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  • Workers’ Voice newspaper: March-April edition

    Workers’ Voice newspaper: March-April edition

    The U.S.-Israel war on Iran is a major escalation in the Middle East that has dangerous implications for working people everywhere. The brutality of the imperialist assault internationally is paired with the attack on civil liberties by the Trump regime inside the U.S. This includes the continued operations of ICE and Border Patrol, the threats to the 2026 mid-term elections, environmental rollbacks that deeply impact the Black community, and unchecked police brutality.

    Our editorial in this issue warns us: “There is a great danger of underestimating the determination of the U.S. corporate elite to drive through this effort. We cannot rely on court rulings or upcoming elections to save us. We must organize now, not only for mass demonstrations and community networks against ICE violence, but to find our way to building a new working-class party through which we can organize our political defense on every plane and on every day.”

    In this issue we also have articles on the Epstein files and the ruling class, the San Francisco teachers’ strike, and a review of the new album by U2.

    The March–April 2026 edition of our newspaper is available in print and online as a pdf. Read the latest issue of our newspaper today with a free pdf download! As always, we appreciate any donations to help with the cost of printing.

    Click on the image to read the paper or message us to get a hard copy:

  • SR’s Dan Piper announces candidacy for State Rep in Connecticut

    Teacher and union member Dan Piper for CT State Rep, 1st District!

    On May 28, Dan Piper announced his bid for Connecticut State Representative in the first district as a candidate for the Socialist Resurgence Party. Piper is running for office to oppose the sacrifice of working-class lives demanded by President Trump and by Governor Lamont and his fellow Democrats such as House Majority Leader Matt Ritter (the present representative in District 1). 

    Dan Piper is a 37 year-old Hartford resident, public school teacher, union member, and longtime activist. Piper’s first experience at a march came at age 16 when he joined the Dead Prisoner’s Parade in Boston to protest the deaths of 34 incarcerated people in 1998. From the fight to defend the Danbury 11 onward, he has joined campaigns to stop anti-immigrant ICE raids and deportations.

    Piper has participated in efforts to stop police brutality, win a $15/hour minimum wage, bring war dollars home, stop FBI harassment of activists, stop entrapment and surveillance of Muslims, stop tuition hikes for public higher ed in CT, stop and end U.S. wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Iran, stop the Dunkin Donuts stadium, and stop attacks on civil liberties. Piper is currently a member of CT Workers’ Crisis Response (CWCR) and Socialist Resurgence.

    The text of Piper’s talk at a May 28 online news conference follows. The Facebook video is here: https://www.facebook.com/SocialistResurgenceCT/videos/685174962056132/?

    Good morning everyone. Thank you in advance for taking time out of your day to join me. My name is Dan Piper. And I am announcing my campaign for the office of State Rep in the 1st district of Connecticut. I am running as a candidate for the Socialist Resurgence Party.

    Before I explain why I decided to run, I wanted to take a moment to say something about the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. I don’t have anything particularly insightful to say other than there is no question that the four police officers responsible for George Floyd’s death must be tried for murder. It is worth thinking about the fact that Michael Brown was murdered by police nearly six years ago; there are now dozens more names of African Americans slain by the police which are now known by the world, and still, police officers can kill a Black man in broad daylight, while being recorded.

    I and Socialist Resurgence stand in solidarity with the movement developing in the streets of Minneapolis and across the U.S. demanding justice for George Floyd. We oppose any use of the National Guard in Minneapolis. In Connecticut as well, police brutality and murder are recurring facts of life—as the murders of Jayson Negron, Jose Soto, Zoe Dowdell, and Hartford’s Jashon Bryant show, among many others. We encourage all to attend the action on June 6 at 3PM at the New Haven City Hall to demand justice for Mubarak another victim of police murder.

    I live in Hartford and I teach in a public school. I am also a union member.

    Without a doubt, this is a critical moment for people who need to work in order to live. After living through one of the greatest crises and disruptions in our lives, we are entering into at least two more.

    Last Wednesday, May 20, 2020, Governor Ned Lamont joined President Donald Trump and governors throughout the U.S. in a campaign to begin rolling back some of the few measures in place meant to slow the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic. Working people have spent more than two months doing our best to slow this plague and the people in power have done almost nothing to prepare for its end.

    When the pandemic hit this country, hospitals were already running on bare-bones supplies, doctor visits had been stripped down to a handful of minutes, and 60,000 people were already dying every year for want of health coverage. Fundamentally, we all knew these were the conditions in this country.

    But when the pandemic hit here, we also learned that the rot went much further. Everywhere, people in positions of authority denied the crisis, delayed action, failed to act even remotely appropriately, and even sabotaged attempts to mitigate the pandemic.

    To be sure, Trump was and is the most visibly and grotesquely at war with reality. It is hard to beat a man who advocates cleaning people’s lungs out with bleach. But it turns out that Trump is just in the lead.

    Everywhere, working people have had to fight tooth and nail for PPE, for social distancing measures, to close their workplaces, and even to get sick leave in the middle of a pandemic. While managers locked themselves in their offices or even went home, they sent workers to work in hotels without even gloves “because they look unprofessional.”

    Before workplaces were closed by the state, workers were already walking out. Before governors were closing down schools parents were keeping their kids home. Some teachers were even organizing sick-outs. Some 100,000 people died here in the last 75 days because the people who give orders in this country waited months before taking any kind of action, and then they did very little. If those who actually do the work had not acted on their own, that count would be much higher already. The death toll is a product of decisions made at every level of authority.

    Prisons are some of the biggest incubators of COVID-19. Here in Connecticut, Governor Lamont has refused to release anyone early from their prison sentences. All around the world, governments are releasing people from prison to protect the incarcerated and the society at large. Meanwhile, Governor Lamont cannot identify a single person—not one—whom he thinks should be released—not even to protect staff and everyone whom they and their families come into contact with.

    No one is making Lamont keep thousands of people in prison and jail through a pandemic. Nor is anyone making him keep military production at Electric Boat running, or at Sikorsky or at Pratt and Whitney, or at the many smaller shops around the state.

    Lamont is responsible for keeping construction of luxury homes going throughout this whole crisis, requiring workers to crowd into service elevators and share port-a-potties just so developers can drive up housing prices and push more people with less money out of their own neighborhoods.

    All of these decisions—and many more—were made by people in positions of authority in this state with the knowledge that they would result in many deaths. For them, these calculations are routine. Just as they know that some 2000 -3000 people will die every year from workplace accidents and another 20,000 -30,000 will die from workplace illnesses. Just as Cuomo knows the consequences of cutting Medicaid in the middle of a pandemic. The fact that these policies would hit people of color the hardest was most certainly part of their calculation.

    Trump and Lamont, and both of their parties, know too that rolling back the few measures taken to curb the pandemic will cause more people to die. Trump’s own administration has calculated these increases.

    And every day new information comes out about how unprepared Connecticut is for any further rollback of social distancing. Lamont says there’s enough PPE, but now nursing home workers are told they cannot give residents showers because it will use up too much PPE. So how then, is there enough PPE? Lamont says he has set up a robust testing and tracing apparatus, but now his own officials say there isn’t enough staff or training.

    Even from the start, Lamont used the lowest available estimates for how much testing would be needed to safely roll back distancing measures. Most experts estimate that we need between five and 50 times as many tests per week as Lamont has organized the state for.

    The state representative in my district, Matt Ritter, has not said one word in public to oppose Lamont’s pandemic policies. He does not call for the release of prisoners. He does not call for the closure or conversion of military manufacturing. He does not call for a pause in luxury home construction. He does not call for more testing or a lower infection rate before workers are told they have to go back to work in restaurants, shopping malls and salons. His online accounts are merely promotional vehicles for the Lamont administration.

    Once again, the parties of big business are ready to sacrifice the lives of working people to rescue the profits of a few rich people. Once again, people of color, immigrants and women are the main objects of this sacrifice. The vast majority of working people oppose this roll-back. Poll after poll shows this. The reality of life after such roll-backs shows this too. Working people still refuse to go shopping like they’re told to. They know that even the customers are not safe.

    Working people have sacrificed enough for the mistakes and for the enrichment of the wealthy. If workers are taking the risks and making the sacrifices, then workers should decide when to go back to work, under what conditions and for what purpose.

    The roll-back of social distancing measures does not merely mean more infection. It also means an end to the financial measures keeping people from abject poverty. In Ohio, the state is telling employers to report people who miss work without special exemptions so they can be removed from unemployment rolls. In Connecticut, Lamont and reporting in the Courant make it clear that the “reopening of the economy” means that workers in the reopened sectors will now be eligible for termination with cause should they not report to work at restaurants and malls. In Texas, the state supreme court has reopened evictions and debt collection—including the garnishment of wages. In New Orleans, striking workers are replaced with prison labor.

    In a period where some 39 million people have applied for unemployment, and some four in 10 have not received it—where food lines are growing everywhere—these are barbaric measures.

    But this is what millionaire businessmen like Lamont mean when they talk about “reopening the economy.” For them, “the economy” means other people producing more value for rich people than it takes to keep them alive and compliant. For people like Lamont, and Trump, and Matt Ritter, “the economy” means the conditions under which people will voluntarily do this kind of work, where people will beg to do this kind of work.

