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El periódico «La Voz de los Trabajadores»: Edición de marzo-abril

La guerra de Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán es una escalada importante en el Medio Oriente que tiene implicaciones peligrosas para los trabajadores de todo el mundo. La brutalidad del asalto imperialista a nivel internacional va junto con el ataque a las libertades civiles por parte del régimen de Trump dentro de Estados Unidos. Esto incluye las operaciones continuas del ICE y la Patrulla Fronteriza, las amenazas a las elecciones de mitad de período de 2026, los retrocesos ambientales que afectan profundamente a la comunidad negra y la brutalidad policial sin control.
Nuestro editorial en este número nos advierte: «Existe un gran peligro de subestimar la determinación de la élite empresarial estadounidense de llevar adelante esta iniciativa. No podemos confiar en que las sentencias judiciales o las próximas elecciones nos salven. Debemos organizarnos ahora, no solo para realizar manifestaciones masivas y crear redes comunitarias contra la violencia del ICE, sino para encontrar el camino hacia la construcción de un nuevo partido de la clase trabajadora a través del cual podamos organizar nuestra defensa política en todos los planos y todos los días».
En este número también tenemos artículos sobre los archivos de Epstein y la clase dominante, la huelga de maestros de San Francisco y una reseña del nuevo álbum de U2.
La edición de marzo-abril de 2026 de nuestro periódico está disponible en formato impreso y en línea como PDF y contiene articulos en ingles y español. ¡Lee hoy mismo el último número de nuestro periódico con una descarga gratuita en PDF! Como siempre, agradecemos cualquier donación que ayude a sufragar los gastos de impresión.
Haz clic en la imagen para leer el periódico o envíanos un mensaje para recibir una copia impresa:
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Planet Earth: Why we must protect it
By ANDY BARNSAt first glance there isn’t a connection between politics and cosmology. After all, the challenges and opportunities presented to the ruled classes, and by extension humanity, have no direct relation to, for example, the Crab nebula. Yet politics is ultimately about human relationships, and whatever illusions or daydreams might be inside human brains, effectively talking about human relationships requires a strong grasp of the concrete reality of our situation. The perspective that a cosmological view can give is essential and indispensable to us in understanding the real meaning of the human race, and also what is at stake if we do not have the wisdom to overcome our challenges or the courage to slay our demons.
The Earth, and with it humans, are immensely precious, finite, and rare. Humanity truly has hit the jackpot. The word “blessed” does not do our fortune justice, and we squander it at our peril. I am not a professional scientist, so a great deal of this article will be simplified, with a limitation on speculation. For further reading, more thorough scientific explanations for all topics will be provided in the sources below.
Where are we now, to the best of humanity’s scientific knowledge?
A basic picture of the cosmos
The universe as we know it began approximately 13.8 billion (~13,800,000,000) years ago in an event known as “The Big Bang,” where it is thought that all matter, energy, and space-time as we know them began. The Big Bang can be characterized as a rapid expansion of all the matter and energy of our universe from a single point, expanding out to many light-years of size within mere moments. Contrary to what the name would imply, this event was not an explosion in space, but rather an expansion of space itself, and an expansion that continues to the present day. In the beginning (the first few millionths of a second, to seconds), the density and temperature of the universe was incredible, but as expansion occurred, the density of temperature fell, allowing normal physics and particles as we know them to operate, with each of the four fundamental forces becoming distinct with each new era. This likely happened in mere seconds or minutes, and is a process analogous to a phase change, such as when ice turns to water, or water to steam.
As the age of the universe progressed (over millions of years), matter clumped into larger and larger collective forms, first stars out of diffuse gas, then whole galaxies out of billions of stars. In our observable universe (that part of the universe from which light could have reached Earth given 13.8 billion years of travel, light is fast, but not infinitely fast) hundreds of billions of galaxies can be observed of a great variety of shapes and sizes. Each with thousands, to millions, to billions of stars. The universe is almost incomprehensibly vast, and there could, potentially, be more unseen galaxies beyond the 13.8 billion light-year sphere that we can see from Earth, and galaxies too dim to see with telescopes.
Before the formation of planets around stars could happen, stars themselves had to go through a whole lifetime (millions to billions of years depending on the type of star) of fuel consumption. Stars “burn” matter in a process of nuclear fusion, in which lighter elements, like hydrogen, are converted into heavier elements, such as helium, nitrogen, carbon, lithium, etc, through shear heat and pressure alone. This releases a huge amount of energy that escapes the star in the form of light and heat. The gravity of stars is immense, and it is under this gravity that the fusion process occurs.
Over time, the fusion process leads to heavier and heavier elements. Once a star begins creating iron, it is about time for its “main sequence” life to end, as iron cannot be used in the fusion process of most stars, thus robbing older stars of any source of fuel. Lighter stars (like our own sun) will simply expand outward in radius, and eventually shed off material before forming an object called a white dwarf. Heavier stars will experience a violent cataclysmic event known as a supernova, where nearly all its matter will explode outward. From these events we see the creation of various nebulae, like the Crab or Horseshoe nebulae. These nebulae are filled with heavier elements, and it is from these elements that rocky objects such as planets, comets, asteroids, and of course, organic life as we know it have formed.
The very lightest stars are thought to live for trillions (1 followed by 12 zeros) more years, and yet will never release their inner elements like their more massive cousins, these are the red and brown dwarfs. Some are so light that they cannot fuse heavy elements and remain comprised of mostly helium. Many stars become so massive that the force of gravity overcomes matter itself and all the matter at the core of massive stars vanishes into a phenomenon called a black hole. We only touch upon this phenomenon in passing, as black hole formation is not directly integral to the formation of planets in the way stars are, since all the useful heavy elements simply vanish into the singularity at the heart of the black hole.
Planet formation is not a straightforward and uniform process, and the science of precisely how stars form planets, and in the configurations that we can observe from Earth, including our own solar system, are not yet well understood. But suffice it to say that virtually all planets develop under wildly different conditions. Even a cursory glance at the zoo of worlds (planets and moons) orbiting our own star demonstrates this fact. The age and mass of their star, the composition of heavier vs. lighter elements in the initial formation disk, the amount of mass clumped into one object, the number of currently and previously formed planets, and their masses, the number of chaotic debris in the form of asteroids that impact planets, the stability of their orbits (planets are thought to frequently be thrown away from their parent stars into deep space, or even be captured by foster stars) etc, etc.
In short, the number of conditions that determine that nature of a world, are innumerable. The Earth is thought to have completed its basic formation approx. 4 billion years ago.
A planet’s history doesn’t end with its formation, either. As clearly seen on the Earth, and also thought to have occurred and our neighbors Venus and Mars, worlds change radically over hundreds of thousands of years. A blip in cosmic time where things are properly measured in billions of years!
From this starting point, we will begin to see just how utterly rare (and transitory) not only the Earth, but also the conditions of the evolution of the human race and all other life we cherish. This rare and transitory nature of the conditions of our existence is further compounded by the sheer isolation of our world in human scales of space and time.
How far away are other worlds?
When considering the vastness of the cosmos both space and time are necessary constraints. Simply getting a human being, or any piece of human technology, to another planet, to say nothing of another star system entirely, is a expensive and time-consuming process. Simply sating literal measurements is not sufficient, so scale models will have to do.
If the Earth were shrunk to the size of a golf ball, the moon would be a marble 1.3 m distant. (The real-life moon is actually 400,000 km away.) The sun would be 4.6 m in diameter and 500 m away. It would take us three minutes to walk to the Sun. At this scale, the closest star, Alpha Centauri, would be 130,000 km away. A continuous drive of over a month would be needed to reach this star. For reference, at this scale, the Voyager 1 probe, currently humanity’s furthest object out in space (and one of humanity’s fastest ever objects), would be 70 km away.
Needless to say, space is vast. Barring fictional technologies that let humans go faster than light (even theoretical models require materials impossible to form on this planet), humans are stuck on Earth. Any expedition to any world outside our solar system is beyond human capability at this time.
Considering the sheer vastness of the universe, it would at first make sense to speculate that other Earth-like worlds exist. But for how long to these conditions last? How far away? And are conditions specific enough for human life?
What made humanity possible?
We return to the central point of Earth’s special nature. It would take an encyclopedia to simply list out the number of conditions that made human life possible, including the existence of a civilization that uses technology. This says nothing of the class struggles that led humanity down the path it has hitherto taken, which could have wildly changed human history. So I will simply list out some of the more relevant prerequisites:
- The existence of a solvent for organic life, in our case water, and in quantities and at temperatures which would allow life as we know it to thrive.
