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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2002

Readers' View

THE WAR ON FREEDOM

It's important to always refer to the so-called "war on terrorism" as that of Bush and the Democrats. The same is true of the "war on freedom." The duplicitous Democrats may soon begin to curry favor with voters fed up with attacks on our civil liberties. Then it may be too late to assign blame for the latest installment of imperialist war at the doorsteps of the Democrats as well as of Bush and John "Southern Patriot" Ashcroft.

Supporter
Illinois


The deaths of thousands of civilians in the Middle East, both from direct military action and the resulting refugee crisis, is nothing short of state-sponsored terrorism. It is not the way to find justice for the 3,000 who died at the hands of terrorists on September 11.

Activist
New York


Giving careful consideration to how our foreign policy affects other peoples would do more than the destruction of war to rid the world of terrorism.

D.T.
Louisiana  


I was glad to hear that Clayton Lee Waagner was apprehended for sending hundreds of anthrax threats to women's health clinics and that Ashcroft was forced to describe him as a domestic terrorist. But Waagner and men like him don't act alone. Why isn't the Army of God he's allied with treated as a terrorist organization by the Department of Justice? The FBI has been notoriously absent from any fight against anti-choice terrorism, even when the Army of God distributes a manual that gives detailed instructions for attacking abortion clinics, manufacturing bombs, and cutting off the hands of abortion doctors!

Women's Liberationist
Chicago


During this month when we are celebrating the life of Martin Luther King Jr. and worried about protecting our civil rights today, it might be good to remember the campaign of spying and vilification waged on King by Hoover's FBI. I recall a statement by Mumia Abu- Jamal that called King a political prisoner, even when not in prison, of the same government he fought and died to save.

Abu-Jamal supporter
Philadelphia


AN AMERICAN TALIBAN?

I read an article recently that asked what Bush was going to do—now that he was taking on religious persecution in Afghanistan—about religious persecution at home. And how about in all the other Islamic fundamentalist states? It turned into a report about the beheading by the Saudis, in the week between Christmas and New Year's, of three men because they had allegedly engaged in homosexual acts. Then the article asked why, since we wouldn't ever do anything like that, do we still have 122-year-old sodomy laws on the books in 16 states, including Texas, where two Houston men were arrested recently and hauled to jail for having sex together in their own apartment.

The answer is the same reason Saudi Arabia chops off homosexuals' heads—because some religious fanatics have made their beliefs the law of the land. The article was talking about the Christian Coalition, the 700 Club, and the Catholic cardinals who constitute a real American Taliban. Our own religious Right is the inspiration for the fanatics who bomb abortion clinics and kill gays on the streets of America. When is Bush going to take on that Taliban?

Angry and alarmed
Chicago


CANADA'S NEW 'SECURITY'

Things are not good here. The British Columbia provincial elections a few months ago elected a very right-wing government. Civil service is about to be slashed by 33%. The minimum wage will be kept at $8 but they have introduced a "beginner wage" of $5, which can be worked off after 500 hours. Since virtually all so employed will be part–timers, 500 hours must seem a lifetime. Privatization is the mantra of the day.

Subscriber
Canada


I'm sure you are aware of our dictatorial new "security" legislation here, drastically curtailing the democratic freedoms of all Canadians. In some respects, I understand that our new laws are even more restrictive than yours in the U.S. In the quest to save our "democracy" we are heading toward a corporate, military, fascist dictatorship. Stupid me, I thought I had left this behind me in Europe when I left in the 1950s. Here we go, starting all this again, under different slogans, fighting terror and terrorists, while millions are starving and freezing to death throughout the world.

Still a dissident
British Columbia


ISRAELI SOLDIERS say 'no'

A large ad in today's HA'ARETZ (Jan. 25), signed by 53 combat soldiers and officers in the Israeli army, announces: "We hereby declare that we shall continue to serve the Israel Defenses Forces in any mission that serves the defense of the State of Israel. The mission of occupation and repression does not serve this goal and we refuse to participate in it."