    This is why, the other day, senior White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett said the economy is looking good because “our human capital stock is ready to get back to work.” They think of us as human capital stock—their human capital stock. For them, everything that allows them to treat us as such is natural and good. And this tells us what is coming next: An assault on the working class unlike one we have ever seen in our lives.

    For the owners of banks, corporations and big property, the crisis is not that millions of people are struggling to eat, or that millions are threatened with homelessness. It is that their profits are endangered. They intend to save their profits. That means getting people to work as hard as possible for as little as possible.

    That is why keeping people in prison is so important for Lamont and his party. For about 45,000 people on probation or parole in Connecticut, the threat of jail time can be used to make some very productive, complaint-free workers. Releasing people from prison on a technicality would remove that threat.

    The debts that come out of this crisis, and the threats of hunger and homelessness will be used as a cudgel to get people working hard, long, flexible, precarious hours for little pay. As more people are sent back to work while schools are closed, many will have to stay home to take care of their kids, losing work and income while unemployment and other supports are removed. This will largely affect women, making them an even more vulnerable part of the workforce.

    The Democrats and Republicans both intend to use the crisis of public budgets as a pretext to cut public sector wages, layoff thousands, and to cut and privatize essential services.

    As for the people who risked and sacrificed the most in this pandemic—elder-care workers, medical workers, grocery store workers, servers, retail workers, manufacturing workers, construction workers, the elderly and all of their family and friends—Lamont and Ritter, the Democrats and the Republicans are already planning on cutting their services to pay for the crisis. They are already planning on evicting their family and friends.

    Is this necessary or inevitable? Most of these workers pay about 12% of their income in state and local taxes. The richest 1% of residents here pay about 8% of their income. If the richest residents in Connecticut simply paid the same percentage of their income as the poorest residents—the same people that everyone is thanking up and down for their heroism—there would be no budget crisis. The state might not even need to keep handing the rich a tidy profit for the privilege of borrowing the money it could be taxing. This is not even to mention the incredible wealth appropriated by big business in this state that goes untaxed.

    There is enough wealth in this state and in this country to pay for all the basic needs working people have and more. Manufacturing shops can be retooled to make medical supplies, PPE and testing equipment. And then retooled again to make a transition to 100% renewable power. A single public health-care plan could not only provide healthcare to all in this state, it could cut costs in half. Food can be made available for free to all who need it. Renting costs could be based on maintenance rather than market rates, and then subsidized by the state at very low cost for those who need it. No one needs to be evicted. No one needs to be homeless. There is already plenty of housing for everyone.

    But Lamont has already made it clear that he is more interested in taxing groceries than taxing the wealthy, or their businesses. And single-payer health care is never on the table. And his party plans to expand the use of fracked gas, rather than renewable power. And driving up housing costs is so essential for them that they continue construction of luxury housing during a pandemic.

    And I know what some of you—maybe all of you—are thinking. “We can’t tax the rich as much as everybody else. They’ll leave!” If true, it is worth pausing to consider what that says about the rich.

    There is a half-truth here. It is this: Lamont and Ritter cannot tell the ultra-rich what to do. Really, it works the other way around. Lamont and Ritter work for the ultra-rich. If the ultra-rich don’t want to pay more in taxes, Lamont, Ritter, and the entire Democratic and Republican parties combined cannot and will not make them. But, just because the Lamont and Ritter are not going to force the rich to do anything they don’t want to do, doesn’t mean no one can. Their power isn’t limitless. No matter how much money the rich have, working people have even more when they put their hands in their pockets with purpose.

    The money of the wealthy is useless if they can’t get anyone to work for them. When the people who actually run the society stop doing what they’re told, the rich become powerless. Will the rich pay a little more just to calm that kind of situation down? They probably will.

    What does it mean to create this kind of situation? First of all, it means we stop trying to convince the Lamonts and the Ritters to do the right thing. It means we start organizing on our own to win what is necessary. This is why we need movements of working and oppressed people independent of the employers and their parties.

    There is an alternative future, where people get what they need to live and where we can take real measures against this plague. The recent fight against the bosses’ pandemic policy suggests that this fight is possible. As do the recent mass international actions for women’s liberation—as do the titanic struggles in recent months throughout the world, from Chile to Puerto Rico, to Haiti to India; as do the recent struggles led by teachers; as do the rebellions against police brutality in this country—coming to life again in Minneapolis.

    But this alternative will only be possible if working and oppressed people can get together and fight with their own strength—independent from the parties of their bosses. And we will never be able to wage an independent fight if we are not also organized politically. If we are not organized with the intent to take power in our own name. We will always feel the need to go begging for one of our bosses’ parties in the end. We will always end up playing by their rules.

    Today I am announcing my candidacy for the Connecticut House of Representatives in the first district. I am running as a Socialist Resurgence candidate. Our campaign will strive to expose the bosses’ parties, to show the alternatives, to show how working people can win when they unite across sectors and fight independently from their employers, to help build the fightback against the coming attacks on workers, and to show that working people should run this society.

    And that is why today, I am joining Unidad Latina en Accion at the State Capitol to demand an emergency fund for undocumented workers who have been excluded from all emergency assistance during the pandemic. An injury to one is an injury to all. If we are to win what we need we must fight for each other. Everyone should join this essential fight at the capital this afternoon, Thursday, May 28, at 3:00 p.m.

    If you are interested in learning more about my party, Socialist Resurgence, please look us up online at socialistresurgence.org and on Facebook. If you are interested in getting involved in the campaign or in the party itself, please contact us. Thank you.

     

     

     

     

  • No National Guard in Minneapolis!

    Minneapolis cops attack protesters on May 27. (Kerem Yucel / AFP / Getty)

    A STATEMENT BY SOCIALIST RESURGENCE

    The Democratic Party Mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, called for the National Guard to be deployed to the city. At the same time, National Guard troops were sent to harass peaceful protesters outside the suburban house of Officer Derek Chauvin, who murdered George Floyd on May 25.

    Socialist Resurgence opposes any use of National Guard troops in Minneapolis or other cities. The presence of the Guard will only inflame the situation. These troops cannot be trusted to act as anything but goons for the state. This is especially true given the fact that just a couple of days ago some Guard members were disciplined for racist remarks made on Snapchat.

    We also stand by those Minneapolis transit drivers who are refusing to drive city buses requisitioned by police for the purpose of mass arrests of protesters.

    The spark that lit the flame in Minneapolis was the callous police murder of Floyd and the subsequent attack by cops in riot gear on non-violent protesters. The blame for all of this lies with a racist criminal injustice system that regularly weaponizes police against Black and Brown people. The road forward must include criminal accountability for killer cops. It must also lead to the abolition of the entire police and prison complex.

    The Trump administration is making a big show about a federal investigation of the killing of George Floyd. Working people should not trust this administration and the Justice Department to produce anything but a cover-up. Trump’s well-known affinity for cops and police brutality should tell us everything we need to know about any “investigation.”

    Justice for George Floyd and all other victims of racist police violence! Jail killer cops! No National Guard Troops in Minneapolis!

     

  • Covid 19, Religious Fundamentalism, LGBTphobia, and the Attack on Science

    Pandemic, stigmas and prejudices
     As it was mentioned in the article “The pandemic of Covid 19 and the LGBTs”[1], in addition to all the health and socioeconomic issues they are facing, LGBT people still have to deal with stigmas and prejudice, which are being fueled by religious fundamentalists, who, irresponsibly, rashly and cruelly are taking advantage of the crisis, to increase the LGBTphobia, by now unbearable. These fundamentalists are crossing geographic, political and religious borders.
     
    By: Wilson Honório da Silva, PSTU National Political Education Secretariat (Brazil)
     
    One of the most known examples is Ralph Drollinger, an evangelical Christian, pastor of Donald Trump’s office and responsible for weekly Bible studies in the White House, who has stated that coronavirus is a consequence of “God’s wrath” against those people who have an “inclination to lesbianism and homosexuality”, in addition to “people with depraved minds”, as the environmentalists, and, naturally, in the head of an ultraconservative, racist and xenophobe one, the Chinese.
    Also in the country which today is the epicenter of the worldwide pandemic, the influential protestant pastor and Republican Party politician Earl Walker Jackson (who is unfortunately black as well) used his TV program to popularize the disgusting idea that Covid-19 is caused by what he called as “homovirus”. While, another tele-evangelist, Pat Robertson, argued that the pandemic was a way God found to “pay back”, and punish the Supreme Court’s decision to allow same-sex marriage in 50 states across the country.
    Evidently, representatives of the most conservative sectors of Catholicism also did not want to be left behind in this insane preaching of hatred. In the USA, a regrettable example was given by Cardinal Raymond Burke, who lives in Rome, but sent messages to his followers, defending that the “grave danger that haunts the world” is due to efforts to promote sex and gender equality.
     
