Category Archives: Rouge Forum Update

Rouge Forum Conference Update – The Wars Left Behind: Education for Action

NoBloodForOil.jpg
Dear Friends,

We focus once again this week on the Rouge Forum Conference in Detroit, March 1 to 4, at Wayne State University. This will be the key gathering of educational activists in the US this year, bringing together test resisters, anti-war activists, community activists, literacy and social studies specialists, students, parents, profs, and k12 educators. We expect participants from the UK, Japan, China, South Africa, Canada, and even Brooklyn.

Spread the word. Nothing works better than a call or email from a friend.

Among the presenters: Patrick Shannon, Susan Ohanian, George Schmidt, Dave Hill, Steven Strauss, Adam Renner, and many others.

As we have had five requests to extend the due date for proposals, we will accept proposals until Saturday morning, January 20, as the review committee must meet and make decisions, as well as the schedule, then. We continue to ask for donations, but no one will be turned away for fees. Many thanks to those who have donated already.

This link represents some of the work that members of the Rouge Forum are initiating for strategic planning in San Diego. The template could be used nearly anywhere.

On this Martin Luther King Holiday, we highlight his speech, “Beyond Vietnam—A Time to Break the Silence,” one speech that it is hard to turn into its own opposite, even though many of the MLK celebrations reflect everything that King set out to oppose, as in the militarized march led by the JROTC in San Diego.

We also recommend the film, Deacons For Defense, as a collateral discussion piece.

Here is Professor Michael Klare, author of Resource Wars, on Energo-Fascism.

This article is but one of many incisive pieces linked to the No Blood For Oil web page, a remarkable resource for educators.

We note with great sadness the death of South African writer, intellectual, and activist, Jimmy Seephe, a dear friend. We will have an appreciation of his life next week.

Happy Holidays from the Rouge Forum!

Dear Friends,

Happy Holidays from the Rouge Forum!

Remember the Rouge Forum Conference, Their Wars Left Behind, in Detroit, March 1 to 4, 2007.

The Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil page is updated.

Among the highlights are a Rouge Forum Broadside on How to Get Out of Iraq.

In schools, where the NCLB seeks to regiment what is known and how people come to know it through curricula standards and racist high-stakes exams in order to turn educators into missionaries for capitalism, and kids into the empire’s warriors, the nation’s largest and richest union, the National Education Association took a sharp position against those who oppose the bi-partisan law. NEA’s bosses, led by what is unquestionably the least well-informed NEA President in decades, Reg Weaver, attacked Susan Ohanian and the Education Roundtable, urging NEA members not to sign the an online protest. The Roundtable responds here.

Here are three short paragraphs representing the consensus of the Roundtable at the NCSS International Assembly in D.C. Next year we will be bigger and better in San Diego.

Those unfortunately good for the rest of your life Rouge Forum posters, great for classroom discussion, are available cheap are available here.

And check out the IWW Pyramid of the Capitalist System.

Remember to give a sub to Substance Newspaper, the best hard copy newspaper on education.

We mourn the loss of a wonderful friend and member of the Rouge Forum, Marshall Michelson, who helped the RF from the beginning in every way he could. In the new year, we hope we can live up to the standards he set for intelligence, inner strength, humor, and perseverance.

We close with advice from Bertolt Brecht.

The Rouge Forum Updates will go on hiatus until January. Here’s to a new year of equality, democracy, reason, and freedom, and the courage it takes to get there. Meanwhile, you can join the Rouge Forum Discussion list here.

People can join the discussion list two ways:

    1. Visit and applying for group membership.

    2. Send an email to rougeforum@pipeline.com requesting to be added to the Rouge Forum Discussion list. Since we will have two lists (mailing list and discussion list), please clearly state that you want to be added to the discussion list, otherwise you will be just added to the mailing list.

Thanks to Gil, Phillip, Amber, Wayne, Susan, Dave Si., Joe B., Gordon, Jim3, Sandy, Gloria, Tom H., Greg J, Bill B, Greg and Katie, Bob A., Tommie, Betty W., Sharon, ZG, Laura, Kathy H., Monty, John DeW., Dave, Carrie, Judytheteacher, Joel S., Sally, Sean A., Connie, Pauline L., Pat S., Richard B, Marc, Currie, Kev, Perry, Steve F, Allan S, and so long BigM.

All the best, r

Rouge Forum Update: Conference and More

Dear Friends,

The Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil web page is updated.

Those unfortunately timeless Rouge Forum posters on the war are for sale via the web site, making great holiday gifts for thinking people. Here is one link.

