Category Archives: Labor

Warning to Our Comrade Teachers in Oaxaca / Cuidado a nuestros profesores del camarada en Oaxaca

A Rouge Forum Broadside / Un Costado Del Foro Del Colorete

Cuidado a nuestros profesores del camarada en Oaxaca

Warning to Our Comrade Teachers in Oaxaca

Beware the Trojan Horse Filled with US Teacher Union Leaders
There are several Rouge Forum members and readers who are now involved in the struggles in Oaxaca. Some are indigenous people who became friends of Rouge Forum visitors to the region, and some are N. Americans who are now part of the struggle there.

The struggle in Oaxaca has always been more than the struggle of school workers for better teaching conditions, wages, and benefits. The lessons of Oaxaca can be learned everywhere.

It has been a community-wide battle against the connection of exploitation and the systematic ruin of education, against racism and sexism. In many instances, the Oaxaca struggles have pointed to the use of the Mexican government as a weapon of the rich, and to the secrets of capitalism itself, from the need to divide people along religious or other lines in order to use those divisions to demolish us, to the key secret: capitalism demands exploitation, injustice, inequality and war–and capital’s greatest fear: we can learn to live beyond capital, peacefully and free, equitably and democratically.

The struggle in Oaxaca has come under sharp, deadly, attack. Lives have been lost to further the battle to live in a better world. Even so, courageous people have stayed united, and have taken direct action, from seizing territory to seizing radio stations. Elites have used force, but so far in limited ways, because they fear the people’s response.

Now, however, the rich and powerful may be about to try another tactic; a Trojan Horse offered to Oaxacans through well-meaning, but completely uninformed, people, a Trojan Horse filled with bosses of the teacher unions in the United States. Some US professors are about to bring US labor leaders to Oaxaca, and introduce them as “allies.” That is wrong.

The leaders of the US teachers unions are reactionary dangerous people. They hold to an idea that they call “New Unionism.” What they mean is they support the unity of US union members, the US government, and US corporations, in the “national interest.” That is what they think is the main reason for having a union; not because working people and their bosses have little but contradiction in common, are on opposing sides, but because working people in the US will do better if working people outside the US do worse.

There is nothing new about their kind of unionism, though. It’s the same kind of idea that was the foundation of Mussolini’s Corporate State: fascism.

But “New Unionism,” is not just a bad, old, idea. In practice, it means that the leadership of the US teacher unions have been involved, for decades, with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), seeking to destroy workers’ movements all over the world.

The two major US teacher unions are the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and the National Education Association (NEA). Leaders of both unions are deeply involved in this activity, but few of their own rank an file members know about it.

How does this work? Both NEA and AFT (and the umbrella organization of nearly all US unions, the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations; AFL-CIO) operate through front groups like the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and the American Institute for Free Labor Development (AIFLD).

NED and AIFLD are funded by secret money from the CIA, the US State Department, and they are supported by funds and personnel from US unions, especially from NEA and AFT. Nearly one-half of the dues income the AFL-CIO receives is spent outside the USA, in conjunction with campaigns led by the CIA.

They use the same divide-and-conquer, reward-and-punish, befriend-and-betray methods that any elite might use to keep people in line.

For example, they identify and recruit local leaders, bring them to “training” sessions in the USA, bribe them, threaten them, and turn them back to be used to destroy the movements they once could have led.

They pay people off, and threaten others. They pretend to be allies, and work behind the workers’ backs to deceive us.

They use force. They have been involved in US attempts to overthrow governments, and massacre since even before the Allende days in Chile, right up to the recent attempts to overthrow the government of Venezuela. They do not play. These people are killers.
Why do they do this? US labor leaders live off the fruits of US imperialism. Leaders of the NEA and AFT, at the top, earn nearly $500,000 a year, about ten times the average wage of US teachers. It is a lot. In addition, they create the illusion of not only power for themselves, but they get to pretend they are being creative and patriotic, when in fact all they are is selfish and corrupt.

Over time, as US labor leaders separate more and more from the rank and file, their lives become like the bosses in the industries they represent, and unlike the workers. The union bosses shop and live in different places, play golf with the bosses, dine at fancy restaurants, and, at the end of the day, literally join the other side.

These labor mis-leaders know that their many privileges are rooted in the betrayal of, not only their own members, but workers all over the world. Their incomes depend largely on the success of US imperialism, the struggle of capitalists in the US to find cheap labor, raw materials, markets, and social control, all over the world. That is why nearly every major US union backs the failed oil wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Caspian region. US unions supported the wars on Vietnam as well.

Many US working people, including teachers, support the unions because they do not know what their own unions are doing, and because they find it hard to believe that their unions would turn around and deceive them, but that is what is happening. Many union members do not grasp that the unions are theirs, and not ours.

That does not make rank and file union members entirely innocent. While it is hard for many people to learn what goes on outside the US, it is easy to see that US unions are segregated unions. That is especially true of the teacher unions, which, taken together, are about 90 percent white.

These are apartheid unions and, wittingly or not, they work on the same basis that the AFT-NEA operate internationally, that is, the idea that white workers (teachers and other school workers) will do better, if school workers of color do worse. If entry into the job can be segregated, that means less people will compete for work, and, inside this theory, pay will go up.

Really, this is just racism, and as a divide and rule tool, it works only for employers over time. Teachers who are isolated from kids and parents (now about 50% people of color), are much less powerful than teachers in an integrated movement. But rank and file teachers have allowed their union leaders to pile up restrictions that make it hard for people of color to become teachers. So the teachers’ unions are, indeed, isolated from the people who they need most, working class kids and parents.

Solidarity is key to winning any workers’ battles, and it is key to the fight going on in Oaxaca now. It is true that working people all over the world need to unite, to take direct action to change the way we all live, for democracy and equality. But we do not need to unite with those who pretend to be our friends, but who will betray us.