    Criminals in the name of God
    It is not an exaggeration to say that these gentlemen will take to their tombs a significant part of the blame for the death (only until April 8) of almost 16 thousand people  in their country alone[2], inasmuch as they contributed criminally to the virus expansion, not only making their followers believed that they were “immune to God’s wrath”, but also playing a harmful role, in resisting the implementation of social isolation and detachment  measures (acting as anointed spokesmen for another imbecile and irresponsible, Donald Trump).
    However, the North Americans are not alone in this genocide levity. In Mexico, for example, the Catholic bishop Ramon Castro, of Cuervanaca, sharing recklessness with the president, López Obrador (who recommended kisses and hugs, instead of quarantine) also preached that young transgender people were among the “evils that made God infect the world with a virus”.
    Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, in Northern Ireland, John Carson, congressman of the country’s biggest party (the Unionist) added the legalization of abortion to the reasons indicated by his peers in the USA. The very same thing that has been said by the Christian pastor Oscar Bougardt, in Cape Town (South Africa), and by the Nigerian evangelist pastor Mike Bamiloye, who added one more culprit for God’s wrath: transplants made by transsexuals.
    Moreover, as a proof that LGBTphobia unites even “mortal enemies” and extrapolates religious boundaries, it is worth mentioning examples from the Jewish and the Islamic world.
    In Israel, Meir Mazur, an ultraconservative rabbi, stated that coronavirus was a “God’s retribution”, specifically against the LGBT Pride Parades. In addition, some days later, many people read (unable to hide the ironic smile) that the Minister of Health, Yaakov Litzman, likewise a Zionist, had caught the virus, after having preached, that the pandemic was a result of Yahweh’s wrath against LGBT people.
    The news was later denied when it was released that they had confused the Minister with that rabbi. Which, however (and if true…), does not ease Litzman’s guilt about the spread of the virus, since, demonstrably, Israel’s ultra-orthodox community, of which he is a member and leader, is the one that has been particularly most affected by the contagion, due to their resistance to adopting preventive measures.
    On the other hand, in the Islamic world, one of the worst examples comes from Iraq, where the Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr also blamed marriage between LGBT’s for the pandemic. In Ghana, Africa, the Muslim Mission’s spokesman, Sheik Amin Bonsu, called the country for a day of prayers and fasting, so that Allah’s intervened against the pandemic provoked by “sins against the world, specially the most abominable acts, such as homosexuality, lesbianism, transsexualism besides the destruction of water sources and forests.
    Talking about fasting, we should not forget that, surely, here in Brazil, though (for now) not having publicly related the pandemic to his LGBTphobia, it is evident that the guy who has already said that “having a gay son is due to lack of punches” and that a “person with HIV is an expense for everybody else”, was also thinking about this kind of things when he convoked an irresponsible fasting, selling the illusion that the way out for the crisis was in religion, instead of providing healthcare investments, protection to the workers and social confinement for all.
    Coming from all sides and multiple beliefs, it is unquestionable that statements like these, however unreasonable they may seem, they strenghten LGBTphobia, and may end up generating even more violence against those who already suffer discrimination. It has been like this along History, in which there are innumerable and deplorable examples of blaming women, LGBTs, black and native people, foreigners in general and other oppressed sectors for tragedies ranging from plages to natural disasters.
    However, we need to remember that it is not only LGBTphobia, and the reinforcement of other oppressive speeches, that worry us in these statements. They are not “just” an attack against us, the non-heterosexual. They constitute a crime against humanity as a whole; a crime that has an even broader range in moments of an economic and humanitarian crisis, when despair accentuates the search for supernatural ways out and answers to the woes and suffering which contaminate reality. These preachers of hate divert the attention from what is truly fundamental to secure survival.
     
    In defense of life, it is not possible to put faith above science.
    Furthermore, this is a crime, in several ways that complement one another, since these fundamentalists make use of the genuine despair and people’s faith to radiate a prejudice pandemic, and simultaneously, to promote an attack on science, at the moment when we most need the technical knowledge, based on research, studies and methodological rigor.
    On the question of faith, here it is not the case to develop the subject. However, we must not fail to mention that the way these “Men of God” are performing is a manifestation of not only their hypocrisy, but they also serve to remind us how false their customary attacks on “communism” as the enemy of people’s faith are.
    Just as a recommendation, we suggest the reading of a text written by Lenin in May 1909 – entitled “The Attitude of the Worker’s Party to Religion” in which the leader of the Soviet Revolution points out that despite the fact that Marx, Engels and all genuine revolutionaries were “materialists”, in the sense of putting their “faith” in a concrete, objective and scientific analysis of reality and believing, above all, in the deepest human power that resides in the class struggle essence, we, communists, have never seen atheism as a “programmatic issue”; we do not believe that making a “declaration of war on religion” should be the role of our party, much less, are we among those who would use faith as a weapon against humanity itself.
    It is true, yea, as written by the Brazilian black Marxist, Clóvis Moura (on the book “Sociologia do Negro Brasileiro” – [Sociology of Afro-Brazilians], discussing, in this case, the religions of African origin) that we believe that in a society in which men and women could live in complete freedom, in economic, political and social equality, and be able to fully develop themselves in cultural, affective and emotional terms (in other words, non- alienated persons, in all possible ways) religions will tend to “slowly disappear of society, due to their lack of function and necessity to mankind”.
    Nevertheless, here and now the problem is another one, and it has all to do with the deplorable contemporary religious leaders’ attitude, whose above examples are only extreme expressions of something much broader: the use of religions (where it is worth remembering, there are also the “dominating and dominated ones”), like Moura also wrote, as an “instrument of social, political and cultural domination”, which reproduce “the levels of subjection and domination that the capitalist society creates on earth”.
    It is not an accident that absolutely all the quoted examples have tight relations with the political institutions of their countries and even more promiscuous bonds with the interests of Capital. For this reason, the use and abuse they take of people’s faith is particularly criminal, since it is not even about the beliefs that guide the population, but rather solely about what is most interesting for them: the economic and political power that could guarantee the continuity of million people’s oppression and exploitation. Even if that implies many others’ deaths.
    [1] [1] https://litci.org/pt/especiais/coronavirus/a-pandemia-da-covid-19-e-as-lgbts/
    [2] Today, May 20, the official number of people killed by the pandemic is more than 93.800.

  • Hold killer cops accountable! No justice, no peace!

    Demonstrators gather near the Police 3rd Precinct as thousands protested on May 26 in response to the killing of George Floyd.  (Richard Tsong-Taatarii / Minneapolis Star Tribune / AP)

    By JOHN LESLIE

    Read this article in French: https://anticapitalisme-et-revolution.blogspot.com/2020/05/etas-unis-stop-limpunite-des-flics.html?

    Read this article in Spanish: http://izar-revolucion.org/lospolicias-son-los-responsables-sin-justicia-no-hay-paz/?fbclid=IwAR1-EUH9frNBfrtMFj4YGicuzDpqy1d7TaK-uK3Lj21B_6l8yY3LuFRFa-k

    In Chinese here

    On May 25, an unarmed Black man, George Floyd, was murdered by Minneapolis cops. In a video shot by a bystander, Floyd is heard saying, “Please, please, please, I can’t breathe. Please, man,” as a cop knelt on his neck and two other cops held him down. After Floyd went silent and motionless, the cop continued to kneel on his neck. Several people shot video of the incident and can be heard telling police to let him breathe and to check his pulse, and pointing out that he had become non-responsive.

    George Floyd.

    Floyd, 46, worked security at a restaurant. Police claimed that they had stopped him because he matched the description of a suspect in a forgery case at a grocery store.

    The whole incident reminds us of the death of Eric Garner in 2014 at the hands of NYPD officers, one of whom used a chokehold. Garner gasped, “I can’t breathe” as his life was extinguished by killer cops. His death sparked massive protests and “I can’t breathe!” became a common slogan of the #BlackLivesMatter movement. In the Garner case, the grand jury declined to prosecute any police.

    On Tuesday, May 26, thousands of protesters gathered near the place where Floyd’s life was stolen and surrounded the police substation. Chants arose of “I can’t breathe!” and “No justice, no peace!” In scenes reminiscent of Ferguson after the police murder of Michael Brown or in Baltimore following the murder of Freddie Gray, cops in riot gear moved against the peaceful protesters firing rubber bullets and tear gas.

    A Socialist Resurgence member from Minneapolis reports: “This lynching happened exactly four blocks from our home. We were at the protest close to the corner where George Floyd was murdered, but the crowd was standing very close together. Almost everyone we saw was wearing a mask of some kind, as were we … protest solidarity event was to take place between 5:00 and 8:00 CST; stuff was happening since last night and continued on into the later hours surrounding the 3rd precinct building, where most folks marched to—about 2.5 miles from the murder scene. … Our daughter, who is more COVID-cautious than we are, drove from her apt in St. Paul to meet folks (at the) precinct, but turned away just as she drove to that corner because the thugs had pulled out their big cars and guns. They shot mace, tear gas and rubber bullets at unarmed protesters around the perimeter of the precinct building, while wearing high tech riot gear.”

