Category Archives: Rouge Forum Update

Rouge Forum Update (June 12, 2006)

brer1.gif[From R. Gibson]

Dear Friends,

The Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil web page is updated. The page is a nice re-design offering a remarkable look back at events since the formation of the Rouge Forum.

As the school year winds down we focus on social analysis and the resistance, connecting reason with power, while recognizing the discouraging emergence of fascism in the US and world-wide.

In the realm of analysis, note the CSPAN Q&A interview with our colleague, former UCSD professor Chalmers Johnson, author of the prescient Blowback and Sorrows of Empire. And, as an aside, here is one of Johnson’s pithy thoughts about retirement: “You no longer have to pretend that your colleagues are smart.”

The Taliban are making a comeback in Afghanistan where the US imposed regime of warlords is unable to travel outside of small areas of Kabul and the US defeat in Iraq, fought to a standstill by a non-existent military with no supply lines, no manufacturing base, and no sane leadership, is available for all to see—while sections of the Bush regime threaten to extend the debacle to Iran—and they eye those oil fields in Venezuela, potentially even richer than the Saudi Peninsula.

Heroic librarians are taking the lead in resisting FBI intrusions, something of a comment on the level of struggle.

In Japan, 350 teachers in Tokyo alone have openly resisted the conservative push to restore fascism in Japanese schools.

And, almost forgotten already, are the massive Mayday marches which showed, if nothing else, the incredible potential power of resistance coming from those at the shortest end of the stick in the US, and were, without much doubt, also the largest gatherings of people opposed to the Iraq invasion ever. Millions of people marched and the cops were simply set aside.

Wayne Ross’ web page has some terrific photos of past Rouge Forum events here

Your suggestions for the Rouge Forum www page, and future actions (conferences, the resurgence of the Rouge Forum News, a Speakers Bureau, etc) are always welcome.

Happy Summer! all the best,

r

Rouge Forum Update (May 30, 2006)

RF4.jpg
The Rouge Forum www page is updated but overdosed, closed for the remainder of the month because more than 25,000 people visited it, and that is well over the limit Earthlink offers us…..a good problem to have.

So, in the interim, we call attention to the Rouge Forum posters now for sale, below our cost, on ebay. Here is one link to a classic poster and we offer an original article by Mike Davis, “Vigilante Man” especially relevant for those addressing the immigration question in classrooms.

To report on our Rouge Forum Survey:

1. Most people asked for a redesign of the web page—we’re working on that and when school lets out we will complete the update.

2. Several people asked for more Rouge Forum Institutes, especially Summer Institutes like those in Detroit, Rochester, and Louisville, in the past. Costs and time prohibit a summer institute for 2006, but we are planning two for 2007.

3. One person suggested that we establish what she calls Rouge Forum Salons, monthly reading groups addressing something of interest to students, parents, and school workers—topics either chosen locally, or from suggestions from the steering committees.

4. One person suggested that we connect with the revitalized Students for a Democratic Society, and we’ll be happy to do that if someone out there has a direct connection.

5. One person suggested we convene a leadership meeting in the fall, or later on at AERA, which we plan to do—and will announce that soon.

6. Finally, one colleague suggested that we promote and engage in more and more direct action and civil disobedience, pressing for a summer of anti-war discontent.

If you have comments on these ideas, or suggestions/criticism of your own, we would appreciate hearing from you.

Rouge Forum Update (May 12, 2006)

picasso.jpg
Dear Friends,

This is the most frequently hit site on the Rouge Forum web site for May (14,131 hits): The Imperial Military, Its Limitless Enemies, and China—complete with a Picasso…Why is this site hit so often? Go figure.

A second article by Patrick Shannon (first was last week) on the NCLB.

Two significant pieces on immigration and capital, a longer one by the Sociologists Without Borders and a short, insightful, exchange on immigration and invasion.

Dick Cheney is planning to visit the lower left coast:

Dick Cheney will be in San Diego on Tuesday, May 23, to support Brian Bilbray at the Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina, 1380 Harbor Island Drive, San Diego, CA 92101

Event doors open at 10:15 am; come protest outside the hotel; some people will be there at 9:30 a.m. Please bring your signs of protest!

Public parking is limited on Harbor Island; come early. Paid parking is available at the airport, you can then walk across Harbor Drive directly toHarbor Island Drive.

As always, the Rouge Forum No Blood for Oil www site is updated at www.rougeforum.org and those posters are selling fast, on ebay.

Rouge Forum Update (May 14, 2006)

From Rich Gibson:

Dear Friends,

Responding to some suggestions from our recent survey:

The Rouge Forum web pages are under a complete reconstruction. Our education and testing pages are revised, as is the No Blood for Oil page, all much easier to read.