If a national “labor leader” from the US approaches our comrades in Oaxaca, it would be best to tell them to go home, get out of Mexico, and fix the racism inside their own unions.

Then, take pictures of them and paste them up everywhere, with the caption: Judas.

Rich Gibson for the Rouge Forum (www.rougeforum.org)

August 2006

Un Costado Del Foro Del Colorete

Cuidado a nuestros profesores del camarada en Oaxaca

Guárdese del Trojan Horse llenado de los líderes de la unión de profesor de los E.E.U.U.
Hay varios miembros y lectores del foro del colorete que ahora están implicados en las luchas en Oaxaca. Alguna es la gente indígena que hizo amigos de los visitantes del foro del colorete a la región, y algo es N. americans que ahora son parte de la lucha allí.

La lucha en Oaxaca ha sido siempre más que la lucha de los trabajadores de la escuela para condiciones, salarios, y ventajas de enseñanza mejores. Las lecciones de Oaxaca se pueden aprender por todas partes.

Ha sido una batalla a nivel comunitario contra la conexión de la explotación y la ruina sistemática de la educación, contra racismo y sexism. En muchos casos, las luchas de Oaxaca han señalado al uso del gobierno mexicano como arma de los ricos, y a los secretos del capitalismo sí mismo, de la necesidad de dividir a gente a lo largo de líneas religiosas u otras para utilizar esas divisiones para demolernos, al secreto dominante: el capitalismo exige la explotación, injusticia, desigualdad y guerra — y el miedo más grande del capital: podemos aprender vivir más allá de capital, pacífico y liberar, equitativo y democrático.

La lucha en Oaxaca ha venido debajo de agudo, mortal, ataque. Las vidas se han perdido a más futuro la batalla a vivir en un mundo mejor. Incluso así pues, la gente valerosa ha permanecido unida, y ha llevado la acción directa, de agarrar el territorio agarrar las estaciones de radio. Las élites han utilizado la fuerza, pero hasta ahora en maneras limitadas, porque temen la respuesta de la gente.

Ahora, sin embargo, el rico y el de gran alcance pueden estar a punto de intentar otra táctica; un Trojan Horse ofreció a Oaxacans con el bien-significado, pero totalmente mal informado, gente, un Trojan Horse llenó de los jefes de las uniones de profesor en los Estados Unidos. Los profesores de los algunos E.E.U.U. están a punto de traer a E.E.U.U. líderes de trabajo a Oaxaca, y los introducen como “aliados.” Eso es incorrecto.

Los líderes de las uniones de profesores de los E.E.U.U. son gente peligrosa reaccionaria. Sostienen a una idea que llaman “Unionism nuevo.” Qué él significa es apoya la unidad de los miembros de unión de los E.E.U.U., el gobierno de los E.E.U.U., y las corporaciones de los E.E.U.U., en el “interés nacional.” Eso es lo que piensan son la razón principal del tener una unión; no porque trabajan la gente y sus jefes tienen poco pero contradicción en campo común, esté en lados de oposición, pero porque la gente de trabajo en los E.E.U.U. hará mejor si la gente de trabajo fuera de los E.E.U.U. hace peor.

Hay nada nuevo sobre su clase de unionism, aunque. Es la misma clase de idea que era la fundación del estado corporativo de Mussolini: fascismo.

Pero “Unionism nuevo,” no es justo un malo, viejo, idea. En la práctica, significa que la dirección de las uniones de profesor de los E.E.U.U. ha estado implicada, por décadas, con la agencia de inteligencia central (Cia), intentando destruir los movimientos de trabajadores todo sobre el mundo.

Las dos uniones de profesor principales de los E.E.U.U. son la federación americana de profesores (A POPA), y la asociación de la educación nacional (NEA). Los líderes de ambas uniones están implicados profundamente en esta actividad, pero pocos sus el propios fila que los miembros de un archivo conocen sobre ella.

¿Cómo este trabajo? NEA y A POPA (y la organización de paraguas de casi todas las uniones de los E.E.U.U., la federación americana del Trabajar-Congreso de organizaciones industriales; AFL-CIO) funcionan a través de grupos delanteros como la dotación nacional para la democracia (NED) y el instituto americano para el desarrollo de trabajo libre (AIFLD).

NED y AIFLD son financiados por el dinero secreto de la Cia, el departamento del estado de los E.E.U.U., y son apoyados por los fondos y el personal de uniones de los E.E.U.U., especialmente de NEA y A POPA. Casi una mitad de la renta de las deudas que el AFL-CIO recibe está pasado fuera de los E.E.U.U., conjuntamente con las campañas conducidas por la Cia.

Utilizan igual dividir-y-conquistan, recompensa-y-castigan, befriend-y-traicionan los métodos que cualquier élite pudo utilizar para mantener a gente línea.

Por ejemplo, identifican y reclutan a líderes locales, los traen a las sesiones del “entrenamiento” en los E.E.U.U., los sobornan, los amenazan, y les dan vuelta de nuevo a se utilicen destruir los movimientos que habrían podido conducir una vez.

Pagan a gente apagado, y amenazan otras. Fingen ser aliados, y trabajo detrás de las partes posterioras de los trabajadores para engañarnos.

Utilizan la fuerza. Han estado implicados en tentativas de los E.E.U.U. de derrocar gobiernos, y masacran desde uniforme antes de los días de Allende en Chile, hasta que las tentativas recientes de derrocar el gobierno de Venezuela. No juegan. Esta gente es asesinos.
¿Por qué ella hace esto? Los líderes de trabajo de los E.E.U.U. viven de las frutas del imperialismo de los E.E.U.U.. Los líderes del NEA y EN POPA, en la tapa, ganan casi $500.000 por año, cerca de diez veces el salario medio de los profesores de los E.E.U.U.. Están mucho. Además, crean la ilusión no solamente de la energía para sí mismos, pero consiguen fingirlos están siendo creativos y patriótico, cuando en el hecho todo están es egoísta y corrupto.