    Minneapolis cops take aim against May 26 protest. (AP)

    Protesters responded by throwing tear gas projectiles and rocks back at cops. Some police vehicles and the precinct building were damaged. As the crowd tried to flee the assault, street medics and others tried to assist people exposed to tear gas by pouring milk in their eyes. A city councilor, Jeremiah Ellison, stated, “This is a disgusting display. … I have been unable to prevent the police from firing indiscriminately into the crowd. Moments ago, I held a towel to a teenage girl’s head as blood poured from it.” This is in stark contrast to the situation with mostly white armed far-right “reopen” protesters, who have been treated preferentially by police.

    The four officers involved in the killing of George Floyd have been fired, but that is not enough. Killer cops must be prosecuted for murder.

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey posted a statement on Facebook, “Being Black in America should not be a death sentence. For five minutes, we watched a white officer press his knee into a Black man’s neck. Five minutes. When you hear someone calling for help, you’re supposed to help. This officer failed in the most basic, human sense.”

    Epidemic of anti-Black violence amid the pandemic

    In recent weeks, video has circulated of the murder in Georgia of Amaud Arbery by a shotgun-wielding assailant. A group of white vigilantes had targeted Arbery for the “crime” of jogging while Black in the wrong neighborhood. The local district attorney had declined to charge Arbery’s assailants, apparently because one of the men is a retired cop. A public outcry caused an inquiry by state investigators and the arrest on murder charges of Travis and Gregory McMichael—who had previously been an investigator for the DA’s office. Subsequently, William “Roddie” Bryan Jr., who filmed the murder of Arbery, was also arrested on homicide charges.

    On March 13, three plainclothes police officers served a “no-knock” warrant on the home of Breonna Taylor, breaking down the door as she and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, slept. Walker, hearing noises, fired a gun, hitting one cop in the leg. Walker said later that he had believed they were burglars entering the apartment, and that he had fired downward, not intending to hit anybody. But police fired back, hitting Taylor, an emergency medical technician, eight times and killing her. Police bullets entered several adjoining homes. Walker was charged with first-degree assault and attempted murder of a police officer.

    The Kentucky commonwealth attorney has recently dropped charges against Walker. Nevertheless, this case has rekindled calls for an end to no-knock warrants. The subject of the warrant was already in police custody when the warrant was executed. None of the police on the raid were wearing body cameras.

    In a recent incident in New York City’s Central Park, a white financial services executive, weaponized police against a Black bird watcher in the section of the park called the Rambles. Christian Cooper had asked her to put her dog on a leash, as park rules specify. He stated that the dog had been “tearing through the plantings.” She responded by calling 911 to report that “an African-American man, he’s recording me and threatening me and my dog.” Christian Cooper, formerly a writer and editor at Marvel Comics, filmed the interaction, and the video shows no threat. The woman, Amy Cooper (no relation), dubbed “Central Park Karen” by some, has since lost her job at Franklin Templeton.

    “I videotaped it because I thought it was important to document things,” Christian Cooper told CNN. “Unfortunately, we live in an era with things like Ahmaud Arbery, where black men are seen as targets. This woman thought she could exploit that to her advantage, and I wasn’t having it.”

    Fortunately for Christian Cooper, cops did not arrive quickly. Calling police on Black and Brown people can have devastating results. Eighty-one percent of the citations issued by the NYPD for violations of social distancing rules were issued to Black and Latinx people.

    Police a bulwark of white supremacy 

    Police are a central tool of capitalist state violence against oppressed nationalities and workers. Any worker who has been on strike and faced cop repression knows this to their core. Police exist to protect and serve the interests of the ruling class. In the U.S., policing cannot be separated from the racist nature of the system.

    The origins of police in the U.S., especially in the South, can be partially traced to the slave patrols formed to catch runaway slaves. Later, police were the enforcers of Jim Crow segregation. They remain an essential component of the mass incarceration machinery, which imprisons hundreds of thousands of young Black and Brown men and women. Police will also look the other way when fascist and far-right groups attack left-wing counter-protesters. Cop unions play a reactionary role in the labor movement by opposing progressive initiatives.

    The Fraternal Order of Police and Police Benevolent Association is the largest police “union.” The Teamsters, American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, and the Service Employees International Union also represent police and prison guards. Building labor solidarity against police violence requires a challenge to the role of police unions and demanding that labor federations cut ties to these reactionary anti-worker organizations. Police are not a legitimate part of the workers’ movement. While police may be drawn from the ranks of the working class, they serve the interests of a racist capitalist social order.

     No justice, no peace! 

    We must build a united movement against police murder and violence. We demand accountability for killer cops, an end to police militarization, and justice for all of the victims of racist police. We cannot rely on capitalist politicians and courts to protect us and end this horror. This means dismantling the police and prisons that are the mechanisms of force against workers and the oppressed.

    Jail Killer Cops! Justice for George Floyd! Justice for Amaud Arbery! Justice for Breonna Taylor!

    An appeal to our readers: If you liked this article, please consider making a donation to our Socialist Resurgence Summer Fund Drive, to help us continue to bring commentary and analysis to you from a revolutionary socialist point of view.

    YOU CAN DONATE ONLINE AT THE FOLLOWING LINK: HTTPS://CHUFFED.ORG/PROJECT/SRFUNDDRIVE

  • Campaign to Support Defenders of Political Prisoners in Chile!

    The situation of the political detainees remains critical, amid a pandemic. To gain their liberty, several organizations are taking part in an international campaign, and there are also entities dedicated to their legal defense. One of these organizations is the Defensoria Popular (DP)[Popular Defense]which has María Rivera as a coordinator.
    By: MIT – Chile (International Workers Movement)
     
    Maria, as well her comrades, lawyers of the DP, does not charge the families for the political prisoners’ defense; as we know, the political detainees belong to working class families, which have few resources, so these lawyers are maintained mainly by donations.
    Due to the immensity of the political detainees’ cases, they almost not assume more cases that enable their subsistence, since it is obviously a necessity to prioritize the solidarity and defense of the fighters. That is why we are promoting a financial campaign of donations to support Maria, so that she can continue defending the first line prisoners.
    Moreover, it is also because, since the beginning of the revolution, the comrade had been threatened with death and persecuted, and we believe that these threats have become more dangerous today, due to the context of a pandemic, without mobilizations, given that many times, in these moments of “calmness”, some groups take advantage of the situation to keep on pursing. Besides that, El Libero[1]an extreme right-wing media, has published again an article attacking the role of the Popular Defense, and thus, Maria, leader of MIT, clearly in order to keep on instigating hatred and looking for scapegoats to a revolution made by hundreds of thousands of workers. It is in this sense that the financial campaign is also performed to guarantee safety mechanisms for our comrade, who continues to be threatened.
    For all of this, we invite all of those who can contribute with this campaign to deposit or contact us:

    • Rut: 15.702.522-8
    • Rut Account: 15.702.522
    • Name: Daniela Delgado Reyes
    • E-mail: solidaridadmariarivera@protonmail.com

     
    [1] https://ellibero.cl/actualidad/el-vinculo-del-ex-mirista-que-disparo-a-sangre-fria-a-un-guardia-de-serviestado-con-el-estallido-del -18-o /

  • Accordius Health retaliated against worker who blew the whistle on COVID-19 outbreak

    By HARRISONBURG WORKERS’ TRIBUNE

    MAY 26—Accordius Health (better known locally by its previous name, Avante) is a privately-owned nursing home facility in Harrisonburg, Va., owned by The Portopiccolo Group, (Accordius Health is the name of both the facility in Harrisonburg and the North Carolina-based regional subsidiary LLC owned by The Portopiccolo Group.)

    Accordius is a nursing home facility that accepts Medicaid, the income-based public health insurance program. Medicare, the public health insurance program available to all seniors, so seniors and other people in need of full-time nursing care who cannot afford out-of-pocket costs and rely on Medicaid to cover it are often limited in their choice of nursing homes.

    A COVID-19 outbreak in the Accordius Health nursing home in Harrisonburg killed, including retired nurse Mary Domzalski, retired UVA Medical Center housekeeper Alberta Barbour, and retired produce farmer and drywall installer Jim Southerly. The outbreak infected a total of 81 residents and 12 of the 35 (or around 34%) of the nursing home’s staff. Accordius Health in Harrisonburg is also located within close proximity to several high-density, working-class residential neighborhoods such as The Mill and University Place, and it is unknowable what impact this had on community spread in Harrisonburg.

    On May 1, the Harrisonburg Daily News-Record (DNR) reported that “[s]everal employees, who requested anonymity on fears of being fired, said dozens of residents flocked into the hallway to participate in [a] dance”. According to the DNR, the workers were alarmed that social distancing among residents “wasn’t good enough with dozens of residents in hallways”, and that residents were not provided with PPE, a claim the Daily News-Record confirmed with Facebook photos of the dance event within the facility.

    Accordius management excused the fact that they had deliberately corralled elderly residents together without PPE (and ignored the concerns of workers in the process) by releasing a public statement that read “[s]ocial distancing has challenged our staff to become very creative to incorporate our resident’s [sic] love of music and dancing into our activities, but [the staff] hit [this] dance party out of the ballpark.” (One would think that a multimillion-dollar company could rise to the “challenge” of providing PPE for residents!)

