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News and Letters, April 2003

Bush's illegal, unwarranted, and inhumane war against Iraq is rightly being condemned by masses of people all over the world. We in News and Letters Committees, America's only Marxist-Humanist organization, join with these powerful voices of opposition, as we seek to project a vision of a new, human society as the absolute opposite to the barbarism that has been released with Bush's war.

As this war begins to unfold, it is clear that it has NOTHING to do with "liberating" the Iraqi people and everything to do with extending U.S. global power both at the expense of the Iraqi AND American people. Bush's effort to "decapitate Hussein" in the first hours of the war clearly reflected the administration's intent to get rid of Hussein while preserving as much of the Iraqi repressive state apparatus--its police, military, and oppressive Ba'ath Party institutions--as possible. Now that that attack's initial goals were apparently unsuccessful, and resistance to the U.S. invasion is showing itself from various quarters inside Iraq, a U.S.-led bloodbath may well ensure. Now is the time to make our voices heard in opposition to the U.S. drive for war and FOR a new human society opposed to ALL repressive rulers as never before!

The Lead-Editorial, below, presents our analysis of the unfolding situation. We encourage you to send us your views and responses.

The Resident Editorial Board,
News and Letters Committees

Lead-Editorial

War on Iraq, resistance, and the shift in global politics

George W. Bush's illegal, unwarranted and barbarous war against Iraq clearly has nothing to do with "liberating" the Iraqi people and everything to do with extending U.S. global power at the expense of both the Iraqi and American populace. At the same time that global reach finds limitations in the faltering economy and conflicts with allies Turkey and the European union. The resistance to U.S. militarism can grow by keeping in mind that there is no national capitalist solution to the U.S. drive for war.


From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist Archives

Murder and war in the uncivilized U.S.

April 4 is an appropriate date to remember the resistance to the Vietnam War and the Black Civil Rights movement. For on that date, in 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down in Memphis, Tennessee where he came to support sanitation workers on strike. Where King connected, and where he failed to connect, to Reason in the Black struggle for freedom speaks to today's struggles against war and racism and for liberation.


Mexico’s campesinos hit NAFTA

On the first day of 2003, the final and current provisions of the North American Free Trade Agreement took effect. On that day commenced also a new and independent resistance to NAFTA's ill effects on indigenous communities in southern Mexico, capped by the massive protest Jan. 31 in Mexico City.


Detroit stands up for affirmative action

A fight to stop the curtailments in minority and women's rights in college admissions and employment is shaping up in Michigan. A march in Detroit drew together the movement for affirmative action's many allies.


JCI strike scores gains against GM

GM cloaks runaway production in parts imported from Mexico, but workers on the inside know the threat they pose.


Essay Article

Helen Macfarlane: Antigone in Victorian England

The qualities of the ancient heroic figure Antigone may help us understand Helen Macfarlane, the unknown translator of the first English edition of the Communist Manifesto. Not only did Macfarlane challenge the oppressive state but she also stood out as on who voiced the aspiration of the common person, especially women.


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