This is an unprecedented call by Israeli soldiers to other Israeli soldiers not to serve in the army of occupation. It is an incredibly courageous act to announce that they will no longer continue fighting in the territories "for the purposes of domination, expulsion, starvation, and humiliation of an entire people." It is in the rich moral tradition of Yesh Gvul and New Profile, two organizations that have consistently advocated this position, but in unprecedented numbers. May their numbers multiply!

Gila Svirsky
Jerusalem


SICKENING HEALTH POLICY

One of Tony Blair's closest advisors runs a private healthcare company that is making millions from acute National Health Service shortages. Lord Sawyer, the former Labour Party general-secretary and public sector union chief, is now chairman of Reed Health Group, whose own publicity material states that it aims to profit from the structural deficiencies of the NHS, the continuing shortage of nurses and an aging population. Karen Jennings, head of nursing at the public sector union Unison, said the situation was nothing short of a scandal: "The more desperate the hospital is, the more these firms charge." Dr. Evan Harris, the Liberal Democrats health spokesman, said, "I have lost count of the number of so-called progressive Labour politicians who leave their principles behind them to make money from the private sector."

Sick Nurse
Britain


ARGENTINA'S CRISIS  

There is a big difference between how Latin Americans and people in the U.S. view the crisis in Argentina. A lot of people in the anti-globalization movement here in the States are acting as if the Argentine crisis is a great thing since it exposes the fragility of global capital. But that's not how folks are reading it back home. They view it as a disaster and are worried whether they will ever see decent living conditions again.

Exiled Latin American
Chicago


When I look at the Argentine collapse, I wonder whether what we're seeing is a harbinger of new revolts against global capital, or a repeat of Russia's economic collapse—which didn't lead to any revolutionary beginnings.

P.M.
New York


Interesting that Castro sent a message of support to then-President of Argentina, Adolfo Rodriguez Saa, at the very moment workers and the unemplpoyed were marching against the state of siege he had imposed. He had more understanding for the beleaguered rulers of Argentina than for the masses.

Observer
Illinois


THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY—IN HEGEL, IN MARX, IN MARXIST-HUMANISM

The excerpts from the Introduction to THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY (December 2001 N&L) refer to Hegel's assertion that the Absolute Idea is the unity of theory and practice. This is in fact the central point of Hegel's failure: he did not unify theory and practice, but rather theory and his abstract idea of practice. While it was no doubt his intention to break out of his closed system, he in fact did not do so.

Reader
New York


Dunayevskaya says we faced a "new divide" in Marxism when Lenin returned to Marx's philosophic roots in the Hegelian dialectic—but that we now face a new divide in which the return to those roots cannot be kept in private notes but has to be developed "openly, publicly, and collectively." Here it seems to me is a fundamental difference between her way of proceeding and Lenin's. Learning the lessons from the past is what gives an opportunity to avoid the same mistakes.

Activist/scholar
Spokane


I'm impressed with your steadfastness of carrying the banner of "the power of negativity in today's freedom struggles" as you entitled your Perspectives thesis for 2001-2002. While I guess I understand about 70-80% of the practical struggles, I'm afraid I will go to my grave not fully understanding the philosophic meaning of absolute negativity.

Musician
Canada


Printing part of the Introduction to THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY in the December issue has helped me to better understand the concepts of "dialectic" and "negativity." I am now reading the book in hopes of better understanding where we are as a human race and where we need to go to survive these dangerous times when our unelected president tries to drag us down into an abject totalitarianism.

Sustaining subscriber
Wisconsin


It is not at all clear to me from reading your last issue why all this fuss is being made about Hegel's Absolutes. One can surely appreciate the importance of Hegelian concepts like the "negation of the negation" without bothering with his concept of "Absolute Knowledge," which is a residue of metaphysical speculation.

Teacher
Illinois


THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY will be a great help in the process of delving into the thinking of Marx and Hegel and will be a great stimulus I am sure for revolutionary thinking today. I am reading Marx's doctoral dissertation of 1839-41 at the same time.

