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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

READERS VIEWS

WELFARE 'REFORM'

One wonders how Michigan Republican Governor John Engler's spokesperson fixed her mouth to say that changes in welfare rules would "help more families make the transition from welfare to work." The new rules require single parents to work 40 hours per week (currently it's 20 for parents of babies and 30 for parents of school age children). There are no more exemptions for parents caring for disabled children or for their own aged parents. I know no one working a poverty job who knows from week to week what their hours will be, and they rarely work 40, even with two jobs. The mouthpiece said work exemption requests would be reviewed individually hey, who can even reach their caseworker in a timely fashion?

Observer
Detroit

FOOD NOT BOMBS FOR AFGHANISTAN

On Thanksgiving weekend 30 of us took to the streets in Memphis to a blustery Food Not Bombs (FNB) Parade. We wanted to show solidarity with starving people all over the world, especially those facing peril in Afghanistan this winter. Our signs said "Food is a right not a privilege." FNB has been salvaging good food discarded by grocery stores and cooking free vegetarian meals for the hungry for several years. The chant made up by our youngest helper, a five-year-old, showed wisdom the men in power seem to lack: "Food Not Bombs, because bombs hurt people." The money spent on weapons in one week around the world is enough to feed all the people on earth for a year. How can we afford to spend another dollar on war when so many people are starving?

Andrea Bouardee
Memphis

***

Katie Sierra is a 15-year-old student who tried to start an anarchy club in her high school in West Virginia and lost her case in court. She also lost the right to wear a T-shirt that opposed the bombing in Afghanistan, as well as one that protested racism, sexism and homophobia. The judge who ruled against her said, "I don't think anybody disagrees that in America the right of free speech is sacred. Sierra has the right to believe anything she wants to believe and to express those beliefs. However, in a school educational setting, those rights are not absolute." Sierra's lawyer plans to appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court.

Angry Katie supporter

North Carolina

ON THE ENVIRONMENTAL FRONT

All of a sudden, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are talking only about bioterrorism. They only care about something when it starts affecting white America. People of color have been terrorized by the U.S. government and industry all our lives. The terrorism is in our communities where we've been exposed to toxic chemicals, but they want to put pollution on the back burner. I recommend that they put environmental justice, community health and community clinics in every bill about terrorism because the industries have terrorized our communities.

Environmental justice activist

Tennessee

***

Big Oil didn't make a grab just for the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. Hoping Michiganders wouldn't notice, on Sept. 14 Republican Governor Engler's Natural Resources Commission lifted a four-year suspension on directional drilling under Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. Fortunately, the federal water and energy bill signed into law in November carries an amendment that halts Great Lakes drilling until 2003. The National Wildlife Federation, opposing "slant drilling," cited ecological concerns such as wellhead leaks, conflicts with recreational use of the shoreline, and insufficient protection of critical fragile biological areas like wetlands and sand dunes. The state's own records revealed 89 oil or gas leaks last year.

Urban gardener
Michigan

RAWA AND THE LEFT

I heard Tahmeena Faryal speak at Mills College. She is very courageous. She talked about how much women risked to just have a school for girls. They represent a genuine alternative for what Afghan society could be but I wondered if she herself saw the tremendous power of that stance when she focused on appealing to the UN for help. Hundreds and hundreds showed up at her events and hundreds more were turned away. I think people turned out because they wanted to express their solidarity with that alternative she represented. They wanted to hear an opposition to the Taliban and to the war that was about humanity, a viable response beyond bin Laden and Bush.

Women's Liberationist
Oakland, Cal.

***

What was shocking was how totally the organized Left groups were missing from all the RAWA events held in the Berkeley area. It must be that they are so defined as being against this war that they didn't want to discolor the purity of their opposition by being for someone who is opposed to Bush's enemy. It is a warning that we have to be careful not to get locked into opposites that aren't opposite.

Student of Marx and Hegel
California

***

RAWA's historic existence contrasts dramatically in important respects with that of Marxist-Humanism, the philosophy of the organization that sponsored their tour in New York. The philosophy of N&L is presented, argued, contended with among virtually all other philosophies and further developed on these bases in numerous books, pamphlets, journals and articles collected wherever people struggle for freedom throughout the world. It is a philosophy that has emerged in an ongoing global battle of ideas since the 1950s. It might be argued that it is only this mode of existence that permits the fullest appreciation of the historic, global significance of a group like RAWA.

Marxist-Humanist
New York

***

Editor's note: We are proud to present a voice of RAWA, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, speaking for themselves on page one of this issue.

COVERING THE CONGO WAR

I can't forget the column John Alan wrote on the war in the Congo from 1998 to 2001, where it is claimed that three million people lost their lives (N&L June 2001). Compared to the coverage today on Afghanistan, Israel/Palestine, or in the past on Serbia/Kosova/NATO or even the Gulf War of 1991, there was virtually no coverage of the Congo events. Thus a major world event went unreported and the public, including N&L readers, are unaware of it. I see this as institutional racism promoted by the State Dept. and media censorship. Each African who lost a life should be as worthy of being recorded as each Afghanistan or Sept. 11 victim. The problem is the separation of the African victims from ourselves.