En un cierto plazo, como líderes de trabajo de los E.E.U.U. separe más y más de la tropa, sus vidas se convierten como los jefes en las industrias que representan, y desemejante de los trabajadores. Los jefes de la unión hacen compras y viven en diversos lugares, juegan golf con los jefes, cenan en los restaurantes de lujo, y, en el final del día, ensamblan literalmente el otro lado.

Estos mis-li’deres de trabajo saben que sus muchos privilegios están arraigados en la traición de, no solamente sus propios miembros, pero los trabajadores todo sobre el mundo. Sus rentas dependen en gran parte del éxito del imperialismo de los E.E.U.U., de la lucha de capitalistas en los E.E.U.U. para encontrar el trabajo barato, de las materias primas, mercados, y del control social, todo sobre el mundo. Ése es porqué casi cada unión importante de los E.E.U.U. mueve hacia atrás las guerras falladas del aceite en Iraq, Afganistán, y la región caspia. Las uniones de los E.E.U.U. apoyaron las guerras en Vietnam también.

Mucha gente de trabajo de los E.E.U.U., incluyendo profesores, apoya las uniones porque ella no sabe lo que están haciendo sus propias uniones, y porque ella encuentra duro creer que sus uniones darían vuelta alrededor y lo engañarían, solamente eso es qué está sucediendo. Muchos miembros de unión no agarran que las uniones son las suyas, y no el nuestros.

Eso no hace a miembros de unión de la tropa enteramente inocentes. Mientras que es duro que mucha gente aprenda qué va en fuera de los E.E.U.U., es fácil ver que las uniones de los E.E.U.U. son uniones segregadas. Eso es especialmente verdad de las uniones de profesor, que, tomadas juntas, son cerca de 90 por ciento de blanco.

Éstas son uniones del apartheid y, wittingly o no, trabajan sobre la misma base que los AFT-NEA funcionan internacionalmente, es decir, la idea que los trabajadores blancos (los profesores y otros trabajadores de la escuela) harán mejor, si los trabajadores de la escuela del color hacen peor. Si la entrada en el trabajo puede ser segregada, ese los medios menos gente competirán para el trabajo, y, dentro de esta teoría, la paga irá para arriba.

Realmente, éste es racismo justo, y como herramienta del dividir y de la regla, trabaja solamente para los patrones en un cierto plazo. Los profesores que se aíslan de cabritos y los padres (ahora personas del cerca de 50% de color), son mucho menos de gran alcance que profesores en un movimiento integrado. Pero los profesores de la tropa han permitido que sus líderes de la unión llenen encima de las restricciones que hacen duro para la gente del color sentir bien a profesores. Las uniones de profesores, se aíslan tan de hecho de la gente que necesitan la mayoría, de los cabritos de la clase obrera y de los padres.

La solidaridad es dominante a ganar las batallas de cualquier trabajador, y es dominante a la lucha que entra encendido en Oaxaca ahora. Es verdad que trabajando a gente todo sobre la necesidad del mundo de unir, a la acción directa de la toma para cambiar la manera todos vivimos, para la democracia y la igualdad. Pero no necesitamos unir con los que finjan ser nuestros amigos, pero quiénes nos traicionará.

Si un “líder de trabajo nacional” de los E.E.U.U. acerca a nuestros camaradas en Oaxaca, sería el mejor decirles ir a casa, sale de México, y fija el interior del racismo sus propias uniones.

Entonces, los cuadros de la toma de ellas y las pegan para arriba por todas partes, con el subtítulo: Judas.

Gibson rico para el foro del colorete (www.rougeforum.org)

Agosto de 2006

Casero | El escribir de Gibson | El escribir por otros | Ninguna sangre para el aceite | Foro Del Colorete

British Columbia: Teachers settle at last minute for 16% over 5 years

Vancouver Sun: Teachers settle at last minute for 16% over 5 years

Contract agreement just before midnight deadline means BCTF members will get $4,000-a-person signing bonus from province

The B.C. Teachers’ Federation has signed a tentative contract giving its members a 16-per-cent salary hike over five years and holding out promise of labour peace this fall in public schools.

The deal also includes an enhanced signing bonus of $4,000 a teacher.

“It’s not everything we wanted for our members, but it’s a significant step,” said BCTF president Jinny Sims.

Sims said she would have preferred a shorter deal, but added, “Sometimes you have to make compromises.”

The deal was announced late Friday night, just hours before the government’s offer of a signing bonus was due to expire.

The teachers, like other public sector union workers, were eligible for $3,700 bonus if they inked a new contract before their old deal expired at midnight, although teachers negotiated a larger bonus.

Sims said she would have liked to address teacher workload and class size and composition in a more significant way, but suggested the union will continue working for those improvements.

“There are many ways to effect change besides the negotiating table,” she said.

Teachers will vote in September throughout the province to ratify the tentative agreement. The BCTF executive will recommend they accept it.

Hugh Finlayson, chief executive officer of the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, said he thinks it is a good agreement for teachers and taxpayers.

“I think this is a very, very positive move for public education,” he said. “There was a lot of goodwill expressed on both sides, and we have something that we be used to build a strong and effective relationship between the BCTF and ourselves.”

Before Friday’s deal, the union had been asking for a 19-per-cent wage hike over three years while the employer had countered with 10 per cent over four years.

Teachers had given their union a strike mandate, and job action had been expected in September. Last fall, the BCTF shut down schools for 10 days in an illegal strike.

The two sides hadn’t negotiated an agreement since provincial bargaining was introduced for the education sector more than a dozen years ago.

Earlier Friday, Sims played down the importance of the signing bonus, although it was obviously a significant factor in the last-minute push to reach a deal before the union’s contract expired.