This week, we feature a piece by Patrick Shannon, the IRA Hall of Fame Speech on NCLB.

A California judge temporarily halted the use of high school exit exam scores to stop more than 47,000 kids from graduating from high school, while California kids just skipped out on the STAR tests.

In addition, we note that in California, Democrat activist Alan Bersin whose work as the superintendent of San Diego Schools rightly earned him the appellation, “fascist,” as he implemented a top down, test driven, utterly corrupt regime propelled by profits and nepotism (specifically, hundreds of thousands of dollars siphoned off to his pal, Tony Alvarado)—Bersin was appointed State Superintendent of Education by the Republican Governor, demonstrating the unity of the two parties.

When Bersin exited, the San Diego teachers’ union and many others applauded the arrival of a nice boss who promised to be kinder, gentler, more compassionate. Now the new boss has promised to implement a plan of closing access to high schools for kids who fail two middle school classes (a new border, in addition to test scores) and he laid off 216 support workers.

Here is a link to a review of the film Walkout, likely soon to be on HBO again, and a hot topic in schools.

And here is a link showing the ties between the Broad Foundation and the projected LA Schools takeover.

It promises to be quite a week ahead, with the potential militarization of the border at Mexico, the legal action against Karl Rove, the implications of the nationalization of Bolivian oil, and, School is Almost Out.

Next week we will report more on the Rouge Forum survey results, and circulate the survey again, so everyone has a full chance to respond. Meanwhile, comments and criticism welcome.

Anyone who happens on a stockpile of 200.000 AK 47s should NOT put them on ebay..

best r

Rouge Forum Update (May 9, 2006)

muertaalosfascistas.jpg
Dear Friends,

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

Please note we have several new posters for sale (and even a paypal account) at or below cost.

Of special interest is the opening of the film, Sir, No Sir!, a documentary on the GI’s opposed to the Vietnam wars. The web site contains a great deal of material school workers should find useful.

Mayday!

In a period when many educators and activists felt we were at a low ebb of education and activism, the people marching on Mayday have shown that the class struggle and class consciousness are always on, no matter how submerged it may seem. Indeed, many of us may need to rethink our viewpoints, as what has been submerged to us has been daily work life to others.

The Mayday marches involved millions of people. We marched because imperialism and the processes of capital made it necessary to fight back. Imperialism made life impossible in people’s homelands, and capitalism made life nearly impossible in the US. Treated worse than commodities, the mass of people marching face more problems at international borders than auto parts.

Despite the infinite problems of the marches, like the concession to US flags, most people in the marches knew that capitalism cannot solve the problems we face. Just as the US cannot win in Iraq, because Iraqis know the US troops are really their to rob them, yet the US cannot leave Iraq because it must have the oil and social control that Iraq represents, so the incessant drive for cheap labor, and to rule through divide and conquer maneuvers, will not be stopped by any of the bills in Congress. US bosses cannot live without cheap labor, and cannot live with the struggles cheap labor produces. Only the long struggle against capital itself, involving direct actions like on Mayday, can address our common crises.

Indeed, since Mayday is recognized in Mexico as an international workers’ holiday initiated by anarchists and communists in the US, most people on the marches knew of the political significance of the Mayday action. People marched as in a wildcat strike, against the directions of their sellout union and church leaders. And hundreds of thousands of marchers were, in fact, involved in what amounted to a massive general strike.

Moreover, the structure of the marches, including people of all ages, all job classifications, all nations, all races, all sexes, offer clues of how organizing for the future could be done—beyond the narrow confines of unionism.

The perplexing problems of how we get from what is, to what should be; from a society that is united via systems of communications, technology, production, and transportation, yet sharply divided by nation, race, and sex/gender—and at perpetual war—to a world where people can become reasonably free and creative in collective communities—the gap between one and the other is what we must seek to fill with education and action. We make our own histories.

With Mayday, and the coming of spring, we all may find some good cheer in the future. Look for extensive coverage in the hardcopy editions of Substance.

Survey Responses

We are still in the process of evaluating the survey responses that came in. In general, some people think we should focus even more on the connections of the wars, segregation, and schooling. Others felt we should focus more on the NCLB and the daily lives of education workers and students. One good bit of advice: The way we do fundraising will demonstrate how we envision a society of the future—and idea we are still grappling with.

In addition, several people asked that we re-initiate our Rouge Forum Institutes and to make the Rouge Forum News hard copy editions either annual or bi-annual publications.