Worker/student
Amsterdam


AN URGENT APPEAL FROM IRAN

Akbar and Manoochehr Mohammadi are brothers who have been held in prison in Iran since the pro-democracy demonstrations at Tehran University in July 1999, under the harshest of prison conditions, including beatings and other tortures. They are in serious need of medical attention but have consistently been denied removal to a medical facility or even the one-day furlough some other prisoners had been given. In a letter from the notorious Evin Prison they described what they were told when they asked the reasons behind this discriminatory policy:

"The authorities replied: 'You are arrogant and have rejected the opportunity to ask for amnesty. Rest assured that as long as you do not ask for amnesty, we will not free you.' We replied, 'An appeal for amnesty for a crime we have not committed would be a confirmation of the charges against us. You should rest assured we will not make such an appeal.'"

They went on a hunger strike shortly after that letter was sent out. The International Alliance of Iranian Students report that their fate is unclear. They are demanding the unconditional and immediate release of all imprisoned students and political activists.

More information is available from their web address: www.daneshjooyan.org.


ANTI-WAR STRUGGLE: WHAT NOW?

The theme of a piece in the December N&L asking "Whatever happened to the anti-war movement?" was about perishing movements and persisting left tendencies. That's what has happened from the Gulf War to today's war where, in both cases, the live subject gets lost, whether the Kurds fighting Sadaam or the RAWA women fighting both the Taliban and U.S.'s Northern Alliance allies. That happens when the opposition to war is not based on the human being's immanent drive for wholeness, seen in the struggles of women, workers, Blacks and other national minorities. Movements perish because theory has become an external script to be followed and is not based on this drive to be whole. But the left tendencies themselves persist. The war today is popular not because people don't recognize problems with capitalism, especially in their everyday activity, but because they want an answer beyond economism and the Left's opposition to U.S. imperialism.

Bay Area Hegelian
California


What does it mean when supposed revolutionary forces in the U.S. don't refute bin Ladenism and terrorism? It raises the question of what is our basis for being "anti-imperialist." In Iran the so-called anti-imperialist forces such as Khomeini tried to eliminate the entire Left. Bush learned from Khomeini who said you are either for us or against us. Then Khomeini started killing Marxists, accusing them of being under American influence. Haven't we lost enough comrades in Iran and Afghanistan over the last 30 years to exclaim loud and clear that these are reactionary forces. People like Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson stand in opposition to rulers in the U.S. Does that make them revolutionaries?

Iranian revolutionary
California


Two previous anti-war events I attended here were silent processions, but the one in December was a political march with slogans, banners, speakers. The politics were dismal and only bearable because I had HOBGOBLIN, our British Marxist-Humanist journal, to work with. None of the speakers seriously addressed the real danger posed by Al Qaeda, or the oppression of women (and men) under the Taliban. Blair, Bush and the bombing were condemned but there was no attempt at an objective analysis of the impact of the war on Afghanistan. No one expressed support for the "Other Afghanistan" or called for secular democracy, let alone social revolution. The best speaker was a young Black American who argued that a real "war against terror" would take on the KKK, the militias, and the CIA.

R. Bunting
Oxford


There was a section in the May 2001 N&L on "Globalization and Dialectics" that speaks to the question N&L has recently raised concerning "What happened to the anti-war movement?" In an article called "We ignore ideas at our own risk" the writer went through his own history in the movement and how he kept hearing that we have to organize around the immediate issues. He said his goal was a new society and the choice was between human power or capital power. He saw philosophy as a question of life and death. That's the same question I think needs to be posed to today's yet-another-anti-war movement.

Women's liberationist
California


MUMIA ABU-JAMAL

The first year of the new millennium ended with good news for me when I read on the Dec. 19 front page of the Battle Creek Enquirer (the local version of the National Inquirer) that the death sentence of Mumia Abu-Jamal had been thrown out!

Retired postal worker
Battle Creek, Mich.


Editor's Note: On Jan. 17 attorneys for Mumia Abu-Jamal filed an appeal of his murder conviction. Prosecutors have also appealed the ruling of Judge William Yohn who found errors in the sentencing phase of the original trial and ordered Abu-Jamal to be resentenced within 180 days or face life imprisonment. The appeals will likely take years to resolve, freezing Yohn's order and continuing the case which has been a touchstone in the international debate over the death penalty.