“We really would like to get a settlement done by tonight because I think the students, the parents, the teachers — everybody — wants to have a sense of stability as they go into the fall,” she said outside negotiations at a downtown Vancouver hotel.

The main sticking point in the dispute was wages. The employers’ association, the bargaining agent for school boards, had said the BCTF proposal for a 19-per-cent salary increase and improved benefits would increase education costs by 38 per cent — or $2 billion — over three years. The union disputed that calculation but did not provide its own figures.

Before the settlement with teachers, B.C. Finance Minister Carole Taylor said a total of 136 agreements had been reached with public sector unions, covering 261,798 employees. The contracts, which extend to 2010, include settlements with support staff in all 69 school districts.

The Independent asks “Does Marx Still Matter?”

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The Independent (London, UK) June 6 2006

Politics and principles: Marx: does he still matter?

In a letter to former Labour leader Michael Foot, written in 1982 and published yesterday, Tony Blair reveals that reading Karl Marx ‘irreversibly altered’ his outlook. He even agreed with Tony Benn that Labour’s right-wing was politically bankrupt. We asked nine commentators – including Mr Benn – whether Marxism still has anything to offer today
Published: 16 June 2006

Eric Hobsbawm Historian

I think there has been a substantial revival of interest in Marx in recent years, and this has been largely because what he said about the volatility and shape of capitalism was correct – even some business people now seem to recognise this. Marx is once again somebody that you can quote, and this in part is due to the end of the Cold War.

In terms of Marx’s legacy, as the Chinese are reported to have said following the French Revolution: “It’s too early to tell.” What we do know, though, is that Marx and his disciples were massively responsible for the shaping of the 20th century, for good or for bad, and Marx was an extraordinarily important thinker.

In this era of neo-liberal globalisation, Marxist thinking is still important in showing that while capitalism is enormously dynamic, that dynamism creates crises. We need to address these crises, not by free markets, but by controlling the system or changing it altogether. Whether or not that is possible in the short term is a different story.

Matthew d’Ancona Editor, ‘THE Spectator’

Marx is certainly relevant. As Francis Wheen’s very good biography shows, he was on to the idea of globalisation long before right-wing economists started writing about it. Beyond that, his way of thinking is still pervasive.

One of the fascinating things about the Labour Party is that there has been what you might call a Marx-size hole in it, a quest for a sense of destiny. Blair has tried to fill that: his critics would say with religion, his apologists would say with Europe. Blair is someone with a pretty strong sense of destiny, and he has tried to extend that to the Labour Party. He is no Marxist but in a funny way he has that sense of destiny Marx had.

Marx was wrong about lots of things, but he is still somebody you have to know about. He is one of a very small number of people – Marx, Freud and Darwin are, I suppose, the three big ones – who completely changed the way we see mankind.

Jack Straw Leader of The House of Commons

Karl Marx’s legacy – not just for the Labour Party but for intellectual development – is his development of Hegel’s more scientific approach to historical analysis and his elevation of the dialectical process. Both are, I think, enduring. Much of his analysis is accurate and his analytical tools are still respected by many historians.

His prescriptions were often widely off-beam, as we now know, and played down non-economic forces to a point where I think he made some grievous historical and political errors – for example, ignoring the role of nationalism and religion as political forces.

What we saw in 1989, with the collapse of theSoviet system, was that the Marxist-Leninist approach to running not only economies but also societies was unenduring. The point of Francis Fukuyama’s book The End of History was not that history had ended but that we had reached a point of ideological hegemony which I think we probably had. So Marxist Leninism is not relevant in that respect but the analysis is still worth having.

Hilary Wainwright Editor, ‘Red Pepper’

For all the abuses of his work, Marx’s view of society was far from being mechanical and determinist. His notion of people “making history but not in conditions of their own choosing” and his idea of “the social individual” points to that crucial balance between recognising the capacity of individuals to choose to transform rather than reproduce the social relations that depend on them and on the other hand the enduring nature of these social relations.

There is in Marx a powerfully grounded belief in human creativity combined with a strong belief in individual fufilment. It’s there in his theory of alienation: the way in which the capitalist labour market depends on workers’ alienation from their creative capacity. It’s there in his vision of socialism: not as a command economy but as the association of free producers. It is a cruel irony his name should have been used to justify authoritarianism and new, state, forms of alienation.

Tony Benn Labour Politician

It’s the teachers, including the prophets of ancient times, the founders of the great religions, along with Galileo, Darwin, and Karl Marx, who explain the world and our place in it.

I always think of Marx as the last of the Old Testament prophets who wrote a brilliant book about capitalism but also condemned it because of the oppression by one class of rich and powerful people.

Marx was no more responsible for a Stalinist tyranny than Jesus was for the Inquisition or the recent war of aggression waged by a Christian president and a Christian prime minister. Without the Marxist analysis, it is impossible to understand capitalism and globalisation, to reach a moral judgement, and it is even harder to explain the crude use of that power and the need for it to be held to account. There is nothing in the Marxist analysis to prevent us from thinking things out for ourselves and working to build a genuine democracy, where the polling station replaces the marketplace, and the ballot replaces the wallet as a source of political and economic power.

Alexei Sayle Comedian and Writer

I think that the Marxist historical analysis is an accurate account of how society has developed. Although perhaps a little wide of the mark, it is definitely still relevant. When Marx spoke about the differences in society being based on economic structure he definitely had a point.

Marxism should be seen as a tool and therefore a method of analysing society and that can be relevant today. You can certainly be right-wing and still be a Marxist.

It is a historical analysis of the class struggles and a prediction of the way our society would be, and it isn’t wrong. Yes, it is a complex set of ideas, but it makes sense.