Basho
Los Angeles

***

For all those "anti-imperialists" who don't seem to understand what is going on today, let me pass along this wonderful story about what former heavyweight boxing champion, Muhammad Ali, said when he visited the ruins of the World Trade Center and CNN reporters came running up to ask him how he felt about the suspects sharing his Islamic faith. Ali responded pleasantly, "How do you feel about Hitler sharing yours?" I would say the Champ never lost his punch.

Muhammad Ali fan
Chicago

***

Lower Manhattan continues to be extremely depressing. Eleven weeks after the World Trade Center attack, we still smell the fires most days, see a cloud of smoke and dust, and feel the irritants, which no one believes are harmless despite government assurances. Immigrant vendors hawk T-shirts with images of the twin towers, and tourists with cameras crowd the streets. Subway service is disrupted indefinitely and security measures slow walking and driving and entering buildings. Unemployment is staggering, with 80,000 laid off in October alone and food kitchens keeping thousands alive.

Some capitalist pigs try to turn the tragedy to their advantage. I know a group of tenants who have been on rent strike for several months over serious conditions in their building who recently came home to find a sign in their lobby from management, stating: "In light of the recent events throughout the country, we are asking residents when entering or leaving to make sure all exit doors are securely closed behind you." In other words, if there is another terrorist attack, it will be the tenants' fault? That is a logical development of the landlord view that every problem is the tenants' fault.

Renter
New York

***

Thousands were killed on Sept. 11, more thousands injured and millions emotionally damaged, and the damage to the economy and the Constitution continues. Opportunists of every kind are capitalizing on the moment to further their agendas. The 19 terrorists are dead but these Americans have picked up the torch and seem determined to burn away our hard-fought and well-earned freedoms while they mouth the world's "safety." Those who would prefer to be "safe" rather than free are doing what the 19 terrorists never could destroy our Bill of Rights.

Imprisoned citizen
Nebraska

***

Fundamentalism is much worse than the regime in the U.S. Here we can talk openly and write what we want. What happens in Iran is that a paper like N&L would have to be underground. Even finding a book can be difficult. When I talk about fundamentalism with other leftists here they say they are anti-imperialist and forget about important issues in the Middle East. I'm anti-imperialist, too, but want to know what ideas those leftists have to offer to the people in the Middle East who are struggling against their own rulers.

Iranian revolutionary
California 

***

Bush's war against terrorism and bin Laden is very unusual. When has the U.S. ever carried on a war against an individual? Bush does not want to upset relations in the Middle East. It is an extremely reactionary war. World War II had a slogan projecting it as a war for liberation. Bush doesn't try to do that. In seeing the kind of "collective" government he wants in Afghanistan, you can see he wants the old conservative forces back in power. He is for counter-revolution in permanence.

Black writer
California

***

We will never forget that Bush & Co. stole the election and our democracy a year ago. We will not accept an illegitimate administration pursuing immoral policies.

JB and DB
San Francisco

***

FDR said the only thing to fear is fear and now Bush is telling us to just go on with our lives as if everything were normal. Those of us who belong to the "other America" have never lived a normal life except under fear. Bush needs permanent fear to keep up his permanent war.

Asian-American
Oakland, Cal.

***

We heard a lot about anthrax threats since early October, but it wasn't until Thanksgiving weekend that I first heard a single report about the 500 Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers which had been sent threatening letters about anthrax, all of which have been hoaxes. Talk about a conspiracy of silence! Does anyone have ideas on how we can mobilize to stop this kind of terror, and its support by a silent media?

Women's Liberationist
Detroit

***

Seattle did seem to change the world two years ago. While everyone else was talking about the movement being dead, people were emboldened by Seattle. It looked as though the Left was gathering momentum. Then came Sept. 11. All that confidence in numbers evaporated. The Left had to come up with a new laundry list to rally around as a united front. We were supposed to shut up for the sake of unity. All that does is keep ideas out of the discussion.

Activist
California

***

Nowhere were the "two worlds" of capitalist America that N&L talks about more evident than in the drumbeat to reopen the Wall Street stock exchange in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks. It was also seen in Giuliani's order to defend his policy of giving up on locating the remains of the thousands still missing before they began scooping up and dumping them in a landfill. He even had his police attack firefighters who were demonstrating opposition to that plan. Those rescue workers opposed not only Giuliani but their own department head. The firefighters had a different agenda entirely from Giuliani's, which was to wrap up the "rescue effort" that he had sucked clean of all its political benefit and get on with re-establishing the business potential of the devastated sites.

Counselor
New York

***

What happened in New York reminded me of the earthquake in Mexico a few years ago when new unions, new organizations, new communities grew in the solidarity of the struggle to save lives in the aftermath of that disaster, as the state stood by idly. In New York we saw Giuliani self-destructing in his fight with the firefighters.