And the pyramid of capital here on infamous ebay.

Robert Fisk remains the sole on the scene correspondent who seems to make sense of these many crises, likely the prelude to world war three.

The massive uprising initiated by school workers in Oaxaca continues to sharpen, meeting sharp repression from paramilitary squads, probably led by the government, as well as Mexican troops and cops.

Narco News is still the best source on Oaxaca, despite a worrisome absence of solid analysis of the social forces at battle there. Many suggestions have been made for action in support of what can be called the Oaxaca Commune, from emailing the Mexican Consulates to the constant presence in front of the consulate in San Diego, which lasted more than two weeks.

Here is the Rouge Forum historical peek at Oaxaca.

However, the best way to support Oaxaca remains the patient, if urgent work, that we seek to do in transforming the system of capital through critique and direct action, to a caring community where people can live more or less equitably, democratically, creatively, in peace. That will, of course, be a fight, but the linkage of international imperialism, the Oaxaca struggle, related fights like the Detroit Teachers’ Strike, the regimentation of curricula and high-stakes testing must be at the base of any action in schools today.

Organization is central to this question. Without organization, nothing. We need our own organization, one that truly unites people in the spirit of solidarity, all for one, and that grasps our unity does not include those who profit from our labor, who rely on racism and nationalism to pit us against one another, fighting the enemies of our enemies. We need our own media, to help Substance expand.

The Rouge Forum Conference in March is key to continuing the construction of such an organization. Join Us!

We welcome the return of one Rouge Forum member, safe and sound, from Iraq, and hope the rest of you are back, and well, very soon.

We will be at NCSS in D.C. from November 29 to December 3 staying at the Grand Hyatt on 1000 H Street. Come visit. We’ll be presenting at the CUFA-International Assembly on Friday morning.

Next week we will announce the beginning of a Rouge Forum google group for pre-conference discussions, and more. The group will be open to anyone who asks to join it, but not open to non-members of the group. It will not be moderated, unless experience guides otherwise.
We will ask group members not to circulate material posted on the discussion group elsewhere, without author permission.

Please take a look at the insightful writing at the Journal of Critical Education Policy Studies publishing the work of many Rouge Forum leaders.

Rouge Forum Conference: Their Wars Left Behind

Call for Session Leaders and Active Participants

The Rouge Forum

hosts

Their Wars Left Behind: Education for Action

March 1-4, 2007
Wayne State University
Detroit Michigan

This interactive conference will focus on the question of building a caring education community while, at the same time, building serious resistance to inequality, racism, sexism, imperialism, and war-in schools and out. This conference is designed to connect reflection and action, reason and organizing, teaching and social change. Please come prepared to both lead and participate.

We ask that you offer sessions that begin with critical questions, and prepare to lead discussions. Please understand that some workshops may be combined, depending on space limitations and attendance. We will communicate with all session leaders for consensus on combinations.

Possible Session Proposals Could Include:

  • Standardized testing, regimented curricula—and war—what’s the connection, if any?
  • Shall we confront the militarization of schools—how?
  • How can we teach the connections, and disconnections, of the media and war?
  • Why and How; the development of our own media centers.
  • Will the arts and aesthetics survive an imperial education—how?
  • What can be learned from the Detroit, Oaxaca and other, strikes, and how can it be taught?
  • Is teaching, or any school work, really labor and what value do teachers create anyway?
  • Can the immigration movement and border activism be a part of the curriculum, and education action in schools and out? How?
  • Why have school?
  • Schooling and sex/gender—what is up with that?
  • How can school workers connect capitalism, imperialism, war, and daily life in school?
  • Is it possible to teach against racism inside segregated schools, and if so how?
  • How can the Hard Sciences, like math, be linked to social justice education?
  • What is the role of labor law for educators in classrooms, and on the streets?
  • How would Marx evaluate education today?
  • How to teach for solidarity and class consciousness against opportunism?
  • Freire: Liberator or just another new boss?
  • Can educators initiate regional or local workers councils?
  • Why do the education unions look as they do, and what is to be done with them?

Tentative Schedule:
Thursday Evening: Ground Zen, a play by Bill Boyer followed by a discussion centered on the purpose of the conference.

Friday and Saturday: Workshops during the day, followed by a brief plenary each day.
Ground Zen each evening.

Luncheon Speakers scheduled: Susan Ohanian, E. Wayne Ross, Patrick Shannon, Rich Gibson, George Schmidt

Sunday: Plenary: Organizing and proposals for action

Presenters: please email proposals to Rich Gibson at rgibson2@pipeline.com

Registration: $25 donation, or more. No one will be turned away for registration fees.