- The long-term stability of climate and planetary orbit, allowing complex life to evolve. Note that while Mars is thought to have once had liquid water on its surface and even life, it no longer has either of these. Mars’ climate changed.
- The in-fact evolution of multi-celled life, including the evolution of cells with organelles like chloroplasts (for plant cells).
- The evolution of complex brains. Further, the evolution of complex brains able to speak language and use tools.
- The extinction of the dinosaurs. Indeed, the existence of fossil-fuel capitalism is only possible do to many, many generations of extinct species. On that note,
- The absence of any mass extinction event, like asteroid impact, which destroyed the human race. This is often thought to be because the planet Jupiter, our very large planetary cousin, absorbs (or gravitationally deflects) many large asteroids. Along with this, the relative absence of large asteroids in our solar system, sans the one which killed the dinosaurs.
- Earth’s magnetic field, resulting from our planet’s molten core, protecting life from the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation.
- Earth’s moon being both close and massive enough, creating tides that are integral to Earth weather, and possibly the formation of early life.
- The absence of any large-mass star about to go supernova in our immediate vicinity (think tens of light-years). Such an event would destroy all organic life on Earth.
There are a few items related only to our particular technological civilization:
- The evolution of grass (livestock).
- Our sun produced no solar flare of enough strength to engulf the Earth since humans began widely using electronics. Such an event would be devastating. It could still happen in the next few centuries, possibly sooner.
- Humans did not use nuclear/bio-weapons to destroy themselves.
- No climate change/mass extinction event of sufficient speed and ferocity has destroyed the biodiversity of the Earth, and with it humanity’s ideal temperature, humidity, and sources of food. However, humanity is currently in progress to create this event. The existence of a capitalist class set to exploit the Earth’s resources and humanity’s labor-power is the genesis of this coming disaster.
Any single one of these traits of the Earth, the solar system, and the human race itself could have been fundamentally different. In fact, contrary to comforting religious belief, there is nothing that made humanity a guarantee. It is quite possible that some other creatures could have evolved in our place, whether or not they possessed intelligence or the ability to be introspective. All that would be needed would have been, say, the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs being a few hundred kilometers off course, and there would have been no human beings in the observable universe.
The conditions of life on this world are specific and delicate, and this is not the result of divine magic, but random chance. In a universe of trillions of stars and still more trillions of planets and moons, something like the Earth is bound to exist somewhere—but not forever.
The fact that the existence of human beings was never a guarantee should be understood if the value and relevance of human life is to be fully grasped. And then it should not be hard to see that humanity’s continued existence is no guarantee either! Hopefully, this understanding will grant us the humility and wisdom to see that our stewardship of the Earth, and our consideration for the well-being of our fellow humans, are not options. They are our essential, unending, nonnegotiable, and necessary duty.
Any human being, or class of human beings, who puts forward the most petty and vile aims of wealth accumulation over and above the survival of the human race are traitors to the human race itself. If we want to survive and allow the human legacy to go on, and if we value our lives and those of our families, then these exploiters must be stopped, even if it requires determined struggle. The choice is fundamentally between capitalist profits and human existence on the Earth.
Blood and oil
It has been known scientifically for over 40 years that human activity was resulting in climate change that could drastically affect human life, and indeed, all life on planet Earth. Oil companies were quick to suppress the knowledge and create massive disinformation campaigns [1]. But why? Surely any rational human could see that temporary profits from fossil fuel consumption should come second to the survival of the species?
Rational from what perspective? That is the correct question to begin with. It is rational from the perspective of humanity generally, yes, and specifically the working class—for whom simply living life in peace is a principal goal. But it is not rational from the perspective of Exxon shareholders.
Exxon shareholders had, and still have, a vested interest in guaranteeing continued and widespread use of fossil fuels by all the world’s economy, despite the apocalyptic significance. This is because they are capitalists, and as capitalists, they fulfill a social role under the capitalist economic system to generate the highest rate of profitability for their corporation, and at all costs. If millions of Americans need to be swindled into thinking it is a Chinese hoax—then so be it. The point is profit. Damn the air and water quality!
Corporate-level cover-ups of scientific knowledge are not new. The cigarette industry infamously waged a decades-long war against the now well-established fact that smoking is bad for our health. This is not because cigarette companies, or their CEOs, or shareholders, are uniquely evil persons. It is because these persons are part of a class of people out to make profit. It is their social role under capitalism. Human life is irrelevant to capitalism. Profit is everything.
The U.S. government, a state power historically set up with the interests of the capitalist class in mind, has eagerly enabled the use of fossil fuels. The federal government always provides oil companies with huge subsidies and land to mine for coal, frack the land and seas, and despoil the natural landscape. This struggle between capitalism and the environment came to a head in 2018 during the intrepid Indigenous struggle against the Dakota Access pipeline, which brought along with it enormous working-class support. The federal government was more than happy to sanction the use of violence against the protesters, for the simple reason that it represents a state power for capital and profit.
While the cigarette industry wasn’t exactly of strategic value to capitalism, oil is. If the oil stops flowing, then capitalism stops in its tracks. All transportation and nearly all electric generation are dependent on fossil fuels, and this is a situation that the shareholders of ExxonMobil absolutely love!
American propagandists talked about how it was necessary to invade Iraq to “protect our freedoms.” Modern capitalism’s dependency on oil is a key factor in motivating the U.S. war machine and imperialist occupation of the globe. The U.S. government (and both of the major political parties!) puts a premium on militarism and military spending for this very reason. U.S. imperialism doesn’t protect American freedom, it enhances American dependency on the oil barons of U.S. capitalism.
This incessant need to keep the economy moving at all costs is displayed clearly with the COVID-19 pandemic. People need to stay away from work to live, and yet by doing so, they cannot afford basic necessities or rent. Many working families are at risk of losing everything. The reason is the market anarchy of capitalism. All that humans need to live hasn’t vanished, it is simply inaccessible behind the market barrier, in capitalist hands. Farmers are dumping milk and fruit while the grocery stores cannot keep up with the demand for these foods in the cities! [2] But rather than overcome capitalism and preserve human life, mouthpieces of capital have other plans.
The Trump administration, right-wing propagandists, and other ignorant tools of capital accumulation are pushing for a rapid end to coronavirus restrictions, to facilitate “returning to work,” because their holy god “economy” (which under capitalism amounts to the profitability of capital) matters more than human lives! In the meantime, well over 20,000 U.S. lives have been lost to this pandemic—most of them working class and disproportionally Black and Latino. The callous logic of capitalism is clear: return to work, risk your lives for the bosses’ profits; your life doesn’t matter.
Water and soil
The ecological disaster we are facing is the direct result of capitalism’s wasteful techniques of accumulation (mining, drilling, corporate agriculture, etc.), production, and distribution. In the first place, this includes fossil-fuel extraction and processing, and an entire transportation network that is enabled by the burning of fossil fuels. Capitalism needs to exist in a state of constant motion, constantly buying and selling, with constant production. This creates a vicious spiral of dependency on fossil fuels. The technology and means exist to transition away from fossil fuels, and rapidly, but have been left to the side, as there is no political will within the capitalist Republican or Democratic parties to do so.
The solution, to save the human race, requires re-organizing the work of millions (without reduction in pay!) to make use of these technologies and means. Society must re-purpose most of the industrial machinery and industrial workforce to produce less fossil fuels and more renewable energy, as well as to phase out those technologies that are dependent on fossil fuel.
We also must take pains to restore key, strategic parts of the ecology that is necessary to healthy air and water and the survival of other animal and plant species. This does not imply a complete re-naturalization of the globe, which is an impossible demand as long as humans exist. The ecology and human economy must be transformed to facilitate human life and whatever biodiversity remains.
Since the capitalists and the twin U.S. parties of capitalism have no will to do this, the working class and its allies must overthrow these callous leaders and organize society under a workers’ democracy—which can quickly make a just transition to an economy that promotes biodiversity in nature; sustainable power sources, transportation, agriculture, and consumer products; and healthy, safe lives for all.
In brief, the socialist program—which can only be accomplished by the working masses directly—includes the expropriation of the big corporations from the capitalists, to be placed into the workers’ hands (transfer of large capital from private ownership to public ownership); a replacement of market anarchy with a planned economy for the benefit of working people (production quotas for needs rather than profits); and the establishment of a democratic workers’ government (legal power vested in direct working bodies of the people), which can facilitate the transformation of the capitalist fossil-fuel economy into a socialist green economy.