    Mary Domzalski’s daughter-in-law told the DNR, “It sickens me … It’s like running cattle through a slaughterhouse.” Alberta Barbour’s daughter said “[t]he nursing home failed us.”

    The same DNR article reports that “[i]n March 2019, the facility was cited for 22 violations, including failing to provide and implement an infection prevention and control program. The facility was fined roughly $13,000.”

    This is in keeping with other reports of Accordius Health’s conduct across the country. On April 21, WBTV in Salisbury, North Carolina that the family of a resident of The Citadel-Salisbury, an Accordius Health-owned facility in Salisbury, has a lawsuit against the company for “fail[ing] to track the virus as it grew and spread and did not take proper steps to protect [residents] from the pandemic.” (For more information, is an eyewitness account from a doctor at Citadel who came forward. There are striking similarities between what occurred at Citadel and what happened here at Accordius in Harrisonburg.)

    One of the workers, certified nursing assistant Kanesha Hamilton, who came forward to the local media about the outbreak, went on the public record. The DNR reported that “[o]n April 13, a concerned employee, Kanesha Hamilton, told the Daily News-Record there was an outbreak at the facility. She also voiced concerns of the dance party and lack of proper PPE.”

    Kanesha Hamilton made a public Facebook post on April 14, stating: “I’m going to speak my peace on this one time & one time ONLY. I’m a mandated reporter. Something we all vow to do when working in healthcare. I’m to report negligence of any sort when people’s lives are at stake. I will not say sorry. I will not apologize or feel bad nor will I sweep the facts under the rug. I don’t care about being the bad guy when it comes to the lives of the people I take care of & the amazing women I work with one of whom is now positive for covid.. admitted & fighting for her life. 2 others + & are trying to recover & numerous other results of the rest pending. IF this entire ordeal meant my position SO BE IT! Morally.. ethically I did what I felt was necessary when asked & with that I have peace!”

    On May 12, Hamilton wrote: “What’s sad an disheartening to me about this entire covid out break within my former facility is that I have been what seems to me “punished” for caring too much about my former co workers … & former residents , who were NOT just that in my eyes but more so grew to be FAMILY. Everytime the conversation is brought up it hits a little different … takes a inch more. Defending the girls I work with from being passed blame on the virus within literally cost me my job. I could have respected the situation if I got to at least speak my peace about it. If I was responded to back or at least was told what I was terminated for & or was I terminated at all & on what legal grounds. No closure. No response. No nothing. That wasn’t just a “job” or a “pay check” to me … those are an will forever be my residents & Some of the most amazing women I’ve ever got the pleasure of working with. Love y’all forever.”

    On April 15, Hamilton made another public Facebook post mourning the loss of her friend Jim Southerly, a resident of the facility killed by the outbreak.

    It should be obvious to anyone with a heart and a mind that Hamilton acted out of ethical conscience and out of immense concern for the residents she cared for, for her co-workers, and for the health of Harrisonburg’s population at large, at great risk of sacrifice to her own livelihood. It’s worth emphasizing that Hamilton is also the mother of two young children.

    It’s also clear from Hamilton’s accounts, and from her role and the role of her coworkers in blowing the whistle on this story, that she and other local Accordius Healthcare workers (contrary to Accordius’ absurd PR claims) do not share blame with management, but on the contrary, acted in all earnest effort at their disposal to stop the outbreak.

    But there is a part of this story that hasn’t been fully reported. Accordius Healthcare retaliated against Kanesha Hamilton for her act of bravery.

    On April 10, the outbreak within the facility had been internally confirmed, but the workers were not told. The next day, April 11, all but three of the workers in Hamilton’s unit had fevers. This would be Hamilton’s last day working at Accordius. On April 12, Hamilton was tested for COVID-19. On April 15 her test came back negative. She asked about returning back to work and did not get a response.

    On April 13, the reporting on a possible COVID-19 outbreak in Accordius, and publicly identifying Hamilton as the whistle-blower, hit the presses. The DNR reached out to Hamilton after she had publicly spoken out about the outbreak and defended her coworkers on the comments section of their website. In the article, Hamilton said “[a]ll of this could have been prevented … [w]e told them over and over and over that we didn’t feel comfortable working there. I’ve never been in the dark so much. It was like we’re figuring it out as we go.” In the same article, Hamilton told the DNR that most of the staff had fallen ill and that she had been unable to see her children for a week due to her symptoms.

    On April 17, corporate requested that she needed to take a retest, and she complied.

    On the weekend of the 17th-18th, Accordius workers received official confirmation of what they (and the public) already knew; there was a COVID-19 outbreak in the facility. They did not receive this information from Accordius management, but from a doctor who worked for the JMU Health Center. Hamilton told the Harrisonburg Workers’ Tribune that she and other workers were instructed by Accordius management not to tell the residents or their family about the outbreak, as that was the responsibility of corporate. Accordius workers were led to believe that corporate would do so. Hamilton questioned why Accordius was not reporting the outbreak to the public, and she was told this was the responsibility of the Health Department. We have no reason to believe that we would have ever gotten the full truth of the matter were it not for the actions of Hamilton, her co-workers, and the Daily News-Record writers who reported on the story.

    On April 19, Hamilton messaged the nursing director of Accordius in Harrisonburg informing her that someone from corporate told her she would be able to return to work on the 25th, but that she was unable to get a hold of the manager in charge of scheduling. Hamilton told her nursing director that if she was terminated, she needed to know so she could file for unemployment. Her director messaged her back that day, informing her that they would need a copy of her negative COVID-19 retest and that she would need to be symptom free for three days without medication in order to return. Hamilton promptly replied, informing the director she would call the hospital and get a copy of the retest results. Hamilton texted the director back the next day, informing them that her retest also came back negative.

    On April 20, Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed wrote a message to her Facebook friends saying “It is with a heavy heart that we learned tonight of the devastating loss of life at Accordius Health due to COVID-19. Words cannot express the sorrow that this virus has brought, and my heart goes out to the family, friends and loved ones of those who passed. I pray tonight that the staff with Accordius Health, the Virginia Department of Health, and Sentara RMH who are working to prevent further loss of life in our community have the strength to continue forward, and I ask that we all keep them in our thoughts and prayers.” Reed’s statement made no mention of Accordius’ active role in causing the COVID-19 outbreak in their facility, or the role Hamilton and her co-workers played as whistle-blowers in this case. To our knowledge, few if any local civic officials have publicly condemned Accordius’ actions or recognized Kanesha Hamilton’s courage.

    When the Harrisonburg Workers’ Tribune spoke to Hamilton on May 12, over three weeks after her April 19 conversation with the nursing director, she said she had not heard a response back from the director or from corporate as to when she could return to work. Hamilton attempted to call her supervisors multiple times and her calls were ignored. Hamilton said she had filed for unemployment on April 20 and had received nothing. A coworker informed her that Accordius was denying multiple workers’ unemployment claims and using a hiring agency to deny full-time workers their hours.

    On May 13, Hamilton informed the Harrisonburg Workers’ Tribune that she had been denied unemployment because Accordius made false claims to the Virginia Employment Commission that she had quit. On May 14, Hamilton e-mailed the Virginia Employment Commission evidence that she had not quit.

    Hamilton did not hear back from Accordius until May 18, by which point she had already gotten another nursing job. Accordius told her she could reapply for her job. Hamilton informed them that she never resigned from her position, and pointed out that Accordius had been denying her unemployment claims, at which point Hamilton was told that Accordius would continue to deny her claims now she was offered her position back.

    The facts speak for themselves. Not only did Accordius directly cause a COVID-19 outbreak that murdered 21 of our elders and infected a dozen of their workers, they also attempted to cover it up. Not only did they take Kanesha Hamilton off the schedule, retaliating against her for fulfilling her legal responsibility as a mandated reporter, they went the extra mile of falsifying claims to the Virginia Employment Commission. They stole food out of the mouths of Kanesha Hamilton’s children for doing the right thing and protecting the lives of the residents she cared for, her coworkers, and the general public. Because of this, because she was a good person who took the responsibilities of her job seriously, Kanesha Hamilton’s family of three went a month without any income.

    Hamilton’s experience is not atypical. There has been lots of talk lately of essential workers being “heroes.” Sentara RMH (our local hospital that was bought out by a that pays its CEO millions of dollars a year) expresses this sentiment locally with placards around town, saying, “heroes work here”. What is a hero? Heroes don’t lower their heads and follow orders in the face of injustice. Kanesha Hamilton is a true working-class hero and we all need to stand up and follow in her footsteps before the capitalist response to this pandemic murders even more of us.

    Even before this pandemic, the private healthcare system in the United States killed tens of thousands of workers a year. The number of nursing workers who have died in the United States because of the COVID-19 pandemic is unknown. In the age of COVID-19, workers need free, universal healthcare. This is a question of life-or-death, and an impossibility under U.S. capitalism, where pharmaceutical, health insurance, and private health-care company lobbyists spend billions of dollars preventing it. But even if we saw the nationalization of the payer-end of the healthcare system, pharmaceutical companies and private hospitals would still profit off of the commodification of healthcare and the exploitation of healthcare workers.