You may preregister at PayPal (below) , or email Rich Gibson at rgibson2@pipeline.com

Child care will be available. Request housing information at registration.

Exhibitors welcomed.

Email: rgibson2@pipeline.com
http://www.RougeForum.org

Rouge Forum Update

Here is the link to the call for session leaders and participants in the Rouge Forum Conference in Detroit, March 1-4, 2007.

Please forward the link (http://www.pipeline.com/~rgibson/rouge_forum/TheirWarsLeft%20Behind.htm) to lists that you might consider related.

The Rouge Forum No Blood For Oil page is updated, with articles by Robert Fisk, Sy Hersh, Scott Ritter, and many others, useful for any classroom.

We note that the retreat from the promises of the Democratic Party has already begun, with calls to secure Iraq and its key oil resources, and geo-political position, for US interests. And, while the US cannot contain Baghdad, we witness threats to invade Iran, perhaps using Israel as a proxy. Rumsfield’s replacement, Bob Gates, has lots of experience with Iran and Iraq, having played a role in the Iran Contra scheme, and the Iraqi attack on Iran.

In the US, we suggest that their will be no substantive reform of the NCLB, and instead we will witness more calls for national unity, particularly a call for “National Service,” which might be linked to a military draft, as the Democrats seek to reposition the popularity of the imperial nation and
to recreate trust in government, which is undeserved. The Democrats will, most likely, continue the intensification of the war on working people, here and abroad.

Here is a link to a discussion about the school reform movement, the Big Tests, and what to do.

Our Rouge Forum web page now also highlights the hopeful uprising in Oaxaca which demonstrates the Rouge Forum thesis that educators are well positioned to initiate, if not complete, struggles to end exploitation, for equality and democracy. Here is the link: http://www.rohan.sdsu.edu/%7Ergibson/oaxaca.htm

AOL users, please note that AOL system administrators may block your email coming from me, following Rouge Forum postings. AOL system administrators refuse to take action to overcome this problem which their system, and theirs alone, creates, even after four months of attempting to work with them. If you are an AOL user, and do not hear back from Rich Gibson or Amber, or others using our system address, that is why it is happening. You might consider getting another account, as AOL wants to rid itself of subscribers anyway.

There are now a dozen Rouge Forum members in Iraq. We sincerely wish you all well.

And we look hopefully at the coming decision in the case of the Grenada 17 which could end their unjust imprisonment in a jail built in the late 1600’s, since 1983.

Rouge Forum Update: Oaxaca

Dear Friends,

Apologies for this unusually long Rouge Forum Update, but the urgency of the issue in Oaxaca requires it.

The struggle in Oaxaca, which demonstrates that school workers are centrally positioned in the battle for equality and justice, sharpened this week. Now the Mexican police and military are poised to attack the nascent Oaxaca Workers’ Council as a whole. At the same time, thousands of people are headed toward Oaxaca to defend the peoples’ movement.

Below is a note from a friend of a friend describing the situation.

We urge you to take direct action at Mexican consulates, if possible.

The Oaxaca battle also shows the need to build a mass well-organized base of people who grasp that we must transcend capitalism itself, to eradicate exploitation at its root. The movement in Oaxaca has not, to date, taken a sharp position on this central issue, perhaps to maintain a sense of unity among those who want to merely replace the elected officials, those who just want a raise and textbooks, and those who have a more radical view. Whether this unity can be sustained under Federale attacks is yet to be seen.

Even so, the heroic struggle in Oaxaca serves as a harbinger of the future.

Here is a list of the Mexican consulates in this country; call or write to yours:
http://www.mexonline.com/consulate.htm

Here is the US State Dept in Mexico City:
embeuamx@state.gov

and the consular agent in Oaxaca
conagent@prodigy.mx

Remember to set aside the first weekend in March for the Rouge Forum conference in Detroit. Full details to arrive next Sunday.

Oaxaca, Sunday 29 October 2006

Friends, Here’s a bit of update and a revealing first-hand report from two Pittsburgh folks who were at the barricade in Santa Lucia del Camino barrio (an out-of-the-center neighborhood of Oaxaca City, about 4 miles east of the center) where William Bradley Roland (Brad Will), the U.S. journalist and camerman from New York City was shot and killed Friday the 27th.