LIFE AT GROUND ZERO

The economic impact of September 11 ripples out in tidal waves. As recovery workers continue to dig through the devastation and the city puts up viewing platforms for the tourists, more and more people are losing their jobs. Over 100,000 were lost in the last three months.

Concern for the victims is giving way to criticism about the disparate treatment of the rich and poor who suffered losses on September 11. Marriott World Trade Center Hotel employees who were promised replacement jobs still do not have them. They held a demonstration in Times Square on Jan. 16. On Jan. 17 over 500 relatives of the dead held a protest rally against the federal compensation plan. THE NEW YORK TIMES ran a story about anonymous undocumented workers pointing out that no one will ever know all the people who died that day because some employers didn't even know their workers' names.

With the passage of four months questions are also being asked about whether so many lives had to be lost. Was the building construction faulty? Should police and firemen have been stopped from rushing into buildings that were going to collapse? Meanwhile the debate about whether it is safe to breathe the air in that part of the city continues, while those of us who work or live there just keep on breathing it.

Manhattanite
New York


The events of September 11 claimed the lives of 73 employees of Windows on the World, most of whom were members of Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union (HERE), Local 100. Many who worked as cooks, servers, bussers, runners, stewards and housekeepers were the sole breadwinners and the families left behind are largely headed by immigrant women with young children. For the undocumented the hardship is even greater as they are ineligible for most government assistance. Beside the lost lives, over 240 Windows workers were displaced from their jobs and are struggling to find work to support their families.

The HERE New York Assistance Fund was established to directly aid all these victims and is administered by Judson Memorial Church. Donations will go directly to families and displaced workers and the needs of undocumented workers will receive special attention. Donations should be sent to:

HERE
New York Assistance Fund
Judson Memorial Church
55 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012


A CALL FOR DISCUSSION

In the December N&L, Peter Hudis added his voice to the growing chorus on the Left calling for "a projection of the kind of new human society we are for." Unfortunately, while there have been many exhortations, there has been none of the detailed sorting out of issues and discussion which is required. What is needed is for left journals to devote a few pages regularly working through the obvious questions and calling for participants to extend the discussion. Two basic groups of issues are: 1) How would a world devoted to producing use values rather than for exchange value plan production and exchange in a democratic, ecologically and environmentally sound manner? 2) What decisions must be taken at what level (production unit, locality, wider region, and so on) if the system is to be genuinely democratic?

R.F.P.
Melbourne, Australia


HAITI TURNS 198

Happy birthday, Haiti! Bonne Fete, Cheri! The 198 years from Jan. 1, 1804 to Jan. 1, 2002 is not a long time for a nation's life. But when you have a sibling like Uncle Sam, the fact that you have lived two years is amazing to me. Yes, Haiti, you helped the 13 colonies in the U.S. revolutionary war against Great Britain, the United Kingdom "where the sun never set." And after the 1779 battle of Savannah the sun started to set for them all over the place.

What was your reward, Haiti, for helping the U.S.? Nearly 60 years of non-recognition as an independent nation and an embargo for the same length of time. So when I wish you happy 198th birthday this year, I would like to wish you more years, but with a brother like Uncle Sam, who can say how many more years you will be allowed to have?

Nouveau Toussaint
Chicago


SAVING ROE V. WADE

This January marked the 29th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion nationwide. If we don't act quickly to save it, it could be the last year we will be able to celebrate the landmark decision, since legal abortion hangs by a razor-thin 5-to-4 margin in the Supreme Court and at least one Justice is likely to retire in 2002. It means that President Bush could—and who doubts that he would?—appoint enough anti-abortion Justices to overturn our rights to have a choice and the days of back alley abortions would be back! You can find out what you can do to help save our rights by checking into www.Million4Roe.com.

One of the millions

Chicago


WHO READS N&L?

Thanks for the years of enjoyment and understanding of what's going on in this country. We have to push to make this paper more widespread. I wish you would print at the bottom of each page "Please do not throw this paper away. Share it with someone." We have to keep Marxism and freedom alive.

Prisoner
Amarillo, Texas


The news you bring out of the problems among human beings around the globe has made such an impact on me that I have started looking into the traditions of all cultures and writing on "civil society." Please thank the donors who make N&L available to me.

Philosophy teacher
India

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