    Under capitalism, it is the socialized labor of nurses and other health-care workers that create the medical marvels we take for granted. It is the socialized labor of food production, transportation/distribution, grocery store, and restaurant workers that make sure we are fed. It is the socialized labor of manufacturing, transportation/distribution, and retail workers that gives us the amenities of modern civilization. It’s because of the socialized labor of education workers that we can even read and write articles such as this one. It’s the socialized labor of construction, municipal infrastructure, janitorial, grounds-keeping, and public transit workers that we even have things like buildings and roads. The great toiling majority does the labor that gives us an abundant modern society, and this great majority lives from paycheck to paycheck, sometimes going hungry, so that a small minority of capitalists can accumulate millions or billions of dollars in profits. They say we live in a democracy but the majority of workers do not have any democratic control over the place where they spend eight, twelve, sometimes sixteen hours a day, and as we see in Kanesha Hamilton’s case, this often has deadly results.

    Throughout history, elders have been respected and revered as a source of intergenerational wisdom, but under capitalism, elderly workers are cordoned off away from the rest of society and left to die. Once our bodies are used up from a lifetime of our backbreaking labor that the capitalists exploit and profit from, we’re no longer of any use to them. A relaxed and comfortable old age is a reward for a life well lived, and having the wisdom of our elders is something that enriches all of our lives. But the capitalists are happy to rob the workers of this. They’re perfectly content to let the COVID-19 crisis kill off our elders to streamline their system of profit. This attitude is best exemplified by Affordable Care Act architect and Trump administration healthcare advisor Ezekiel Emanuel when “[t]hese people who live a vigorous life to 70, 80, 90 years of age—when I look at what those people ‘do,’ almost all of it is what I classify as play. It’s not meaningful work. They’re riding motorcycles; they’re hiking. Which can all have value—don’t get me wrong. But if it’s the main thing in your life? Ummm, that’s not probably a meaningful life.”

    Let’s fight for a society where we have all the time in the world to do nothing but play, and aren’t being murdered by “meaningful work”.

    Let’s all follow the example of Kanesha Hamilton and stand up and finally put a stop to these preventable, meaningless deaths.

     

  • COVID-19 in Latin America: A tale of two countries

    A group of doctors with a child in Cuba.

    By ALEX KOLE

    As Dickens writes in the opening of his great novel, “A Tale of Two Cities,” “it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness.” These lines capture the spirit of our times as well, especially if we consider the disparate manner in which governments around the world have approached the threat posed by COVID-19. In Latin America, as elsewhere, many countries are engaged in an ongoing struggle against the virus, yet depending on where you are, some have embraced wisdom, while others are haunted by the folly of their neglect.

    Last week, The New York Times reported that deaths from the virus in Latin America are comparable to those in Europe; however, the capacity of those countries to address this crisis depends on how that country approached the outbreak early on, coupled with the capacity of their health-care systems to respond effectively.

    As cases and deaths rise, the ability of Latin American governments to confront the medical challenges posed by the virus have been hampered by persistent economic malaise and underfunded health-care budgets that have severely limited people’s access to such services. And observers suspect that many deaths from the virus have gone unreported.

    In spite of a general lack of resources to combat the virus, two countries that have confronted a rise in the cases of COVID-19, yet responded very differently, are Brazil and Cuba. By May 22, reported deaths from COVID-19 had topped 21,000 in Brazil, and were rising by well over 800 a day, making the country the focal point of the outbreak in Latin America. Testing there is limited to individuals that make it to a hospital.

    Cuba, in contrast, while hardly immune from COVID-19 deaths, implemented a comprehensive plan to contain the virus in January that included training medical personnel, reserving spaces for quarantine, equipping medical facilities, and communicating to the public information about the virus. Cuba’s measures have proved effective and as of May 12, according to a report by Reuters, “new cases have fallen to fewer than 20 per day from a peak around 50 in April,” and the island nation’s ratio of testing to cases is the highest in Latin America.

    While few in the U.S. media are reporting on Cuba’s response to COVID-19, reports on Brazil generally focus on its right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro’s flagrant disregard of the seriousness of the novel virus and link Brazil’s failure to contain the disease as emanating from his leadership shortcomings. Not only did he refuse to implement quarantine protocols early on, he criticized some governors and mayors for implementing strict quarantine protocols.

    Bolsonaro’s attitude to the virus should not be dismissed as merely grounded in ignorance but rather a self-serving unwillingness to allow Brazil’s economy to suffer, which would certainly jeopardize his political future. His government deemed as “essential” businesses like gyms and hair salons, which have remained open notwithstanding the risk to public health. As the BBC reports, only 48% of the residents of Sao Paulo are adhering to quarantine, and vehicles are jamming city streets with traffic as people continue to commute to work.

    The Brazilian government’s mismanagement of the outbreak has left the country confronted with one of the highest death tolls from COVID-19 in the world. When asked about this, The New York Times reports, Bolsonaro responded, “So what? I’m sorry. What do you want me to do?” Bolsonaro’s incompetence is contributing to tragic consequences for Brazil’s people, who are putting greater and greater demands on a health-care system that is inadequate to address their needs. His cavalier attitude to the disease and its lethality are obvious and certainly contributing to the spike in cases and deaths, but there are deeper systemic causes for Brazil’s inadequate measures to contain the disease.

    Brazil’s Constitution of 1988, which was written to correct some of the worst excesses of the military junta that ruled the country from 1964 to 1985, established health care as a right that the state was responsible for providing its people. A national health-care system, the Sistema Único de Saúde, was created to fulfill its constitutional mandate and provide universal and free health-care services. In the ensuing decades, according to the World Health Organization, Brazil has struggled to realize the goal set by the constitution.

    One area where Brazil is particularly challenged is a lack of medical personnel, and in particular, the equitable distribution of doctors throughout the country (as of 2012, there were two doctors for every 1000 inhabitants). While Brazil’s expenditures on health care as a percentage of GDP—11.77% in 2016, according to the World Bank—are the second highest in Latin America, its spending per capita—$1015.90 in 2016, which is down dramatically from $1301.10 just two years before—leaves Brazil outspent by several of its neighbors. These include Chile, Uruguay, and even beleaguered Venezuela, which not incidentally spent the highest per capita at $1578.44 in 2015.

    Although these figures do not give a complete picture of the challenges facing Brazil’s health-care system, they are enough to illustrate that sick Brazilians will very likely overwhelm medical facilities, especially in the rural areas. The New York Times report showcased the city of Manaus, located deep in the Amazonian rainforest, which is struggling to care for those infected with COVID-19. The number of deaths during April in that city of just over 2 million people that the local government reported was 2800, three times the monthly average and similar to the spike in deaths experienced in Madrid, Spain, when deaths from the virus were at its peak, from mid-March to mid-April.

    The mayor of Manaus, Arthur Neto, interviewed by The Times reporters, blames the lack of a federal response combined with an inability to purchase needed medical equipment and difficulty in transporting vital supplies to residents of the remote city. The region’s Indigenous population is suffering from both a lack of access to health care and difficulty in obtaining emergency payments from the government, which requires that they travel to larger cities, The Times reports.

    Cuba represents a stark contrast to Brazil when one looks at their respective approaches to the COVID-19 outbreak. Cuba and Brazil share certain disadvantages for effectively fighting the virus, such as poorly developed infrastructure, a shortage of housing, etc. However, Brazil has enjoyed access to investment capital from developed nations and international institutions, whereas Cuba has suffered from the decades-long U.S. sponsored embargo and sanctions that has deterred foreign investment, hampered trade (including medical equipment), obstructed access to international finance and emergency funds.

    Yet the small island nation is seeing a decline of new cases since their peak in April. In this context, Cuba’s centrally planned economy has proven to be its greatest asset. Cuba’s government began preparations for COVID-19 back in January and has aggressively mobilized its people and resources to contain the disease by implementing a strict quarantine, preparing its medical facilities, and training its staff to accommodate the influx of sick patients.

    While both countries have a national health system with universal coverage, Cuba spends a greater percentage of its GDP on health care—12.19%, the highest in Latin America—which translates to $972.7 per capita. Cuba also has the highest ratio of doctors to population in the region, long life expectancy, low infant mortality, and advanced medical research facilities—which include three labs that can run virus tests. Cuba’s government has also mobilized activists tasked with tracking cases, which has greatly assisted its efforts to limit contagion.

    As Cuba’s cases of the virus diminish, comprehensive testing represents a vital part of keeping new cases on the decline, specifically the ratio of tests to reported cases. According to a May 15 article in The Conversation, authors and public health experts Emily Morris and Ilan Kelman write, “According to available data, Cuba leads the region with a ratio of 25:1.” While tests are expensive, around $50 per test, Reuters reports that Cuban scientists recently announced that they “had adapted a computerized system developed locally to quickly detect antibodies of the new virus, allowing for mass testing in hospitals and clinics at little cost.”