We are also working on updating the look of our web page.

Volunteers to all that work are welcome.

IRA Censors Opposition to NCLB

Here is one key item taken from Susan Ohanian’s web page.

LA School Board Takeover and the Broad Foundation

San Diego Reader article

Whole Schooling Conference Portland, May 11

Many of us will be at the Whole Schooling Consortium Conference in Portland, Oregon.

All the best, r

Rouge Forum Update (May 1, 2006)

wilson.JPG.jpgFrom Rich G.:

Dear Friends,

March on Mayday! Walkout and Shut Down the Schools and Workplaces!

The massive “Immigration Rights Are Workers’ Rights” school and workplace walkouts scheduled for Mayday are under attack, from within and without. Labor bosses like SEIU’s Andy Stern, and Catholic Church prelates like the Bishop of L.A., are attacking the Mayday actions because they fear the power of what they see as “their” rank and file taking action. Radio DJ’s, really the filler between commercials, who helped organize the original actions, are now attacking us, promoting the Bishop’s line, “work is a gift from God,” when work as we know it is nothing but a curse of capitalism.

From the outside, school bosses are using the old carrot and stick maneuvers that typify their rule—threats of school expulsions or lockdowns, and claims that what happens inside school is far more important that what happens out of school on Mayday: fear and prizes. Nonsense. The more people who walkout of schools and workplaces (better than just not showing up, as it requires organization and solidarity), the less discipline will be handed out. Nobody’s “permanent record” will be hurt. Indeed, in ten years, we will all forget whatever silly punishment is delivered, and we will remember we walked out and marched.

The Immigration-worker rights marches are full of weaknesses, contradictions: it’s a movement that waves flags, yet rightly declares that workers’ interests know no borders. But it may be that the most significant thing that comes from this Mayday shutdown is to demonstrate, once again, that workers create everything of value, and that if we act together, we can control what we create. The idea of direct-action walkouts, wildcats, strikes, sit-downs, could spread.

Nothing is going on in schools or at work on Mayday that will match the learning experience that will occur from walkouts and the marches. If possible, set up a study session on Mayday, just to backup the direct action, to reflect on the historic experience of the revolutionary and radical moment. Here’s a link: May Day

Rouge Forum Mayday Report

As we approach what we hope will be the massive Mayday marches on Monday, the school walkouts and work site shutdowns, we want to update you on the Rouge Forum and ask for your ideas.

The Rouge Forum email list has 4,461 members, about the same number for the last four years. The Rouge Forum web pages attract about 22,500 people a month, so many that the page is routinely shut down at the end of each month as we exceed our allotted web traffic—a good problem to have. The list includes university profs, adjuncts, k12 teachers, parents, university, college, and community college students, high school students, industrial workers, retired people, community activists, NEA and AFT staff, UAW staff, and one middle school student (with parental permission). Interestingly, more than half of the RF web page visitors are from outside of the US, mostly from the old United Kingdom.

The list has been active for eight years. As we have taken positions on key issues (like the immigration workers’ rights marches, calls for direct action vs the oil wars, or efforts to shut down the high-stakes tests in schools) people have left the list, and about the same number sign on. To make a leap in logic with only anecdotal evidence, we think the list represents more and more sophisticated people, what marketeers call opinion makers—what we think of as leaders.

What makes the Rouge Forum distinctive is our insistence (without dogmatically adopting a single line) that class struggle is key to social change, and our vision of change toward a democratic, egalitarian world that offers everyone a chance to be reasonably free, creative, caring, and cooperative. In schools, we have consistently linked curricula regimentation, high-stakes testing, racism, and imperialist war, as folds in the same cloth of capitalism, which must be superceded.

The conditions for a just world exist today—in our levels of production, transportation, technology, and communications. What is necessary to social justice is a massive change of mind—a pedagogical issue—and direct action. We also need a shared ethic in order to hold ourselves and our leaders to the values we adopted at the outset. We need organization. No other organized group working directly in schools in the US holds these views–and there is nothing especially remarkable about our outlook, except that we have had the courage to make the sacrifices to say it.

The Rouge Forum has held six conferences since 1998. The largest was in Detroit, the smallest in Syracuse, New York. The style of the conferences varied, from the free flowing three days in Detroit, with few presentations and what amounted to a long chat, to the more structured sessions of later meetings. Perhaps above all, people at the conferences made lifelong friendships with others of similar views.

We are, predictably, broke—no money. But we never had any. We have made three fund-raising appeals over the years, raising less than $2000, but individual donations have made it possible to run the www page. We have had to curtail the hard-copy editions of the Rouge Forum News, but have kept the online editions going–a problem since the online editions get blocked in schools.

