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NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Readers’ Views

Responses TO THE DRAFT FOR MARXIST-HUMANIST PERSPECTIVES, 2002-2003: PERMANENT WAR OR REVOLUTION IN PERMANENCE?

I’m new to the radical Left and appreciate how the Draft Perspectives shows that News and Letters Committees is not about providing pat answers to social questions. That’s important because addressing manifestations of capital is not a permanent solution. It can be helpful, but it’s not a revolution. I didn’t understand that before. It boils down to how a small group can’t implement a plan on people. When people do come together, that will be a source of power. They aren’t willing to settle for pat answers. I also liked that the Perspectives showed that Bush is driven by capital. It’s more than that he’s a terrible person, he really is a slave to capital.

--New to the movement, Tennessee


A recent article I read in POLITICAL AFFAIRS called “The Forever War: Globalization and the New World Order” documented the entrenched, reactionary ownership by the few of our central government and their drive to barbaric oblivion for all. It is a challenge to confront all the dead end roads being again proposed for resolving this capitalist crisis of over-production and declining rate of profits. The Draft Perspectives clearly describes the objective reality and the road to a radical, revolutionary alternative. But, despite all my attempts to understand, I still stumble on “double negation,” “the Absolute,” and how Marx went beyond Hegel. I feel if I can ever incorporate those concepts into my being, it would be a new awakening for me. Can anyone write an article really clarifying these basic intellectual concepts?

--Frank, Wisconsin


I have a problem with the discussion of “the negation of the negation.” It’s a type of double negation that could appear to the uninitiated as containing serious negative connotations. Am I correct to understand that the first negation is destruction of capitalism and the second negation is a reversal of the destruction, i.e., building a new paradigm? It sounds convoluted. Is it just me? Could this concept be more clearly articulated for the masses?

--M.S., Texas


In Argentina, which is taken up in some detail in the Perspectives, it really is the women who are pushing the movement forward, even when the reports don’t say so. Neighborhood associations in Latin America mean women doing the work. That existed in the poor communities before the bank closures. Women may be one reason why these organizations refuse to be taken over by the vanguardist Left. I wish we could hear more directly from the women themselves.

--Women’s Liberationist, Memphis


None of the things Bush did as an oilman, which voters passed over in the ‘90s, can be ignored now. Just think what trouble he’d be in without September 11. The most important thing about the collapse in equity prices is not the lies and corruption, but the fact that the falling rate of profit has become unveiled. The so-called “investor class,” a category pointing to the large percentage of Americans who own stock, was supposed to make everyone identify with capitalism and make “class warfare” a thing of the past. Now most realize they are just workers after all, and the economic policies are for the super-rich. Further, we’re seeing a dramatic downturn in the last pillar of this economy, consumer confidence, as this deflation in assets hits the majority consuming class.

--R.B., California


I’m enclosing for you an article that appeared in a Canadian magazine called MONEY SENSE, which is titled “Give war a chance.” The writer sees war as still the best business and recommends investments in the stocks of defense companies like Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, General Dynamics and Northrop Grumman, which are expected to jump 26% against a 7% decline for the Standard and Poors 500. Here in plain English we read about the role of war in keeping up and making profit in the oldest most profitable “business.” The longer and more intense the war is, the more replacements are needed for the expended cruise missiles, bombs, ammunition, and the newest and latest systems to deliver them. Just imagine what the military budget could do in the fight against worldwide poverty, hunger, and AIDS. When will we finally reach a state of sanity where war will not be the “best business” and instead of giving war a chance we give peace a chance?

--Giorgio, Canada


The global corporations have made it clear that the future they have in mind for a majority of the human race is a total lack of material security. It has come to the point where they will destroy us or we them. Asking corporate CEOs to be ethical is like asking a tiger to be a vegetarian. The WTO protest in Seattle was good because it was a genuine confrontation. But we didn’t see any follow-through. Great revolutions come about spontaneously but an organized strategy is needed to give a direction.

