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

    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:

  • The revolutionary party & its role in the struggle for socialism

    The revolutionary party & its role in the struggle for socialism
    April 2020 Cannon, May 1945
    James P. Cannon, speaking on May Day 1945, after his release from prison. Cannon, with 17 others from the Socialist Workers Party and the Teamsters union, were imprisoned on false charges of conspiracy to overthrow the U.S. government by force and violence.

    By JAMES P. CANNON

    The following essay was written by James P. Cannon, the main founder and early leader of the U.S. Socialist Workers Party, in 1967 and published in the International Socialist Review, vol. 28, no. 5. It was later published in “Fighting for Socialism in the ‘American Century,’” © Resistance Books ©2000 permission granted by Resistance Books for use by the James P. Cannon Internet Archive in 2003.

    See: https://www.marxists.org/archive/cannon/works/1967/party.htm

    The greatest contribution to the arsenal of Marxism since the death of Engels in 1895 was Lenin’s conception of the vanguard party as the organiser and director of the proletarian revolution. That celebrated theory of organisation was not, as some contend, simply a product of the special Russian conditions of his time and restricted to them. It is deep-rooted in two of the weightiest realities of the 20th century: the actuality of the workers’ struggle for the conquest of power, and the necessity of creating a leadership capable of carrying it through to the end.

    Recognising that our epoch was characterised by imperialist wars, proletarian revolutions, and colonial uprisings, Lenin deliberately set out at the beginning of this century to form a party able to turn such cataclysmic events to the advantage of socialism. The triumph of the Bolsheviks in the upheavals of 1917, and the durability of the Soviet Union they established, attested to Lenin’s foresight and the merits of his methods of organisation. His party stands out as the unsurpassed prototype of what a democratic and centralised leadership of the workers, true to Marxist principles and applying them with courage and skill, can be and do.

    Limited as it was to a single country, the epoch-making achievement of the Bolsheviks did not conclusively dispose of further dispute over the nature of the revolutionary leadership. That controversy has continued ever since. Fifty years afterwards there is no lack of sceptics inside the socialist ranks who doubt or deny that a party of the Leninist type is either necessary or desirable. And even where Lenin’s theory is clearly understood and convincing, the problem of the vanguard party remains as urgent as ever, since it has yet to be solved in the everyday struggle against the old order.

    A correct appreciation of the vanguard party and its indispensable role depends upon understanding the crucial importance of the subjective factors in the proletarian revolution. On a broad historical scale, and in the final accounting, economic conditions are decisive in shaping the development of society. This truth of historical materialism does not negate the fact that the political and psychological processes unfolding within the working masses more directly and immediately affect the course, the pace, and the outcome of the national and world revolution. Once the objective material preconditions for revolutionary activity by the workers have reached a certain point of maturity, their will and consciousness, expressed through the intervention of the organised vanguard, can become the key component in determining the outcome of the class struggle.

    The Leninist theory of the vanguard party is based on two factors: the heterogeneity of the working class and the exceptionally conscious character of the movement for socialism. The revolutionising of the proletariat and oppressed people in general is a complex, prolonged, and contradictory affair. Under class society and capitalism, the toilers are stratified and divided in many ways; they live under very dissimilar conditions and are at disparate stages of economic and political development. Their culture is inadequate and their outlook narrow. Consequently they do not and cannot all at once, en masse and to the same degree, arrive at a clear and comprehensive understanding of their real position in society or the political course they must follow to end the evils they suffer from and make their way to a better system. Still less can they learn quickly and easily how to act most effectively to protect and promote their class interests.

    This irregular self-determination of the class as a whole is the primary cause for a vanguard party. It has to be constituted by those elements of the class and their spokesmen who grasp the requirements for revolutionary action and proceed to their implementation sooner than the bulk of the proletariat on both a national and international scale. Here also is the basic reason that the vanguard always begins as a minority of its class, a “splinter group”. The earliest formations of advanced workers committed to socialism, and their intellectual associates propagating its views, must first organise themselves around a definite body of scientific doctrine, class tradition, and experience, and work out a correct political program in order then to organise and lead the big battalions of revolutionary forces.

    The vanguard party should aim at all times to reach, move, and win the broadest masses. Yet, beginning with Lenin’s Bolsheviks, no such party has ever started out with the backing of the majority of the class and as its recognised head. It originates, as a rule, as a group of propagandists concerned with the elaboration and dissemination of ideas. It trains, teaches, and tempers cadres around that program and outlook which they take to the masses for consideration, adoption, action, and verification.

    The size and influence of their organisation is never a matter of indifference to serious revolutionists. Nonetheless, quantitative indices alone cannot be taken as the decisive determinants for judging the real nature of a revolutionary grouping. More fundamental are such qualitative features as the program and relationship with the class whose interests it formulates, represents, and fights for.

    “The interests of the class cannot be formulated otherwise than in the shape of a program; the program cannot be defended otherwise than by creating the party”, wrote Trotsky in What Next?— “The class, taken by itself, is only raw material for exploitation. The proletariat acquires an independent role only at that moment when, from a social class in itself, it becomes a political class for itself. This cannot take place otherwise than through the medium of a party. The party is that historical organ by means of which the class becomes class conscious.”1

    Marxism teaches that the revolution against capitalism and the socialist reconstruction of the old world can be accomplished only through conscious, collective action by the workers themselves. The vanguard party is the highest expression and irreplaceable instrument of that class consciousness at all stages of the world revolutionary process. In the prerevolutionary period the vanguard assembles and welds together the cadres who march ahead of the main army but seek at all points to maintain correct relations with it. The vanguard grows in numbers and influence and comes to the fore in the course of the mass struggle for supremacy which it aspires to bring to a successful conclusion. After the overthrow of the old ruling powers, the vanguard leads the people in the tasks of defending and constructing the new society.

    A political organisation capable of handling such colossal tasks cannot arise spontaneously or haphazardly; it has to be continuously, consistently and consciously built. It is not only foolish but fatal to take a lackadaisical attitude toward party-building or its problems. The bitter experiences of so many revolutionary opportunities aborted, mismanaged, and ruined over the past half century by inadequate or treacherous leaderships has incontestably demonstrated that nonchalance in this vital area is a sure formula for disorientation and defeat.

    Lenin’s superb capacities as a revolutionary leader were best shown in his insistence upon the utmost consciousness in all aspects of party-building, from capital issues of theory and policy to the meticulous attention given to small details of daily work. Other parties and kinds of parties are content to amble and stumble along, dealing empirically and in a makeshift manner with problems as they arise. Lenin introduced system and planning into the construction and activity of the revolutionary party on the road to power, not only into the economy such a party was later called upon to direct. He left as little as possible to chance and improvisation. Proceeding from a formulated appraisal of the given stage of the struggle, he singled out the main tasks at hand and sought to discover and devise the best ways and means of solving them in accord with the long-range goals of world socialism.

    The vanguard party, guided by the methods of scientific socialism and totally dedicated to the welfare of the toiling masses and all victims of oppression, must always be in principled opposition to the guardians and institutions of class society. These traits can immunise it against the infections, and armour it against the pressures, of alien class influences. But the Leninist party must be, above all, a combat party intent on organising the masses for effective action leading to the taking of power.

    That overriding aim determines the character of the party and priority of its tasks. It cannot be a talking shop for aimless and endless debate. The purpose of its deliberations, discussions, and internal disputes is to arrive at decisions for action and systematic work. Neither can it be an infirmary for the care and cure of sick souls, nor itself a model of the future socialist society. It is a band of revolutionary fighters, ready, willing, and able to meet and defeat all enemies of the people and assist the masses in clearing the way to the new world.

    Much of the New Left, imbued with an anarchistic or existentialist spirit, denigrate or dismiss professional leadership in a revolutionary movement. So do some disillusioned workers and ex-radicals, who have come to equate conscientious dedication to full-time leadership with bureaucratic domination and privilege. They fail to understand the interrelations between the masses, the revolutionary class, the party, and its leadership. Just as the revolutionary class leads the nation forward, so the vanguard party leads the class. However, the role of leadership does not stop there. The party itself needs leadership. It is impossible for a revolutionary party to provide correct leadership without the right sort of leaders. This leadership performs the same functions within the vanguard party as that party does for the working class.

    Its cadres remain the backbone of the party, in periods of contraction as well as expansion. The vitality of such a party is certified by the capacity to extend and replenish its cadres and reproduce qualified leaders from one generation to another.

    The vanguard party cannot be proclaimed by sectarian fiat or be created overnight. Its leadership and membership are selected and sifted out by tests and trials in the mass movement, and in the internal controversies and sharp conflicts over the critical policy questions raised at every turn in the class struggle. It is not possible to step over, and even less possible to leap over, the preliminary stage in which the basic cadres of the party organise and reorganise themselves in preparation for, and in connection with, the larger job of organising and winning over broad sections of the masses.