The Earth is our only habitat and will be so for a long time. We are, like it or not, the stewards of our planet. It is our highest duty to maintain a future for the human race and all life on this amazing and special planet. We won’t have that future if capitalism destroys it.
[1] https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exxon-knew-about-climate-change-almost-40-years-ago/ How Exxon knew about and covered up climate science.
[2] https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-dairy-insight-idUSKBN21L1DW On food waste during the pandemic.
Further reading:
https://climate.nasa.gov/evidence/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_gas#Anthropogenic_greenhouse_gases Overview of climate change on Earth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bang Overview of “The Big Bang” theory.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fusion
https://futurism.com/what-happens-when-stars-produce-iron Overview of nuclear fusion in stars.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formation_and_evolution_of_the_Solar_System
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebular_hypothesis Overview of planetary formation.
https://spacescience.arc.nasa.gov/mars-climate-modeling-group/past.html One example of planetary climate change: Our neighbor Mars.
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Cross-border Feminist Manifesto: To emerge from the pandemic together & change the system
• El manifiesto en español:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yl9dmlxRVhHKn_U_6Fe1sBxRlnjSSgBp/view?fbclid=IwAR1qxLfUibt75z
By CROSS-BORDER FEMINISTS (see list of signers below)
We will not go back to normality, because normality was the problem: the global feminist and trans-feminist movement, confronted with this new global health, economic, food and ecological crisis, will not surrender to isolation and will not silence its struggles in the face of the restrictive measures undertaken in our territories to deal with the coronavirus. All over the world, women and LGBTQI* people are refusing to submit to the multiple forms of violence that are exacerbated by the global pandemic and are beginning to organize by intertwining our rebellious practices, empowered by the strength of the recent years of global feminist strikes.
This crisis reveals and intensifies the violence, the hierarchies and the structural roots of oppression, exploitation and inequality of the colonial capitalist patriarchy, against which we have always fought and will continue to fight. It is precisely in the tensions and fissures opened up by this crisis that the new forms of resistance and solidarity to which we belong are emerging. Those are forms of resistance that we want to join and we want to make resonate at the global level through our collective voice, so that we can emerge together from isolation and undermine dominant paradigms by affirming feminist, trans-feminist and anti-patriarchal knowledge and practices.
The coronavirus affects all of us, but the effects of the pandemic are differentiated, especially if we look at it from a cross-border perspective, starting from our position as women and LGBTQI* people.
They told us to stay home, without considering that home is not a safe place for many of us and that there are people who are homeless. Femicides and violence against women and LGBTQI* people have been increasing since this crisis began, and quarantine measures have made it even more difficult for us to rebel against male and gender violence and assert our will for freedom and self-determination.
The crisis is attacking the different material conditions of reproduction, intensifying and making more precarious women’s and LGBTQI* people’s productive and reproductive labor: while they have always been invisible and exploited, now the need for them is becoming visible, making clear the political centrality we have and which we have always claimed.
On the one hand, the patriarchal system assigns the care of the most vulnerable, the elders and the children, to women, increasing the burden of domestic work. On the other hand, many women – nurses, doctors, janitors, cashiers, workers, pharmacists – have to be at the frontline in this emergency, working in hazardous conditions for their health, for long hours, and often for miserable wages.
Domestic and care work, as well as many precarious or informal jobs, are often carried out by migrant, Afro-descendent, Black or indigenous women who are now not only dismissed, with no possibility of supporting themselves or paying medical expenses, but also find themselves without residence permits, more vulnerable to racist attacks and more exposed to the health and economic consequences of infection, as they often live in the most populated and poorest areas.
Thus, on the one hand, our lives are sacrificed to sustain this crisis, while on the other hand, bodies that are not considered productive, as well as those of people with disabilities, are totally invisible, precarious and unprotected.
In indigenous communities and native peoples’ communities women are intensifying their care and life- support work while, at the same time, they continue to produce the food needed to support the cities. They are emphasizing their central role in mobilizing and producing food and developing mutually support measures to deal with the pandemic.
Some countries open their borders to migrants only when their work is considered necessary to ensure food stability in times of pandemic, while other countries close their borders not only to migrants, but also to their inhabitants, leaving them in refugee camps and violating their right to health and to return to their territory.
On the multiple fronts of war and territories in rebellion, such as what is happening to Kurdish and Palestinian people, the patriarchal and imperialist invasion is ongoing. This complicates the possibilities of receiving adequate treatment, thus intensifying the attack on the revolution of Kurdish women and the struggle of all women who want to be free from colonial and patriarchal domination.
While today, more than ever, health and life are becoming established as collective and politically central matters, years of neoliberal policies have imposed a burden of individual responsibility, with different degrees of intensity: in several countries, cuts have been made to the health and social protection system, leaving thousands of people without medications and forcing them to confront the absence of State support by establishing networks of solidarity and mutual care; in other countries, by contrast, a public health and social protection system never existed and the situation got worse with the widespread implementation of economic austerity and adjustment plans. Moreover, in many cases the crisis is being used to further restrict sexual and reproductive rights of women and LGBTI* people.
From another perspective, neoliberalism is showing its most brutal face in the militarization and over-policing of urban and rural environments and of indigenous territories carried out by armed forces who are taking advantage of the emergency and of the already existing democratic fragility of governments to silence all traces of revolt, to criminalize the solidarity networks that are emerging and to ensure the chain of command of the State, which is becoming more and more authoritarian and repressive.
And, finally, it has become even more evident that we cannot accept the environmental and ecological devastation that subordinates all living species and natural resources to the needs of capital. This favours the same imbalances that have allowed the spread of the coronavirus. Widespread extraction of natural resources, industrial and large-scale production of food, single-crop farming and pollution are condemning millions of people to a new, unprecedented food crisis.
The pandemic is exposing the untenable nature of our society’s capitalist, colonial and patriarchal structure and the pre-existing crisis of neoliberalism. Our struggle must not only aim at our survival in the face of contagion but must also find solutions to the immense consequences that this pandemic will have on our economic and material conditions.
We believe that the responses of governments are completely insufficient and we reject all policies that continue to finance companies instead of health care and to take advantage of the pandemic to consolidate extractive projects. Although state measures are heterogeneous, the capitalist response to the crisis follows the same logic everywhere in the world: putting profits before our lives, unloading on us the costs of this crisis and producing effects that will not be temporary. We do not want to exit this «emergency» with even more debt and poverty! We want a cross-border feminist way out of the crisis, so that we will not return to a normality structured by inequality and violence.
In every working-class neighborhood, people are organizing to protest and denounce the increase of femicides and domestic violence. Worldwide, domestic workers are denouncing their extreme insecurity and lack of rights. Nurses and doctors are protesting the lack of protective equipment, declaring that their lives are not expendable. Thousands of workers in warehouses and factories are going on strike, because they refuse to sacrifice their health for corporate profits. In their communities, indigenous women continue to fight against the implementation of extractive projects and the privatization of community territories and resources. In every jail, the detained are decrying inhumane prison conditions in an extremely racist military-industrial complex. Everywhere, Afro-descendants and Black people are denouncing institutional racism in the management of the pandemic and migrants are claiming their visas in order to no longer be subjected to conditions that intensify exploitation and violence. Sex workers continue to demand the decriminalization of their jobs so that they are no longer excluded from the social buffers and stigmatized by the patriarchal colonial capitalist system. In Rojava, Kurdish women in the midst of an historic resistance to war, are responding to the pandemic by cross-border strengthening of their confederal self-organization, as well as community health and expanded networks of self-managed and ecological economies.
Coming from different material conditions, and speaking from our plurality of languages, practices, and discourses, we join together to support, strengthen, and interweave our struggles, and our forms of rebellion and solidarity as those that are emerging spontaneously at the global level and are central for boosting our future initiative. What the global feminist strike has taught us during the past four years is that when we are united, we have more power to rebel against the patriarchal and oppressive “normality”. Now more than ever, we must raise our thousands of voices in the same direction, to avoid the fragmentation that the pandemic imposes on us. At this moment, we cannot flood the streets with our feminist power, but we will continue to raise our voices in rage against the violence of a system that exploits, oppresses, and kills us; and we will continue to denounce the guilty, so that when we return to the streets on the front lines, our numbers will be even greater.
We will continue this process of cross-border feminist liberation that we are collectively and expansively weaving. We will continue fighting to build the life that we want and we desire.
We call on everyone who rejects the patriarchal, exploitative, colonial, and racist violence to mobilize and join together to enrich and strengthen the global feminist struggle, because if we unite we can not only emerge from the pandemic, but we can change everything.
LONG LIVE THE WOMEN AND THE PEOPLE WHO STRUGGLE!