    Cuba has also demonstrated a commitment to internationalism through deploying the Henry Reeves medical brigades to over 20 countries around the world to assist them in their fight against the disease. The brigade was named after a U.S. soldier who fought in Cuba’s war of independence from Spain and was founded by Fidel Castro to address human suffering caused by natural disasters. It has not only been deployed to places like South Africa, Italy, and Honduras to serve patients infected by COVID-19, but was also on the front lines against Ebola during the outbreak in West Africa in 2014-15. Cuba’s Henry Reeves brigade is so well respected by the global community that it has been nominated by a French organization, Cuba Linda, to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts.

     

  • Because the Pandemic Kills: Immediate Release of Prisoners, Sanitary Measures in All Prisons!

    The policy of president Piñera and other officials is a murderous policy focused on the fighters of the revolution that started last year. Keeping our fellow political prisoners incarcerated means delivering them to death of coronavirus, which will be a triumph of the counterrevolution and a severe blow to our revolution that they want to end.
    By: MIT-Chile
    This scandal is demonstrated by the fact that there were about 45 political prisoners both Mapuche and non-Mapuche people in Chile before October 18, 2019, and more than 2,500 young people and workers after that date. Therefore, we say it is a conscious policy of the government and parliamentarians to end the revolution that threatens this system of hunger and death.
    The situation of political prisoners in the midst of the pandemic is still a crisis. A Supreme Court justice said the prisons were a time bomb because overcrowding and prison conditions make it impossible to guarantee minimum protocols to stop the spread of the coronavirus. The prisoners released several videos asking for minimum conditions to prevent their death, but the authorities did little or nothing. That is why there are already political prisoners who are assuming defeat because they may die inside the prison. This, while the Piñera government releases human rights violators and discusses projects that in no case benefit political prisoners.
    For this situation, the Mapuche political prisoners detained in the prisons of Angol and Temuco informed the prison service that they were undergoing an indefinite hunger strike until their situation in the penitentiaries was changed and the benefit of fulfilling their sentences in their territories is granted.
    Worldwide, it has been shown that prisons present greater risks of contagion and a higher incidence rate than infectious diseases such as influenza, tuberculosis, HIV, hepatitis B and C, among others (WHO, 2014). In South America, overcrowding in prisons reaches in some cases around 700%, which creates an environment prone to fights and riots with a balance of several dead and injured.
    In our country, the prison situation generates favorable conditions for coronavirus transmission. Overpopulation rates are high, as in the CDP Limache penitentiary, which has almost thrice its capacity (189%). In addition, there are prisons with deficient electrical installations, without clean bathrooms, and a general lack of specialized medical care, or even an infirmary. Currently, only one penitentiary has a hospital. In addition, the INDH 2019’s Third Study of Prison Conditions in Chile, found that, out of the 40 penitentiaries, 24 have some level of water shortage 24 hours a day, or a permanent lack of hygienic services.
    Finally, according to a study carried out in Chilean prisons in 2012, around 45% of the penal population has at least one pathology formally diagnosed, the second most common being those that affect the respiratory system, with asthma predominating, an illness that puts the person in the risk group for the coronavirus.
    That is why, in addition to the riot attempts and videos of prisoners calling for basic health measures, several organizations are developing an international campaign for the release of political prisoners. About 70 human rights organizations and memory websites sent a letter to Piñera; to the Minister of Justice and Human Rights, Hernán Larraín; to the Minister of Health, Jaime Mañalich, among other authorities, demanding the release of all detainees during social protests, given the danger of contracting COVID-19 and “taking into account that most of them have no criminal record and enjoy the presumption of innocence.”
    Government proposals on the subject
    Piñera enacted a reprieve for people convicted of non-violent crimes who belong to risk groups (older people, pregnant women, newborn babies’ mothers, etc.) but excluding prisoners in pre-trial detention. Around 1,300 people were confined to house arrest, something totally insufficient if we consider that the Chilean prison population is about 42 thousand people.
    On the other hand, there is an urgent discussion on the Humanitarian Law, which would release those convicted of human rights violations during the Pinochet dictatorship. More than 17,000 human rights violators have already been released.
    For their part, several Guarantee Courts changed the prison situation of some political prisoners to house arrest, although it’s also a form of liberty deprivation often the Courts of Appeal revoke these sentences and maintain pre-trial detention.
    As a minimum measure, some prisons are undergoing early detection testing and requiring some protocols, but with little or no effectiveness. We have already seen that restricting visits is of no use if there is no control or care over prison staff who are possible vectors of contagion.
    Thus, there is no guarantee of justice for political prisoners who, for the most part, are not convicted, not to mention the lack of evidence.
    It is always good to remember that the former president and currently United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, amended the Criminal Law in 2015, which started to demand the effective serving of sentences for Molotov cocktail shooters, among others repressive laws against the people, allowing Sebastián Piñera to make so many preventive arrests.
    Emergency and general measures
    This health emergency that affects all humanity evidently needs extraordinary measures to prevent mass deaths, because individualistic solutions are the ones that serve the least at this moment.

    • Immediate release of political prisoners. As a minimum measure, a move to house arrest to avoid dying of COVID-19.
    • Repeal pre-trial detention for all prisoners charged with non-violent crimes. These defendants must await their trial in freedom and under extra-prison surveillance measures.
    • Piñera’s pardon, which released 1,300 people at risk and convicted of non-violent crimes, is insufficient to prevent the deaths. In Latin America young people also die, old age is not the only risk factor. For this reason, all those convicted of non-violent crimes (offenders, petty assailants (thefts), and petty traffickers) should also be placed on probation or house arrest. Most of them are poor, blacks, immigrants, and inhabitants of the outskirts. An example of such measures was seen in Iran, where 54,000 prisoners released in March to try to stop the spread of the epidemic in the country’s prisons. The measure was a temporary release that did not include defendants sentenced to more than five years in prison or those in high-security settings. How many dead must happen in Chile before the government takes saving-life measures?

    All of the above excludes those who have been convicted of violent crimes, such as theft followed by death, kidnappings and murders; and violence against women, as well as military killers, professional or state agents, torturers, those who committed crimes against humanity.

    • Mass detection tests for prisoners and prison staff.
    • Immediate replacement of basic services such as water, to combat the spread of the virus.
    • Hygiene products for employees and prisoners, such as masks, soap, etc.
    • In case of suspicion of contagion, apply isolation measures, maintaining dignified treatment for people. This also applies to jailers.
    • For a plan to contain the epidemic in the prison system, supervised by state, human rights organizations, and relatives of prisoners.

    The Movimiento Internacional de los Trabajadores (MIT) makes an urgent call to all personalities and social and political organizations, to all defenders of political prisoners, to families and organizations of family members of prisoners to join forces and raise a single voice: Because the pandemic kills: Immediate release of prisoners, sanitary measures in all prisons!
    We know that we must put strong pressure on the authorities, through letters, videos, or other means, as the IWL-FI is doing. But the strongest guarantee is organized mobilization. May the Chilean workers resume the revolution and fight primarily to recover their front-line soldiers arrested after the fight

  • Fruit-packing workers demand health and safety

    By STEVE LEIGH

    Steve Leigh is a member of the Seattle Revolutionary Socialists and the Revolutionary Socialist Network.

    YAKIMA VALLEY, Wash., May 21—The U.S. is divided. The vast majority opposes early “re-opening” of the economy before workplaces are safe. A small right-wing minority waves rifles and demands that its freedom to get a haircut is more important than the lives of workers. They are backed by billionaires such as Koch industries and the families of Education Secretary Betsy Devos as well as the Sociopath in Chief. These billionaires only care about increasing their already obscene wealth—workers lives be damned.

    The workers who risk death on the front lines are speaking out for their right to survive. Workers at Amazon, Instacart, Whole Foods, and meatpacking plants, among others, have struck for health and safety. These workers have won some of their demands, including hazard pay. Many companies, including Kroger and Amazon, are now trying to get away with ending that hazard pay. They apparently feel the crisis is over, even as the U.S. death toll passes 93,000.

    In the Yakima Valley of central Washington, over 300 workers in fruit-packing sheds went on strike on May 7. They are demanding safety on the job and hazard pay. Many workers are immigrants from Mexico, but the workforce includes a variety of nationalities and racial and ethnic groups and includes local residents. Before the strike, the workers generally made the minimum wage, which is $13.50 per hour in Washington State.

    The working conditions are ideal for the spread of COVID. Workers stand side by side, and the disease can spread quickly. “Fourteen people have left work over the last month because they have the COVID-19,” Augustin Lopez, a striker at Allan Brothers, told Capital and Main.

    Though the companies claim they are providing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), the workers feel it has been inadequate and want social distancing to stop the spread. This would cut production and lower profits for the companies, even if it would save lives. The companies so far refuse, putting profit before human life.

    Lopez went on to say, “We need protections at work, like adequate masks, and we want tests. How do we even know if any of us have been infected if there are no tests?” He also said that the company didn’t clean and disinfect the plant or even stop production when workers got sick. Another worker, Jennifer Garton, told the Yakima Herald, “They are not doing what they’re saying they’re doing.”