Norman Tebbit Former Conservative Party Chairman

I read bits of Marx, though in a way when I grew up what seemed more relevant was Mein Kampf. I read that because I wanted to know about the bugger who was dropping bombs on me. I don’t think Marx is relevant, except to show up the folly of people who believe in what is now shown to be an absolute failure of a political system. Blair is right that it purports to be a total system. You can be a Conservative without being a capitalist, you can be Labour without being a socialist, but if you buy Marx, you have to buy the lot. It’s like a religion in that respect, and very harmful. So, for once, Tony’s right.

Anthony Seldon Headmaster, Wellington College

I think that Marx’s way of analysing society is of course relevant today because you simply cannot understand how societies have formed today without seeing the remnants of Marxism. It has been hugely influential across the world.

Marx definitely got some things wrong because his theory was, sadly, overly idealistic about working-class unity. Nevertheless, you can certainly still see elements of truth in what he said – workers are stronger when they stand together.

Marxism hasn’t itself been a negative influence. It is often the way that followers have chosen to interpret Marxism that has led to things like police states and concentration camps. Marx would have been horrified in the same way that Jesus would have been by the way people have interpreted him.

I find Marxism a lot less odious as an idea than capitalist policies. The idea of people living in a just society with no warfare is an inspiring vision, although hopelessly naïve.

Bob Crow General Secretary, RMT

It was entertaining to hear that Tony Blair’s youthful outlook was “irreversibly altered” by reading Marx. Of course, he doesn’t say in which direction his outlook was altered, but his actions during the past decade give us a clue. Today it is far easier to win the ear of Downing Street if you represent the class of capitalists, as Marx would have put it, rather than working people.

Of course, it may be that Blair has had a memory lapse and just needs a refresher. No need to wade through all of Das Kapital – just a quick read of the little pamphlet Wages, Price and Profit, which lays bare the mechanism by which bosses extract surplus value from the labour of working people. It should be in the pocket of every trade unionist.

In it, Marx demolishes the idea that wage rises cause inflation and that it is futile for workers to fight for higher pay.

Marx’s great achievement was understanding capitalism, and in understanding it he came to the conclusion that it could and must be replaced with something better.

As long as there are capitalists Marx will remain relevant.

TRADE UNION STRATEGIES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY (Discussion panel in Vancouver this weekend)

TRADE UNION STRATEGIES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY:
AN INTERNATIONAL DISCUSSION

In the age of globalization, outsourcing and the ‘race for the bottom’ what strategies make sense for unions? How can falling union density in the private sector be reversed? What is social unionism and how can both public and private sector workers build alliances with their communities? How should unions relate to ‘progressive’ governments?

These questions and many more will be tackled by an outstanding international panel:

Willy Madisha President, Congress of South African Trade Unions

Cristina ErcoliWomen’s Secretary of CTERATeachers union in Argentina

George HeymanPresident, British Columbia Government and Service Employees’ Union

Moderator, David Chudnovsky, MLA Vancouver-Kensington, former president BCTF

When? Saturday, June 24, 7 PM
Where? 550 W 6th Avenue, Vancouver (BCTF Building)

Sponsored by Vancouver and District Labour Council and British Columbia Teachers’ Federation

Contacts: Mabel Elmore (604-254-0703), Larry Kuehn (604-871-2255)

Massacre of teachers in Mexico, 11 dead

Socialist Teachers Alliance: MASSACRE OF TEACHERS IN MEXICO, 11 DEAD

Here are several reports on developments in Oaxaca, Mexico. The eyewitness report below here is both terrible and inspiring. Please respond to the request for letters denouncing the attack of teachers.

Dave Stratman
newdemocracyworld.org
20 Moraine Street
Boston, MA 02130
617-524-4073
********************

The state of Oaxaca MX and the MX federal government have launched an attack on striking teachers in Oaxaca and other popular organizations killing an as-yet unknown number. Teachers reclaimed the center of Oaxaca city, but new and larger attacks are expected (and may by now have happened). Please at least send a protest email (addresses below) and if you can, look for demonstrations (or create one) at Mexican consulates.

There is a sketchy report in the New York Times (Link unsatisfactory).

Two longer pieces below from Rich Gibson and Rouge Forum:
Massacre of Teachers in Mexico, 11 Dead
Urgent Protest Thursday, June 15, 5 p.m.
Outside the Mexican Consulate General,
27 East 39th Street (between Madison and Park Aves.)

Dear all,
Most of you will have heard by now of the violent repression of striking teachers in Oaxaca camped in the central plaza of Oaxaca City. The 70,000 schoolteachers in Oaxaca have been on strike since May 22nd, demanding a pay raise, differential pay for teachers working in high-cost regions, resources for school infrastructure, free school breakfasts, school supplies, and scholarships for students. For much of this time thousands have been camped in the centre of the city to press their demands.

This morning, state police attacked the encampments with riot police and helicopters. They also raided the union headquarters, a hotel that houses teachers and the Unionís radio station. Despite the force used against them, teachers were able to regain control of the main plaza and the blocks around it.

With all the chaos, the reports we have received of casualties are not firm and are sometimes conflicting, but it appears that at least 5 people, including one teachersí child, have been killed, dozens wounded and dozens more detained. There is fear that there will be more violence as police backed by federal re-inforcements attempt to take the plaza again.

If further violence is to be prevented, the Oaxacan teachers will need the support of the international community to pressure Mexican authorities to reign in their security forces and return to the bargaining table. We are requesting of the organizations of the IDEA Network to at least send letters of protest to the Mexican President and the governor of Oaxaca, with copies ot the Mexican section of the Trinational Coalition to Defend Public Education (see addresses below). However, it will have a much stronger impact if your organization can send a delegation to the Mexican consulate or embassy in your city to deliver the letters directly (and better still if some of you remain outside the consulates and embassies wiht signs denouncing the violence)..

