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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

READERS' VIEWS

FIGHTING U.S.'S  NEW WORLD ORDER

Because Marxist-Humanism has from its beginnings been free from even a vestige of Stalinism, it was able to critique U.S. imperialism during the Cold War without any sort of rationalization for the Stalinist counter-revolution that occurred within the revolution. It was able to project an alternative vision of new forms of human social relations without tripping into the false dilemma of the bipolar world that vanished in 1991.

Yet in the decade since, the Left has continued to be hamstrung by a binary logic. Anti-imperialists and prominent voices in the anti-globalization movement somehow feel compelled to dismiss serious criticisms of a Milosevic, Hussein, or in the most bizarre example, even a Taliban militia. They seem unable to achieve a higher viewpoint of what to be for and not only against.

The editorial "After Afghanistan, What?" (January-February 2002 N&L) can foresee how escalating the "war" by sustaining a permanent war economy and the national security state that goes along with it, will create more terror and terrorists, the opposite of the Bush administration's supposed intentions. We don't need to apologize for the depredations of Islamic fundamentalism any more than for Christian fundamentalism in order to criticize the new world order of U.S.-dominated global capitalism.

Teacher
Washington


The lead article in the January-February issue did a fine job describing the new perils facing immigrants under the oppressive measures taken by the Bush administration under the guise of "fighting terrorism." However, I think the report would have been strengthened by specific reference to the "Patriot's Bill" rammed through Congress that threw out many of the legal rights immigrants had before the September attacks against the World Trade Center and Pentagon.

Old Radical
Detroit


Fully 212 years of the orderly constitutional transfer of power were trashed in the "coup by gavel" that put in power the regime we now have in the White House. Its first major fascist measure was the "USA Patriot Act of 2001" which is 342 pages long and is in reality a refurbished version of the "Protective Custody Law" of Nazi Germany, the law that started the concentration camps. We already have an occupied concentration camp in Guantanamo Bay. But other unoccupied ones exist at undisclosed locations since the Reagan administration, ready to confine people in case of "massive civil unrest."

Worried
Texas


The large number of protesters at the World Economic Forum who turned out despite a huge police force, barricaded streets, helicopters and media attacks was encouraging. I believe opposition will continue to grow as the repression deepens. I see strikes and threats of strike already, from airline workers to teachers in Detroit. Capitalism's gravediggers are alive and kicking.

Ready to dig
Detroit


I usually enjoy watching the Olympics, but the jingoism this year was just too much. When commentator Bob Costas referred to the U.S. as the "homeland," it reminded me of Hitler and I almost threw up.

No watching
Memphis


KING'S LEGACY

John Alan's column in the last issue raised the provocative question of who will carry on Martin Luther King's legacy. The idea of freedom doesn't belong to any specific time or place. Anyone can borrow from anyone freely. The ideas of the Civil Rights Movement were powerful beyond the U.S. At the time of the Montgomery Bus Boycott there was also the Hungarian Revolution. A continuity appeared decades later in Tiananmen Square when the Chinese students sang "We shall overcome." The universality of the idea is there. The question of the struggle for freedom in our everyday lives is what the fetish of "violence vs. non-violence" overlays.

Asian worker
California


John Alan's column made me think of the many liberation theologians who try to make a relation between religion and theology. Many of the most active women in prison are very religious, trying to draw strength from their beliefs, but it can't stop there. Marx said religion is the opiate of the masses, but he also called it the soul of the soulless world and distinguished between the religion of the oppressed and the oppressor. The difference between a theologian who is revolutionary and one who's not, is seen in whether you're told to wait for your reward in heaven or to try to realize it on earth.

Support activist
Chicago


'LIFE AND DEBT': A REVIEW

"Life and Debt" is a movie about the economic conditions affecting present-day Jamaicans and how the World Trade Organization and the IMF loans drive the country deeper into debt and intensify the repression of the workers. Imported powdered milk undersells local milk producers and drives them out of business. England stops buying bananas under pressure from Western banana corporations. Local Black women lose their jobs in the sweatshop when they protest their conditions and contractors respond by importing busloads of Chinese women laborers.