--New reader, Berkeley


The invitation you printed to ask readers to participate in the discussion of your Perspectives is really great because what you’re presenting relates to all of us on the planet. The Left says the U.S. is enemy number one and any others are smaller enemies. But men and women who are suffering in Iran know it is not only Bush but all sorts of fundamentalists who need to be seen as “false alternatives.” After World War II we saw revolutions happening in the Third World, but now all these countries are struggling for their daily lives. We are having problems right here. Germany, Japan and the U.S. are going down simultaneously. Could there be a revolution in a developed country like the U.S.?

--Iranian exile, Fremont, California


I generally agree with your viewpoints. But I disagree with what you said in the July issue about Hindu and Jewish fundamentalism. When has any Hindu or Jewish fundamentalist bombed a church or a mosque in Italy, Morocco, Germany or the U.S.? When did a Jewish fundamentalist anywhere in the world turn a mosque into a synagogue? Yet Islamic fundamentalists have been guilty of such things. While I praise N&L for not falling into the anti-Semitic claptrap of the rest of the leftist and “progressive” media, by saying all fundamentalisms have a moral equivalence you are self-defeating.

--J.F.,  Marion, Ohio


In early July the Senate approved the opening of Yucca Mountain in Nevada (western Shoshone land) as the central storage site for the nation’s high level nuclear waste, primarily from weapons production facilities and the 103 nuclear power plants. Catastrophic truck and rail accidents carrying nuclear wastes across the U.S. now become a real possibility. The approval of the facility, projected to open in ten years, now gives the nuclear industry an excuse to build a whole new generation of nuclear power plants and weapons. There is no safe way to dispose of nuclear waste, yet the industry is pushing for more growth. The best solution is to store and monitor for leakage on site, with no transporting—and to stop all future production.

--Basho, Los Angeles


First came Sharon’s march to Temple Mount. Then, his deliberate incursion into Jenin and Ramallah right on the heels of the Arab League’s peace proposal. Now we’ve seen a missile attack in a crowded neighborhood right in the midst of ongoing cease-fire talks sponsored by European diplomats. Let’s think. In view of all this evidence can we believe that Sheik Shehada was the “real” target? Or is the real target what Sharon’s government deems most dangerous to his regime? The possibility that peace might actually break out?

--Asian American, Oakland, California


I have no suggestions to add to your forthcoming Convention and discussion. But I would like to say that the publication of N&L is invaluable in that it provides a perspective on the dissent within, and sometimes outside, the great U.S. I am sure that many of its readers and contributors, including myself, will never be really grounded in Raya Dunayevskaya’s works. Bless those of you who are. Just don’t forget where the ground is.

--Longtime supporter, North Vancouver, B.C.


Many youth today get stuck in a half-way house--that is, only half way to revolution--by embodying their activism through forming more and more co-operatives of some type. As the Draft Perspectives highlights, the revolt in Argentina has come up with some very new and exciting forms of organization born out of the masses’ spontaneity. I believe that youth should take the challenge given by the Draft Perspectives in terms of what we as revolutionaries have to offer, “in terms of ideas, concepts, perspectives that can help answer that most difficult question of all--what happens after?”

--Former anarchist, Memphis


LIGHT IN BOLIVIA?

In the July elections in Bolivia, for the very first time a socialist political party got the second place with almost 22% of the vote. The Movement to Socialism (MAS) was born in the tropical jungle of Cochabamba in a region called Chapare, well-known because there are the biggest coca crops of Bolivia. The leader is a cocalero union chief who has been accused by the U.S. ambassador and DEA of being a drug and crime supporter, and now he has a chance to reach the presidential chair. For the very first time, the senate and house of representatives are going to have coca growers, Indian representatives and a wide range of people from the most depressed sectors. For the first time in many years I can see some light in the future of my country.

--Carlos, Bolivia


WOMEN VS. WAR

The reports of four Fort Bragg military men murdering their wives made me go back to reread the June N&L article by Suzanne Rose who wrote from North Carolina about anti-war women in military families being beaten by their husbands or his friends.

