#noDAPL: Stop Dakota Pipeline Defend Standing Rock!​

GlobalWeeksofSolidarity090616

The following statement was released by Workers World Party 2016 Presidential Candidate Monica Moorehead and Vice Presidential Candidate Lamont Lilly on Sept. 3.

Representatives of some 300 Indigenous nations and their supporters have since Aug. 18 blocked the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, meant to be built under the Missouri, Mississippi and Big Sioux rivers in violation of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s federally protected rights. Despite violent police-orchestrated terror, including the use of dogs, the heroic resistance led by Indigenous people has only grown stronger, sparking national and international support.

A series of solidarity events under the banner of “#NoDAPL Global Weeks of Action” began on Sept. 3 and will continue through Sept. 17. See nodaplsolidarity.org.

We are in full solidarity with the magnificent struggle of thousands of Indigenous and non-Native people who are at Standing Rock, in what is now known as North Dakota, protecting the land and water against the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. They are protecting the Missouri River and the drinking water of millions against the brazen efforts of corporations and corrupt politicians to push through an unnecessary pipeline on the Standing Rock Sioux Nation’s treaty land and despite Standing Rock’s lack of consent.

Indigenous Nations throughout the Americas have been on the frontlines of environmental devastation for decades. It is long past time for everyone to respect Indigenous leadership, listen to Indigenous voices and stand with Indigenous peoples in their many struggles.

We respect and honor the sovereignty and right to self-determination of Standing Rock and all Native Nations. We fully recognize the necessity of their right to refuse consent for any development or exploitation of land and water in their territories, from Oak Flat to Mauna Kea. We are painfully conscious of the ongoing poverty and genocide experienced by Indigenous people both on and off reservations.

Protecting the water and insisting that water is a human right are issues key to our future. While many people now know about the drinking water crisis in Flint, Mich., we also note that more than a tenth of Native homes in the the U.S. do not have clean drinking water. In addition to the water crisis in some colonies like Puerto Rico, we are aware that it also exists in Black and farming communities, while thousands of poor people live in cities that are aggressively shutting off water due to exorbitant fees.

We acknowledge that all people in the U.S. today are living on Indigenous land. #NoDAPL and hundreds of other ongoing Indigenous struggles are as close to our hearts as the monumental struggles of Black people to defend their lives. Our solidarity with Native struggles is not newly born. Members of Workers World Party have supported freedom for Leonard Peltier, Wounded Knee in 1973, The Longest Walk, Big Mountain, the 1990 Mohawk blockade, the 1975 Menominee takeover, Indigenous Peoples’ Day struggles in many cities and much more. Our members also have a long and proud history of supporting anti-pipeline and anti-fracking struggles.

As Black people whose Elders were attacked by dogs during the times of slavery and the Civil Rights struggles, we condemn the despicable actions of private security companies hired by the corporations behind the Dakota Access Pipeline that unleashed dogs and pepper spray on peaceful Water Protectors, including children. We share outrage at the injustice of peaceful Water Protectors having their road access blockaded by police and cell phone service cut off, while being subject to police surveillance and arrest.

Finally, we call on all people who oppose corporate greed and destruction to take immediate action — locally and nationally — in support of the #NoDAPL Water Protectors and to follow Indigenous leadership to stop fracking and pipelines wherever they live. The rapacious corporate greed of capitalism can only be overturned by millions of people united in revolutionary struggle.

Mni Wiconi. Water Is Life.

Monica Moorehead (writing from Lenape Territory) and

Lamont Lilly (writing from Occoneechi Territory)

September 3, 2016, https://www.facebook.com/mooreheadlilly2016

In Wisconsin Voters Have a Choice to Vote for Socialist Presidential Candidate

WWP members and friends in Milwaukee, July 2016.

By Workers World Staff

Poor and working people in Wisconsin will have a choice in November to vote for socialist Presidential candidate Monica Moorehead and her Vice Presidential running mate Lamont Lilly of Workers World Party. The candidates were certified to be on the ballot by the Wisconsin Elections Commission as of Aug. 25.