The movie emphasizes the contrast between the affluence of Western white tourists and their insulation from and ignorance of the massive poverty of the Black Jamaicans. What the movie doesn't show is that, though the local Jamaican companies producing cattle, bananas, milk, coffee, etc. were profitable even after the British colonizers left in 1947, the people weren't freed from poverty. Nothing fundamental changed in the system of production. Workers were still doing the physical labor under the rules of the bosses who controlled the productive process. The movie ended with a few local women growing their own food on a small plot of land.

Basho
Los Angeles


ENRONIZING THE U.S.

The SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE recently juxtaposed pictures of the Enron officials taking the fifth and the cases of hundreds of people locked up for 25 years to life for shoplifting (under the three strikes law). It showed the gulag of the justice system out to discipline labor. There is an army of people focusing on bringing labor under the heel of capital while Enron is presented as "just" a financial market scandal. The mechanism of the state as an extension of capitalism recognizes freedom only for capital.

R.B.
California


Sen. Trent Lott responded to questions concerning Cheney's refusal to disclose information about the Energy Taskforce meetings with Enron executives by claiming, "If we require these kinds of meetings to be open, that would put a chilling effect on input by industry." It put new meaning to what Sen. Daschle introduced into the American lexicon when he said he would "not allow the Bush administration to enronize the U.S. economy." Daschle was only referring to the tendency to make economic projections based on mirages. But increasingly to "enronize" is beginning to signify a shadow government "behind closed doors," based on deception and secrecy and flouting U.S. legal and constitutional requirements.

Observer
California


A NEW SLAVE TRADE?

Moving prisoners around at the drop of a hat as prisons in the U.S. do is tantamount to the slave trade. That is something that began with the process of private prisons. Most disturbing of all is that there seems no rhyme or reason behind how the decisions are made of who moves and who is allowed to remain. Since 1983 I have been moved to 11 different facilities in three different states. The longest I have been in any facility has been five, four and three years. The rest of the time I have spent anywhere from a year to a month and a half somewhere before being moved again.

Prisoner on the move
Minnesota (for now)


I have been looking everywhere, including surfing the internet, looking for "jobs for felons" but there is nothing, Nothing, NOTHING. I know that God is supposed to be a forgiving God but where are the jobs, so you can move on with your life?

Unemployed felon
Missouri


THE HOMELESS

The article on the homeless youth in the last issue counters statements in a PBS series on the brain. They examined the "teenage brain" and "scientifically" concluded that young people are physically incapable of making mature judgments. But N&L showed these are very capable individuals who care very much about their lives.

Not homeless
Illinois


I happily received a copy of N&L that was distributed at a meeting in Berkeley and had to tell you how much appreciated reading the article by Sonia Bergonzi about the homeless youth holding a vigil in Chicago. I am a disabled 54-year-old woman living at poverty level and am a survivor of the kind of sexual exploitation Sonia wrote about. That article made me feel more sane.

New supporter
California


I cannot forget the article I read in the LOS ANGELES TIMES reporting that the rate of homelessness had shot up 80% during the past year. What was unforgettable was the story it told of a 51-year-old woman who was single, lived alone, and for the last five years had cleaned rooms in a downtown Cleveland hotel. She had worked her way up to earning $8 an hour plus benefits until the hotel's business collapsed after September 11, and she was laid off. To buy groceries she had sold all the belongings she could but had not been able to pay her rent after November. When she admitted in court she could still not pay it, the magistrate gave her ten days to vacate the premises. The article described her eyes filling with tears as she left the courtroom saying, "I'm going to have to get a lot of quarters because I'll have to call a lot of shelters." What makes the story unforgettable is the "statistic" that says this kind of story has "shot up 80% during the past year."