    Besides health and safety, the workers want hazard pay. They are demanding $100 a week on top of their regular pay. This is a very reasonable demand. If achieved permanently, their pay would still be less than the minimum wage in Seattle!

    They also want negotiations now and on a regular basis with the companies. Whether this would result in union representation is still to be decided.

    On May 19, strikers Maribel Medina and Cesar Traverso began a hunger strike. Strikers and supporters held a small ceremony honoring the hunger strikers with the reading of a statement by United Farm Workers founder Cesar Chavez.

    The workers are getting pushback from the companies and racists. The companies have called the sheriff on the workers and are trying to force them off their property. One man came to a picket line on May 14 and threatened to shoot the workers. He was finally arrested for malicious harassment though no charges have yet been filed. He has a history of threatening Hispanic people, including firing a gun at three Hispanic men last year.

    In spite of this push back, the workers have gotten tremendous community support locally and from across the state. The main group organizing support is Familias Unidas por la Justicia, a farm-worker union based 60 miles north of Seattle. They have raised money for food, housing and organizing and have sent in-person support. The workers have been unorganized, so they did not have a regular strike fund. Since they were making only the minimum wage, financial support is crucial!

    Familias Unidas por la Justicia is in the midst of negotiating a new contract with Sakuma Brothers farms in the Skagit Valley, north of Seattle. It established itself through a series of strikes and an ongoing boycott (see: https://socialistworker.org/2017/06/20/sakuma-workers-win-their-first-contract).

    Morale on the Yakima Valley picket lines is mostly good. Only a couple of workers have gone back to work in the face of extreme poverty. Though the companies have gone to temporary agencies to obtain scabs, they have been largely unsuccessful. The workers are looking into legal action to prevent scabbing.

    The loss of production and community pressure has made an impact. Early on, Allan Brothers offered $1 per hour in hazard pay. This was not enough, and the workers stayed on strike. As of May 21, two companies have offered to negotiate, Matson and Monson, while Columbia Reach is on the fence.

    More pressure from the public, more financial support, and continued loss of production can help the workers achieve their goals. These strikes are one small but important step in winning a workers’ solution to the COVID crisis. Please generously support these strikers! Here is what you can do:

    Donate money to the Familias Unidas por la Justicia website—

    http://familiasunidasjusticia.org/en/donate/

    Call management and urge them to negotiate, and not to retaliate against striking workers:
    Allan Bros. Fruit in Naches, Wash. (509) 653-2625
    Hansen Fruit in Yakima, Wash. (509) 457-4153
    Jack Frost Fruit Co. in Yakima, Wash. (509) 248-5231
    Matson Fruit Co. in Selah, Wash. (509) 697-7100
    Monson Fruit Co. in Selah, Wash. (509) 697-9175
    Columbia Reach in Yakima, Wash. (509) 457-8001

    Follow the strike at: https://www.facebook.com/pg/FamiliasUnidas/posts/?ref=page_internal

     

     

     

     

  • Millions of U.S. working-class families experience hunger

    By ANDY BARNS

    Hunger and lack of access to nutritious food is a problem for many U.S. working families, employed and unemployed. According to 2014 data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), 17.4 million households had experienced hunger at some point during the year [1], and 21 million poor children need assistance in affording school lunches during the year. Nearly half (47%) of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients are under the age of 18.

    Similar data from 2018 [2] suggests that upwards of 51% of households had at least a year of “food insecurity” over a five-year period. The USDA defines both “low food insecurity” and “very low food security” as different levels of insecurity that poor families can experience [3]. At the worst, 6% of households experienced a full five years of food insecurity of either type—the equivalent of approximately 19 million people.

    The problem of food insecurity has only been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. With many millions unemployed and unable to work, millions of working families who had problems affording food now have much worse problems. Millions more American workers will likely have days, weeks, or months of food insecurity ahead, without drastic measures to reduce the problem. For example, in New York, 25 million visits were made to food banks in 2019, and now many of the older volunteers at those sites are by necessity staying home due to the virus [4]. With rising unemployment now becoming a problem, the challenge of feeding all will only grow.

    Indeed, much of the anger behind the “reopen the economy” protests can be traced to very legitimate concerns over the need of families to afford nutrition. Donald Trump and other capitalists have also demanded a premature opening of the economy (against health experts warnings, and despite 90,000 dead from the virus).

    But we should absolutely not forget that it was Trump’s administration that cut food-stamp (SNAP) benefits to over 700,000 working-class people in 2019 [5]. This is a part of a wider set of “reforms” that Republicans have pursued on the behest on conservative sections of the capitalist class, to reduce government spending at the cost of working-class nutrition [6]. Keep in mind the U.S. wastes $750 billion annually in terrorizing the globe with its imperialist military operations. Any justification for cutting food stamps is hollow; “affordability” is not a factor.

    Food insecurity in the United States, as well as for the whole human race, is not a new phenomenon. Hunger has been a pretty consistent element of human life since the dawn of agriculture—and before. Unlike past eras of human history, though, humans now have access to the raw data to track the spread of hunger, and also the immense productive capacity to mass-produce food. The Earth makes enough food to feed 10 billion humans [7]. So why does hunger still exist in the United States today, let alone the whole world?

    In a word: capitalism. In more words: capitalist production has the historical advantage of increasing the raw output of farms, since food, as everything, is treated as a commodity under capitalism, resulting in production for mass amounts of food, and re-investment in food production by the largest monopolies into further mass production. But as a commodity, food is made and distributed for profits rather than for the nutritional needs of humans. As a result, much food simply wasted (since it cannot be sold for profit before spoiling). Furthermore, a great deal of food production is funneled into types of products that are easy for mass sale but not necessarily nutritious (think convenience-store food).

    Of course, as a commodity, if one cannot afford food, one starves. Thus, it should be clear that the structural inequities of capitalism are the primary cause of food insecurity in the U.S. and the world—not scarcity. Policies that are particularly voiced by the Republican faction of the capitalist class, in its relentless struggle to rob poor working families of the means to feed themselves (by cutting food stamps) for meager savings (pennies compared to the trillions of dollars collectively owned by that class), should be unforgivable. Sensible people should ignore pleas by scoundrels about “expenses.” In order to end hunger, we must demand a halt to military spending, along with taxing the rich and the profits of the highest earning corporations.

    In the short term, reducing hunger caused by unemployment as a result of the COVID-19 crisis, and in general, would be aided by an expansion, not a retraction, of SNAP benefits. Higher benefits should be available to all who need to augment their ability to obtain food. And in this time of quarantine, the benefits should be applicable to take-out, home-delivery, and pre-prepared food.

    Moreover, society must make sure that everyone is supplied with nutritious food—delivered to homes for free, if necessary. Neighborhood committees can help with distribution. Small businesses, such as restaurants, must be given adequate funding and resources to aid in feeding everyone.

    Issues concerning farm production, the environment, and equitable working conditions for agricultural workers are closely linked to that of hunger. Migrant farm workers must be granted full union organizing rights, union pay, and citizenship (with all attendant rights). Efficient distribution of food from the farm to the consumer also requires an expansion of sustainable and locally based farming. This would entail the improvement of the soil and water, and healthful management of livestock, according to the best ecological practices.

    As longer-term goals, socialists demand nationalization of the land and wiping out the debts of small farmers; control of farms by the farm workers and small farmers; workers’ control of the grocery stores, fast-food chains, supply lines, etc. A government managed by working-class people, for working-class people, would be the only kind of government able to ensure that production and distribution of food to all persons is equitable and ecologically sustainable.

    Food should not be a commodity, and market anarchy should not dictate whether or not people eat. Hunger, given modern means, is inexcusable politically, morally, and scientifically. The working class can no longer tolerate this odious robbery of the means of life by the ruling class. In the long term, a complete wiping out of world hunger can only be accomplished with planned economies on the international level, not market anarchy predicated on capitalist profits. Ultimately, working people must look toward replacing the capitalist system in its entirety through a working-class-led revolution that can take society on the road to socialism.

    [1] https://allentownfoodbank.org/the-impact-of-hunger/

    [2] https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/food-nutrition-assistance/food-security-in-the-us/frequency-of-food-insecurity/

    [3] https://www.healthypeople.gov/2020/topics-objectives/topic/social-determinants-health/interventions-resources/food-insecurity

    [4] https://www.pix11.com/news/coronavirus/food-insecurity-in-new-york-city-during-coronavirus

    [5] https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/12/21/trump-food-stamps-cut-snap-benefits-more-hungry-americans/2710146001/

    [6] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-administration-says-food-stamps-need-reform-advocates-say-millions-will-suffer/

    [7] https://www.huffpost.com/entry/world-hunger_b_1463429?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kdWNrZHVja2dvLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAE-8B7TWOGNbSpnmzlcjARwcHRBUP1hB1FrLi3yHzxkCCoCAGKluwdneqt_ngyxhk8zATPLVRHzLoflNmXbNChu5SEAxB-q7bMYZtgHckQiKU8kbk7YA6TTrlE98nTlULe1pzSxqEb5vpbNp94jLYTeCx2zI-yXtSiRtEM-UnwkM

     

     

     

     

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