CROSS-BORDER FEMINISTS current list of signers:
ALAMES (Ecuador)
Associació stop violències (Andorra)
Bibi Ni una menos – Soriano (Uruguay)
Cabildo de mujeres (Ecuador)
Creando Juntas (Ecuador)
Coordinadora Feminista 8M (Chile)
Democracia Socialista (Argentina)
Desmadres (Uruguay)
Disidentes Violetas (Ecuador)
Feministas Autónomas (Bolivia)
Feministas con voz de maíz (Mexico)
Feministas en Holanda (Holland)
Grupos Regionales de la Red para una Huelga Feminista en Alemania (Stuttgart,Berlin, Augsburg, Frankfurt/Main, «Gemeinsam kämpfen», Leipzig)
International Women’s Strike (United States)
Luna Creciente (Ecuador)
Minervas (Uruguay)Movimiento de Mujeres de Kurdistán en America Latina (Kurdistán)
Nina Warmi (Ecuador)
Ni Una Menos (Argentina)
Non Una Di Meno (Italy)
Opinión Socialista (Argentina)
Parlamento Plurinacional de Mujeres y Feministas (Ecuador)
Radical Women/Mujeres Radicals (Australia & United States)
Red de feminismo populares y desde abajo (Uruguay)
Revista Amazonas (Ecuador)Toutes en Grève (Francia)
Saturday, April 25
12 p.m. to 2 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time (3 p.m. Eastern)
International Women Strike US invites you to join a webinar with international and U.S. organizers of an emergent cross-border feminist movement to discuss how we can join together to fight the pandemic and change the system. We will discuss the Cross-border Feminist Manifesto calling for actions on May Day and beyond.
We will hear from the following speakers and then engage in a discussion:
• Alondra Carrillo Vidal from Coordinadora feminista 8M (Chile)
• Veronica Gago from Ni Una Menos (Argentina)
• Carmen Lanche from Unidad Latina en Acción (ULA) (United States)
• Margaret Prescod from IWS-US Coordination Group, IWSLA & Women of Color/Global Women’s Strike (United States)
• Paola Rudan from Ni Una di Meno (Italy)
Please register in advance for this meeting:
https://NewSchool.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJItd-uhrD0qGdBraMO1psVFln4oa4XciCpZ
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COVID-19 and imperialism: the coming disaster and revolt
This article is reprinted from the PuntoRojo website (puntorojomag.org), with permission from the author.
As the coronavirus spreads across the globe, the impact is winding its way through the hierarchical channels of the global capitalist system. As the richer nations approach the apex of the first wave of the infection, the pandemic is just hitting the poorer nations. The combined catastrophe of mass-infection and economic collapse is going to be more destructive and the effects longer-lasting in societies historically under-developed by imperialism. This refers to the internationalization of the capitalist system by the dominant economic powers, who then divide (and re-divide) and economically exploit other nations through the institutions of neoliberal capitalism.
The combined catastrophe of mass-infection and economic collapse is going to be more destructive and the effects longer-lasting in societies historically under-developed by imperialism.
In the most recent phase of capitalism, this has accelerated through the financialization of the global capitalist economy. This refers to a process in which an international investor class, the global 1%, has accumulated unprecedented quantities of wealth, and who ceaselessly move their money around the world in the chase for “yield”—a return on investment. The richest states have created international agencies, laws, treaties, and other agreements and organizations to build the architecture of a system that works on behalf of this class, creating boundless and borderless pathways for them to increase their wealth.
Since the last economic crisis and bailout, finance capital has recovered and spread its wings once more. Alongside the continuation of longer-standing forms of international exploitation—such as invasion, war, the maintenance of colonies, and imposition of unequal trade arrangements—international lending and debt-building regimes have maintained and increased the magnitude of inequality within and between nations. Austerity, the practice of forcing transfer of publicly-invested wealth for the purpose of usurious “debt-servicing”, has dismantled social safety net infrastructure in countries around the world at the onset of a new and unprecedented crisis.
As we enter the first phase of global economic recession—and likely depression over the next year—the poorer, colonized, formerly-colonized, semi-colonized, and other nations (which I will refer to as low- and middle-income countries, LMI, for simplicity) will be the most adversely impacted.
Bailouts for the rich nations, bailing out of the poor ones
The initial flurry of national bailouts by the richest ‘G20’ nations has so far amounted to an estimated $8 trillion dollars, an unprecedented transfer of public debt to prop up the faltering global financial system. The act of bailing out their own economies has taken priority, while they have been slow to respond to the crisis across the rest of the global economy.
In fact, their first response was to bail out. In response to the first indications of oncoming global crisis in late January, international investors quickly dumped $95 billion dollars’ worth of stocks and bonds and other investments in LMI nations—the largest capital outflow ever recorded. Skittish investors are not going to return anytime soon. Capital flight triggered an immediate crisis of liquidity (available cash to deal with the crisis) and depletion of foreign reserves, followed by the economic jolt reflecting the particular vulnerabilities of poorer countries.
Aside from effects of economic shut-down, these include a substantial drop-off in exports, especially commodity export or supply-chain production, tourism, capital flight, and plunging value of their national currencies. Falling currency values have resulted from investors at home and abroad nervously converting their existing currency holdings into dollars. This causes national currencies to plummet. For instance, the Indian rupee and Mexican peso fell to their lowest levels against the dollar in history in a matter of weeks, while South Korea’s won fell to its lowest level in 11-years.
Lower-valued currencies mean people who receive their wages, hold their savings, and purchase goods in their national denominations have less-buying power. This general trend could trigger devaluations as feature of future debt-restructuring, economically displacing more sectors of the population. This could also increase the cost of imports to LMI countries, such as food, pushing prices higher when income is static or dropping.
Taken together, the circumstances facing LMI countries is bleak. According to one economic analysis: “The impact of global measures to contain the coronavirus will result in a steep fall in [emerging markets’] gross domestic product this year and the collapse in output, spike in capital outflows and plunge in commodity prices could trigger balance sheet problems that make the downturn much worse and the recovery slower.”
Enter the IMF
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the IMF, has stated that LMI countries may need as much as $2.5 trillion in support, with that being a “low-end” estimate.
The scale of the crisis leaves many LMI countries vulnerable. Since they typically have fewer reserves, smaller central banks, and less international leverage; many are already turning to IMF to avoid meltdown. The IMF promised to provide emergency loan fund of up to $100 billion for emerging and poor nations markets (at zero interest rates), and a plan to ultimately raise $1 trillion dollars from G20 nations to fund the loans.
The finance ministers of the G20, and more specifically the richest creditor nations of the “Paris Club,” are those that will determine the content of the loan packages.
Over 90 countries have already applied for the emergency loans, with 60 percent coming from the poorest nations and 40 percent from middle income, or “emerging” markets. As the IMF Director stated, the priority will be preventing these nations from falling “into an inability to serve their debt.”
While there may be short-term relief and re-payment moratorium, there will likely be a continuation and expansion of the current model: increased national debt and austerity requirements. In fact, one facet of the longer-term recovery of the rich nations will require that LMI countries are maintained as debtor nations that continue to carry and pay on exorbitant debts under regimes of austerity. This way of operating is parallel to the character of the US bailouts: banks are directly funded and relieved, while people are forced to maintain their mortgage, student, and personal debt payments—even as they experience unemployment and other insecurities.
The World Bank also pledged $35 billion in support, but balked when it became clear that this money would be quickly absorbed to pay off existing debt to the richest creditor nations. Poor countries already receiving bilateral development assistance, for instance, are due to make repayments of about $40 billion to public and private creditors this year.
The only other sector of rich investors responding quickly to domino effect hitting LMI nations, are those seeking to capitalize and profit from the crisis.
In one case involving the World Bank, emergency funds have been created and tied to financial instruments called “pandemic bonds”. Payout of these bonds are based on opaque market calculations, associated with how a pandemic develops—not peoples’ needs.
In 2017, the World Bank developed a tranche of specially-designed “pandemic bonds”, a $320-million-dollar program theoretically designed to help low-income nations facing an epidemic. If there is no epidemic, investors collect interest and then return of their initial payment once the bond matures. The bonds only release to the country in the event of a spiraling epidemic. For instance, the bonds require 84 days to have passed since the designation of an outbreak and a minimum of 2,500 deaths within in the country—with 20% confirmed—for countries to be eligible for a payout. Even then, it takes another two weeks to confirm eligibility. By that time, the infection is ravaging the population.
These secondary risk markets, in which vulture capitalists and investors bet on calculations of social, structural, and economic failure, while people are thrown into existential crisis, amount to real-life Hunger Games.