No Statistician
Los Angeles


SEGREGATION IN 2002

The Detroit News recently ran a series on segregation and found that both Blacks and whites are "comfortable" with segregation. However, on a local TV talk show, Dr. Shirley Stancato, Director of New Detroit, a non-profit founded after the 1967 rebellion, said that wrong questions had been asked. She said people might agree with a statement such as "I am comfortable where I live, or in my house," but what if they were asked, "Are you comfortable with the choices you have about where you can live?" You have to dig below the surface to get to real answers.

S. Van Gelder
Detroit


HEGEL AND THE DIALECTIC

The "In Memoriam to Wang Ruoshui" (N&L, January-February 2002) says he got excited about Raya Dunayevskaya's critique of Lenin's comment that Hegel's "Absolute Idea" equaled "Objective Truth." Wang's own critique of Lenin was that Lenin only got as far as objectivity but not the unity of subjectivity and objectivity. In other words, Lenin stopped at the identity of opposites as the dialectic principle. But the real problem today is how to transcend opposites that are identical. Dunayevskaya's view of the PHENOMENOLOGY points to just that. Nobody else thought to say that Hegel's Preface to that work  is a continuation of his chapter on Absolute Knowledge or that an actively engaged philosophy can make the difference between the long night and the breaking of the dawn, because that is what the future needs.

People are drawn to different aspects of the dialectic. Marcuse, for example, was also drawn to the identity of opposites. But the departure for our age is not that, but seeing absolute negativity as new beginning.

Marxist-Humanist
California


FREE SPEECH VICTORY

Readers of N&L should know about a victory for pluralism and free speech which was won when the Union for Radical Political Economics (URPE) retracted a false charge made against Andrew Kliman and lifted a publishing ban imposed on him. URPE had falsely charged that Kliman violated professional ethics by submitting a paper to another journal while it was still under review by them and banned all further articles authored by him.

In its retraction (see www.urpe.org/rrpehome.html) URPE accepts that the paper was no longer under review when it was submitted elsewhere. Although the fundamental issue of pluralism remains unresolved, the retraction removes a decisive obstacle to genuine scholarly debate around the substantive question of Marx's Value Theory which has been raised by Kliman.

Alan Freeman
New York


FOR WOMEN'S LIBERATION, MARCH 2002

An enthusiastic overflow crowd joined an array of talented local musicians to shout "you are not alone" to the video camera at the conclusion of an inspiring benefit concert for Revolutionary Association for the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) organized by Detroit-area composer/musician Mark Gottlieb. The music was punctuated by short readings and commentary about the history and struggles of RAWA. In a concert with no low points, the high point was a string quartet composed by Gottlieb which was played to a reading of "I'll Never Return," a poem written by RAWA founder Meena before she was assassinated by Islamic fundamentalists at the age of 30 in 1987. Mark told the audience that he had known of RAWA and had intended to send a donation but never got around to it. After September 11 he saw a film in which fundamentalist men were beating the faces of Afghan women protesters "and smiling, they liked it." That was when he had decided to organize the benefit concert. Anyone interested in more information can visit www.gott.musik.com.

Women's Liberationist
Detroit


Yael Dean, as the speaker who opened a "Women Who Shook the Jewish World" series in Northern California, had been asked to discuss the status of women in Israel. That she did, but not without spending at least half of her talk railing against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

She is a Labor Knesset member whose views put her at the extreme left of her party. She insisted that you cannot believe in the concept of a "Greater Israel" and be a feminist at the same time, that you cannot have a double standard when it comes to basic human rights. The audience was quietly receptive.

Women's Liberationist
California


A full week after the letter from the soldiers who refused to serve in the occupied territories was published, their act was still all over the media in Israel. An incredible one-third of Israelis expressed support and several support groups have sprung up. One is by disabled army veterans. Another is by the wives of reserve soldiers who are circulating a petition that says in part, "We are not willing to be pawns of a government of occupation and oppression, which corrupts the values of our loved ones and our nation...while our families pay the price."