Women’s Liberationists have long documented how war abroad comes home in the form of extreme violence against women. Serbian feminists, in particular, saw their country transformed into one where soldiers, returning from murdering civilians in Bosnia, brutalized their own wives and children. Guns were everywhere. To me, it’s no accident that three of the four U.S. soldiers in the recent murders had just returned from Afghanistan. The bravery and reason of the women Suzanne Rose wrote about who had come out against the war is starkly underscored by these murders.

--Terry Moon, Memphis


IS TIME RUNNING OUT?

The UN has released a report predicting that time is running out for the planet and if society continues on a “market first” direction, the planet’s condition in 30 years will be stark: 3% of the earth’s surface absorbed into urban sprawl, much of it slums, devastating biodiversity; 55% of humanity facing water shortages; most coastal regions clogged with pollution; almost one third of the world’s fish stocks depleted or over exploited; substantial degradation of farmland and destruction of forests. Rather than take the slightest action to prevent this from happening, Bush, lord of the world, shows that he is at the same time the slave of capital by lifting all environmental restrictions on its activity, as much as he can get away with. Although he imagines he is capital’s master, commanding it to go forth and multiply, even at the expense of earth itself, he is only articulating its own inner drive.

--Environmentalist, Tennessee


EMERGENCY APPEAL: STOP INDONESIA MILITARY AID!

President Bush has already convinced Congress to restore some aid to Indonesia and proposes to give millions more. An outpouring of calls and letters to Congress is needed to try to defeat this proposal. Congress cut off aid to Indonesia in 1999 because of its horrendous human rights abuses in East Timor. Now the pattern of military militias that murder, rape and torture unarmed civilians and burn their villages is being repeated in Aceh, Malukus, West Papua and other regions that have dared to demand self-determination in the past few years. Restoring U.S. aid will give the green light to Indonesia to intensify its repression. One woman describes the Acehnese condition as hopeless: “They are fighting the military not because they think they can win, but because there is no way out of their dilemma: devastated if they fight back, annihilated if they don’t.”

Readers can help by contacting Congress and getting in touch with NEWS & LETTERS about people-to-people solidarity work.

--Anne Jaclard, New York


CORRECTION

Two lines from the “Draft for Marxist-Humanist Perspectives, 2002-2003” in the July N&L were omitted. On page 8, the line “Convention will focus on perspectives for projecting this” should have appeared at the very bottom of the first column, and the line “other publications will be discussed at the Convention” should have appeared at the bottom of the second column. We regret any confusion this may have caused.

—Editor


LABOR STRUGGLES IN 2002

Demonstrating outside a Taco Bell with ten Immokalee workers, we almost shut the place down--until police came when there was almost a physical confrontation with an angry Taco Bell patron, who tried to run us over. But we got a lot of honks for support from other motorists. It is an amazing movement by workers to have some control over what they do. One of them would yell, “Don’t eat at Taco Bell, it makes people poor.” It made it concise. He would go up to the cars and talk to everyone and show the relationship of what people were buying to what workers do in the fields. He talked about “solidarity” in doing away with inhuman conditions. One worker told me that despite the bad things he’s encountered in the U.S. he likes being a migrant worker because he meets new people, sees new things, and is looking forward to taking back what he’s learned to Guatemala.

--Young activist, Tennessee


I have worked for a used appliance sales and repair shop for 12 years. I repair and deliver any and all of their appliances. The store has been sold three times since I came to work here. I have worked for my current boss for three and a half years. When I told him I needed two weeks off for a vacation with my family he told me I couldn’t take the time because the place was too busy, and if I took off  I was fired and should find another job. I couldn’t believe what he told me. Everyone needs some vacation time; my boss takes his, but I can’t. I receive no vacation pay and get no medical coverage, but he is going to fire me if I take two weeks without pay. It is difficult to find a different job because my English is not good, but I am a good worker and very knowledgeable in my trade. It makes me very angry to be treated so badly.