Crush of debt
The reality for many LMI countries is crushing debt—with many already burdened with huge amounts or already in recession before the current crisis began.
The massive accumulation of wealth by the richest 1% within the richest nations since 2009 led to an investment scramble across the globe. Over the same period, development aid, lower interest “concessional” loans, and grants from the richest to the poorest nations have been declining. LMI countries have increasingly come to rely on taking on more debt in all forms.
In recent years, international investors flush with cash have chased more return on investment in desperate pursuit of shrinking opportunities as existing markets became saturated. This led to new lending patterns into uncharted and unregulated terrain, creating a raft of instruments and practices so opaque they are referred to as “dark pools.”
Within this context, investors pivoted towards lending to poor countries that had historically been unable to access public debt markets. As a result of the exponential growth in credit markets, international debt has sky-rocketed overall since the end of the last economic crisis, and many poor nations have already been, or are now on the precipice.
As one report observed: “After weeks in which prosperous countries from Italy to the US have battled both the pandemic and its economic fallout, the fight against corona-virus is moving to a new front. Across Africa, Latin America and much of Asia, governments with far less firepower than their western counterparts are figuring out how to keep the pandemic at bay and their economies afloat.
“It is not clear they can do both. With Europe and the US, the virus arrived first, forcing a public health response, and then — as the enormity of the crisis struck home — a massive fiscal and monetary injection. In much of the developing world, the sequence has happened in reverse, with the economic devastation of coronavirus arriving before the epidemic itself.”
In 2019, total global debt topped $255 trillion dollars, 40 percent ($87 trillion dollars) higher than on the eve of the 2008 financial crisis. In the decade to March 2019, the LMI countries’ share of total global debt increased to 31% –nearly doubling. This includes debt in all categories, but especially national and corporate debt. Governments in poorer countries have borrowed more money (including for debt-servicing), as well as corporations based in poorer countries.
Prior to the pandemic, these countries had already become saddled with rising debt, which included loan principal and interest primarily owed to multi-national banks and investment companies based in rich nations.
Prior to the pandemic, these countries had already become saddled with rising debt, which included loan principal and interest primarily owed to multi-national banks and investment companies based in rich nations. For instance, “the combined debts of 30 large emerging economies rose to 216.4 per cent of their GDP in March [2019], from 212.4 per cent a year earlier, according to the [Institute of International Finance]. In dollar terms, they rose to $69.1tn.” On the eve of the pandemic, this amount had exceeded $71 trillion.
Every category of debt, including household debt, has dramatically increased since the 2008 financial crisis. A global study of seventy-five countries conducted in 2019 showed that low and middle-income countries accounted for largest percentage of buildup in household debt since the last crisis, with debt most concentrated in lower-income households.
Bleeding the poorest nations
In reality, the poorest nations in the world have never recovered from the last economic crisis in 2008. For some conditions are worse. For example, the total external debt in the 46 countries of Sub-Sahara Africa increased, with over half of those nations seeing their debts double or more without significant corresponding economic growth. The contrast going into global recession is stark: as the rich nations slide into global depression, these countries have already been in crisis, and will face disproportionate negative impact.
In 2019, debt servicing costs as a proportion of GDP rose to their highest level since 2005. In the months before the pandemic, for instance, the International Monetary Fund published its 2019 “Global Financial Stability Report”, identifying that “the number of low-income developing countries assessed at high risk of debt distress or in debt distress…has doubled [between 2013 and 2019] to 43 percent.”
At the same time, debt servicing capacity has also deteriorated. While debt has increased substantially as a share of GDP—for example, from 20 percent of GDP in 2013 to 55 percent in 2018 for the 50 lowest-income nations—access to credit has begun to decline since 2017. In 2018 net debt inflows into these countries fell by 28%, as creditors began to lose confidence in these markets. The burden of debt-servicing for LMI countries is also exacerbated by inequality within lending markets. These nations typically pay 4 to 5 times the amount of interest on loans than rich countries do on debts from international lenders (typically 5-6% versus 1-1.5%).
Furthermore, the plunge in LMI currencies values against the dollar sharply increases the cost of debt-servicing, creating a serious threat to financial stability in the poorest countries.
For instance, what are called “Eurobond Markets” opened up to dozens of poorer countries, including in over a dozen Sub-Saharan nations, the poorest region in the world. This was fueled by “investor appetite for [Sub-Saharan African] bonds, [that] has been fueled by record-low interest rates in advanced economies and commodity price recovery in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.” The lustful desire to make money hand-over-fist drives investment without consideration for sustainability.
By 2019, Eurobond issuances reached $35 billion. These bonds have up to 3 times higher interest rates (than traditionally low-interest “concessionary loans”), and have already been paying-out an estimated $1.5 billion per year, and will “mature” between 2021 and 2025 requiring these nations to pay average of about $4 billion annually over that period. This will ultimately add an additional an estimated $15 billion dollars across the term of the Eurobonds. These inflated rates of repayment will hit just as the crisis upends the economies of these countries. Furthermore, the US dollar denomination of these bonds further increase their cost as the national currencies plummet in relation to the dollar.
In the search for quick cash, yield-hungry international investors have poured an estimated total of over $2 trillion dollars into dollar-denominated government bonds in LMI markets over the last decade.
Corporate debt has also expanded, surging over 70% since 2007 to a total of $74 trillion internationally. This debt has risen even faster in LMI economies than in the rich countries, climbing almost 50 per cent. This represents the growing corporate penetration of these economies, especially the growth and prominence of foreign multinationals. In LMI countries, increasing corporate sector debt alongside national debt has driven total indebtedness to unprecedented levels since the last global financial crisis.
Imperialism and austerity intensify misery—and fuel the next uprisings
Austerity policies tied to debt servicing and restructuring have already been devastating working class, poor, and indigenous people in many LMI countries. In 2011, austerity-induced food shortages and rising prices (amid constricted export markets) contributed to the revolutionary uprisings of the Arab Spring. Austerity-driven protests and unrest then spread to the United States and Europe. Once again, prices are rising and international food stocks will diminish, leading to shortages in food import-dependent nations such as those in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa.
Over the last year, there has been a second wave of international revolt against neoliberal capitalism and austerity in LMI countries on all continents, including Lebanon, Ecuador, Chile, Iraq, Puerto Rico, Hong Kong, and many more. These revolts have been put on hold due to the pandemic and attendant economic collapse, but the conditions that produced them will continue—and intensify.
Over the last year, there has been a wave of international revolt against neoliberal capitalism and austerity.
Add on top of this that pandemic is spreading more rapidly in the LMI countries. On the continent of Africa, there are now emerging clusters of infections in every one of its 54 countries. Austerity and systematic under-development over decades means that governments on the continent spend an average per capita of $12, compared to the rich countries which spend up to $10,000 per capita. To illustrate the scale of the coming health crisis, “Sierra Leone has just one ventilator for 7.5m people, the Central African Republic has three machines for 5m citizens, while Burkina Faso has 11 for a population of 19m.”
Some Latin American economies were already in recession, and overall comprised the slowest-growing in the global economy before the pandemic. For instance, fourteen Latin American and Caribbean countries are part of the 80 nations appealing for emergency relief from the IMF.
Now combined with the oil price crash, the end of the commodities export boom, and other features specific to Latin American economies, the situation is getting worse quick. The price of crude oil has collapsed from $70 a barrel in January to below $30 in just a few weeks, hitting oil-exporting nations particularly hard. Overall, the under-developed and unequal structures of these economies in recession make them more vulnerable to deeper and prolonged health crisis as the pandemic spreads.
While there is unevenness between nations, the health care systems Latin American countries overall are not prepared to cope. As one analysis explained: “… Latin America’s safety net has shortcomings, which covid-19 will expose. Fragmentation, red tape and corruption will enfeeble its response in some areas…In several countries, bare-bones publicly financed health care operates alongside plush private provision for the rich. The course of the pandemic may sharpen grievances about inequality that drew millions of protesters onto the streets of many Latin American countries late last year.”
Ecuador, for instance, has been the hardest hit region in Latin America. In the fall of 2019, the working class and indigenous people rose up against the government’s plan to impose austerity measures in compliance with a $4.2 billion dollar IMF loan package. The people forced the government to flee the capital of Quito as a result of a nationwide uprising. After a week of unrest, the government was compelled to retreat on some measures. Now with the pandemic bearing down and oil prices collapsing, the government recently re-pledged to carry out the austerity requirements dictated by the IMF—even as the infections spread.