    The decisive role that kind of party can play in the making of history was dramatically exemplified by the Bolshevik cadres in the first world war and the first proletarian revolution. These cadres degenerated or were destroyed and replaced after Lenin’s death by the totalitarian apparatus of the Soviet bureaucracy fashioned under Stalin. The importance of such cadres was negatively confirmed by the terrible defeats of the socialist forces in other countries, extending from the Germany of 1918 to the Spain of 1936-1939, because of the opportunism, defects, or defaults of the labour leaderships.

    Contrary to the opinions of some other students of his remarkable career, I believe that Trotsky’s most valuable contribution to the world revolutionary movement in the struggle against Stalinism and centrism was his defence and enrichment of the Leninist principles of the party, culminating in the decision to create new parties of the Fourth International along these lines. Trotsky was from 1903 to 1917 opposed in theory and practice to Lenin’s methods of building a revolutionary party. It is a tribute to his exemplary objectivity and capacity for growth that he wholeheartedly came over to Lenin’s conceptions in 1917, when he saw them verified by the developments of the revolution at home and abroad.

    From that point to his last day Trotsky never for a moment wavered in his adherence to these methods of party-building. After correcting his mistake in that department, he became, after Lenin’s death in 1924, the foremost exponent and developer of the Bolshevik traditions of the vanguard party in national and international politics.

    Most people think that Trotsky’s genius was best displayed in his work as theorist of the permanent revolution, as the head of the October uprising, or as creator and commander of the Red Army. I believe that he exercised his powers of revolutionary Marxist leadership most eminently not during the rise but during the recession of the Russian and world revolutions, when, as leader of the Left Opposition, he undertook to save the program and perspectives of the Bolshevik Party against the Stalinist reaction, and then founded the Fourth International once the Comintern had decisively disclosed its bankruptcy in 1933. The purpose of the new International was to create and coordinate new revolutionary mass parties of the world working class.

    Trotsky summarised his views on the momentous importance of the vanguard party in the “Transitional Program” he drafted for its founding congress in 1938. He asserted that “the historical crisis of mankind is reduced to the crisis of the revolutionary leadership”. The principal strategic task for our whole epoch is “overcoming the contradiction between the maturity of objective revolutionary conditions and the immaturity of the proletariat and its vanguard (the confusion and disappointment of the older generation, the inexperience of the younger generation)”.[1]

    He pointed out that the vanguard party was the sole agency by which this burning political problem of the imperialist phase of world capitalism could be solved. More specifically, he stated categorically: “… the crisis of the proletarian leadership, having become the crisis in mankind’s culture, can be resolved only by the Fourth International”, the World Party of the Socialist Revolution.[2]

    Have the major experiences in the struggle for socialism, since this was written, spoken for or against Trotsky’s pregnant political generalisations? Has the crisis of mankind, or the crisis of the proletarian leadership, been overcome?

    The fact is it has grown ever deeper and more acute with the advent of nuclear weapons and the failures of the established parties to overthrow capitalist imperialism and promote the progress of socialism.

    In the revolutionary resurgence in Western Europe opened by Mussolini’s deposition in July 1943, which signalled the eclipse of fascism, to the ousting of the Communists from the coalition cabinets in France and Italy in 1947, the Stalinist and Social Democratic parties repeated their previous treachery and impotence by refusing to pursue a revolutionary policy directed toward the conquest of power in a highly revolutionary situation. These defaults and defeats permitted capitalism to be restabilised in the second most important sector of that system.

    In the colonial countries from 1945 on, Communist leaderships, handcuffed or misled by Kremlin diplomacy, have been responsible for many setbacks and disasters. These have stretched from the compromise of the Indochinese Communists with the French imperialists in 1945 to political subservience to such representatives of the “progressive” bourgeoisie as Nehru in India, Kassim in Iraq, Goulart in Brazil, and Sukarno in Indonesia. The terrible reverses of the colonial freedom struggle, culminating in the Indonesian butchery of 1965, owing to such false leadership, provide powerful evidence that the need for new and better leadership is as urgent in the “Third World” as elsewhere.

    The conquest of power by the Communist parties of Yugoslavia, China, North Korea, and North Vietnam has induced not a few radicals and ex-Trotskyists to assume or assert that Lenin’s teachings on the party, and Trotsky’s reaffirmation of them, are out of date. These developments prove, they argue, that it is a waste of time, a useless undertaking, to try to build independent revolutionary parties of the Leninist type as Trotsky advised, since the exploiters can be overthrown with other kinds of parties, especially if these are supported by a powerful workers’ state like the Soviet Union or China.

    What substance do these arguments have? It should first be observed that Trotsky himself foresaw and allowed for such a possibility. In the “Transitional Program” he wrote: “… one cannot categorically deny in advance the theoretical possibility that, under the influence of completely exceptional circumstances (war, defeat, financial crash, mass revolutionary pressure, etc.), the petty-bourgeois parties including the Stalinists may go further than they themselves wish along the road to a break with the bourgeoisie.”[3]

    In the postwar years these exceptional conditions in the more backward countries have been the prostration and collapse of the most corrupt colonial bourgeoisies, the weaknesses of the old imperialist powers in Europe and of Japan, and the mighty upsurge of the indigenous peasant and proletarian masses. Certain Communist leaderships were confronted with the alternatives of being crushed by reaction, outflanked by the revolutionary forces, or taking command of the national liberation and anticapitalist struggles. After some hesitation and vacillation, and against the Kremlin’s advice, the Communist leaders in Yugoslavia, China, and Vietnam took the latter course and led the proletariat and peasantry to power.

    In its resolution on “The Dynamics of World Revolution Today”, adopted at the 1963 Reunification Congress, the Fourth International has taken into account this variant of political development as follows: “The weakness of the enemy in the backward countries has opened the possibility of coming to power with a blunted instrument.”[4]

    However, this factual observation does not dispose of the entire question, or even touch its most important aspects. The deformations of the regimes emanating from the revolutionary movements headed by the Stalinised parties, and the opportunism and sectarianism exhibited by their leaderships since assuming power, notably in Eastern Europe, Yugoslavia, and China, demonstrate that the need for organising genuine Marxist parties is not ended with the overthrow of capitalist domination. The building of such political formations can become equally urgent as the result of the bureaucratic degeneration and deformation of postcapitalist states in an environment where imperialism remains predominant and backwardness prevails.

    This was first recognised in the case of the Soviet Union by Trotsky in 1933. That political conclusion retains full validity for all those workers’ states governed by parties that fail to uphold or foster a democratic internal regime or pursue an international revolutionary line. The experience of the Polish and Hungarian uprisings of 1956, and restriction of the de-Stalinisation processes in the Soviet Union, alike demonstrate the need for an independent Marxist-Leninist party to lead the antibureaucratic revolution to the end.

    The keynote of the reunification document is that “the building of new mass revolutionary parties remains the central strategic task” in all three sectors of the international struggle for socialism: the workers’ states, the colonial regions, and above all in the advanced capitalisms.

    If Yugoslavia and China are cited to show that any party will do in a pinch, the example of Cuba is often brought forward as proof that no party at all is required in the struggle for power, or that any kind of improvised political outfit will do the job. First of all, this involves a misconstruction of the political history of the Cuban Revolution. The July 26 Movement had a small, close-knit nucleus of leaders, subjected to military discipline by the imperatives of armed combat. They had to construct a broader leadership in the heat of civil war against Batista. Once the Cuban freedom fighters had become sovereign in the country, they found not only that they could not dispense with a vanguard party, but that they desperately needed one. They have therefore proceeded to construct one along Marxist lines and are still engaged in that task nine years after their victory.

    Wouldn’t their difficulties have been lessened before and after the taking of power if they had been able to enter the revolution with a more powerful cadre and party? But the default of the Cuban Stalinists foreclosed that more favourable possibility. Moreover, it should be recognised that, since the Cuban experience, both the imperialists and their native satellites under Washington’s direction are much more alerted and prompt to take repressive measures to nip rebellion in the bud.

    The circumstances of the struggle for power in the highly industrialised countries are vastly different from those in colonial lands, where the native upper classes are feeble, isolated, and discredited, and where the impetus of the unsolved tasks of the democratic revolution reinforces the claims of the wage workers. It would be foolish and fatal to hold that the workers in the imperialist strongholds will be able to get rid of capitalism under the direction of the bureaucratised, corrupt, and ossified Social Democratic or Communist parties, or any centrist shadow of them. Here the injunction to build revolutionary Marxist parties is absolutely unconditional.

