Clarence Thomas, Longshore unionist: ‘Why workers must fight white supremacy’

By Monica Moorehead 
October 16, 2017

New York — Clarence Thomas, a retired rank-and-file member of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 10 in the Bay Area, Calif., spoke at an Oct. 10 Workers World Party political discussion here on “Why workers must fight white supremacy.”  Thomas was a founding member of the Million Worker March, a coalition of Black trade unionists from around the country who called for workers to speak in “our own name” and not as an appendage to the Democratic and Republican parties during the 2004 presidential election.

The MWM public call to action stated: “The time has come to mobilize working people for our own agenda. Let us end subservience to the power of the privileged few and their monopoly of the political process in America.”

At the Oct. 10 meeting, Thomas’ presentation focused on the struggle against white supremacy during the Great Depression of the 1930s, especially the heroic efforts made to bring Black workers into the ILWU, led by Harry Bridges, an Australian immigrant unionist. This was a revolutionary act since at the time most Black workers were forced to scab during strikes or else languish in low-wage jobs while locked out of all-white, closed-shop, skilled crafts unions.

Thomas also spoke about the heroic shutting down of West Coast docks since the 1980s, mainly on May Day, International Workers Day, in political solidarity with oppressed peoples’ struggles around the world. These work stoppages include against the apartheid regime of South Africa, the Zionist regime of Israel, police brutality and for the freedom of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.

Thomas stated that global capitalism exploits all workers, be they dockworkers, prisoners, migrants or NFL players. That is precisely why, he emphasized, that all workers must unite and resist a system that relies on white supremacy for its very existence.

To hear Thomas’ talk, go to youtu.be/fpKmxpYhKw8/

Milwaukee, October 21: Próximos pasos contra AB190 / Meeting: Next Steps against AB190

Hosted by Voces de la Frontera

ENGLISH BELOW

Junta comunitaria: próximos pasos en la lucha en contra de la ley antiinmigrante AB190/SB275
sábado, 21 de octubre, 2pm
Voces de la Frontera
1027 S 5th St en Milwaukee

Acompáñanos para planear los próximos pasos en nuestra lucha en contra de la propuesta de ley antiinmigrante AB190/SB275. La ley aumentaría los póderes de los empleados públicos, policías y alguaciles para averiguar el estatús migratorio, y lo haría mandatorio que los policías y alguaciles cumplan con las peticiones inconstitucionales de detención de ICE.

Platicaremos de nuestros esfuerzos para mandar tarjetas postales al gobernador, generar llamadas a los blancos legislativos y tomar otros pasos para derrotar esta propuesta de ley odiosa.

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Community meeting: Next steps in the fight against the anti-immigrant bill AB190 / SB275
Saturday, October 21, 2PM
Voces de la Frontera
1027 S 5th St in Milwaukee

Join us to plan the next steps in our fight against the anti-immigrant bill AB190 / SB275. The bill would expand the power of public employees, police and sheriffs to investigate immigration status, and would make it mandatory for police and sheriffs to comply with unconstitutional ICE detainer requests.

We will talk about our campaign to send postcards to the governor, generate calls to legislative targets, and take other steps to defeat this hateful bill.

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Photo: Joe Brusky

Milwaukee, October 30: ‎Building on the Queer Indigenous Movement in the Americas

UWM LGBT Resource Center

UW-Milwaukee LGBTQ Resource Center, 2 P.M. 

“Uniting to Resist Attacks on Our Land & Identities: Building on the Queer Indigenous Movement in the Americas”

Join us on Monday, October 30th for a presentation by Gaspar Sánchez.

In 2003, Gaspar Sánchez dropped out of the fifth grade and became a full-time member of COPINH (Consejo Cívico de Organizaciones Indígenas y Populares de Honduras), learning about its anti-patriarchal, anti-racist and anti-capitalist struggles from beloved founder and Indigenous feminist leader, Berta Cáceres. Since 2014 Sánchez has served on COPINH’s leadership team as the Sexual Diversity & Rights Equality Coordinator. COPINH is the first Indigenous organization in Latin America to establish LGBTQ issues as a pillar of its work. Sánchez also hosts a radio program, Los Colores de Wiphala, that discusses human rights with an emphasis on the LGBTQ community. He leads community trainings on Indigenous rights, territorial defense, and protecting Mother Nature’s common goods under siege by extractivist projects. He accompanies legal processes in support of Indigenous humans rights defenders and against state actors and corporations that have committed crimes in Lenca territories. Sánchez is a popular educator with COPINH’s Tomás García Formation School which works to shape the next generation of young Indigenous leadership. He also serves as a spiritual guide for the Lenca people in their collective efforts to recuperate historical memory through processes of life, land defense, and ancestral practices. Sánchez has represented COPINH all over the world from Mexico, Cuba, Venezuela, and Brazil, to the United States and the United Nations.

This event is Co-Sponsored by: UWM Department of Spanish and Portuguese and UWM Latin American, Caribbean, and U.S. Latinx Studies,Electa Quinney Institute at UW-MilwaukeeUWM Roberto Hernández CenterUniversity of WI-Milwaukee’s Center for International Education, and LGBT Studies.

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Milwaukee, October 24: No Cuts to Milwaukee Public Schools! We Will Not Be Silenced!

Hosted by Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association

MPS has a $20 million budget shortfall and is planning a pay freeze for all employees. We MUST stand together and demand the school board:

4:30pm – Dinner and prep at MTEA – 5130 W. Vliet
5:30pm – Pack the school board hearing

SAY YES TO
• Class sizes that enable teachers to connect one-on-one with each student
• Well-rounded curriculum at EVERY school with arts, phy. ed., and music
• A budget that honors the AGR Board Policy
• Full funding of a salary schedule and raises for educational assistants
• Steps and a cost of living increase for every MPS educator
• Increasing administrative fees for privately operated MPS charter schools 
• Raising the cost of leases on privately operated MPS charter schools

SAY NO TO
• Cuts to front-line educators
• Cuts to our students and classrooms
• Excessive use of no-bid contracts
• Additional layers of administration

We need a delegation of members from every building to attend!

RSVP here: http://mtea.weac.org/event/mps-board-meeting/

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November 9: Action for a World without Walls

Hosted by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

From Israel’s apartheid Wall on Palestinian land to the US Wall of Shame on indigenous land at the border with Mexico – Walls are monuments of expulsion, exclusion, oppression, discrimination and exploitation. As people affected by these walls and as movements that pose justice, freedom and equality as our tools to resolve the problems of this planet, we join the call for the 9th of November as a Global Day of Action for a World without Walls.

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