--Latino worker, Los Angeles


Everybody could surely relate to what reporters described as the “bitterness” the rescued coal miner, Brian Mayhugh, expressed when he mentioned that days after the rescue, the miners had yet to hear from the owners of the company, Black Wolf Coal Co., for which they had been working. It makes you feel they were lucky it wasn’t the coal company but state and national agencies that were directing the rescue, or they might still be down there.

What I related to as well was the way his wife added sharply to his revealing comment with an immediate, “Every minute they were down there better be paid as overtime!” The reporter--who was a woman--added “she wasn’t joking in the least.” No kidding!

--Ex-miner’s wife, Illinois


THE BRITISH LABOR SCENE

Where to now is the question after a massive strike by local government workers here in Britain. I attended a rally where some 200 to 300 union workers turned up to lobby the local councillors over low pay and their national pay campaign. Nationally the one-day strike where over a million people walked out was the largest strike in 20 years. The mood of the strikers was united but ironically, though a trade union official who spoke paid tribute to the large number of women strikers (650,000 out of one million), not a single woman had been given the mike or the platform. There were the usual handful of socialist paper-sellers but the dead hand of official unionism made it feel that the members were just a stage army. At one point one of the leaders asked the strikers to come together. Like a flash, there were exchanges between the strikers, management and the councillors.

As I left, a small detachment of police marched past me on the road. It seemed to me that the government had been preparing for this strike, since the police had been given their pay rises and promised more of everything. The councillors receive allowances of 20,000 pounds plus expenses and pensions. The average wage of local authority workers is between 5,000 to 10,000 pounds, with women as usual in the lowest pay bracket. The future will depend on the extent that activists and union members actually run the dispute. Will we see only a cozy deal between New Labour and the trade union leaders or a little more respect and dignity at work?

--Patrick Duffy, England

CRIMINAL INJUSTICE SYSTEM

Today (July 31) the Inglewood police issued a warrant for Neilson Williams. On June 23 he was beaten so badly he was unconscious for three days and there is a witness to his beating by J. Morse—the same cop who was seen on tape slamming Donovan Jackson’s head on the hood of a police car. Williams was not charged with any crime until today, after he filed charges against the Inglewood police. Now consider that today another Black man was released from prison in St. Louis, Missouri after 18 years for a rape he did not commit. He had been trying to get the DNA tests done for the last eight years, but had been blocked at every turn. Someone has to answer where is the justice for Blacks and Browns and the poor in this country? Something has to change now.

--Angry, Los Angeles


I enjoy reading N&L very much. I have learned a lot about some of the problems in other countries as well as this one. It seems the whole world is against the poor, no matter what color we are. I was poor and white from Maine, which is not as bad as being poor and Black in the South. But it’s close. I was picked out because we were poor, just so the cops would have someone to beat.

--Prisoner, Maine


I am incarcerated at the Supermax prison at Tamms. We are in our cells 23 hours a day, alone in a 7-by-12-foot cell. To see what we’re going through you’d have to lock yourself in a bathroom for 12 years and see how it affects the mind. Yet when I was reading your newspaper it made me feel like I have some hope in getting others to see I am innocent of the crimes I was charged with.

--C.F., Tamms, Illinois


LIBERATION FOR AFGHAN WOMEN?

An article in the SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE reported that since the “liberation” of Afghanistan from the Taliban, dozens of young women have chosen death by self-immolation in order not to be sold by their families to the highest bidder. One 14-year-old burned herself to death last month after her family sold her to a 60-year-old man. The “dowries” offered reach $10,000 to $15,000. According to “observers” women are not self-sufficient and “agree to be married off at an early age.” I don’t understand how much more strongly you can express your disagreement than by taking your own life!

All the recent news is testimony to how little the “liberated” interim government, created by the U.S. and UN, actually liberated. The work of RAWA, which recognizes women as human beings, and whose stories you have covered, stands in sharp contrast against any military solution to the problems of liberation.

--Urszula Wislanka, California

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