    The difficulties encountered by the Trotskyist vanguard over the past three decades show that there are no easy or simple recipes for solving the multiple problems posed by this necessity. The major obstacle to building alternative leaderships in most of these countries is the presence of powerful and wealthy Labor, Social Democratic, or Communist organisations which exercise bureaucratic control over the labour movement, but for traditional reasons continue to exact a certain loyalty from the workers. Under such conditions it is often advisable for the original corps of revolutionary Marxists to enter and work for extended periods within such mass parties.

    It should never for a moment be forgotten that the prime objective of such a tactical entry is the creation, consolidation, and expansion of the initial cadres and the growth of ties with the most advanced elements. It is not an end in itself. The immediate aim is to transform a propaganda group into a force capable of influencing, organising, and directing broad masses in action. The ultimate goal is to create a new mass party of the working class along this road.

    Experience has shown that there are many pitfalls in implementing an entrist tactic. As a result of prolonged immersion in reformist work and overadaptation to a centrist environment, the fibre of the revolutionary cadre may become corroded and its perspectives dimmed and even lost. Total immersion in such a milieu has many liabilities and dangers. It is therefore essential that entrist work be complemented by a sector of open public work through which the full program and policies of the Fourth International can at all times be made accessible to the advanced workers.

    It is also possible (We have seen such cases!) for entrism to be conducted in an impatient and inflexible way. Then, when adequate results are not quickly forthcoming, the group can prematurely revert to an independent organisational status. If persisted in, such a sectarian course can, under cover of a falsetto ultraleft rhetoric, lead to self-isolation and impotence. It can help the reformist and Communist bureaucrats by leaving them in uncontested command of the situation and narrowing the channels of contact and communication between the revolutionary Marxists and the best militants in the traditional parties.

    Both through independent or entrist activities, as the given situation warranted, the American Trotskyists have been busy building a revolutionary Marxist party in the United States ever since they discarded the prospect of reforming the Communist Party in 1933. The Socialist Workers Party regards itself as the legitimate inheritor of the finest traditions of the socialist movement of Debs, the Socialist Labor Party of De Leon, the IWW of St. John and Haywood, and the early Communist Party. It has drawn upon and benefited from the good and bad experiences of these pioneer attempts to create the party needed by the American workers to lead their revolution.

    The history of American communism since its inception in 1919 has been a record of struggle for the right kind of party. All the other problems have been related to this central issue.

    Everything that has been done since October 1917 for the advancement of socialism in this citadel of world capitalism and counterrevolution has been governed by this necessity of building the vanguard party, and whatever will be accomplished in the future will, in my opinion, revolve around it. The key to the victory of socialism in the United States will be the fusion of American power, above all the potential power of its working class, with Russian ideas, first and foremost the organisational principles of Lenin’s Bolshevism.

    The Leninist party proved indispensable in Russia, where the belated bourgeoisie was a feeble social and political force. It will be a million times more necessary in America, the home of the strongest, richest, and most ruthless exploiting class. The Bolshevik conception of the party and its leadership originated and was first put to the test in the weakest and most backward of capitalist countries. I venture to predict that it will become naturalised and find its fullest application in the struggle for socialism in the most developed country of capitalism.

    The revolutionists here confront the most highly organised concentration of economic, political, military, and cultural power in history. These mighty forces of reaction cannot and will not be overthrown without a movement of the popular masses, black and white, which has a centralised, disciplined, principled, experienced Marxist leadership at its head.

    It is impossible to stumble into a successful revolution in the United States. It will have to be organised and directed by people and a party that have at their command all the theory, knowledge, resources, and lessons accumulated by the world working class. Its know-how and organisation in politics and action must match and surpass that of its enemies.

    Those who claim that a Leninist party is irrelevant or unneeded in the advanced capitalisms are 100% wrong. On the contrary, such a party is an absolutely essential condition and instrument for the promotion and triumph of the socialist revolution in the United States, the paragon of world capitalism. Just as the overturn inaugurated by the Bolsheviks under Lenin and Trotsky in 1917 was the first giant step in the world socialist revolution and renovation, so the Leninist theory of the party, first vindicated by that event, will find its ultimate verification in the overthrow of imperialism in its central fortress and the establishment of a socialist regime with full democracy on American soil.

    Nothing less than the fate of humanity hinges upon the speediest solution of the drawn-out crisis of proletarian leadership. This will have to be done under the banner and through the program of the parties of the Fourth International. The very physical existence of our species depends upon the prompt fulfillment of this supreme obligation. No greater task was ever shouldered by revolutionists of the Marxist school—and not too much time will be given by the monopolists and militarists at bay to carry it through.

    On this fiftieth anniversary of the imperishable October Revolution, which has shaped and changed all our lives, our motto is: “To work with more energy toward that goal and win it for the good of mankind.”

    Endnotes

    [1] See The Transitional Program

    [2] See The Transitional Program

    [3] See The Transitional Program

    [4] Dynamics of World Revolution Today (Pathfinder Press: New York, 1974), p.29.

     

  • ¡Que mueran las compañías petroleras!

    ¡Que mueran las compañías petroleras!

    Oil sunset

    Por WAYNE DELUCA

    El lunes, 20 de abril, los precios de los futuros del petróleo crudo efectivamente se volvieron negativos. La demanda de petróleo ha disminuido tanto que es más costoso encontrar lugares para almacenarlo de lo que vale la pena venderlo. Los expertos en petróleo han pronosticado que cientos, o incluso miles, de empresas podrían ir a la bancarrota y descubrir que ni siquiera vale la pena mantener sus activos. No podría pasarle a una industria más merecedora.

    Durante décadas, Estados Unidos ha favorecido regímenes autoritarios brutales y derrocó gobiernos para garantizar el acceso continuo al petróleo. El cartel de su apoyo es el Reino de Arabia Saudita, que, en cualquier medida, es uno de los gobiernos más tiránicos del mundo, pero ha sido constantemente tolerado por sus reservas probadas de petróleo y su cooperación con las corporaciones imperialistas de energía.

    El golpe de estado de 1953 que derrocó a Mohammad Mosaddegh, el presidente democráticamente elegido de Irán, se produjo porque los planes de Mosaddegh habrían significado la nacionalización del petróleo. El Shah, un conocido títere de los Estados Unidos, supervisó un estado notoriamente brutal durante los siguientes 26 años, hasta que fue derrocado en la revolución de 1979.

    Quienes participaron en el movimiento contra la guerra de 2003 en Irak recuerdan bien el eslogan de la época: “No hay sangre para el petróleo”. La posición de Irak en la cima de una reserva de petróleo masiva lo convirtió en un objetivo estratégico de la falsa “guerra contra el terrorismo” de George W. Bush, a pesar de que el régimen de Saddam Hussein no tuvo nada que ver con los ataques terroristas del 11 de septiembre de 2001, y supuestas pruebas de biología nuclear y biológica y los programas de armas químicas resultaron ser falsos.

    En Venezuela, donde primero Hugo Chávez y ahora Nicolás Maduro han intentado utilizar los ingresos petroleros del país para programas sociales, Estados Unidos ha apoyado numerosos golpes de estado e intentos de golpe. En 2002, un breve golpe había derrocado a Chávez pero fue revertido bajo una presión popular masiva. Desde principios de 2019, Estados Unidos ha reconocido al autoproclamado “presidente” Juan Guaidó en lugar de Maduro e hizo varios intentos para desestabilizar el país. Las sanciones y embargos están en curso incluso durante la emergencia del coronavirus. Todo esto está destinado a disciplinar a Venezuela como país productor de petróleo.

    La industria petrolera ha sido durante mucho tiempo un contaminante atroz e impenitente. El derrame de petróleo en el Deepwater Horizon, que bombeó crudo al Golfo de México durante 87 días en 2010, sigue siendo uno de sus desastres más notorios. También han presionado para que las tuberías muevan el petróleo a través de la tierra, excavando a través de cuencas hidrográficas y amenazando derrames como ese en Dakota del Norte en noviembre de 2019, cuando se filtraron 9000 barriles de parte del sistema de tuberías Keystone. Estos a menudo han cruzado territorios indígenas y han generado una fuerte resistencia, como las protestas de 2016 en Standing Rock contra el oleoducto Dakota Access dirigido por el pueblo Oceti Sakowin.

    En los Estados Unidos, bajo el objetivo absurdo de la independencia energética, la industria petrolera está subsidiada por una suma de $ 16 mil millones por año. La Unión Europea paga a sus compañías petroleras considerablemente más. A cambio, estas corporaciones financian la industria de los negadores del clima, que difunden información errónea sobre los efectos de los gases de efecto invernadero. Durante una emergencia planetaria, esto hace que la industria petrolera sea especialmente tóxica.