With this as background, it is well past time to call for your views at this critical juncture, when a rising social movement is about to meet a ruthless opposition dedicated to perpetual war.

Below are several questions we have posed to ourselves, and now to you:

What do you think will be the most critical issues the Rouge Forum should address in the next five years? Why? What should we do?

How do you think we can improve our communications? Would you be willing to urge others to join the weekly email list?

Would you attend an upcoming Rouge Forum Conference? Where should it be? Why? When? What should be the focal issues of the conference? What form should the conference take (semi-formal presentations, just a long conversation, etc.)?

Do you think some assertive fund-raising would defeat the spirit of the Rouge Forum? Do you have ideas on how we might raise money (say, for the RF News hard-copy editions) without becoming dedicated to raising money?

Would you be willing to help establish a Rouge Forum publishing venture (not for profit) to publish books and pocket sized pamphlets?

Please respond to Rich Gibson at rgibson@pipeline.com

Rouge Forum Update (April 22, 2006)

brer.gifDear Friends,

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

We focus, this week, on the mass actions, walkouts, strikes, boycotts, demonstrations, set for Mayday, the international workers’ holiday.

Our old colleague and friend, Jim Lafferty of the LA Lawyers’ Guild, has been busy defending those students who participated in the most recent mass school walkouts and boycotts.

But it has been the mass direct action of millions of people, marching collectively in the streets, that has demonstrated, if nothing else, the incredible potential power of working people whose interests know no borders. Despite the many clear weaknesses (nationalism in particular)of the immigration rights movement, the possibilities that rise from people taking charge of their own lives, in concert with others, reach far beyond the soldiering that makes up much of daily work and school life.

While leaders of the Catholic Church and labor bosses, like Andy Stern of the Service Employees International Union, attack the coming mass demonstrations and walkouts, it remains that the Mayday actions will happen without their approval—because they had little or nothing to do with organizing them in the first place. The mass actions could easily take on a life of their own, organizing from the ground up.

March on Mayday!

WHO WE ARE:

The Rouge Forum is a group of educators, students, and parents seeking a democratic society. We are concerned about questions like these: How can we teach against racism, national chauvinism and sexism in an increasingly authoritarian and undemocratic society? How can we gain enough real power to keep our ideals and still teach–or learn? Whose interests shall school serve in a society that is ever more unequal? We are both research and action oriented. We want to learn about equality, democracy and social justice as we simultaneously struggle to bring into practice our present understanding of what that is. We seek to build a caring inclusive community which understands that an injury to one is an injury to all. At the same time, our caring community is going to need to deal decisively with an opposition that is sometimes ruthless.

Rouge Forum Update (April 4, 2006)

warfor1.gifThe Rouge Forum No Blood For Oil web page is updated.

We have added a section on the current protests related to immigration “reform.” Here is one of many related pieces.

In these days of regimented curricula, high-stakes tests, and the sheer soldiering through the day that typifies much of schooling, closed schools, closed by social strife, are often better than open schools. And, to the converse, schools that are seized in the midst of social strife, as in the case of some universities in France now, may well offer lessons about real freedom schooling.

Those who want to “Save public education,” need to recognize that behind not-so-public education for “knowledge and the common good,” lies the force and violence of the cops who will be used, invariably, against poor and working class kids–trying to drive them back into the warrens that are called schools–forcing them back to be subjected by curricula and teaching methods that promote lies and obscurity–alienating kids so much from learning that they learn to believe it has nothing to do with them–a remarkable achievement of unpublic apartheid schools today.

Given the nature of the protests against racism and nationalism related to the many immigration bills, it must be underline that it is not possible to strip racism and nationalism from imperialism–and war—as many elites would like to do. The kids seem to recognize that, if their self appointed leaders do not.

The reason that poor and working people flood into the US is, in part, because US backed regimes in their home nations make life nearly impossible and, on the other hand, because low-wage employers in the US feed on them and draw them in, use them, then seek to kick them out, or to shift the burden of their needs onto other workers inside the US. The minor differences between the many “immigration” bills in Congress only serve specific interests among elites, ie, the growers’ interests, the meatpackers’ interests, some xenophobic nationalist interests, and the interests of the US military as well, desperate for bodies to fight its wars.

There is no way out of this dilemma under the system of capital, which requires nationalism, racism, imperialism and war. Nor is there any way out of the immigration dilemma for the US ruling class. Just as they are trapped in Iraq, unable to stay and win the war, unable to leave and leave the oil—and the social/political damage this debacle has created; so they are unable to deal with the reality of 12 million, or more, workers in the US, who have decided to not just stay, but fight back.