In early March, the government of Lenín Moreno declared a new round of budget cuts for social services, and layoffs and salary cuts for public employees. Ecuador is already one of the poorest countries in the region, spending about $500 per-capita on health care, one of the lowest in the hemisphere. Its national social service infrastructure and capacity has been further reduced in the last few years as a result of austerity measures.
As a result, its national health care system was quickly overwhelmed in the first weeks of the pandemic. The rate of death from COVID-19 spiked so quickly that paramedic and medical services were quickly overwhelmed, and people have been forced to leave bodies and coffins of deceased love one in the city streets.
As the crisis spreads, other austerity-ridden countries are also showing stresses. In the first weeks of the pandemic, Lebanon and Argentina defaulted on their IMF loans. The Lebanese government of Hassan Diab, who only came to power in January 2020 after the previous government was toppled by popular uprising, announced he would not make a $1.2 billion payment on a Eurobond that comes due this year. Argentina is already into its third consecutive year of recession, (with inflation running at about 50 per cent), and is also heading into default. Since 2001, Argentina has had nearly 30 loan packages from the IMF and has defaulted on eight times, making this the ninth.
In 2018 the government of Mauricio Macri arranged an IMF loan worth $57 billion that included yet another raft of austerity. There had been significant protest movements over the last two years in resistance to the Macri government’s plans. The mass uprising and general strikes in nearby Chile in 2019 and against austerity measures imposed by the Piñera government, pushed Argentinian politics to the left, leading to the spectacular defeat of right-wing Macri, and to the election of center-left Peronist Alberto Fernández—after he promised to “renegotiate” repayment of the debt.
In Iraq, a nation devastated a decade of sanctions followed by another two decades of invasion, occupation, and the imposition of US-backed regimes, the country is one the verge of yet another disaster as the pandemic spreads. Over the last year, mass protests had forced the resignation of the president Barham Saleh, and was pushing for even more radical and comprehensive demands after US-aligned regimes sacked the nation’s wealth.
As one observer reported: “In Iraq, 16 years after the U.S. invasion, a succession of corrupt U.S.-backed governments has boosted oil production to about 4.6 million barrels per day, the second highest production in OPEC. But in line with U.S. neoliberal orthodoxy, the profits have been pocketed by Iraq’s new U.S.-installed ruling class, not redistributed to provide universal healthcare, education, housing and other public services …”
Before the sanctions, US invasion, and subsequent dismantling of public services through bombing, defunding, corruption, and privatization; Iraq had a world-class health-care system. Over the last several years, it has deteriorated dramatically.
“For example, in 2019 … the government allocated just 2.5% of the state’s $106.5 billion budget to its health ministry, a fraction of spending elsewhere in the Middle East. By comparison, security forces received 18% and the oil ministry 13.5%. Over the past decade, data from the World Health Organization shows, Iraq’s central government has consistently spent far less per capita on healthcare than its much poorer neighbors – $161 per citizen each year on average, compared to Jordan’s $304 and Lebanon’s $649.”
As the pandemic spreads, the country is already nearly bankrupt. The crisis has already been compounded by the collapse of oil prices which provide more than 90% of government revenue. The government has stopped paying salaries, and the ruling militias that replaced the Iraqi military are in the early stages of fragmentation, producing an even more volatile situation.
The IMF currently has austerity loans already in place with 35 LMI countries, with more defaults likely to occur as the crisis plays out. Nevertheless, the capitalist system as-it-is cannot function any differently; and the IMF and World Bank will continue to be used as instruments for rich nations to keep the noose of debt in place. In other words, using the crisis to further, discipline, restructure, and extract more wealth coming out of the current crisis. As one financial analyst close to the process summarized, “the IMF can only lend to countries where it deems debt to be sustainable…they are not going to tear up that rule, so for many countries an IMF role will have to come alongside a condition that debt restructuring is required.”
As the global financial system as it exists can only go in one direction, towards extraction and accumulation based on the current arrangements of imperialism, so too will it produce class struggle on an international scale. As one financial newspaper gloomily predicted, the pandemic will eventually be followed by a return to protests, strikes, and social revolution:
“Social unrest had already been increasing around the world before [COVID-19] began its journey. According to one count, there have been about 100 large anti-government protests since 2017, from the gilets jaunes riots in a rich country like France to demonstrations against strongmen in poor countries such as Sudan and Bolivia. About 20 of these uprisings toppled leaders, while several were suppressed by brutal crackdowns and many others went back to simmering until the next outbreak.
“The immediate effect of Covid-19 is to dampen most forms of unrest, as both democratic and authoritarian governments force their populations into lockdowns, which keep people from taking to the streets or gathering in groups. But behind the doors of quarantined households, in the lengthening lines of soup kitchens, in prisons and slums and refugee camps — wherever people were hungry, sick and worried even before the outbreak — tragedy and trauma are building up. One way or another, these pressures will erupt.”
Another study advising those in power also predicts that nearly half of the countries in the world may see “civil unrest” over the course of the next year. If so, it won’t be the result of Covid-19 alone. Rather, it will result from how this pandemic exposed a greater and even more fatal sickness in search of a cure—the global capitalist system and its managers and beneficiaries that put accumulation of wealth for the richest over the health and well-being of the rest.
Justin Akers Chacón is an educator, activist, and writer in the San Diego-Tijuana border region. His recent works include No One is Illegal: Fighting Racism and State Violence on the US-Mexico Border (with Mike Davis, Haymarket Books, 2nd edition, 2018), and Radicals in the Barrio: Magonistas, Socialists, Wobblies, and Communists in the Mexican-American Working Class (Haymarket Books, 2018).
The original article can be accessed at: https://www.puntorojomag.org/2020/04/14/covid-19-and-imperialism-the-coming-disaster-and-revolt/?fbclid=IwAR1ErnE7dyRpC09Dh9Hqx_R5LKWB2KhLTYDlpV9dxQpRZ1pcnLGrvkfHy0I
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Let the oil companies die!
By WAYNE DELUCA
On Monday, April 20, prices of crude oil futures effectively turned negative. Demand for oil has gone so low that it is more expensive to find places to store it than it is worth to sell it. Oil insiders have forecast that hundreds, or even thousands, of companies could go bankrupt, and find that their assets are not even worth keeping around. It couldn’t happen to a more deserving industry.
For decades, the United States has favored brutal authoritarian regimes and toppled governments in order to ensure continuous access to oil. The poster child for its support is the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which by any measure is one of the most tyrannical governments in the world, but has been consistently tolerated because of its proven oil reserves and its cooperation with imperialist energy corporations.
The 1953 coup that overthrew Mohammad Mosaddegh, the democratically elected president of Iran, came because Mosaddegh’s plans would have meant the nationalization of oil. The Shah, a known puppet of the United States, oversaw a notoriously brutal state for the next 26 years—until he was overthrown in the 1979 revolution.
Those who took part in the movement against the 2003 war in Iraq well remember the slogan of the time—“No Blood for Oil.” Iraq’s position atop a massive oil reserve made it a strategic target of George W. Bush’s fake “war on terror” even though Saddam Hussein’s regime had nothing to do with the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and alleged evidence of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons programs turned out to be all fake.
In Venezuela, where first Hugo Chávez and now Nicolás Maduro have attempted to use the country’s oil revenues for social programs, the United States has supported numerous coups and coup attempts. In 2002, a brief coup had ousted Chávez but was reversed under massive popular pressure. Since early 2019, the United States has recognized self-proclaimed “President” Juan Guaidó in place of Maduro and made several attempts to destabilize the country. Sanctions and embargoes are ongoing even during the coronavirus emergency. All of this is meant to discipline Venezuela as an oil-producing country.
The oil industry has long been an egregious and unrepentant polluter. The oil spill at the Deepwater Horizon, which pumped crude into the Gulf of Mexico for 87 days in 2010, remains one of its most notorious disasters. They have pushed for pipelines to move oil across the land as well, digging through watersheds and threatening spills like that in North Dakota in November 2019, when 9000 barrels leaked from part of the Keystone pipeline system. These have often crossed Indigenous territories and drawn sharp resistance, such as the 2016 protests at Standing Rock against the Dakota Access Pipeline led by the Oceti Sakowin people.
In the United States, under the farcical goal of energy independence, the oil industry is subsidized to the tune of $16 billion per year. The European Union pays its oil companies considerably more. In return, these corporations fund the industry of climate denialists, who spread misinformation about the effects of greenhouse gases. During a planetary emergency, this makes the oil industry especially toxic.