    El petróleo representa aproximadamente el 40% de las emisiones de carbono en los Estados Unidos. Dados los objetivos actuales para evitar los peores efectos del cambio climático, está claro que tendremos que quemar dramáticamente menos para 2030, y efectivamente ninguno para 2050. La forma más efectiva de hacerlo es dejar que la crisis actual destruya mucho de la industria petrolera.

    El capital invertido y la infraestructura actual de la industria petrolera, y su influencia en el gobierno, ya han llevado a Donald Trump a hacer promesas para salvar a la industria. Pero los socialistas y los ambientalistas deben oponerse a tales maniobras. Si las compañías petroleras y sus activos se liquidan en bancarrota, desaparecerá uno de los principales obstáculos para una transición de energía limpia. Deberíamos comenzar con la demanda: ¡ni un centavo para las compañías petroleras!

    En su lugar, tan pronto como sea seguro regresar al trabajo, podríamos comenzar una transición a la infraestructura de transporte público. Millones de personas, en cifras sin precedentes, han solicitado el desempleo. Muchos de ellos podrían ponerse a trabajar de inmediato, construyendo sistemas ferroviarios livianos y pesados que podrían reemplazar una gran parte de nuestra dependencia actual del petróleo para transportar personas y mercancías por todo el país.

    Mientras tanto, los empleados anteriormente en la industria petrolera podrían ser remunerados en la industria energética, construyendo y colocando infraestructura de energía renovable. Los ingresos de las bancarrotas petroleras podrían incluso ser secuestrados para financiar la transición. Y a todos los trabajadores se les debe garantizar un salario digno y el derecho a formar sindicatos.

    Tal programa podría ser el comienzo de una transformación general de la economía. No solo necesitamos dejar de extraer y quemar petróleo, sino reorientar todo el proceso de producción y distribución para satisfacer las necesidades humanas, en lugar de obtener ganancias privadas.

     

  • Connecticut protest demands prisoner release due to COVID crisis

    Connecticut protest demands prisoner release due to COVID crisis

    April 2020 Conn. prison (Kay McAuliffe)By KAY MAY

    On April 23, more than 40 people gathered in idling cars for a vigil outside the entrance to Northern C.I., the supermax prison that is currently housing the majority of COVID-positive people in Department of Corrections custody. Hosted by Stop Solitary CT and supported by family members of incarcerated people, the 20 cars pulled to the side of the road, displaying decorated windows and signs showing family photos and the hashtag “#FreeThemAll.”

    The demands described by Stop Solitary CT included the immediate release of as many people in custody as possible, a moratorium on new admissions into jails and prisons, and evidence-based, humane and rights-affirming measures to protect the health and wellbeing of people behind walls. This event followed an action the previous Sunday at the Governor’s Mansion and a demonstration earlier on April 23 at York Correctional Institute in Niantic, Conn., demanding the release of incarcerated women.

    The vigil began with a local minister’s prayer calling for the governor to be just and let people be free to go home to families that are willing to provide the safety and support missing from state facilities. Soon to speak were family members who shared their stories regarding loved ones trapped in inhumane conditions, being forced to shower with shackles on after being locked in a shared room for 23 hours.

    Family members described the lack of medical attention received by their loved ones before the COVID-19 pandemic and lamented that these discrepancies have become even more extreme during the crisis. The group of Stop Solitary CT activists and family members chanted at a scattered line of prison officers, “Let them live!” and “Show some humanity, show some decency!”

    As the vigil came to a close and cars were pulling away, each driver sounded their horn in unison. The honking echoed out over the enclosed hills and lasted as the procession moved down the length of Taylor Road past each police-blocked entrance to the supermax prison. Some workers on the side of the road, dressed in reflective yellow jackets, waved to the blaring motorcade.

    Stop Solitary CT released a statement ahead of the vigil: “In light of even more evidence discussed in an open letter from Yale Medical Faculty (released 4/21) and a letter to the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture (released 4/22) from Allard K. Lowenstein Clinic at Yale Law School, it is clear that Governor Lamont’s failure to respond to Covid-19 in prisons will almost certainly result in preventable death.”

    Stop Solitary CT has co-authored an open letter asking Governor Lamont to release prisoners and provide disease-specific health interventions in the prison system. Additional authors to this open letter are Global Health Justice Partnership, Connecticut Bail Fund, The Katal Center for Health, Equality, and Justice, Sex Workers and Allies Network, ACLU CT, and Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic at Yale Law School. This open letter is endorsed by 90 additional organizations and signed by more than 1600 individuals and counting.

    Photo by Kay May / Socialist Resurgence

     

  • The World Economy Plummets: Major Clashes are Looming

    “It is now clear that we have entered a recession – as bad as or worse than in 2009,” said Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in late March [1]. Actually, the announcement only confirmed an ongoing trend long before the pandemic but is now undeniable.
    By Daniel Sugasti
    On April 14, a report by the same body predicted a 3% drop in world GDP in 2020, the worst since 1929, as a result of what they call the economic great lockdown caused by more or less stringent quarantines enacted by governments to contain or slow the contagious escalation of the new coronavirus.
    In fact, the forecasts underwent a U-turn in less than three months. In late 2019, the IMF estimated global growth was 3.4%. Thus, the current change means a negative difference of more than six points. An unprecedented fact in recent history, “much worse than during the 2008–09 financial crisis,” according to the World Economic Outlook report. By the way, the IMF compares the effects of the pandemic with the consequences of war, but on a global scale. According to its reckoning, the world output will lose US$ 9 trillion between 2020 and 2021. The picture is really grim.
    The United States, the hegemonic imperialism, would suffer a 5.6% reduction in its GDP. The situation there is critical. Not only is it the epicenter of the pandemic, but the effects of the recession are knocking on the door: More than 22 million Americans have applied for unemployment insurance in the last month. 73% assure that their income fell in the last months. Trump’s own re-election, which seemed likely due to certain economic indicators, is now in jeopardy.
    China will grow by only 1.2%, a figure so small for the Chinese standards that in practice it would amount to a recession. The advanced economies, always according to the IMF, would fall to -6.1% from 1.7% in 2019. The Eurozone would fall to -7.5% from 1.2% but, out of that, Italy and the Spanish State would plummet to -9.1% and -8%, respectively. The Greek economy, meanwhile, would contract by -10%.
    Latin America would contract by -5.2% from 0.1%. If we focus on its two main economies, Brazil would fall to -5.3% and Mexico would suffer a melt of 6.6% of its GDP. Both countries, according to “optimistic” estimates, would recover the economic crisis accentuated by COVID-19 loss only in 2023.
    There is more: world trade would fall 11% and industrial production would collapse 10.2% in 2020 [2].

    Obviously, it is not possible to assure that this gloomy scenario will materialize. First, because the IMF and other imperialist organizations are used to forecast wrongly to favor speculation. However, keeping this in mind, it must be understood that the current situation is different. It is a fact that the world economy is collapsing. This is a difficult truth to question at this point. In other words, the recession predicted by imperialism economists may not only have that “catastrophic” dimension, but it may be even worse. In other words, these forecasts are not likely to improve but to worsen.
    Starting from this premise, among the most important questions are how and when the recovery will take place. The IMF, World Bank, IDB, and other institutions expect a quick recovery in 2021. They predict a V-shaped recovery, i.e. one that start with a steep fall, but trough and recover quickly. The IMF, for example, predicts uncertain global GDP growth of 5.8% next year because it depends critically on the pandemic fading in the second half of 2020 and on economic policy actions, their well-known “guidelines.” Other institutions point in the same direction.
    So far, two initial conclusions: 1) the world economy will enter a brutal recession, even opening up the possibility of an L-shaped recovery, that is, a sharp decline and a long period of depression; 2) once the pandemic is contained – that the international bourgeoisie assumes it will be relatively fast – the burden of the crisis, whatever its size, will fall – as it already happens – on the shoulders of the working class.
    It is important to highlight that the new coronavirus is only the trigger for the future recession. The pandemic struck a global economy that had been showing signs of weakness; it attacked an organism with pre-existing ailments: the evils and contradictions of capitalism itself. The real curse is not the COVID-19 but the bourgeois system of production and social organization. It is this system that is leading us, once again, to a more or less prolonged recession period – perhaps a depression – that will make 2008 seem like a joke in bad taste.
    The fact that the US, the most powerful nation in the world, is the epicenter of the pandemic naked capitalism’s ability to guarantee the survival of humanity against such big crises. European imperialist countries are not far behind: in a few weeks, their health systems were completely overcrowded by the advance of COVID-19. The commodification of health is taking a heavy toll on lives, mainly among the most vulnerable sectors of the working class.
    The case of the United States is perhaps the one that best illustrates the latter: without having a proper public health system, the disease felt on blacks, Latinos, and casual workers, in short, on millions of people who cannot afford private health insurance. In New York alone, 62% of the dead are black or Latino [3].
    Most of the health insurances are granted by companies to their employees. So if one loses his job, he will almost certainly lose his health coverage as well. Thus, the millions of recently unemployed put even more pressure on a health system that is itself in intensive care. Not to mention more than 10 million undocumented immigrants and other sectors that are completely on the fringes of the US economy and society. Mass graves on Hart Island, New York City’s Bronx district, reveal the cruel face of the “most developed and democratic” capitalism in the world. The American dream is over.