I am attaching with this message information that we have received from the Mexican section of the Trinational Coalition about the conflict in Oaxaca, as well has an eyewitness report we received a few hours ago from the coordinator of the Oaxacan teachersí unionís research institute. I am also enclosing copies of the letters the IDEA network has sent to Mexicoís president and the governor of Oaxaca. Please feel free to modify the letters and use them for your own organization.

Thank You,
Steve Stewart,
Technical Secretary,
IDEA Network

Contact information below:
Lic. Vicente Fox Quesada
Presidente Constitucional de MÈxico
Fax 55 5277 2376,
vicente.fox.quesada@presidencia.gob.mx.

Dr. JosÈ Luis Soberanes
Presidente de la ComisiÛn Nacional de Derechos Humanos
Fax: 55 5681 7199

Dr. Ricardo Sep˙lveda
Coordinador de la Unidad para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos de la SecretarÌa de GobernaciÛn
Fax: 55 5128 0234

Lic. Ulises Ruiz Ortiz
Gobernador Constitucional del Estado de Oaxaca
Fax. 01 (951) 51 65 966,51-60677/ fax: 51-63737/ cel: 0449515470377
E-mail: gobernador@oaxaca.gob.mx.
with copies to urama@prodigy.net.mx, antonio_icn@hotmail.com radioplanton@hotmail.com, and the Mexican newspaper La Jornada

From: David
Dear Friends,

Iím writing about the situation in Oaxaca. As I write, the capital city is under siege. At approximately 5AM this morning the state police attacked the teachers occupation of the city center. Though reports are sketchy, it seems that three teachers have been killed, as well as a young girl. The teachers have taken three or four police hostage. A raging battle is underway to control the zocalo, the center of life in Oaxaca, and the heart of the teacherís encampment. In the dawn raid the teachers were forced out, but the local paper, Noticias de Oaxaca, has reported that at 9:30AM local time the teachers, armed with rocks and sticks, re-took the main square. Police are firing tear gas from helicopters right now. Thousands (tens of thousands) of people are involved in running battles in the streets. And there is the fear that upwards of 3500 federal riot police ó deployed to Oaxaca in the last two weeks by Vicente Fox ó are about to enter the city.

Iíve just gotten off the phone with friends in the center. They described the scene on the streets this morning at about 7:30AM. Hundreds of people crying from the mix of tear gas, smoke bombs and some other pepper spray. The men forming groups to launch the assault to retake the zocalo. Mothers telling their boys to take care of themselves as they fell into line. From the rooftops of the single story houses you can watch the helicopters flying overhead shelling tear gas canisters into the crowds. There is a heavy fear, but also, I was told, you could hear the sound of people marching and singing.

As a brief background, you might want to read:News

The teachers occupation of the city, known in Spanish as a ëplantoní began 23 days ago. More than 80,000 teachers from every municipality in the state had converged on the capital to press a list of demands for more resources for education. They have had two mass marches, the most recent bringing more than 120,000 people out, the largest demonstration in the cityís history. The planton has become an annual event since more than a decade, and I will never forget last yearís planton which happened while I was still living there. For about ten days the teachers occupied the entire center of town, sleeping on the streets under tarpaulins stretched overhead. They were extremely well organized and the city center was never more alive. The teachers and their families would cook large meals on open fires, play guitar and sing, rest on folded cardboard in the shade. They set up their radio station ìRadio Plantonî and played music on loud speakers. There were first aid tents, propaganda tents, mass meetings on every corner.

This year, many have remarked that the planton, and the teachersí mobilization generally, has been different. The question is: If the teachers brought 80,000 to the city, who are the other 40,000? Iím not close enough to give a good answer, but what I understand is that the teachers have offered an opening which hundreds of small community groups and social justice centers from around the state have chosen to follow. The past two years under the new PRI governor Ulises Ruis has intensified the level of state repression. Scores of activists in small villages have been killed, hundreds arrested and still in jail as political prisoners. The spike in repression was so great that Amnesty International sent a delegation to Oaxaca in May of 2005 to investigate. It appears that when the teachers marched on the capital three weeks ago they were joined by tens of thousands of others from the villages in what is becoming a broad movement to depose the governor. Ruis has refused to meet with the teachers, and has managed to pull in his partyís promisary notes to about half of the stateís municipal mayors who signed a decree condemning the teachers action. But there is a palpable sense that the social movements are converging and that something new is underway.

During the past three weeks, the movement has shown a great level of strength and creativity ó occupying the cityís airport, smashing the newly-installed parking meters throughout the city center, occupying the toll booths on the main road from Oaxaca to Mexico City ó not to stop the cars, only to stop the collecting of tolls, and the very fact that they have occupied the zocalo has great significance as the new governor, after spending upwards of $100 million to ëbeautifyí the zocalo, decreed that it was now off-limits for any demonstrations.

Three nights ago, Ruis met with business leaders at a late night gathering and promised to use the ëmano duraí or hard hand. There were reports that the first 1500 federal riot police were camped in the nearby town of Tlacolula. This morning the governor appears to have proven himself a man of his word. Some reports have said that the tear gas in the city center is so thick you canít see the hand in front of you.

I have not seen any reports in the US media, BBC etc. There is some information on indymediaís Mexico site, some more on the online version of Noticias de Oaxaca ó both in Spanish. (www.noticias-oax.com.mx/) I know that the police have shut down the teachersí radio station ëRadio Plantoní but as of 12:00 noon Oaxaca time the studentsí radio station ëRadio Universitarioí was still broadcasting and ìyou can hear the broadcast from every window and door in town.î The students themselves have occupied the university, but the latest reports suggest that the police are heading there now.