Radical lawyer
New York

***

In recalling the 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts, John Alan's column in the November N&L showed how to bring those two words together. The Sedition Act is Ashcroft's posture exactly. A lot of what he is doing is to go on TV and reiterate that if you fit the profile of this alien and seditious person we will do whatever we can to hunt you down. This kind of state harassment is reminiscent of what Black and Latino Americans go through in this country every day. As Alan wrote, the African- American press constantly pointed out during World War II that they couldn't be fighting for democracy abroad if there was no equality at home. It shows how far back we've gone.

Hospital worker
California

IDEALISM, MATERIALISM, AND MARX

The piece by Raya Dunayevskaya on "Marx's concept of praxis" in the November issue made me see for the first time that Marx's concept of praxis comes out of his first thesis on Feuerbach, where Marx wrote that abstract materialism fails to grasp that "human activity is itself objective." Dunayevskaya argues that for Marx, "praxis" was not a matter of intellectuals handing down a line for workers to follow, but the expression of "revolutionary, critical-practical activity." That is, when workers break through the rigidity and false sense of reality which surrounds everyday life, the idea of freedom which idealism first developed, "albeit abstractly," comes to life as praxis.

Student of dialectics
New York

***

Gramsci once wrote that the distinction between idealism and materialism belongs to "past societies" Ñ that is, societies preceding the transcendence of capitalism. I believe that implies that transcending the separation of idealism and materialism calls for a philosophy of a new type. Those who reject philosophy in the name of "Marxism" always end up as either one-sided abstract idealists or equally one-sided "materialists."

Peter Wermuth
Chicago

CHARLESTON 5 VICTORY

The demonstrations and possible worldwide port shutdowns that were to take place on Nov. 14 were cancelled to celebrate the victory of the Charleston 5 instead. Their battle with the state of South Carolina had been going on ever since Jan. 20. That was when 600 riot-equipped police had been unleashed against dockworkers who were picketing against the use of scab labor in Charleston, and five of the workers were charged with "inciting to riot." Their case won the support of unionists around the world as well as organizations like the Black Radical Congress, since it was clear that the state of South Carolina was really aiming to cripple ILA Local 1422 which was known for helping to develop Black working-class power in the port city of Charleston. After almost a year living under the threat of severe jail sentences, the five were allowed to plead no contest to a magistrate-level offense and walk away with $100 fines. Considering what they were stacked up against, they considered it a tremendous victory.

Union supporter
Illinois

I read the new issue of Hobgoblin (issue No.4) with much interest. The articles in these 48 pages on current world events along with the searing critiques of such radical tendencies as Situationism, Anarchism and Leninism were well done. It's rare to come across such a combination.

New subscriber
Illinois

***

Editor's Note: The Hobgoblin is published twice yearly by the London Corresponding Committee which works in solidarity with Marxist-Humanists internationally. A subscription for two issues costs 5 pounds. For information or to order a sub, write to NEWS & LETTERS or directly to the London Corresponding Committee at BCM 3514 London WC1N 3XX.

ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS

The situation continues to be grave in the Palestinian Occupied Territories. This is the worst Ramadan in many years. Prime Minister Sharon demands "seven days of quiet" before entering into negotiations, while making sure that these seven days never happen. His policies towards Palestinians constitute a string of provocations and brutal oppression. While the rest of the world was looking and acting elsewhere after Sept. 11, the violence in this region escalated. In parallel, peace activism reached intense levels. Women in Black vigils have sprouted in new locations in Israel and throughout the world as well. A major international event is being planned for Dec. 28 by the Coalition of Women for Peace. In Jerusalem, we will hold a silent and solemn march of Women (and men) in Black, followed by a concert for peace. People from all over the world are invited to join us in any way they liken to be with us here or to organize or attend a vigil in your own city. For more information see www.coalitionofwomen4peace.org. Shalom/Salaam.

Gila Svirsky
Jerusalem

***

Despite all the new evidence of Mumia's innocence, Pennsylvania State Court judge Pamela Dembe refused to hear it, claiming she had "no jurisdiction" in the case. She chose 3 p.m. the day before Thanksgiving, to announce her ruling, hoping we would be unable to mobilize an emergency demonstration to demand that Philadelphia Federal Judge William Yohn now hear the new evidence. Dec. 9 marks the 20th stolen year Mumia has spent incarcerated and on death row for a crime he did not commit. His life now hangs by a thread. We are asking everyone who cares about Mumia and about justice to SHOW UP AT 12 NOON IN PHILADELPHIA ON SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8!

International concerned family and friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal

After Judge Pamela Dembe gave her ruling on Nov. 21, we have to speak up. I am not an attorney or a paralegal but I can see there is an old-fashioned lynching, a premeditated murder, an assassination coming from Uncle Sam through the state of Pennsylvania, courtesy of the city of Philadelphia. The fact that Pamela Dembe is of African descent bothers me. What is going on in that part of the United States could set four white male officers free from the Amadou Diallo case after 19 shots hit him and 22 missed him! Now we see Pamela Dembe literally trying to seal Mumia's death. As an African American of Haitian descent, born in Chicago, the most racist city in the U.S., according to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., I want to tell brother Mumia that whether or not he will be with our ancestors soon, courtesy of the system and a sister, he should know that among his family and supporters, he will live as long as one of us can utter his name.

Nouveau Toussaint
Chicago

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