    But the way the pandemic strikes rich countries cannot make us lose sight of the fact that the most affected are poor countries. Both due to the health crisis and its counterpart, the economic recession.
    The crisis in Latin America
    In the Latin American case, we can contrast the IMF’s forecasts with those of other organizations. GDP in the Latin America and Caribbean region, excluding Venezuela, is expected to shrink 4.6% in 2020, according to the World Bank, the largest drop since there are records. The figure exceeds the projections of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which estimates a drop of between 1.8% and 5.5%. If confirmed, these numbers would leave behind the 2.5% contraction in 1983 – associated with the Latin American foreign debt crisis and triggering what would later be called the “lost decade.” The same can be said of the contraction experienced in 2009, when the Latin American economy fell “only” 1.9% [4] .
    Eric Parrado, IDB chief economist, stated that: “the region will suffer economic shock of historical proportions.” Depending on the economic impact suffered by the US and China (the major trading partners of Latin American countries), the scenarios foreseen for the period 2020-2022 are of losses between 5.5% and 14.4% [5]. Added to the acceleration of the economic crisis caused by the pandemic there is an informal labor market of around 60%, the fall in the prices of raw materials, and the capital flight throughout Latin America. Between February and March alone, approximately US$ 53 billion escaped from those countries, more than double the capital flight from those markets that immediately followed the 2008 crisis, when the flight reached US$ 26.7 billion [6]. Brazil, the major Latin American economy, is not only the epicenter of the pandemic in the region but also of capital flight: more than US$ 12 billion in two months [7]. If the 37% drop in commodity prices is added to capital flight since the beginning of the crisis, the situation worsens [8]. According to a UN report, the so-called developing countries (excluding China) will lose nearly US$ 800 billion in terms of export revenue in 2020 [9]. According to the same entity, they will need more than US$ 2.5 trillion to recover from the disaster. The agency’s recommendations focus on using state resources – not the market, of course – to bail out companies and increase the share of the well-known compensatory measures, called “transfer programs.”
    Social crisis and class struggle
    The economic recession is showing dire social consequences. The precariousness of working conditions and unemployment are growing worldwide, a drama that goes hand in hand with increasing misery and hunger. In some countries, the combination of COVID-19 and recession will create full-blown humanitarian crises.
    The effect on employment will be “devastating”, according to the International Labor Organization (ILO). At the start of the health crisis, this agency estimated the destruction of 25 million jobs worldwide, more than during the 2008 economic crisis. But a recent report predicts that “195 million jobs will be lost in just 3 months” in this year’s second quarter. Considering both the layoffs and the reduction in hours worked, the agency estimates that Latin America and the Caribbean region will lose no less than 14 million jobs, while Central America will see 3 million jobs destroyed [10]. The landmark stopped being 2008 or even 1929. ILO technicians point out that this is “the most severe crisis since World War II: job losses are growing rapidly worldwide” [11]. In the US alone, 37 million jobs could be lost [12]. According to Oxfam, the economic consequences of the coronavirus pandemic could drag an additional 500 million people into poverty. In short, between 6% and 8% of the world population could plunge into poor status, especially in the so-called developing countries.
    These estimates are based on pre-pandemic data. Only one in four jobless workers in the world has access to unemployment benefits. Two billion people work in the informal sector, without access to sick leave, especially in developing countries, where more than 60% of jobs are informal, compared to 18% in rich countries. There are countries with such precarious working conditions, such as Bolivia or India, where informality reaches 80 and 90%, respectively.
    In this way, the impact of COVID-19 will be harder in poor countries than in rich countries. An initial explanation for this is the health funding: while an imperialist country like Germany allocates US$ 5,986 per capita/year, countries like Haiti allocate US$ 37 per capita/year [13] in the health system.
    In poor countries, those who will suffer the most will be the most exploited and oppressed sectors of the working class in the least developed regions. Women, for example, who are in the front line in the fight against the new coronavirus, are more likely to be the most economically affected. They constitute 70% of the global workforce in the health sector. In addition, they assume 75% of unpaid care work, which includes caring for children, the sick and the elderly. In turn, women are more likely to have precarious and low-paid jobs, which in turn are the most threatened by the crisis [14]. Not to mention the increase in male violence in the midst of confinement measures. The same can be said about blacks, indigenous people, immigrants, etc.
    The main unknown in the current scenario and the gloomy forecasts of the world economy is class struggle response. It is known that economic crises are not necessarily equal to social outbursts or revolutions. There is no mechanical relationship. Furthermore, unemployment, disaggregation or demoralization of broad sectors of the working class and its allies could create conditions for an “ebb tide”, that is, a scenario opposed to the explosion of revolutionary processes. Nothing can be ruled out at this point nor is there a prescription for each country. The class struggle is dynamic and will have the last word.
    But, if we rely on the protests (such as “banging pots and pans” against several governments) and the strikes in sectors that are still active, it is possible to point out a perspective of militant response to the effects of the crisis and the attacks that will come or that are already underway. There are no serious reasons to rule out that critical processes of the class struggle prior to the pandemic – Chile, Ecuador, Hong Kong, France, Algeria, Lebanon, Iraq, etc. – could be resumed with renewed force when conditions allow [15]. What’s more, other countries could be added that are being severely hit by both the pandemic and the neglect of governments, such as Italy, the Spanish State, or the United States itself. Why not?
    In this context, the revolutionaries must be prepared for great confrontations. We have to prepare theoretically, programmatically, politically and organizationally for decisive tests.
    The burning question is which program is the most adequate to intervene in the protests and revolutions that will follow the pandemic. For us, it can only be a working-class, revolutionary and socialist program. An anti-capitalist program that, under the burden of the double health and economic crisis, can be better understood by broad sectors of activists and even by the popular masses, which can not only serve as a defensive weapon against present and future attacks but also as a guide to an offensive against the handful of riches that lead the world towards barbarism.
    There is no middle ground: or them or us. At the same time we fight the spread of the new coronavirus, we have to fight another virus that is the capitalist class. More than ever we must explain, as many times as necessary, that only socialism can prevent the international bourgeoisie from imposing barbarism on the planet.
    In short: we must fight back the attacks of the bourgeoisie and their governments, but that will not be enough. Without a strategic goal, we may even win a few battles, but we will continue to be disoriented in this social war. This strategic goal cannot be other than to face every struggle, however small it may be, expecting that the working class will defeat the bourgeoisie, seize power and build a new type of state – a proletarian state with workers’ democracy – and undertake the transition to socialism.
    Notes:
    [1] <www.france24.com/es/econom%C3%ADa-y-tecnolog%C3%ADa/20200328-economia-covid19-fmi-recesion-pandemia >.
    [2] <www1.folha.uol.com.br/mercado/2020/04/grande-paralisacao-levara-economia-global-a-pior-recessao-desde-29-diz-fmi.shtml?utm_source=mail&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=compmail&fbclid=IwAR0LVHmTRJuevZEJJ5SCDCX7OmX5tfRNNbUgOzVcrPUprQgUcDi0ic_aM20>.
    [3] <www.clarin.com/internacional/estados-unidos/coronavirus-unidos-62-muertos-nueva-york-latinos-negros_0_Su6QK85oq.html?fbclid=IwAR3cnUfx9DZq5lklpHh1qtFfqB5qOkQ30ohEL_DcAih8aOk6k1kaPhUmFy8>.
    [4] <https://elpais.com/economia/2020-04-12/el-banco-mundial-proyecta-un-caida-del-pib-del-46-en-america-latina-la-greater-since-there-are-records.html?fbclid=IwAR1BFBzNH-03EX9nT_pcklZAu39Bm1AnqjZgpeX_c2VMrdfTIRl5mHPhpD8>.
    [5] <https://elpais.com/economia/2020-04-09/la-economia-latinoamericana-se-contraera-entre-un-18-y-un-55-este-ano-por-the-advance-the-pandemic.html?fbclid=IwAR2AjBJmlr84RelIWuT2PjsZ_JL5Xbl8bYoJO9u8RrSy_8eojlhQEWnksm0>.
    [6] <https://noticias.uol.com.br/colunas/jamil-chade/2020/03/30/brasil-tem-fuga-de-us-7-bi-e-onu-preve- deep-crise-for-emerging.htm>.
    [7] <https://brasil.elpais.com/economia/2020-03-26/brasil-perde-quase-12-bilhoes-de-dolares-em-dois-meses-e-vira-epicentro- da-fuga-de-capitais-na-america-latina.html>.
    [8] <https://nacoesunidas.org/onu-pede-pacote-de-us25-trilhoes-para-paises-em-desenvolvimento-superarem-crise-do-coronavirus/amp/>.
    [9] <https://noticias.uol.com.br/colunas/jamil-chade/2020/03/30/brasil-tem-fuga-de-us-7-bi-e-onu-preve- deep-crise-for-emerging.htm>.
    [10] < https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-52220090 >.
    [11] <https://elpais.com/economia/2020-04-07/la-pandemia-provocara-una-caida-del-empleo-del-7-en-todo-el-mundo.html>.
    [12] <https://www.cronista.com/internacionales/Oxfam-coronavirus-dejara-en-la-pobreza-a-otros- 500-millones-de- personas- 20200409-0005.html>.
    [13] <https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=245491906596091>.
    [14] <https://www.oxfamintermon.org/es/nota-de-prensa/coronavirus-podria-sumir-pobreza-500-millones-personas?fbclid=IwAR27qLgRXjIng3aBb1Ib-3wAWxk09Y22VwTcP499qqQ_A0dYjjwBtMutg8I>.
    [15] <https://elpais.com/internacional/2020-04-14/la-protesta-se-resiste-a-morir.html>.