Petroleum accounts for about 40% of carbon emissions in the United States. Given the current targets for avoiding the worst effects of climate change, it is clear that we will need to burn dramatically less of it by 2030, and effectively none by 2050. The most effective way to do this is to let the current crisis destroy much of the oil industry.
The oil industry’s current invested capital and infrastructure, and its influence in the government, have already moved Donald Trump to make pledges to save the industry. But socialists and environmentalists need to oppose such maneuvers. If the oil companies and their assets are liquidated in bankruptcy, one of the major obstacles to a clean energy transition will disappear. We should begin with the demand: Not one penny for the oil companies!
In their place, as soon as it is safe to return to work, we could begin a transition to mass transit infrastructure. Millions of people—in unprecedented, record numbers—have filed for unemployment. Many of them could be put to work straightaway, building light and heavy rail systems that could replace a great deal of our current reliance on oil to transport people and goods around the country.
Meanwhile, those formerly employed in the oil industry could be gainfully employed in the energy industry, building and placing renewable energy infrastructure. The revenues from oil bankruptcies could even be sequestered to fund the transition. And all workers must be guaranteed a living wage and the right to form unions.
Such a program could be a start on a wholesale transformation of the economy. We need not only to stop extracting and burning oil but to reorient the whole process of production and distribution toward meeting human needs, rather than making private profit. A sustainable system cannot be built on the assumptions of accumulation of capital, which must inevitably treat the natural world as a source of values to be extracted. It must be based on an ecological socialism that treats it instead as irreplaceable and a value in itself.
The oil industry is in crisis, and for the vast majority of humanity that is a good thing. We should take this opportunity to create a future where it is only a distant and quaint memory.
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Second anniversary of Husky refinery fire: The dangers continue
By LUCAS ALAN DIETSCHE
Several refineries in Louisiana and California have recently exploded and released toxic fumes. These events make the upcoming second anniversary of the Husky refinery explosion and fire in Superior, Wis., even more disconcerting. The Husky anniversary on April 26 is also the anniversary of Chernobyl’s explosion (See Heather Bradford’s April 13 article on the Socialist Resurgence website, “Chernobyl fires threaten to unleash radiation”).
In the aftermath of the Husky explosion in 2018, the plant was also hit with 13 safety violations and fined $83,000 by OSHA. Another settlement made the company pay least $290,000 to replace or retrofit wood-burning stoves or furnaces at homes, churches or schools over a seven-year period. Another possibly explosion of the deadly Hydrogen Fluoride would make the local population of 150,000 people injured, sick, or dead. Husky locally, nationally, and internationally have been given many chances to clean up their act, but it shows what capitalists are willing to lose to maintain a sense of hegemony and profits.
Unfortunately, unlike last year, with three local anti-Husky events by Socialist Resurgence, Green New Deal groups, DSA, Honor the Earth, Anti-Colonial Land Defense, and other local activists, this year will be met with no resistance. Since last year, Husky has met many environmental fines, minor problems, as well as more safety concerns due to COVID-19.
In June of 2019, Husky Energy was fined nearly 3 million U.S. dollars over a pipeline spill in 2016. Some 60,000 gallons were released into the North Saskatchewan River, with a $102 million cleanup effort.
In February 2020, BP-Husky agreed to pay $2. 6 million for violating air pollution regulations in Oregon and Ohio. The U.S. Justice Department found many record-keeping problems at a Husky refinery plant in regard to pollution requirements.
Also, in February 2020, Husky’s Superior plant had issues with a large tower during maintenance and rebuilding projects. Workers noted that a “pop” had indicated a defect in the tower’s integrity. Even though the company said that the “pop” of the tower and the possible falling of the tower would present no risk to the community, a large area and a major road was either evacuated or sealed off for a time. This did not stop rebuilding efforts at the Superior facility.
Months ago, due to the price of declining oil, Husky said they were cutting “millions of dollars.” Exactly what they were cutting is unclear. But due to the need for profits, it is assumed that Husky cut viable safety, maintenance, and labor needs to supervise daily maintenance of the Husky refinery.
Last month, Husky’s Superior plant suspended reconstruction efforts due to the COVID-19 epidemic. “Given the current safety and public health risks, Husky has begun a systematic and orderly suspension of major construction activities related to the Superior rebuild project,” spokeswoman Kim Guttormson said. Parts of the plant as well as wastewater treatment, diesel terminals, and gasoline would still operate. There is no information on how many people would continue maintenance work or adhering to their safety measures. It is almost unbelievable that such an important and possibly deadly refinery could not have enough safety personal at the plant.
In June 2019, another refinery—which is not part of Husky—exploded in Philadelphia, sending 5000 pounds of deadly hydrogen fluoride into the air before being doused. HF is used in many refineries around the country—including in Superior. A piece of shrapnel from the Superior fire narrowly failed to hit a container of HF only 150 feet away. While agitation by environmental activists and neighbors in Philadelphia helped in closing the refinery, the Husky facility in Superior remains in operation.
Any action to unite labor and climate justice activists has come to naught in the Superior, Wis., and Duluth, Minn., area. The local community of Superior with a population just under 30,000 has been divided over taking part in protests against the refinery since it brings relatively high-paying union jobs. It is up to socialists, environmentally concerned union workers, and climate justice activists to persuade other union activists and families that they have a common interest in bringing in good-paying union jobs that do not cost the health and safety of the environment and community.
Husky is a ticking time bomb; it has had more than enough chances to prove its so-called safety record. The communities of Duluth and Superior, environmental and labor activists, and Indigenous communities must be united to prevent the release of deadly hydrogen fluoride in another disaster, and thus avoid an American Chernobyl scenario.
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Watch the video! Marxist economics webinar: Money & finance
Child workers employed in 1911 by the Pennsylvania Coal Co. to break up pieces of coal. (Lewis Hine / Library Of Congress) This Socialist Resurgence live webinar took place on April 23. See the video now!
Access the YouTube video presentation of Part I here:
Profit is the unpaid wages of the working class. That fundamental fact has been the center of militant worker and socialist struggles for hundreds of years. Over 150 years ago, Karl Marx solidified how central the concept is to the whole historic process that we call “capitalism.”
Socialist Resurgence brings you out of the workshop and into the “dazzling money-form,” the riddle that Marx solves in the first chapter of “Capital,” Volume One. We move beyond the simple class antagonism at the heart of production to the general movements of money and financial instruments that hide the exploitation of labor by capital. What is the relationship between the stock market and the productive sectors? How does money come to be the universal equivalent? What are the implications for working-class militants?
Osmond K., a PhD student of urban economics, answers these questions and more in this video presentation.
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The meaning of the anti-quarantine protests
Right wingers gather on the steps of the capitol in Lansing, Mich., on April 15. (AP) By JOHN LESLIE
An anti-quarantine protest organized by rightist groups in Michigan on April 15 drew a large crowd to the state capitol in Lansing. Waving Trump and confederate flags, the crowd of protesters, who police estimated at close to 4000, clamored for the reopening of the economy and demanded a return to work. Many of the protesters in Michigan carried firearms.
The proto-fascist Proud Boys, militia members, and groups linked to the far right DeVos family, the Kochs, and other rightist figures participated in this mobilization. At one point, protesters’ cars blocked access to a hospital and delayed an ambulance reaching the ER for 10 minutes. Organizers supposedly cautioned participants to stay in their cars to maintain social distancing, but this was ignored by hundreds who streamed onto capitol grounds.
Neo-Nazi at Ohio Statehouse protest on April 18 holds sign depicting Jews as rats. Additionally, demonstrations calling on states to end the lockdowns have occurred in Ohio, North Carolina, Minnesota, Utah, Virginia, Oklahoma, and Kentucky. Another such protest is planned in Harrisburg, Pa., on April 20.
While some disoriented workers may have participated in this mobilization, the real social base of this manifestation was in the petty bourgeoisie, such as small business owners, shopkeepers, and small contractors. Small capitalists, who didn’t get the same bailouts as the richest segment of society, are also threatened with ruin by the current COVID-19-associated economic crisis.
Anti-quarantine protest in Kentucky. (CNN) These protests are not being organized by robed Klansmen or neo-Nazis. They are being put into motion by powerful interests, including the Michigan Conservative Coalition, a GOP front group, and the Michigan Freedom Fund, a conservative group with ties to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. DeVos herself is an offspring of the powerful Prince family. Her father was a long-time kingmaker in Michigan politics. Her brother Eric was the founder of the Blackwater mercenary outfit. Other organizations involved with these protests—the Heritage Foundation, the Tea Party Patriots, FreedomWorks, and ALEC are all controlled and financed by Charles Koch. The Koch brothers were centrally involved in the formation of the Tea Party movement.