Neither Donald Trump nor Hillary Clinton represent the people — both candidates and their parties are pro-war, anti-immigrant, anti-Black, anti-lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender-queer, anti-woman and anti-worker.

What a refreshing and much-needed contrast to have Moorehead as a choice, the only Black revolutionary socialist woman running for president. The candidate will be visiting the Midwest in September, making stops in Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin.

Moorehead and Lilly’s campaign is in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement; defends the Milwaukee Rebellion against cops murdering Black and Brown people; supports unions, other workers’ organizations, the LGBTQ community and women’s liberation; and fights for a socialist system that puts people before profits and nurtures the environment.

There is a climate in Wisconsin of unrelenting racist austerity created by Wall Street forces and their political servants, such as Gov. Scott Walker and Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett. Many gains that working-class and oppressed peoples won over the past 100 years have been eviscerated.

It was in this climate that members and friends of Workers World Party conducted a signature-gathering blitz from June 30 to July 10 in Milwaukee, Madison and other areas of the state.

Activists gathered over 3,700 signatures in working-class and oppressed communities, where they received warm responses to the Moorehead-Lilly 10-point program. Two thousand valid signatures are required to obtain ballot status for presidential candidates in Wisconsin. During the blitz, WWP members and others from organizations such as the Wisconsin Bail Out the People Movement, also supported a community conversation event where Lilly spoke; a protest at the right-wing Bradley Foundation; and a Red, Black and Queer slideshow at the LGBTQ community center.

The WWP candidates are also on the ballot in Utah and New Jersey.

WWP members and friends are now organizing for a Midwest tour by Moorehead that will include stops in Detroit and other Michigan cities, Sept. 8-13; Chicago, Sept. 15; Milwaukee. Sept. 16; and Madison, Sept. 17. All events are free and open to the public.

DETROIT: Saturday, Sept. 10, 5-8 p.m., candidate’s forum at 5920 Second Ave. http://bit.ly/2bR4dWH

CHICAGO: Visit facebook.com/ChicagoWWP.

MILWAUKEE: Friday, Sept. 16, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the African American Women’s Center (formerly Carpenters’ union hall), 3020 W. Vliet St. http://bit.ly/2bWjUqs

MADISON: Saturday, Sept. 17, 1-3 p.m. at the Villager Mall, Room A, 2312 S. Park St. http://bit.ly/2c7LioO

For more information: facebook.com/mooreheadlilly2016, workersworlddetroit.org, www.vote4socialism.org.

Administration at Long Island University Locks Out Faculty on Labor Day Weekend, Workers Need Support

The administration of Long Island University is marking Labor Day with an unprecedented lockout of full- and part-time faculty at its Brooklyn campus who have been engaged in a hard fight for a fair contract since spring.

LIU’s administration has told the hundreds of members of the Long Island University Faculty Federation (NYSUT/AFT) that they are barred from the university’s campus as of 12:01 a.m. this morning. Their pay is being stopped. And yesterday afternoon, they received notice that their health insurance will also be cut off this morning—with less than a day’s notice.

Tell LIU’s administration to end the lockout and bargain with our members now.

In labor history, lockouts are also known as “employer strikes.” LIU has chosen the weekend when Americans reflect on the importance of the labor movement to strike against LIU’s faculty—and against the 8,170 students on LIU’s Brooklyn campus. LIU plans to redeploy administrators and hired strikebreakers to teach these students when classes begin this week.

Tell LIU’s administration to let its faculty return to work, restore their pay and benefits, and settle a fair contract now.

In unity,
Jessica Rosenberg
LIUFF President

Action Alert: March with Voces On Labor Day!

Voces de la Frontera

Join us as we participate in Milwaukee’s proud tradition of marching on Labor Day! We’ll meet on Everett Street between 3rd and 4th Streets.

We’ll be marching with the Wisconsin Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals, whose members at St. Francis Hospital are currently negotiating a contract to keep good, family supporting jobs at the hospital and protect in-person translation. Solidarity!