Yesterday, Saturday, was a very tense day. With president Vicente Fox’s announcement that he was sending a force of Federal Preventive Police (PFP, the initials in Spanish) to restore order, the widespread expectation was that they would act to clear the encampments and the barricades. Nancy’’s theory was that if they came in daylight they would likely surround the Zócalo and give the protestors an opportunity to leave, but if they arrived at night they were coming to apply el mano duro (the hard hand) and it would be bloody. It seemed likely that after the terrible press the Ulises PRI State government got the day before, the first possibility was more likely because a massive blood-bath would be very bad publicity for the PAN federal government. The reports on the radio were that buses were on their way, already between Puebla and Oaxaca, with PFP contingents. Maybe they’’d be arriving by early or mid-afternoon.

So we went to the Zóócalo around noon. The usual vendors were practically all gone. A handful of tourists. A funeral ceremony for one of the victims of the Friday massacre. Not very many people compared to the massive crowds recently to be seen there. People fearful but determined to resist. The Popular Assembly Movement was not backing down, waiting, calling for strengthening the barricades. But the day, and the night, seem to have passed relatively quietly. And the item below, from La Jornada‘‘s late news posting reports arrest of two of the assassins. We can hope that the federal move is intended to curb Ulises, and that the PRI forces in the state will be deterred sufficiently for a non-bloody exit from the immediate crisis. Sorry I don’’t have time to translate the article now, but will post it on the Oaxaca Study-Action Group website later. That site is at .

Here’’s the item in Spanish: (at 3:50am Central Standard Time) (at 3:50am Central Standard Time) Detienen a 2 presuntos responsables de la muerte de camaróógrafo de EU 28/10/2006 15:12 Oaxaca, Oax. Este sáábado fueron detenidos dos presuntos responsables de ataques con armas de fuego contra una barricada en Santa Lucíía del Camino la tarde del viernes, y que causaron la muerte del camaróógrafo neoyorquino Bradley Roland Will. Se trata de Abel Santiago Zurita, regidor de Seguridad Púública, y Manuel Aguilar, jefe de personal del ayuntamiento de Santa Lucíía del Camino. El corresponsal acreditado por la agencia Indymedia e integrante de la ONG Asociacióón de Asesores de Derechos Humanos (segúún las credenciales que portaba) murióó cerca de las seis de la tarde del viernes a causa de dos impactos de R-15.

And here’s the report from Santa Lucia del Camino: Account of the Prííista attack in Santa Lucia del Camino in Oaxaca, Mexico Attacks across the city kill at least 4. NOTE: This account is not meant to be a complete account of the day, it is meant to be from the perspectives and experiences of two people in the midst of what can only be described as a battle in the streets of Santa Lucia, in Oaxaca. We know that other things happened in other neighborhoods, and that other things probably happened in our vicinity. This is our best effort at capturing the events that we experienced and witnessed. On Thursday night, Barricade Three in Santa Lucia del Camino set up a little earlier than normal. Reinforcing the barricades for Friday’’s day of action required more trucks and buses than usual. At times, it was a chaotic scene with camióón after camióón joining the barricade and people unsure of where they should go. Eventually things calmed down. Many more people than usual guarded the barricade and the tranquility of the night had many regulars taking time to lie down, if not sleep. As day broke, the barricade took on the feel of a community holiday or small block party with small children running about. At what felt like an informal pot-luck, people brought tortillas and beans, sandwiches, bread, and arroz con leche.

Most chose to not cover their faces, despite this being a regular practice at the barricades. Up to this point, the only ““contentious”” moment was the permitted approached of a chicken truck that surprised several people. Sudenly, about a dozen people started shouting, donning masks, picking up Molotov cocktails (known as bombas Molotov) and cohetes (large bottle rockets typically shit out of PVC pipes the people call bazookas), and collecting rocks and sticks. A small group moved forward to see why a truck that was part of the barricade (about 200 feet away) was moving and investigate a commotion on the other side of that barricade. After advancing about 100 feet, the group spotted 150 to 200 Prííistas (supporters of the authoritarian PRI party that ruled Mexico for 70 years and currently ““rule”” the state of Oaxaca) marching toward the barricade.

The cohetes were fired into the air to warn the Prííistas not to approach. The warning was ignored. The tiny group of defenders fell back to the barricade and gathered more supplies. It was a chaotic situation. Prioritizing in the moment, a split second decision was made to leave our bags, in part because rocks from the Prííistas were already falling where our bags lay. As we sprinted down side streets to the closest barricade, there were shouts for children to go inside their homes to safety.