Trump, of course, is encouraging these protests, tweeting, “Liberate Minnesota! Liberate Virginia! Liberate Michigan!” While saying in public that ending the lockdowns is up to the governors, he is mobilizing his base with the exact opposite message. In the case of Virginia, he is invoking the 2nd Amendment, an action that sets the stage for armed demonstrations.
Capitalist crisis
The world capitalist economy was already moving to crisis. The coronavirus crisis has deepened and accelerated the situation.
In the U.S., there is an opportunity for the working class and its allies to build both social and class struggles. This is also an opportunity to build an independent working-class party. None of this is preordained but is a possibility. We already saw an uptick in class struggles before the crisis. Now, we see workers acting on the job in self-defense. We also see working people demanding relief from rents and debt as the crisis deepens.
The ruling class has exposed itself. It’s clear to many people now that the rich care more about their wealth than the lives of people. You see it in politicians and reactionary commentators, like Dr. Phil, Dr. Oz, and Fox host Jeanine Pirro, who state that society must accept a certain number of deaths to restart the economy. This chorus is joined by politicians associated with the GOP.
An opportunity for the right
This crisis is also an opportunity for the far right, which is already mobilizing as we see in Michigan and other places. This represents a mobilization of what Trotsky called the “crazed petty bourgeoisie” and provides one of the elements of the raw material of fascism. These demonstrations are reminiscent of those put on by the reactionary Tea Party, which had the character of a proto-fascist movement. The Tea Party rose in reaction to the election of the first Black president of the U.S. and represented the reactionary fears of a layer of white people who had been battered by neoliberalism and globalization.
While there is no mass fascist movement today, the far right has been energized by Trump and his anti-immigrant and racist rhetoric. From Charlottesville to Portland, the far right has been organizing and preparing for conflict. The ruling class does not need a mass fascist movement at this time but will call up such a movement if their power and wealth are threatened.
In 1932, Trotsky wrote about this phenomenon, “At the moment that the ‘normal’ police and military resources of the bourgeois dictatorship, together with their parliamentary screens, no longer suffice to hold society in a state of equilibrium—the turn of the fascist regime arrives. Through the fascist agency, capitalism sets in motion the masses of the crazed petty bourgeoisie and the bands of declassed and demoralized lumpenproletariat—all the countless human beings whom finance capital itself has brought to desperation and frenzy” (italics, my emphasis).
No illusions
While the Sanders campaign is over, illusions in reformist electoralism are still strong. Working people can’t afford to delude themselves about the nature of the state and its institutions. We can’t rely on the capitalist courts, cops, or politicians to protect us from the far right.
In reference to cops and fascism, Socialist Workers Party leader Farrell Dobbs wrote: “What is the tactic of the ruling class? How does the ruling class proceed when it’s getting ready to utilize fascism? What they want at that point is to turn from the existing form of bourgeois rule to a ruthless fascist dictatorship. The objective is to crush the organizations and the combat capacity of the working class, the main opponent of the capitalist class.
“In a given country at a particular time when the bourgeoisie opens this chapter, there will be one or another degree of democratic rights. Our situation is one where there are on the law books a somewhat extensive body of formal democratic rights won by the masses in the history of the class struggle in the U.S. The approach of the ruling class is to begin to move toward a deterioration of those rights.
“Their tactic is to protect the rights of the fascists while at the same time using fascist forces to try to keep others from exercising those rights. One of the forces used to implement this is that most malevolent of all the repressive instruments of capitalist rule, the police forces. The police structure is of a character that makes it a breeding ground for fascists.
“You don’t only have an army of capitalist cops that represses opponents of capitalism, you have a ripe recruiting ground for fascism itself. You not only have cops implementing ruling class orders in aiding the fascists, you have a police force that is honeycombed with fascists.”
Marxist economist Ernest Mandel also made an essential point on the nature of the modern state, writing: “It should not take much perspicacity to see that the industrialists and bankers, who own and operate most of the resources of the United States and control the major political parties, likewise direct the employment of the military machine and other repressive agencies of the federal government The use of police, state guards, and federal troops to put down the ghetto uprisings testifies to the openly repressive function of the capitalist state apparatus. Yet liberal Americans find it difficult to generalize from these quite flagrant facts and thus to accept the sociological definition of state power offered by Marxism.
Fascists in New York: “Friends of New Germany” rally at Madison Square Garden in May 1934. “They are blinded or baffled by three misconceptions: (1) that there are no clearly defined class formations in American society; (2) that there are no serious or irreconcilable conflicts between classes; and (3) that the government is not ‘the executive committee’ administering the general affairs and furthering the aims of the capitalist exploiters, but that it is—or can be made into—the supreme agency for taking care of the welfare of the whole people, rather than serving the interests of the minority rich” (Mandel, The Marxist Theory of the State).
Socialists argue that bourgeois political parties are integral parts of the capitalist state setup. They serve the purpose of legitimizing and organizing the capitalist state. But, you might ask, aren’t there workers in the Democratic Party? What about them?
The Democrats are very skilled at co-opting the leaderships of social movements, labor, women, oppressed nationalities, LGBTQI+, into their structures and using these leaderships to subordinate working people and social movements to their agenda. This is where the left “wing” of the party comes into play. They play a crucial role as a reformist shock absorber for capital, not as an opposition. The party tends to tolerate this left wing as long as it doesn’t get too close to the levers of power in the party.
Revolutionary socialist opposition to working inside the Democratic Party isn’t about “sectarianism” or ultraleftism but is based on the principled and practical observation that decades of work inside that party by some housebroken socialists and ostensible communists has not advanced the struggles of workers and the oppressed.
Fighting back
Going forward, we have to build social and class struggles, and a class-struggle left wing in the unions. It’s also necessary to forge a revolutionary combat party. We have to be prepared to mobilize the working class and its allies against a far-right movement that will try to exploit this crisis. Workers’ organizations should also support demands for support for small businesses. This will help expose the ruling class as enemies of the petty bourgeois layers.
Mass counter-mobilization against the far right is an essential tool in our arsenal. This will require the involvement of the unions, as the primary mass organizations of workers, however flawed they may be at the present time. A growing far-right movement will also bring into focus the need for defense guards to protect our movements and meetings.
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April 25 webinar: Cross-border feminism in a time of pandemic
Saturday, April 2512 p.m. to 2 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time (3 p.m. Eastern)
International Women Strike US invites you to join a webinar with international and U.S. organizers of an emergent cross-border feminist movement to discuss how we can join together to fight the pandemic and change the system. We will discuss the Cross-border Feminist Manifesto calling for actions on May Day and beyond.
We will hear from the following speakers and then engage in a discussion:
• Alondra Carrillo Vidal from Coordinadora feminista 8M (Chile)
• Veronica Gago from Ni Una Menos (Argentina)
• Carmen Lanche from Unidad Latina en Acción (ULA) (United States)
• Margaret Prescod from IWS-US Coordination Group, IWSLA & Women of Color/Global Women’s Strike (United States)
• Paola Rudan from Ni Una di Meno (Italy)
Please register in advance for this meeting:
https://NewSchool.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJItd-uhrD0qGdBraMO1psVFln4oa4XciCpZ
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
This event will be primarily in English, with translation into Spanish.
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El colectivo HUELGA INTERNACIONAL DE MUJERES – EEUU te invita a unirte a un seminario web con organizadores internacionales y estadounidenses de un movimiento feminista transfronterizo emergente para debatir cómo podemos unirnos para combatir la pandemia y cambiar el sistema. Conversaremos sobre el nuevo Manifiesto Feminista Transfronterizo y el llamado para movilizarnos el primero de mayo y más allá.
Escucharemos a las siguientes oradores y luego entablaremos una discusión:
• Alondra Carrillo Vidal de Coordinadora feminista 8M (Chile)
• Veronica Gago de Ni Una Menos (Argentina)
• Carmen Lanche de Unidad Latina en Acción (ULA) (Estados Unidos)
• Margaret Prescod del IWS-US Coordination Group, IWSLA & Women of Color / Global Women’s Strike (Estados Unidos)
• Paola Rudan de Ni Una di Meno (Italia)
Por favor regístrate con anticipación para esta reunión:
https://NewSchool.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJItd-uhrD0qGdBraMO1psVFln4oa4XciCpZ
Después de registrarte, recibirás un correo electrónico con información sobre cómo unirse a la reunión.
Este evento será principalmente en inglés, con traducción al español.
Hosted by:
International Women Strike Bay Area / Paro International de Mujeres
International Women’s Strike US / Paro Internacional de Mujeres EUA