Iím writing this in the hope that you can help spread the word, and alert others in the network of media to turn their attention to the struggle ongoing.
In solidarity,
Dave

Violent represion in Oaxaca
posteado por vlax en jun 14, 2006 [21:35]

To the peoples of the world
To the people of Mexico
To the civil society
To the social political, and humans rights organizations,

Oaxaca de Ju·rez, Oaxaca, June 14 of 2006

Today, June 14, 2006, on of the most abhorrent manifestations of the exercise of power on behalf of the government has been perpetrated in Mexico. At 4:40 a.m., an act of repression against the social movement in Oaxaca began. At dawn today, state government police forces brutally and violently evacuated teachers who were occupying streets and the central square of downtown Oaxaca. We are speaking of more than fifty thousand teachers.

They also beat other people and destroyed the radio equipment of Radio PlantÛn, 92,1 F.M., a wireless station that is been continuously transmitting the situation of the teachers movement. This community radio, which has been operating for a year, has played an important role in the transmission of clear and transparent information as it occurs in Oaxaca and our country.

This act is yet another piece of evidence of the repression that governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz has orchestrated against those who disagree with policies that violate human rights and those who stand up to denounce social injustice and the state of siege lived in today.

There are disappeared teachers, people hurt and intoxicated with tear gases, apprehensions, and domiciliary persecutions. Also mentioned are the death of two children and at least three teachers. After five hours of skirmish, the teachers began to re-occupy the central square while ìthe forces of the orderî regroup in other places of the city to reinitiate the aggression.

The city¥s inhabitants are very disturbed and have begun to organize in support of the teachers. Similarly, social organizations are pronouncing themselves against the repression.

On the other hand, governmental and commercial media, both radio and television, try to cause the social irritation against the teachers. Due to the destruction of Radio PlantÛn, groups of students and teachers took over Radio Universidad, the station of the Independent University Benito Ju·rez of Oaxaca, and are transmitting minute by minute what is happening in the streets of the city. In addition, the University has announced its total support to the teachers, declaring that this conflict has taken on a widespread social character and invites the society in general to join the movement.

The main demands of the teachers are: adjustment of wages according to the cost of the life in Oaxaca; strengthening of support programs to the schools, mainly regarding infrastructure; allowance of equipment and diverse educational materials to students who live in the municipalities of greater marginalization; finally, an end to repression against education workers; clarification on cases of the disappeared; and the liberation of the political prisoners.

Currently, social discontent and mobilization increase. In the face of this barbaric repression, more protests have sparked:10 Municipal Presidencies have been taken over, among which are Juchit·n, Zimatl·n, Huautla de JimÈnez, Teotitl·n de Flores MagÛn, MatÌas Romero, Huajuapan of Leon, Port Angel and Puerto Escondido. Farmers are marching in from Tuxtepec. Inhabitants of San Salvador Atenco make their way towards the State Capital. The future seems uncertain, but hope grows.

For this reason, the teacher¥s movement, social organizations, and a great number of inhabitants of the city hold the governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz responsible of the chaos and the violence currently affecting the most indigenous state of the country.

Finally, while a mega-march is being planned for next Friday, the government has sent orders of apprehension to the leadership. We hope to count on your support, and request the most ample circulation of this information.

Teachers strike, political violence in Oaxaca

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Narco News: Teachers Repel 3,000 Police from Oaxaca’s Historic Center
Thousands of Police Surround the City Center as Strikers Hold Their Ground

By Geoffrey Harman
The Other Journalism with the Other Campaign in Oaxaca
June 14, 2006

OAXACA CITY: In a scene that is starting to look all too familiar in Mexico, the police attempted to disrupt the Oaxaca teachers strike in downtown Oaxaca City this morning. At roughly 3 a.m. a police helicopter flew low over the tent city where the teachers have been camped for the past 23 days and shot canisters of tear gas. Meanwhile, 3,000 state police armed with riot shields and clubs entered the chaos and tore apart the roughshod shelters where the teachers had been staying. During the course of the six-hour police intervention three people were reported to have been killed (this is unconfirmed), two women and one child.

Radio Plantón (the teachers’ pirate radio station, which had been broadcasting from the Zócalo, or central square, since the strike started and had been the main source of information for the striking teachers) was dismantled and has been off the air since the first police attack. (Four journalists from the station were among the first to be arrested: Arcelio Ruiz Villanueva, Ociel Martínez Martínez, Eduardo Castellanos Morales and Roberto Gazga.) The teachers are now broadcasting on the college radio station 89.7 FM and 113.95 AM. At roughly 10 am the police retreated and the teachers re-took the Zócalo. During the course of the struggle unconfirmed reports have said four people were arrested (three of which were from Radio Plantón), 20 people hospitalized and three police taken hostage. …

Narco News: Stand-off Continues as Oaxaca Teachers’ Strike enters Fourth Week

By Nancy Davies
June 12, 2006

The strike by Section 22 of the Síndicato Nacionál Trajabadores Educativas (SNTE), the teachers’ union, enters its fourth week in a stand-off that seems no closer to resolution. SNTE Section 22 vows to increase pressure on Ulises Ruiz Ortega (URO) by continuing the invasions or blockades of government property such as PEMEX distribution terminals, the Chamber of Deputies, the state attorney general’s office, the collection tollbooth of Huitzo on the Oaxaca-Mexico highway, the Institute of State Public Education for Oaxaca, the Secretary of Finances’ office, and the so-called public works such as the renovation of Llano Park and the Fountain of Seven Regions, and the widening of Fortin Road.

Furthermore, teachers are now soliciting citizen signatures to depose URO as governor of the state. At the corner of Independencia and Porfirio Díaz streets on Sunday, June 11, two young teachers and a professor were requesting passersby to sign on. …

Narco News: Oaxaca Near Meltdown Over Teacher Strike
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More than Just an Educators’ Pay Dispute, the Conflict Is a Sign of Governor Ruiz’s Inability to Rule a State Fed Up with Repression and Corruption

By Nancy Davies
June 7, 2006

It’s unprecedented and nobody knows what will happen, but nobody is backing down.