  • The Hope in the Revolution Will Bring a New Dawn

    It might sound intriguing to the reader hearing about hope at this time we are undergoing. Surely, insecurity, fear and hopelessness are the feelings hanging in the air. So imagine, talking about hope in revolution! Furthermore, what kind of revolution can we think at this moment?
    By: Ana Godoy
     
    Looking around, we come across the face of irrationality staring at us, telling that lives are less important than economy. Then, we´re sure that hope doesn´t exist; that it’s gone with the arrival of barbarism. But, precisely because of this whole scenario, we can have the deepest hope that a new world is possible.
    Considering theory, the one which is concerned to explain the mechanism of the world we live in, we always read about the existing contradictions of our society, and how they are the driving force of the transformations.  Thus, we feel happy, in theory, knowing that one day, who knows, the revolution will come. But, there are differences between theory and life, even though the theory pursues “giving life to the substance”. Confronting the contradiction on paper and living it in practice are very different matters.
    One of the characteristics of the crisis is opening wide those contradictions that we read on the books, turning then transparent to our eyes. It causes us insecurity, and maybe, even, the willingness to give up. However, facing them with resolution and serenity is the task for this moment, and this conviction in the future is what makes us revolutionaries.
    Yes, we live in a world in which the production and circulation  of goods is infinitely more important than the life of any human being that walks through the earth, and that´s how it is every day. This moment is peculiar since this problem is printed on the newspaper headlines. It has been causing political instability and reaching people’s front doors.
    The real problem is that we have for so long developed a society that gives preference to the things, goods and money, rather than to life, necessity and human well-being; maybe just for half a dozen people in the world.
    When talking about revolution, we invariably go back to Marx; the great German revolutionary who has relinquished everything because he was sure that a socialist revolution not only was possible, but it was also the only way out. Many people view him just as an economist, who had uncovered the capitalism laws and demonstrated with some formulas the contradictions enclosed in that system. However, the Marxist theory is not about goods, formulas or general laws of society. The Marxist theory is about humans, and there’s nothing more important than talking about people in a moment like this.
    Actually, the Marxist socialist theory is about hope. It is about the pursuit of happiness. It is a theory created from the certainty that it is not possible to live in a world in which people have to choose between dying of a disease or dying of hunger. Each written line, each page revised was done looking for an alternative to burst the cycle of misery, hunger and humiliation which the worker is subjected to. We ask the reader’s permission, to quote an excerpt of a letter written by Marx’s daughter, Eleanor, telling about her father’s theory.
    “It is odd, but, I believe many people don’t understand how much the notion of happiness is important for the socialists, and how it is inside the very heart of Marx’s thought. Happiness is, in the end, the great ultimate goal of our struggle; not as a simple pursuit of individual pleasure, but as the human being self-realization; the right that each individual has to express and perform his or her capabilities. The right of being fulfilled, putting his or her humanity in what he or she does, whatever it is: a goal, tillage or a work of art.  May everyone be happy, performing their capabilities and being part of a collectivity, a group that recognizes them as its own. Many people do not always associate the ‘free development of each one as the condition for the free development of all’ with the notion of individual happiness. They do not understand that this ‘free development of each one’ is, precisely, the condition to be happy. Or they think that this is something for the future and should be delayed to the future. They do not realize that being happy is something to seek in the present; that it must not be a utopia. Instead, it is something required, presently, to be attempted as of now, something that makes us better people and, therefore, more capable of facing the long struggle. I do not believe it to be an overstatement when I think that the beauty of life, the joy of living are what should guide us and what can give us some strength; that the revolution means not only the search of life and liberty, but also the pursuit of happiness.”
    It is exactly in moments like the one we are now undergoing, that each line of this letter makes more sense. There is no economic plan that could settle millions of people’s lives around the world and simultaneously solves the problems of the banks and multinationals. This society we live in neither secure well-being nor happiness for the whole population. It is for us to pave the way to get there.
    That is why hope is our fuel at this moment. The irrationality won’t prevail, because people, workers, will react. It is not possible to live a long time in appalling conditions and on top of that missing our loved ones. The uprising will come; and with it the possibility of building a world in which life is worth more than goods.
    The current generation has not lived a global crisis as the one we are now coming across. We have not lived a global catastrophe on the scale of a war neither faced the unfolding of those processes. However, for sure it will rise to be heiress of the legacy left by ancient men and women who had given their lives for believing in the possibility of building a society in which we could be fulfilled and happy.
    We may be appointed as utopians. People may allege that socialism has not worked out. We can just say to these persons: you have not understood it yet! The capitalism does not secure the future of humankind, and we hear it screaming in our ears at this moment.
    We will build a new world, not only for a simple wish, but because we do not want to see any of our beloved ones going anymore.
    We finish this text with the end of Trotsky’s speech at the funeral of Joffe, who was a member of the USSR Left-wing Opposition, which had struggled against the Stalinist betrayal to the October Revolution: “We will lift high the Leninst flag of the international proletarian revolution and we will take it to the world communism. Long live the revolutionary communist party”.
     
    Originally published on the blog Theory and Revolution
     
    Translated by Roberta Maiani

  • COVID-19: A ‘tinderbox’ in Wisconsin and Minnesota prisons 

    COVID-19: A ‘tinderbox’ in Wisconsin and Minnesota prisons 

    Wis. prisons copy

    By LUCAS ALAN DIETSCHE

    The Democratic governors of both Wisconsin and Minnesota have continued stay-at-home orders. Tragically, however, both governors indicate that social distancing does not pertain to prisoners. Both governors have created hazards in correctional facilities that could be considered criminal.

    The Moose Lake Correctional Facility in Minnesota, and its 836 inmates, could become the “epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in Minnesota correctional facilities,” says Dr. Susan Hasti of Hennepin Health Care. In a major outbreak, there would not be enough hospital beds in the area to cover even half of the suspected cases. Minnesota prides itself on the many health-care facilities from Duluth to Mayo Clinic. But the lack of equipment, room, and personal protections would create dire problems in the state health-care system if a COVID-19 outbreak happens.

    The rapid spread of the highly contagious disease within prison walls could quickly move to outside communities. Prisons are not immutable ecosystems that can be locked down to avoid infection by the virus.

    The prison eco-system already has been compromised by prison workers and doctors who have infected inmates. The movements of inmates, social workers, and prison workers and guards ensure that the spread of COVID would be like a “tinderbox,” according to Dr. Lynne Ogawa, medical director of the St. Paul-Ramsey County Department of Public Health.

    So far this month, 13 Moose Lake inmates have tested positive, with another 31 presumed to have the virus. A minimum-security facility at Willow River, had three confirmed cases and six presumed. Those are the only prisons in the state where the virus has been confirmed; the Department of Corrections said that only two cases so far have required hospitalization.

    A petition for release was filed by three Moose Lake inmates on behalf of themselves and others who meet certain criteria. It includes the demand that many inmates who are not a threat to the community or have six months left should be released or isolated in transitional living placements.

    A “death sentence” in Wisconsin prisons 

    Democratic Governor Evers is certainly not a “lesser evil” when it comes to evacuation and social distancing orders in the vast gulag archipelago of Wisconsin prisons.