Despite the fact that these demonstrations are often misled by adults who seek to drive kids to church, the polls, or even the military, it remains that the youth have taken courageous, direct action—examples for all the rest of us who should be both inspired and shamed by their nerve in facing down ridiculous levels of police repression in order to stand up for their own, and others’ , dignity.

Many, many demonstrations are scheduled for the next few weeks. Depending on shifts in the law and congress, perhaps the biggest will be the mass walkout now set for May 1, Mayday, all over the world, perhaps rekindling the international communist holiday that it once was–dovetailing nicely with antiwar actions scheduled for the April 29th weekend.

Many Rouge Forum members will be at the AERA meeting in San Francisco this coming weekend. Come see us at the MASSEs SIG (Marxian Analysis of Schools, Society and Education).

best, r (apologies for an unusually long message this week)

Thanks to Phillip, Gil, Sean, David, Stephanie, Cal, Barry, Joe, Henry, Scott of the Flex Program, Candace, Hoffie, Annie, Tommie Lee, Marc and Bonnie, Beverly P., Sharon A., and Alcorn.

And a message from Susan Ohanian regarding Substance News:

Substance, the newspaper of the resistance, is in crisis. They did not receive a single new subscription last month and renewals are coming in slowly. George and Sharon Schmidt made a tremendous sacrifice in the name of standing up to test secrecy. We owe them a huge debt. As a result of their legal appeal, people have the right to publish test questions (not whole tests but some questions). This is extraordinary. Fighting this battle cost George, a high school English teacher, his
job. He is now blackballed in the entire Chicago area.

Substance cannot continue to publish without our support. The immediate need is money to pay the printer for the April issue. But there is an ongoing need for subscribers.

Do we want a voice of resistance or don’t we? A subscription for one year is $16.

Please send what you can. We cannot let our voices be silenced.

Substance
5132 Berteau Avenue
Chicago, IL 60641-1440

Susan Ohanian, National Resistance Editor

Rouge Forum Update (March 27, 2006)

From Rich Gibson:

Dear Friends,

A massive groundswell of people rose up in the past week, more than a million people marching in the streets from the Carolinas to Chicago to LA for the right to a decent job, a living, and a place to be–and in opposition to the nationalist movement in the US that seeks to make them, and all of us, unfree. Clearly, people are willing to take action, even in this repressive period. At issue is, in part, what kind of action, and toward what end?

We have endorsed the next scheduled action, April 10, as a day of leaving work, school, and the routines of daily life to demonstrate once again.

In addition, we have endorsed the April 29th world-wide demonstrations against the wars, which also dovetails nicely with Mayday.

Detroit Teachers wildcatted again this week, a one day sickout strike against layoffs and cuts in pay.

Here is a fine piece by our colleagues, the Research Unit for Political Economy in India, writing on the reasons for the latest US deals with the Indian ruling class, and the race for imperial control. These are the same folks who wrote, Behind the Invasion of Iraq.

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

Of particular interest is a piece by Chalmers Johnson, author of Sorrows Of Empire, on the crisis of the economy and the military budget and an example of mainstream US media coverage (60 Minutes) of the fizzled operations of the last months. CBS joins the psy-wars.

We note with some regret that Andrew Young, former civil rights activist, is now a Walmart Spokesperson. He appeared on the scene with courage and intelligence, goes out as a farce.

Rouge Forum Update (March 14, 2006)

From Rich Gibson:

A single focus this week: March in March.

There are dozens of marches scheduled throughout March, all opposing the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan, and in Latin America as well.

We identified the key action as March 18, the third anniversary of the now-failed invasion of Iraq. Thousands of people will be marching in cities large and small throughout the world. Join us!

It is possible a mass outpouring will open new possibilities to build a mass base against this and future wars–even to overcome the social relations that make them necessary.

We do not, however, wish to repeat the errors of the Vietnam anti-war movement whose Achilles’ heel was the failure to build a truly anti-racist movement, an integrated action-oriented class conscious mass of people crossing lines of race, sex/gender, and ability.

It follows that we urge integration–and direct action—in opposition to these wars which have the support of both major political parties in the US.

Here is a link to the updated Rouge Forum No Blood For Oil web page http://www.pipeline.com/~rgibson/noblood.html

The apparently timeless “Got War?” Rouge Forum Flyer and four posters available for downloading or free but for the cost of postage

“Shoot Moneybags Not People”

“No Workers’ Blood For Oil”

“US Out of the Middle East”

The Classic “Abolish ROTC!” poster