Tens of thousands of striking teachers occupy the center of Oaxaca city, sprawled out under camp tents, on top of cardboard cartons, on stairs and walls and benches. The plantón — the occupying camp — has now been going on for fifteen days. It covers 56 blocks, preventing all traffic and access to the heart of the central square, or zócalo.

The striking teachers have with them in the zócalo and the Plaza de la Danza their embroidery and their children. Oaxaca Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortíz has called in Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) obligations in more than half the municipalities of Oaxaca and obtained signed condemnation of the teachers, along with their demands to control education at the municipal level, from more than 250 municipal mayors, which means breaking the union. …

B.C. teachers vote 85 per cent in favor of a strike

Last fall BC teachers walked out on a two-week illegal strike with strong backing from the public. As the deadline looms for completing negotiations on a new contract, teachers have voted 85% in favor of a another province wide strike unless the employers give them a significant salary increase.

Teachers are seeking a 24-per-cent salary increase over three years. The B.C. Public School Employers’ Association (the bargaining agent for the province) has offered an eight-per-cent wage hike over three years.

The BCTF points out that teachers have not kept up with…

Inflation – since 1995 they have fallen behind by 4%. The employer’s offer would have teachers falling even further behind inflation

Other professions – a nurse with a four-year degree starts at $49,344, while a teacher with a five-year degree starts at $38,400 in West Vancouver.

Other provinces – teachers in the Lower Mainland earn 20% less than their colleagues in Ottawa and Edmonton.

BCTF: Teachers back strong salary case with huge yes vote

Teachers across British Columbia have voted overwhelmingly to back their bargaining demand for a fair and competitive salary increase.

A total of 85.2 % of teachers voted yes in a province-wide strike vote conducted June 7 and 8, 2006. In all, 30,202 teachers cast a ballot, of whom 25,698 voted yes.

“This vote sends a strong message to the government and the employer that teachers are serious about their need for a significant salary increase,” said Jinny Sims, president of the BC Teachers’ Federation.

“Our salaries haven’t kept up with inflation, nor have they kept up with colleagues in other provinces. The finance minister’s own research showed that BC teachers are 20% behind Alberta and Ontario.”

Sims said the strong yes vote once again demonstrates that teachers are united behind their bargaining goals and ready to take action to achieve them.

“Last fall our members took a courageous stand to achieve improvements in students’ learning conditions and a significant salary increase,” she said. “We went back to work based on government’s assurances that they would deal with our concerns. To some extent, they have addressed the issues of class size and composition with Bill 33 but there has not been an adequate response to our need for a fair salary increase.”

The BCTF has tabled an opening position of 24% over three years, while the BC Public School Employers’ Association has offered 8% over four years. Many teachers consider that offer to be insulting because it does not keep up with inflation and widens the gap between teachers’ salaries in BC and other provinces.

The current contract, the second one to be imposed through legislation, will expire June 30, 2006. Sims emphasized that teachers will continue to seek solutions at the bargaining table.

“We are ready to work 24–7 to reach a negotiated settlement prior to June 30,” Sims said.

Contract negotiations between the teachers and the British Columbia Public School Employers’ Association are ongoing.

In search of “liberation-oriented” economics: Black labor fights “disorder” of globalization

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The Black Commentator: In search of “liberation-oriented” economics: Black labor fights “disorder” of globalization

When African Americans are once again forced to be the primary upholders of worker solidarity and labor principles, when it is African Americans that bear the brunt of corporate de-industrialization, and when Black labor must fight a multi-front war for racial, social, and economic justice, and world peace, then it is logical and righteous that Blacks appropriate these issues as uniquely their own. As always in America, the most despised and pilloried must ultimately lead those whose vision is damaged by relative racial privilege and delusions of Manifest Destiny.…

Happy May Day—International Workers Day!

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Workers of the world, awaken!
Rise in all your splendid might
Take the wealth that you are making,
It belongs to you by right.
No one will for bread be crying
We’ll have freedom, love and health,
When the grand red flag is flying
In the Workers’ Commonwealth
(Joe Hill)

On May 1, 1886, hundreds of thousands of North American workers mobilized to strike. In Chicago, on May 3, police shot two workers during a battle between picketers and scabs at the McCormick Harvester Works. At a protest rally in Haymarket Square the next day someone (possibly a police agent) tossed a bomb into the police ranks. Police then opened fire, indiscriminately killing four workers and wounding a hundred others.

Eight anarachist leaders were arrested, subjected to a sham trial, and sentenced to death (with three later pardoned).

International protests followed the Haymarket Massacre and in 1889 the congress of socialist parties known as the Second International called for an annual one-day strike on May 1 to demonstrate labor solidarity and working-class power.

More information on May Day can be found at:
Haymarket Archives
Marxist Internet Archive
Lucy Parsons Project
Rouge Forum
Haymarket Monument

Video of UBC Roundtable on the British Columbia Teachers’ Strike

Vic_Rally_1.jpgFollowing last fall’s BC teachers’ strike a number of departments and programs at UBC, along with the New Proposals Publishing Society and <a href=”http://www.cust.educ.ubc.ca/workplace/”Workplace: A Journal for Academic Labor sponsored a public roundtable discussion on the significance of the strike and the struggle for education in the public interest in British Columbia.

Streaming video of the presentations at the roundtable are now available via Charles Menzie’s In Support of Public Education blog or you can click on any of the presenters names below to access the video:

Stephen Petrina (Department of Curriculum Studies, UBC)
Jinny Sims (President British Columbia Teachers’ Federation)
Catherine Evans (BC Society for Public Education)
Paul Orlowski (Teacher, Kitsilano Secondary School, Vancouver)
Charles Menzies (Department of Anthropology & Sociology, UBC)
Kevin Millsip (former Vancouver School Board Trustee)
E. Wayne Ross (Department of Curriculum Studies, UBC)