Former and Present Racist Occupiers Unite to Threaten N. Korea

by Gavrielle Gemma

President Trump met with his right-wing counterpart in Japan, Prime Minister Abe, on the first leg of a trip set up to threaten N. Korea, challenge China and forge a new imperialist alliance. Calling Japan a “Warrior Nation”, Trump urged Abe to quickly militarize Japan and promised to sell Japan weapons of every kind.

Japan had brutally occupied Korea from 1910 to 1945 when the U.S. took over after Japan’s defeat in World War II. Their military dictatorship of Korea involved shooting down and imprisoning thousands of worker and farmers fighting for independence and banning the Korean language, schools, newspapers and religion. By 1935, they “owned” half of all farmland stolen from Korean peasants and forced 5 million Koreans into the Japanese army to do all the dirty work for their imperialist army, even being used as military medical experiments in Japan. Over 200, 000 Korean women were kidnapped and forced into sexual and domestic slavery. After Japan lost out to the imperialist U.S., it was banned from developing a military. But now the Trump/Wall ST. /Pentagon Junta is urging them to massively militarize.

Japan threatening N. Korea is no different than if the U.S. had a press conference with a European colonizer in Africa to threaten to directly reoccupy the countries that had liberated themselves from colonialism. On the Korean peninsula, only N. Korea has liberated itself. South Korea has remained a colony of the U.S. with 40,000 troops, many bases and aircraft carriers and nuclear weapons. The U.S. has supported all the S. Korean dictatorships and corporations that impoverish the Korean working class. South Koreans Protest U.S THAAD missile systems and occupation. No War – Peace

Japan kidnapped 200,000 Korean girls and women called “comfort women” into forced sex slavery for Japanese troops. Others were forced in domestic slavery for Japan’s rulers. Koreans before and after WWII were abused and brutally discriminated against in Japan.

Socialists Must Fight Imperialism!

by Quest R.

Socialism is the weapon that workers and oppressed people in every corner of the globe use to resist the constant abuse that capitalists and imperialists have inflicted. It has a rich history with both victories and defeats. Today, billions of people consider themselves part of this tradition, and they struggle under the banner of socialism. It is the responsibility of all who fight under this banner to study its history, the lessons that have been learned through bitter struggle.

Socialists have had to learn many lessons about nationalism and Internationalism. Through all this, the movement has suffered many splits, with some refusing to take up a revolutionary position. These people took the easy, “respectable” way out to appear non-threatening to the ruling class. The modern “democratic socialists” operate in this counter-revolutionary manner.

Long ago the revolutionary movement established two basic principles that lay the groundwork for consistent anti-imperialism.

First, is the right of oppressed nations to self-determination, which affirms the progressive role of nationalism in the countries dominated by imperialism. One reason for this is that the workers in imperialist countries like the U.S. and the people of oppressed countries, for example Venezuela, share a common enemy: the imperialist ruling class in the U.S.

And second, is the counter-revolutionary nature of nationalism in imperialist countries. Revolutionaries in imperialist countries realize that when their ruling class is in a conflict (whether military, political, or economic), it is good for the workers everywhere when imperialists are defeated or weakened. To be a nationalist in an imperialist country is both a betrayal to the people of oppressed nation and the workers in the imperialist country. The downfall of imperialism requires that we identify with the workers of the world instead of some imperialist flag, which represents the system that terrorizes both us and the people of the world.

On both these points, the “democratic socialists” reject the revolutionary outlook and side with imperialism. They consistently side with the imperialists in military conflicts. From Vietnam, to Iraq, to occupied Palestine, and the whole Cold War, the “democratic socialists” have encouraged workers to accept the U.S. government’s narrative. Time after time they’ve proved themselves unwilling to take the hard road: organizing people against the imperialist war machine and its media spokespeople. They deny the legitimacy of the oppressed people’s continuous fight to ward off imperialism. They refuse to lend support to almost any movement or government that bumps heads with the U.S., even though weakening the U.S. establishment strengthens our movements. When the movements and governments of the third world have the courage to strike blows against U.S. imperialism, then they are, in a sense, doing our own work for us. We should strive to be as fearless and self-sacrificing as the revolutionaries who have stood up to our government. But the “democratic socialists” will always encourage you to play by the rules of the establishment. If allowed, they will only lead our movements for liberation into a dead end: defeat and cooperation with the enemy. The only politics relevant to working and oppressed people, the only politics that stand a chance of winning real victory for the exploited here and the super-exploited abroad, is revolutionary politics. Without liberation for oppressed nations around the world, U.S. workers will never have a society that works in our interests.