    In Wisconsin, there is some activism around evacuation of the prisons. Organizing attempts from Save the Kids, Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, Forum for Understanding Prisons (FFUP), and other groups continue to employ phone zaps to Department of Corrections heads and local authorities. Forum for Understanding Prisons held caravans and plot signs in front of the DOC chief’s headquarters.

    In a recent webinar, participants of the FFUP said that if COVID gets into Wisconsin prisons, it will be a death sentence. One incarcerated person’s mother stated that gloves are not being changed, and inadequate social distancing is not being used. New inmates are being admitted as well.

    As of today, FFUP says the DOC has done only one test for COVID-19 although it has tested for influenza. Other actions include a webinar on May 17 on a panel on Youth Detention by Save the Kids, with some members of Socialist Resurgence participating. As stated in a recent Socialist Resurgence article, “Prisons are deathtraps for COVID-19”: Evacuate them now!

    Photo: Rex Winsome 

     

     

     

  • Free Online Course at the Marxist Training Center David Riazanov

    The pandemic, the lockdown, the exacerbation of social inequality, the economic and political crisis we are experiencing pose to the revolutionaries the need to a deeper Marxism training to advance in the knowledge of our actuality, whose change is becoming increasingly necessary and urgent.
    At the same time, quarantine allows us more time to devote to this learning. Aiming at this need, the Marxist Training Center David Riazanov, in addition to continuing with its normal courses, has decided to release the course on Permanent Revolution, taught in Spanish and subtitled in Portuguese and English. In order to have access to it, it is necessary to self-enrol, for which you can learn in the following tutorial. This course will be free but since our centre’s expenses do not disappear during the pandemic, any voluntary funding from the students will be welcome.
    The course will begin on April 20.
    Tutorial: How to enroll

  • [Britain] Right-wing Regain Leadership of the Labour Party

    Labour has a new leader to replace Jeremy Corbyn; Keir Starmer won with 53% without the need for a run-off. Corbyn’s choice, Rebecca Long-Bailey, got 31% and Lisa Nandy 16%. Angela Rayner is deputy leader she got 52.6% and defeated four other candidates including Richard Burgon, who was backed by Corbyn and got 21.3%. 
    International Socialist League, April 13, 2020
    A new Knight for Labour
    Who is Sir Keir Starmer, KCB, and what on earth is a KCB? It stands for Knight Commander of the Bath; this ‘award’ goes back to the middle ages. It represents the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (formerly the Most Honourable Military Order of the Bath). It is a British order of chivalry founded by George I on 18 May 1725 (which had everything to do with a rising colonial power rather than medieval chivalry).
    The name derives from the elaborate medieval ceremony for appointing a knight, which involved bathing (as a symbol of purification) as one of its elements. These knights were known as “Knights of the Bath”. Starmer was given the award in the 2014 New Year Honours by under the then Tory-Lib Dem coalition government. Socialist Voice does not know if Starmer followed the tradition of purification.
    In 2008, prior to his election as an MP he served as Director of Public Prosecutions and Head of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), holding the role until 2013. On 6 October 2016, he was appointed as shadow Brexit secretary in Corbyn and McDonnell’s shadow cabinet. The Tory government then swore him in as a Privy Councillor in 2017.
    Having, therefore, rubbed shoulders, in the Privy Council, with the high command of military, police, state civil servants, royalty and senior Tory, Labour and Lib Dem leaders he is well accustomed to working with those in power. Starmer will be a loyal opposition (sic) and a servant of British capitalism and imperialism, even if he does occasionally call himself a “socialist” and state a preference that one does not address him as ‘Sir’. He is, one might say, a safe pair of hands for the British establishment and the money bags capitalists that rule.
    What happened to Corbynism?
    It is true many young and older people formed a surge, of some hundreds of thousands, to support Corbyn in his bid, against the odds, to become Labour leader, and because of that support, all attempts to oust him over four years did not succeed.
    Corbyn stood on some picket-lines and highlighted the attacks of austerity, but he never called for strikes. The Labour Party leadership shudders at the thought for calling for a mass strike or any strikes.
    Labour is an anti-Marxist party; they do not believe that it is necessary to lead workers in open struggle against capital and to overturn the power of capital. For them, reforms are the way, but even if they got a few they would be insufficient.
    We should not forget that many Labour lefts thought that Corbyn and Labour’s Broad Church could lead a mass movement for socialism through parliament. The Socialist and Socialist Workers Party fawned after Corbyn, and Peter Taaffe (leader of the SP) used to write about the “Corbyn revolution” although that disappeared from view more recently. Both parties thought Corbyn could bring about a fundamental change in Britain and lead a road to socialism.
    They never explained, and nor did anyone else, why types like Starmer entered Corbyn’s cabinet? How did Starmer match the ‘dream’ that Corbyn and the likes of the SWP talked about after the general election defeat?
    The retreats from previously held positions by Corbyn started in 2016 when he instructed all Labour council groups to implement or support a cuts budget that could only implement Tory austerity. They adopted a ‘neutral’ position over Brexit and refused to honour the result of the referendum.
    They allowed anti-racist and Jewish members to be suspended and expelled. They adopted as Labour Party policy the IHRA definitions and examples such as “claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavour” and therefore bowed to Zionism – the ideology on which the State of Israeli was founded and ignore the Israeli army siege and occupations of Gaza, its annexations and its discriminatory laws and practices within Israel.
    Throughout Corbyn’s tenure as Labour leader, the International Socialist League (ISL) maintained that Corbyn could not and would not lead a struggle for socialism. We were called sectarians. As we said, the right-wing of the Party bided their time and used every concession to strengthen their attacks on Corbyn. The inability and unwillingness of the left-wing of the Party to fight back allowed them to rebuild.
    It meant that ‘left-wing’ councillors were allowed to continue voting for cuts without challenge. In ten years of austerity, about four councillors voted against cuts. They were expelled. There was no drive to organise mass action against capitalist attacks, no calling of workers to strike to take to the streets against May, or Johnson. Everything was aimed at winning a general election.
    The vast number of the left who joined Labour abandoned the fight against austerity except in words. Many anti-cuts groups folded, the demonstrations and protests outside council meetings dropped, in the many cities, to nothing.
    Meanwhile, Shadow Chancellor McDonnell endlessly repeated to the top hats that he would be happy working with big money in the city of London. The Corbynistas never complained. The SP and SWP said some critical words but continued proselytising for Corbyn.
    Labour’s election manifesto never promised to repeal all the anti-trade union laws, although some Labour speakers promised they would. They only said they would repeal the most recent legislation leaving the rest until the election of a second term Labour government.
    The bubble burst. Labour lost the election because many workers had turned against Labour especially in the hardest-hit areas of the country that had remained mired in poverty after the Miners’ strike.
    Right-wing in control
    Labour will now return to Blairism while denying it – it’s not so good to be seen rubbing shoulders with what many workers see as a war criminal.
    Corbyn’s “saving” of the Labour party has saved Labour for its right-wing. Blair’s desire to integrate further into the running of a capitalist state in decay and move further away from any workers’ influence will resume.
    Many on Labour’s left will call for unity and a coming together to get Labour re-elected and will, no doubt, say any concerns on Labour’s program can be thrashed out once the Tories are out. But Labour are no answer for the working class and oppressed people; reformism is no answer and parliamentarianism cannot bring socialism.
    The Labour Party is back in the hands of the right-wing – in truth their control of the Parliamentary Labour Party, Labour-controlled councils, council Labour groups and much of the apparatus were never overturned.
    An attempt at a revival after the election defeat came through the newish Labour Left Alliance which held a February national meeting in Sheffield. The average age of attendees was over 60 years of age, and they agreed that only Labour members could join the LLA.
    Through all the Corbyn years the trade unions such as Unite and Unison shovelled money into Labour. They helped Labour to keep on implementing Tory austerity. The trade union leaders never mobilised to fight as services and thousands of jobs were destroyed.
    Not a new question
    These events echo Trotsky’s thoughts on the Labour left,
    The left muddle heads are incapable of power; but if through the turn of events it fell into their hands, they would hasten to pass it over to their elder brothers on the right. They would do the same with the state as they are now doing in the party.
    We recommend readers to study these writings of Trotsky on the Labour Party, where he discusses the balance of forces between the right and left in Labour. Labour lefts will never lead a struggle for socialist power, that is, workers’ power. Trotsky says in this letter that,
    The ideological and organisational formation of a genuinely revolutionary, that is of a communist, party on the basis of the movement of the masses is conceivable only under the condition of a perpetual, systematic, inflexible, untiring and irreconcilable unmasking of the quasi-left leaders of every hue, of their confusion, of their compromises and of their reticence.
    This reasoning of Trotsky not only applies to left Labour leaders but to all those muddle-headed leaders of left parties who supported Corbynism. 
    Workers’ struggle the only answer to the crises of capitalism
    Austerity and its effects, Grenfell Tower life-threatening living conditions, brought on by the brutality of zero-hour contracts, the attacks on benefits, the abuse of migrants, women and all oppressed people. We now face a deep economic recession. It is never-ending for the working class.
    Austerity not only killed workers; it has created a graveyard with COVID-19. Capitalism did not prepare, has not enough PPE and there is no mass testing programme despite many recent warnings by scientists. Only a mass struggle based on class independence and militant workers’ organisations can answer the COVID-19 crisis and prepare for future outbreaks.
    For a new independent class struggle workers’ party
    In this struggle, workers will not advance by creating a new reformist party. There is a need for a new workers’ party with the guiding line that what is won will only be won on the streets with mass mobilisations and action. Such a party cannot look towards parliament for working-class victories. Parliament can be used to expose capitalist parties, the anti-worker functioning of capitalism and call for support for all workers’ struggle. But it is not a means of achieving socialism.
    There have been many failed attempts like Syriza (Greece), Podemos (Spain) and Bloco de Esquerda (Portugal). All these parties turned the tactical question of elections into a strategy – a capitalist strategy; Bloco just signed a COVID-19 agreement with the government to ban strikes in the national interest! Podemos accepted positions in a capitalist government; Syriza betrayed the struggle against the EU’s poverty programme for Greece.
    The French NPA (New Anti-Capitalist Party) is not a successful electoral party but do workers need a party that was never able to help the militant yellow vest movement in France?
    The real workers’ party must be in the frontline of workers struggle and will be tested by that struggle, it has to support and fight for the self-organisation of workers, always seeking the unity in struggle between the militant unions and social struggles. It must help renew the leadership of the old unions and help build new ones like the United Voices of the World and the Independent Workers GB. The ISL will intervene in organisations that emerge to fight for our position.
    Build the ISL
    We also need a different type of party to Labour to lead the working class to overthrow capitalism. Only a revolution led by workers with the oppressed people united by a revolutionary program and a revolutionary party can stop the destruction of humanity and our planet.
    We call on those youth and workers who were cruelly deceived and want to fight for socialism to study Marxism and Trotsky and begin the fight for a genuine party, a revolutionary party to overthrow capitalism. Nothing else will save us.
    That is why we say fight for your future – join the International Socialist League, a workers’, Marxist and internationalist group and part of the International Workers League- Fourth International.