Join us to say that immigrant rights are workers rights! See you on Labor Day!

What: Join Voces’ contingent in Milwaukee’s Labor Day March

When: Monday, September 5th, 10:30am assemble, 11am march

Where: Zeidler Union Square, Everett St. between 3rd and 4th Streets in Milwaukee (look for our banners)

More information: 414-469-9206

Despite Police & Private Security Attacks, Standing Rock Resistance Continues. Water Is Life!

NTLB North Texas Light Brigade action in solidarity with the Protectors at #SacredStoneCamp.

In support of the Standing Rock Reservation and the thousands standing up against construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), the American Indian Movement Of Central Texas (AIMCTX) hosted a demonstration in Dallas at the corporate headquarters of Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), owners of the company constructing the pipeline. As part of the event, the NTLB North Texas Light Brigade gathered at the offices of the petro-pipeline giant to do a lighting and projection, displaying the messages: #StopDAPL; #WaterIsLife; #StopETP; and ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS: #StopDAPL. Special thanks to the Backbone Campaign. Photos by Linda Cooke Frankie Orona, Ernest Jones, Erica Altes Cole, Cindy Freeling, Joseph Smith, Danna Miller Pyke, Pamela Young, Yolonda BlueHorse, Connie Koch, Leslie Harris, Kit Jones, Deborah Beltran

Selma Standing Rock

The state of North Dakota continues to paint indigenous peoples as aggressors, as violent, as expendable people undeserving of basic human rights. They have blockaded us in. They have taken our drinking water. They have taken our medical support. And today, their police stood by as Dakota Access private security maced and attacked men and women with trained dogs.

We are human beings, brought together to fight for our children’s futures and for Mother Earth. This is how corporate America and the government responded.

#StillHere #Resilient #Indigenous #NoDAPL #LoveWaterNotOil

Photo: Teko Alejo

Madison, September 5: Labor Fest

Join your union sisters and brothers and folks from all over the Madison area in celebrating workers on Labor Day!The People Brothers Band is headlining! Come out to dance, enjoy good food and beer, and visit with old and new friends. LaborFest ’16 also features a show by the Red Hot Horn Dawgs!

For the kids we’ll have face painting, a bounce house, a caricature artist, magic show and balloons.

Be a part of Solidarity Roll Call at 2pm! Bring a union poster/banner, or use our materials on site to make one.

As always, SCFL’s Community Services Committee will hold its Labor Day Collection to help students who are homeless in MMSD Transition Education Program. We are collecting deodorant, small bottles of laundry detergent, liquid body wash, shampoo, toothpaste, toothbrushes, hand/body lotion, and food gift cards. Find the collection box at the SCFL Table! Thank you!

If you are a local union or community organization and you’d like to have an informational table at the event, message South Central Federation of Labor for more info.

Milwaukee, September 5: Labor Fest

FREE and OPEN TO THE PUBLIC! Come celebrate Labor Day with those who created it: organized workers at the festival built with volunteers and donations. #LABORFESTMKEStarting with a parade at Carl Zeidler Square Wisconsin Union Memorial in Downtown Milwaukee featuring union affiliates, partners and allies (get ready to catch the candy thrown out of the trucks by the Teamsters!) at 11 am, the festival opens at noon at the Summerfest grounds with free entertainment all day long for the kids and family.

Featuring:
Classic Car show
Entertainment Shows for Children
Grappling (Wrestling)
Live Music
Food and Beverages available for purchase
Raffle tickets to win CASH PRIZES. Grand prize is a Brand New Harley-Davidson motorcycle union-made in MILWAUKEE!

We hope to see you Monday, September 5 as we celebrate our national DAY OFF together. And, if you think of it, please bring a pair of NEW SOCKS for those in need for our SOCK DRIVE for local charities and MPS schools.

Take care! IN SOLIDARITY,
The Milwaukee Area Labor Council, AFL-CIO