At the next barricade, people were banging on poles and railing to sound the alarm and rally the neighborhood to fight the Prííista advance. People came out of their homes and armed themselves with sticks, machetes, metal poles, cohetes and rocks. Once a fairly large crowd had gathered several people started shouting ““Vamos, compaññerQos, Vamos!”” (Let’’s go) and ““Avanza!”” (advance). People began advancing to the fallen barricade and the Prííistas, spreading out along the width of the four-lane highway, it’’s median, and sidewalks. Both sides fired their cohetes, and as we drew nearer rocks started flying from both sides. We pushed the Prííistas back passed the remnants of the now disassembled barricade. There was a lull of about thirty seconds as we populated the area around the barricade before many decided to chase the still-visible Prííistas only about 100 feet away from us.

Though most of them retreated faster than we advanced, one unlucky Prííistas was forced to choose his own safety and well-being over that of his fancy SUV. The look of regret was visible on his face as rocks crashed to the ground around him and he turned and ran. The SUV, lacking a license plate, briefly became the target instead of the retreating Prííistas. Tires slashed, windows smashed, someone decided to ensure that it was beyond use and set it ablaze. While some focused their attention on the SUV, some continued to chase the Prííistas. Most Prííistas had scattered into nearby homes and businesses, so people re-grouped back at the barricade. As we all clustered in the intersection, the two of us looked around and estimated that there were at least 500 people ready to defend their neighborhood.

We were both amazed by what we were seeing. Neither of us had ever witnessed such an incredible display of collective self-defense. We both nearly cried at the inspiring sight of people successfully working together to ward off aggression without centralized leadership. The barricade reclaimed, sandbags replaced, and the Prííistas pushed back, the battle appeared for a few moments, to be over.

We’’re unsure as to the exact reason for the second advance, but we believe that Prííistas were again spotted at the next intersection where they had scattered minutes before. As we cautiously advanced, walking in cover when possible, shots were heard from the intersection and everyone ducked or ran for cover. Many corporate news outlets, most notably those relying on AP ““reporter”” Rebeca Romero (widely believed to be on Ulises Ruiz’’s payroll), have claimed it was ““unclear”” as to who shot first. It was the Prííistas. From the ground, on the receiving end of the gunfire, there is no doubt as to who shot first. There is nothing ““unclear”” about it. It was the Prííistas, shown by El Universal photos and local television to be armed to the teeth, who shot first. After the shooting stopped, the group moved quickly to the other side of the road and to the corner where the shots had originated from.

The attacking Prííistas had retreated back away from the highway and deeper into the neighborhood. Fifty to 100 people slowly advanced north a block into the neighborhood while 200 people gradually moved up, either by going north, or approaching it from the west by way of the barricade. Again the group moved north, taking cover by vehicles parked along the street. In addition to shooters at the far end of the street, more Prííistas were taking cover inside a building along the street. The building was targeted with Molotovs, rocks, bricks, and cohetes. Someone kicked the door in before Prííistas down the street started shooting again and we had to retreat back to the end of the block. This gave the Prííistas time to close and blockade the door. A few attempts with similar results gave way to milling about, as we waited for reinforcements. One block west towards the barricade, about 100 people had gathered to take cover from additional Prííistas on that street. Soon we heard a truck roar to life and a few minutes later, compaññeros in a dump truck came to provide shielding for another advance. In the first such advance, the truck went too far down the road, shooting started again, at which point we fell back to the end of the block. Most waited there while the truck maneuvered itself horizontally across the street in front of the gate of the targeted building. Once the truck was ready, another advance began and the truck smashed open the gate. Another round of shooting began, and again everyone took cover and began to withdraw.

At this point, Brad Will, an Indymedia reporter from New York, was shot in the abdomen as he was filming. Many people ran to carry him around the block and down the street. As we waited for a car to arrive to take him to the hospital, efforts were made to keep him conscious and breathing, including CPR. As Brad showed signs of consciousness and movement, the crowd surrounding him cheered. He was carried into a car and driven to the hospital. Moments later, as people were still taking in what happened, it started to rain. People gathered up the Molotovs and cohetes and got them out of the rain. About a half hour later, people started to gradually head back to the barricade. When we arrived at the barricade, we learned from a teary-eyed compaññero that Brad had died on his way to the hospital. People from APPO such as Flavo Sosa arrived at the scene and were attempting to coordinate with the rest of the city where there had been other attacks. Hundreds of bottles were being filled and prepared as Molotov cocktails.