  • On Earth Day: The shape of protest in a pandemic

    On Earth Day: The shape of protest in a pandemic

     

    April 2020 CT Killingly (Not Another Power Plant)
    Protest against the Killingly fracked-gas power plant at the Connecticut capitol in Hartford in 2019. (Photo: Not Another Power Plant)

    How Connecticut is organizing for climate justice    

    By ITALO LUNACARTA

    Today, April 22, we celebrate not only the births of Vladimir Illych Lenin and jazz legend Charles Mingus but the 50th anniversary of Earth Day as well. We humans find ourselves at a historic crossroads on this day: in the throes of a literal plague propagated by the very same forces that have driven us to the ecological brink, namely capitalism.

    While we should be alarmed at the brazen disregard for human life displayed by right-wing public demonstrations against the quarantine mandates and economic shutdown, we must not despair because activist groups everywhere are supporting one another and organizing web-based rallies and teach-ins. In Connecticut, a group called Connecticut Climate Crisis Mobilization (C3M) has built a whole week of online actions starting April 22 and culminating in a virtual rally on Saturday the 25th, which will feature short speeches from activists representing a diverse array of climate and social justice groups and live music.

    Originally, this rally was to take place at the site of a proposed fracked-gas power plant in Killingly, a quiet town in rural eastern Connecticut, but the realities of COVID-19 forced the coalition, which is composed of representatives of various sub-groups and individuals from different political tendencies, to get creative. While it is tragic that it is not safe to protest en masse, as groups all over the planet were intending to do today, ecosocialists must use this opportunity to further the discussions about how public health and climate change are inextricably linked to the global political economy.

    Imperialism, industrial farming, environmental racism, and extractive industry are all facets of the same putrid body. C3M has issued a statement, drafted by the steering committee and then edited democratically by members, to the local press that is explicit in its outlook on what is wrong, scientifically and morally, with the practices that have gotten humanity to this point.

    While a statement of this length cannot fully expound upon the many complexities of any individual topic, it is above all an attempt to identify zoonotic illnesses, ecological destruction, militarism, agribusiness, the global petrocracy, and environmental racism as fibers of the same rope, which we, the working people of earth, find ourselves at the end of. The truth of the matter is that the full aims of the environmentalist movement are wholly incompatible with capitalism, even its “progressive” variant.

    The present economic crisis, which may well turn into a full-scale depression, is an opportunity for socialists to shatter the illusion that even the most ambitiously drafted Green New Deal is sufficient recourse. Without the nationalization of the war industries to produce ventilators today and windmills tomorrow, we cannot possibly hope to stop the needless human suffering from imperialist wars, coronavirus, or the eventual collapse of the biosphere.

    But ecosocialism in one country shall prove no more effective than socialism in one country; the solution must be international. The document calls for an end to military campaigns and sanctions and for a new era of international collaboration and solidarity. The demands raised around the military industrial complex are particularly striking in Connecticut, which despite being a small state is actually a manufacturing giant in aerospace and defense.

    We must make the point, again and again, that the better world that we have been describing for well over a century is not the utopian pie in the sky that billionaires and their favorite lapdogs, the “pragmatic” politicians, mock. It is simply the outcome of what would happen if our already existing means of production and distribution were reconfigured to provide for human necessity instead of making a small slice of society increasingly wealthy.

    The reason why one billion kilograms of edible potatoes now sits rotting in a Netherlands warehouse, why tens of thousands of gallons of milk are being dumped down the drain by farmers in the States, why egg-producing hens are being prematurely slaughtered in droves, is not because farmers don’t want to sell their goods, nor is it because people have stopped needing them. This waste is mandated by the market to keep supply and demand fixed within the window of profitability, as was done during the Great Depression wherein F.D Roosevelt’s government paid farmers to destroy their surplus at the same time that people in the farmers’ communities were literally starving.

    That you can interchange maps of income, race, air quality, and COVID-19 casualties in any city is no coincidence. That attacks on Indigenous sovereignty and the fast-tracking of pipeline construction (and other destructive projects, such as the Connecticut Killingly fracked-gas plant) are shifting into high gear now, at a time when mass mobilization is unthinkable, is also not a coincidence. Neither is the fact that war production has been deemed “essential” while there remains a huge shortage of ventilator machines and PPE.

    Capitalist crises like the current one not only indict the status quo but provide us a glimpse into what could be if we socialized the means of production. We could nationalize all public hospitals, as Spain, a capitalist country, has done. We could suspend all mortgages, as Italy has done. A moratorium on rents would be the only logical next step. We could house the homeless in hotels, as Britain has done.

    The capitalists and their political agents resist these measures not because they can’t be done, but because they are actually imminently possible, and would be politically costly to remove once in place. These temporary measures would reveal that a better world is possible if capitalist property relations were upended.

    While 52 percent of its workforce is being laid off and thousands of square feet worth of factory machines sit gathering dust, General Electric workers in Lynn, Mass., are demanding that their plant be repurposed from jet engine to ventilator production in order to meet the rapidly growing need. As the C3M Earth Day Declaration urges: today, ventilators; tomorrow, windmills. The working class is the only force capable of such a radical and necessary transformation of society. A better world is possible and at times of crisis we can even see its ghost within the existing order, struggling to be born.

     

     

     

  • The 150th birthday of Vladimir Lenin

    The 150th birthday of Vladimir Lenin
    Lenin clipped
    Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924) was the major leader of the Bolshevik Party in Russia and the main strategist of the Russian Revolution of October 1917, in which the working class overthrew capitalism and took state power. Leon Trotsky, upon hearing of Lenin’s death in 1924, said: “Lenin is no more, but Leninism remains. What was immortal in Lenin—his teaching, his work, his method, his example—lives on in us, in the party which he founded, in the first workers’ state he led and guided. … In all of us there lives a small part of Lenin, and this is the best part of each one of us.”

     Lenin 

     

    By LANGSTON HUGHES 

     

    Lenin walks around the world.

    Frontiers cannot bar him.

    Neither barracks nor barricades impede.

    Nor does barbed wire scar him.

    Lenin walks around the world.

    Black, brown, and white receive him.

    Language is no barrier.

    The strangest tongues believe him.

     

    Lenin walks around the world.

    The sun sets like a scar.

    Between the darkness and the dawn

    There rises a red star.