At the same time, vigils of Women in Black and others are growing all over Israel. There are now 18 regular anti-occupation vigils throughout Israel, about half of them Women in Black.

Gila Svirsky
Jerusalem


FIGHTING AN ATTACK ON FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION 

Marxist.com was the victim of a deliberate act of politically motivated aggression when our web server was hacked into by unidentified individuals in January with the clear intention of destroying our site. As a result of the sabotage a number of web sites were deleted, including "In Defense of Marxism," "Socialist Appeal," "Socialist Labor" and "Trotsky year 2001." It was not a random act of vandalism. Other non-political sites hosted by the same server were not touched. They clearly wanted to shut us up.

Our work has obtained wide recognition, even from people who would not consider themselves Marxists, as shown by the increasing number of visits to our site and the correspondence received from all over the world. 

A few dedicated collaborators have worked day and night to get the web site up and running again. We have recovered practically all the lost material and will soon be running a normal service again. We depend exclusively on the support of our readers and friends to continue our work and appeal for your help. Please pass this appeal on to all those interested in fighting against this attack on the most basic principle of free speech and democracy. 

Alan Woods
Editor, Marxist.com


MUMIA ABU-JAMAL AND THE DEATH PENALTY

Since the judge threw out the death penalty for Mumia his sentence has most likely been relegated to life imprisonment. Will the focus die out now that death is off the table? Or does it mean we will now start looking at the whole picture? Although the death penalty is a big issue to the community—and of course, to those sentenced to die—there are many more lifers in our prisons than those on death row. The fickleness of liberal attitudes when they have a "cause" is widely discussed among prisoners. It is great that Mumia has gained the reprieve from an early death but his case has always been simply the tip of a very large, very convoluted, very repressive iceberg. 

Political prisoner
Indiana


When a Giant food store in Pennsylvania placed an ad in the window: "In honor of Black History Month—Fried Chicken on Sale" an African-American woman called the NAACP and now they are on the scene. My problem with this situation is that they will not go far enough for a good solution. Here is mine: since the state of Pennsylvania had been planning to "fry" Brother Mumia Abu-Jamal with a "hot needle" of chemicals you couldn't give to a chicken without being fined or arrested, I suggest that the Giant food chain be made to fund freeing all political prisoners, starting with Mumia.

Meanwhile, since the NAACP is preparing for their National Awards dinner with the main honoree to be Condoleezza Rice, I have these questions: Does Ms. Rice have a membership in the NAACP? What about the action she took against letting Secretary of State Colin Powell go to the World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa? The NAACP should change its name to National Association for the Advancement of Certain People. "No frying of Brother Mumia Abu-Jamal" should be the chant heard inside and outside the dinner area. 

George Wilfrid Smith Jr.
Chicago


WHO READS N&L?

A fellow worker told me about N&L at the IWW convention in 1979 and I figured I couldn't go far wrong for the $1 a sub cost then. I have been a subscriber ever since and can't imagine life without it. I appreciate the way you look for the revolutionary potential in wide-ranging acts of revolt. Your conception that the revolt of the most oppressed strata of society is the most socially advanced movement of our time has broadened and deepened my understanding of world events. 

Two Wobblies
Boston


I consider myself a green anarchist (not of the neo-primitivist sort) but I am always open to other ideas and viewpoints. The only truly important goal is liberty and equality for all, regardless of personal labels.

New Reader
Ypsilanti


It meant so much to me when I started seeing articles about our Defense Depot work in N&L. This is an international paper and I knew my message was getting out all over the world. I travel a lot and meet people who know about our struggle because of this paper. One of my relatives found an article I wrote in N&L and wanted to know: "How did you manage to get into a paper in Chicago?"

Defense Depot activist
Memphis


NEWS & LETTERS and Marxist-Humanist literature is available at a new radical bookstore in Indianapolis's Fountain Square neighborhood. Visit SOLIDARITY BOOKS, 860 Virginia Ave. Call (317) 252-4842 for hours and information.

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