Thanks to the help of several compaññeras, we recovered one of our bags; though the other which contained a passport, several forms of id, travelers checks, over $1,000 pesos (most of which was intended to be used for the barricade), a video camera, is gone and was presumably stolen by the Prííistas. Hundreds remained at the barricade for the night. The two of us went to a compaññero’’s house to rest, write and watch the news. As of this writing, the Prííistas have set up their own barricades within the neighborhood, APPO has activated the mobile brigades, 4 or 5 people have died, dozens injured, and barricade 3 remains up, reinforced, and alert. Among the attackers were local municipal police (such as Abel Santiago Záárate and Juan Carlos Soriano Velasco) and politicians/PRI thugs (such Manuel Aguilar and Pedro Carmona, the man identified as Brad Will’’s killer), all from the neighborhood. Though the two of us had slightly differing expectations of how the day would pan out, neither of us expected an attack of this kind or magnitude in broad daylight. The diversity of people who fought the Prííista attackers was astounding. We saw young kids helping to gather cohetes and Molotovs.

We saw old women armed with rocks making their way to the front. We saw people wearing circle As, hammer and sickles, and people who didn’’t wear their political identity on their sleeves. In the end, it didn’’t matter who you were, only what side you stood on. La lucha sigue; the struggle continues. ““Tenemos dos manos y un corazóón para luchar.”” ““We have two hands and a heart to struggle.”” –CIPO-RFM Two Poggers in Oaxaca PS We didn’’t know Brad before meeting him here in Oaxaca, and wish to direct you to accounts of his life that are better than anything we would be able to write. Our thoughts go to his family, friends, and loved ones. Our thoughts and prayers also go out to the dead and wounded whose names we do not know and whose fates we did not witness.
_______________________________________________ All comments and criticisms are welcome.
george.salzman@umb.edu

Rouge Forum Update: Oaxaca and Detroit

Dear Friends,

Save the date, the first weekend in March for the Rouge Forum Conference in Detroit.

The Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil web page is updated.

See also the developing scandal around NCLB’s Reading First program, briefly described on Susan Ohanian’s web page here.

The situation with the Detroit Teachers’ Strike is “on hold.” The tentative agreement may or may not be ratified and, if the district loses what may be 20,000 students, the TA will probably be torn up anyway, and, without a fightback, there will be hundreds, maybe more than one thousand, school worker layoffs. Several opposition groups have formed to oppose the existing DFT leadership, and one of them may succeed.

Our focus this week is on Oaxaca, which is nearly completely blocked out in the mainstream press. While the action urged at the close is little enough, and seems almost like a hollow gesture, it is something. People could get union locals, community groups, etc, to take similar action.

There is a lot to be learned from Oaxaca, which may be the reason why it goes unnoticed in the press.

Thanks to Gil, Phil, Nancy, Amber, Shandra, Sharon A, Dave the Rave, Tommie Lee, Candace, Bob A, Lannie, and Gonzo.

best, r

From Sherry Linkon,

I’m forwarding two messages about the situation in Oaxaca, Mexico, from David Johnson and Bill Templer:

Bill sends this:

Here a message from Oaxaca, George Salzman, who is there, at the teachers’ encampment Bill

//////

Oaxaca, Saturday 30 September 2006

Friends,

I do not know whether this is only another of the many threats or whether the government has become so desperate that it is about to begin a bloody assault in an attempt to terrorize the people of Mexico into submission. The message that follows below, from Alvaro Ricárdez Scherenberg, is not the first urgent note from him. A few nights ago he reported receiving word from important people in Mexico City that the police were set to clear the Oaxaca City center (meaning to drive out all the protestors camping there) in the early hours of the following morning. That did not happen. However, what he reports below I also witnessed. Two military helicopters repeatedly circled the city. I took pictures but have not yet downloaded them to my computer.

Two days ago I talked with a woman teacher at an encampment set up to protect one of the radio stations that the movement controls. At that planton (guard camp), she told me, all the campers were teachers, all were indigenous of two groups, Zapotecs from the Sierra Juarez (in the northern Sierra), where she was from, and Mixtecas from the Mixteca Alta region to the northwest of Oaxaca City. I told her I was worried that the government might launch an attack, to which she replied that if it came to that, she and her companeros would all die. I assure you they want a peaceful resolution, and that it is the government that is trying to provoke violence. I hope we can spread the word outside of Mexico sufficiently to help deter the government from following such a bloody course. The psychological attacks are bad enough, but if they start heavy-duty shooting it’ll be a terrible bloodbath.

George

***

From: Alvaro Ricárdez Scherenberg Sat, 30 Sep 2006

It is very important to send mails to all your contacts saying that at exactly at 4:50 minutes Saturday afternoon , September the 30th, helicopters from the Mexican Marine Corps and the PFP (Federal Preventive Police), started overflying downtown Oaxaca, Mexico, trying to intimidate its citizens revolting against its corrupt Government. On the Oaxacan Peoples Popular Assembly (APPO) radio, it was asked to all citizens to remain calm, not to start violence and to send phone, mail and voice messages to all authorities and people who could act as witnesses to this attack. So please, do it!

