations.

The threat of being written up is constant, especially for black workers. Talk back? Written up for being negative. Say nothing and walk away? Written up for insubordination. Take your polo off because it feels like an oven in the back room? Dress code violation. Buying something on your break? Prepare to be stalked by asset protection, the wannabe pigs that assume every black worker wants to clean the store out. Most days I clock out feeling so physically and mentally drained that walking to my car feels like running a marathon. I feel like I wake up every day just to get beaten up and cheated out of eight hours of my life.

And this is just my department, buggy pushers have it even harder. Many have mental illnesses and disabilities and are forced to work in all conditions. Pouring rain? Blistering heat? Freezing cold? Doesn’t matter: that parking lot better be clear. In the break room there’s a picture of a buggy pusher that passed away before I was hired, he was suffering from heat stroke so and a manager sent him home in a taxi instead of calling an ambulance.

Why Is the U.S. Targeting Russia?

By Gavrielle Gemma

Like a ventriloquist’s dummy the monopolized for-profit media, with all their ties to the military, repeats lies told to set the stage for bombing one country after another. It must be countered by destroying the collective amnesia that seems to have sunk into some “opposition” quarters. We are all familiar with lies told about Vietnam, Iraq, Panama, and Grenada. Edward Snowden exposed how the U.S. government hacks into every country’s government, as well as our personal email and social media, including under Obama.

Volumes have been written about U.S. interference in the elections of countries worldwide, carrying out coups installing fascist puppet governments. Why single out Russia which is now surrounded by U.S. and NATO bases and warships? Because they want to set the stage for a war with Russia to occupy that country, take their resources, and subjugate the people.  Look at Eastern Europe with extreme right-wing, even openly Nazi governments, which are colonies of the U.S., hosting its bases, destroying the rights and living standards of the people. These governments, like Saudi Arabia enjoy praise from Democrats and Republicans. Does that not expose the fact that it is material aims, not the character of a government that draws U.S. bombers?

IF YOU DON’T OPPOSE IMPERIALIST WAR AND THE MILITARY BUDGET YOU CANNOT FIGHT FOR SOCIAL NEEDS OR AGAINST RISING  FASCISM

During the rise of Nazism liberal legislators kept voting for war budgets and compromise. While workers were sounding the alarm that it was either workers’ revolution or fascism, loyalty to capitalism at all cost governed the liberals.

Nazism was a capitalist government backed by capitalists globally. Capitalism’s (Nazism) aim was to prevent revolution by the European working class, to destroy the Russian revolution, and to enslave countries as colonies.

The U.S. entered the war only after the Soviet Union, which lost 30 million people resisting the Nazis, had triumphed and the Red Army was marching across Europe. (This is seared into the Russian consciousness) The U.S. stepped in as a replacement for Nazi generals with the Marshall Plan to crush revolutions, install military forces and take part in the colonial occupation of large areas of the world. Freedom, democracy and revulsion of the Nazi Holocaust had nothing to do with it. Since then the U.S. under both Republican and Democratic administrations has trained, funded and installed fascist governments in Chile, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Saudi Arabia, and more.

Ask the Palestinian people being massacred by Israel, a fascist apartheid government backed by billions of dollars and supported wholly by Democrats and Republicans which sees Israel as its closest nuclear ally to threaten all the people in the Middle East. Ask the people of the Ukraine which Obama and Hillary Clinton imposed by coup a Nazi government in Kiev, murdering anti-fascist resistance fighters in Eastern Ukraine. This government is from a party called Svoboda, which honors veterans of the Waffen SS’s local Halychyna Brigade, a unit which was constituted in 1943 to counteract the Soviets.

All the sanctimonious talk by the monsters of imperialism about Putin’s authoritarian regime is hogwash, and blaming Russian interference for Trump’s presidency is self-serving claptrap. The people of Russia are organizing and want no part of U.S. interference or an imperialist invasion. Demonizing a country and its leaders, who used to be its friends, is their script as pretext for war.

Every worker needs to know that both the Democratic and Republicans are the parties of Wall Street, and it’s us against them. We are at a dangerous moment in time internationally and at home. The first weapon we have is truth.

Attacks on Title IX Threaten Trans People

Last year, the Department of Education rolled back previously-won support for transgender students, but until this year, it was unclear how far they would take it. Recently, cases brought before them have been rejected and their intentions are clear: they no longer recognize the inclusion of “gender identity” under Title IX, the law that guarantees equal access to students to school activities. Not only has this allowed schools to deny trans students access to school activities, but it has also removed bathroom access from the list of protections under the law.

This exclusion will allow schools to force trans students to use facilities designated to their birth-assigned genders. For many trans students, this will make them vulnerable. It is a signal that these institutions do not recognize their genders as valid, which not only causes personal distress to the students, but also endorses harassment from students and staff.

The Education Department is playing a dangerous game, trying to split hairs over what is and what isn’t sexist discrimination in order to support the fear-mongering tactics that have demonized and endangered trans people for decades. The truth is that this is yet another ploy to divide the working class and reverse a minor victory for LGBTQ people, a part of the assault on everything we have fought for. We must build solidarity and demand equality for all!

Women Are 51% of the Workforce! The Bosses Are Terrified, So They Attack Reproductive Choice

The Koch brothers, billionaire oil tycoons, bribe legislators around the country, especially in Louisiana, to vote against equal pay, birth control, abortion, family benefits and women’s health care, and raising the minimum wage (the majority of minimum wage workers are women). The bottom line of this is the profits extracted from the underpaid labor of women workers. While Trump boasts of raping women, these so-called moral Christians cheer him on as it confirms their view of male supremacy. It has nothing to do with religion or morality. It is all about using every means to curtail our rights and make us poorer so it is harder to fight them. Birth control, abortion and programs to help raise children made it possible for women to control our lives and take part in political life. They seek to declare that we are servants and sexual receptacles because men should have rights over us.

Religion is a personal matter, and these are personal choices every woman has the right to make without male representatives fronting for Wall Street, criminalizing our decisions. The so-called right to life movement is a right-wing crusade controlled and funded for the benefit of rich men. They prey on women.

The Louisiana House passed by a vote of 90 to 3 a bill that prohibits Planned Parenthood from obtaining an abortion license. Planned Parenthood clinics are non-profits run by people who really care about women. Their clinics are often our only option for abortion, medical screenings and contraception.
Twenty Ohio Republicans have co-sponsored a bill to ban all abortions—punishable by death for women and doctors. Ohio’s abortion ban has no exceptions for rape or incest, or even to save a woman’s life, beginning at the moment of conception. The Kentucky legislature has a bill with a death penalty for abortion, and a candidate for lt. governor in Idaho said the death penalty would be an effective “deterrent” for abortion.

Women are fighting back across the country. Our labor is exploited for their profits. We can show up to work now, but they should remember we can strike for our rights: on March 8th, International Working Women’s Day, the women of Spain shut down the entire country.