David sends this:
URGENT SOLIDARITY CALL FOR OAXACA

At the federal level in Mexico, the current discourse signals an imminent arrival of Federal Police Forces in Oaxaca. The feds claim that, if federal forces are sent to Oaxaca, they will only maintain a presence on the outskirts of the city, to “ensure civilian safety.” However, it is widely known that local PRI-sympathizing groups can be mobilized to provoke a confrontation with the sectors of civil society participating in the popular movement, which would justify the entrance of the federal police.

If the federal police enter Oaxaca, it will be a blood bath…

Please call or send faxes and emails to President Fox and to Secretary of Interior Affairs, Carlos Abascal, demanding the immediate withdrawal of threats to send police forces into Oaxaca, and the immediate resignation of Oaxacan governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. Write in Spanish. Write in English. Just write, or call, or both.

Get down to your local Mexican consulate or embassy. Make a lot of noise. Spend the night out front if you have to.

President Vicente Fox:
Email: vicente.fox.quesadda@presidencia.gob.mx
Fax: 011-52-55-52-77-23-76
Phone: 011-52-55-27-89-11-00

Sec. of Internal Affairs, Carlos Abascal
Tel: 011-52-55-50-93-34-00
Email: cabascal@segob.gob.mx

Rouge Forum Update: Rouge Forum Conference, Detroit, First Weekend in March! Remember.

Dear Friends,

Rouge Forum Conference, Detroit, First Weekend in March! Remember.

The Rouge Forum No Blood For Oil web page is up to date, with key articles from Robert Fisk, Sy Hersh, and others.

Take note of the color anti-war posters available at cost. And, this week marks the beginning of the many actions to Declare Peace. Check here for your city here.

And, of special interest is this video on military recruiting.

And this classic, repeated by request, of George Carlin on how America works.

OAXACA COMMUNE ALERT: The governor of Oaxaca, whose resignation has been demanded by the massive social uprising initiated by school workers there, has ordered schools to open on Monday. He plans to recruit retired teachers and scabs. Thousands of teachers from Oaxaca are now marching on Mexico City, while others hold their radio station, defending their means of communication. Clear splits have appeared within this struggle, between union leaders who merely want to replace the governor on one side, and radicals and others who seek to fundamentally change an exploitative social order on the other. The federal government has warned they will unleash troops on the strikers.

Oaxaca Communards have carried their struggle, similar in many ways to the Detroit Teachers’ Strike, much farther than nearly anyone expected, demonstrating the Rouge Forum thesis that school workers can initiate social change, if not fully carry it through. The Oaxacans have set up their own communications systems, run the traffic, carried on their own internal education campaigns, fought the police and federal goon squads, deepened already close ties with parents and kids because this fight is truly an all-for-one, one-for-all battle, and, whether this long struggle wins or not, the lessons to be learned from this heroism will be invaluable to educators everywhere. NarcoNews has the best site on this fight, so far. Like the Detroit Strike, it is largely blacked out in mainstream media, even though it has involved hundreds of thousands of people. This is a warning to the militants of Oaxaca, about arriving national trade union sellouts from the US.

DETROIT STRIKE UPDATE: While the DFT sellout of the courageous strike of rank and file educators may be ratified, there is a growing chance that the deal may not be the deal, or that the rank and file will need, because of circumstances, to vote the tentative agreement down. Days after the TA was announced, the Detroit Public School bosses revealed there is a 25,000 student shortfall in attendance, about 16,000 more than projected. DPS claimed to project 123,000 students this year. Predictably, they blamed the shortfall on the teachers. At about $7500 per kid in lost state monies, the district is in real jeopardy.

The 25000 figure may be exaggerated, or it may exist because DPS deliberately lied about attendance figures in the past, but even if the loss is, say, just 16,000, it would be a crippling blow to DPS, and it could put the TA in jeopardy as it would mean a massive layoff.
Here is a piece wrapping up the Detroit Strike as of Friday past.

Rouge Forum Update

Hold the date for the first weekend in March for the Rouge Forum Conference in Detroit. Details to follow.

The battles in Oaxaca, Mexico, initiated by educators’s struggles continue today. The best source is NarcoNews.com

The Rouge Forum was one of the first signers for the We Declare Peace movement. Events are on for this week all over the US. In San Diego, one of many events is a mass demonstration from 4-7p.m. on Monday, September 25, Horton Plaza.

A friend, Bill McDannel, initiated his own walk to end the war, from Lakeside, Ca., to Washington DC, starting on November 4. You can track his hike, and maybe fix him dinner, on his site.

The Detroit Teachers’ Strike of 2006 appears to be at an end, a tragic sellout by the leadership of the Detroit Federation of Teachers. Though the tentative deal must still be voted by the membership, it is very hard to pull teachers, who already conducted a two week strike, out of school again. An analysis is here.

The choice of democracy and equality, or barbarism, is especially stark in Michigan, tailspinning behind the auto industry. Those curious about the collateral wreck of the United Auto Workers might check here.

We are preparing informal discussion groups among teachers, students, and parents, in San Diego to address the question of how we link imperial wars, high-stakes standardized tests, curricula regimentation, and the militarization of schools. Interested? Email:rgibson@pipeline.com

The Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil web site is updated. Check out those great posters for upcoming demonstrations, and classroom use too!

Detroit: Monstrous Sellout in the Works Tomorrow

Rich Gibson on the Detroit teachers strike:

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

The leadership of the Detroit Federation of Teachers (AFT) engaged in a systematic effort to demolish the strike which the DFT rank and file made possible.

Now, after two and one half weeks of heroic efforts by school workers who defied court orders, the Governor and Mayor, and attacks from the city’s mainstream press, the union bureaucrats announced a tentative agreement (TA) with “Non-wage concessions.” There is no such thing as a non-wage concession, that’s a terrible lie; all things are interrelated in a contract, but read the Detroit News report (below) for yourself.

The package the DFT bosses have accepted, and hope to ram down the throats of the teachers, is in essence the same package that could have easily been accepted before the strike began. It is very close to the sellout that I predicted in Counterpunch two weeks ago.

Just as the AFT has worked hard with the Business Roundtable and the US Chambers of Commerce to organize the racist decay of urban education all over the US, and has backed the high-stakes standardized tests that now propel that wreckage, so the DFT is working closely with Detroit Democratic party elites, who have controlled the city for decades, and economic powers in the Detroit City Club, to systematically ruin kids’ education in a city where much of schooling is simply pre-prison and pre-military training. Once, Detroit was the finest education system in the US.

What did the DFT do to prepare for this strike, which was easy to foresee? Nothing, but they did buy a $5 million building, in 2006, while thousands of their members were being laid off.

This has been a vicious struggle, though the battle is veiled by (probably true) claims of civility between the DFT bosses and the Administration.

Principals were instructed to make enemies lists of activist teachers, and have done so. The press threatened teachers with bad MEAP scores (the state test that measures race and parental income) as MEAP time is soon. DFT supports high-stakes testing, and says nothing about the layoffs that are attached to the scores. Honest and brave educators were urged to picket empty buildings, wearing them down, while they could have been walking door to door with talking points about the strike. The vaunted power of the Michigan AFL-CIO, the UAW, and the Michigan Education Association (which represents the suburbs) did nothing at all when, with a single stroke, they could have shut down “Union Town” for a day, and won the strike.

At base, elites from all sides, the Democrats (Granholm, Levin, Kilpatrick, etc), the rich, and the DFT, conspired to deal a near death blow to educators, parents and kids. Every branch of government operated as a weapon of wealth.

Public education in Detroit is truly balancing on a tight-rope. Yet the DFT is going to try to mislead school workers to focus on an upcoming vote to make change in their lives. The educators have already shown that the center of their power is at work, taking control of their workplaces, proving that the value in school is created collectively by the rank and file. The Democratic party has already shown their loyalties.

The DFT has a meeting scheduled tomorrow. One can only hope it gets out of hand, that the DFT bosses are thrown from the platform and the TA with them. That, however, requires organization and a system of communications, which only exists in fledgling form. The 1999 wildcat, though, was inspired by a similar move.

An injury to one really does just precede an injury to all. If this contract is ratified in Detroit, not only are other urban educators going to see it on their bargaining tables; it will become a model for the suburbs as well. If health benefits are eroded in Detroit, everyone else is sure to follow.

There are many lessons to be learned from the Detroit strike, particularly that the law pales in the face of direct action from masses of people who withdraw their labor and, on the other hand, that the leadership of the unions is simply another tier of opposition to the interests of not only kids, and parents, and all school workers, but reason itself.

And we can learn that justice demands organization, which is why the Rouge Forum was organized.

However, right now, it is critical that this criminal sellout not be allowed to stand, nor the people who created it.

Spread the word, please.

best r