India Engulfed in Red Banners as Workers Strike Back

Tens of millions of workers shut down the country in what is believed to be the largest labor action the world has seen.The working class of India struck back hard on Friday in a nationally coordinated labor action led by the Center of Indian Trade Unions. The historic work stoppage is by far the largest strike the country—and possibly the world—has ever seen, and reflects a high degree of class-conscious militancy on the subcontinent.

The workers’ demands include monetary controls to prevent inflation, universal social security coverage, a rise in the minimum wage, an end to pro-employer labor law amendments, an assured pension for the entire working population, and a ban on foreign ownership of the country’s strategic sectors, such as defense, insurance and railways. India’s broad and diverse communist movement took the lead in preparing the ground for the nationwide action.

The receptiveness of the people to the strike call reflects the burning rage and resentment of India’s highly exploited workforce. Indian workers have faced various attacks under the right-wing neoliberal coalition government led by Narendra Modi of the sectarian Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, including a recent overhaul that grants employers greater “flexibility” to hire and fire workers.

Organized and unorganized workers, family members, and youth from various sectors of the Indian economy—including mining, agriculture, electricity, public and private sectors, education, telecom, blue and white collar workers, among others—showed an unparalleled degree of unity across the nation from West Bengal to Uttar Pradesh, New Delhi, Mumbai, Assam, Kerala, Haryana, Punjab and beyond. Cities and public roads were completely shut down by workers who took the initiative in deploying the “bandh” tactic—calling in sick to work, picketing businesses or closing shops in solidarity with the strike, and physically blocking roads—despite the unions not calling for the bandh this year.

teleSUR takes a look at the unprecedented show of strength and unity represented by the historic all-India labor action of Sept. 2. http://www.telesurtv.net/english/index.html

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Rockford, September 7: Justice For Jovan: Pack The Courtroom

Call for Solidarity Actions with Standing Rock (#NoDAPL) September 3-17

https://itsgoingdown.org/call-solidarity-actions-nodapl-september-3rd-17th/

From NoDAPL Solidarity

Red Warrior Camp in partnership with the Camp of the Sacred Stones are putting out an official Call to Action for all allies to stand 
in solidarity with us. Please join the #NoDAPL Global Weeks of Solidarity Action which will run from September 3rd through 17th.

Water is a necessity for all life. Water is life. Now is the time for all people from all walks of life to join together to stop the desecration and destruction of water, land and life! Please join our Indigenous led movement to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline by planning or joining an action near you!

For more information on targets for the week of action, or to join an action near you visitNoDaplSolidarity.org.

Contact Info:

Project Contact: Krystal Two Bulls
Organization: Red Warrior Camp
Voice Phone Number: (406) 740-1508
Email Address: RedWarriorCamp@gmail.com
Website: NoDAPLSolidarity.org
Social Media: facebook.com/RedWarriorCamp 
@RedWarriorCamp on Twitter
Hashtags: #NoDAPL #RevolutionaryUnity #RedWarriorCamp #SacredStoneCamp

Take Action:

We are calling for solidarity actions targeting:

  • The pipeline companies trying to build the Dakota Access Pipeline
  • The financial institutions that are lending the money to build the project

Join an existing action near you, or organize an action of your own.

Companies Behind DAPL

The Dakota Access Pipeline is a project being proposed by a collection of pipeline companies, with a complicated and intertwining structure:

  • Energy Transfer Partners owns a 45% stake in the project
  • Sunoco Logistics Partners owns a 30% stake
  • Phillips 66 owns a 25% stake.

Additionally, Enbridge Energy Partners is attempting to buy a 28% stake in the project and Marathon Petroleum Corp is attempting to buy a 9% stake. These companies are hoping to finalzye this deal by the end of September. We are calling on these companies to pull out of the project or to cancel it outright.

Banks Funding DAPL

The companies building DAPL were able to secure a $2.5 billion loan from a collection of banks to build the pipeline. But the pipeline companies can only access $1.1 billion of this loan until certain progress is made on the pipeline project. So we are calling on these lenders to cut off this line of credit to the pipeline companies and to stop funding the DAPL.

Three of the main lenders are Citigroup, TD Securities and Mizuho Bank.


Below is a map of some of the office locations of these targets. In addition to this map there are these resources:

TD Bank Branch Locations in the “United States”

TD Bank Branch Locations in “Canada”

Citibank Branch Locations

March on Labor Day & Help Raise Up the Vote with Voces!

   1027 S. 5th St.,
   Milwaukee, WI 53215 
Wednesday, August 31st, 2016
No membership meeting this Saturday

We won’t have a membership meeting this Saturday! Instead, we want to invite you to three very important events.

  1. March with us on Labor Day, next Monday September 5th! Click here to sign up. We will march with our fellow workers to resist anti-immigrant and anti-worker politicians, for respect on the job and the right to organize, and for a $15 minimum wage!
  2. We want to let you know that every day until Election Day (November 8th), we will be talking to people in the street and by phone to urge them to vote and help organize the vote. But we need your help! Click here to sign up to support these efforts!
  3. Finally, our annual gala is September 23rd! Tickets are $75 for members and $100 for non-members. Tables are still available for sponsorship. Join us to celebrate our movement and to keep supporting our fight. Click here for more information. Please call Nancy at (608) 358-0565 for tickets and to sponsor.

¡Sí se puede! See you in the struggle!

###

Voces De La Frontera

1027 South 5th Street
Milwaukee, WI 53204-1734
United States

Milwaukee, September 9 and 10: Prison Strike Solidarity

Events sponsored by the Milwaukee IWW, https://www.facebook.com/milwaukeeiww/

September 9: PrisonStrike Solidarity Picnic and Poets Milwaukee

Supporters of the Sept. 9 prison strike and the Dying to Live hunger strike will gather to celebrate and mobilize support for a large solidarity march to occur on Sep 10. See that here: https://www.facebook.com/events/296248610736328/

There will be a cookout in the park, poetry readings, speeches and opportunities to gather with like minded folks and get updates about historic prisoner action occurring across the country.

Poets include the following:
Anja Notanja Sieger
Ben Turk
Ceas the Man
Ed Werstein
Franklin KR Cline
Freesia McKee
Heidi Erickson
Indigo Jade Kastel
Margaret Rozga
Maria Elena Scott
Nina Szarka

#PrisonStrike, #EndPrisonSlavery, #SupportPrisonerResistance, #DyingToLiveWI


September 10: Rally Against Prison Slavery

“The walls of Jericho WILL FALL”

Prisoners have called for a national workstoppage and protest to begin on the 45th anniversary of the Attica Uprising.

In Wisconsin, prisoners started a protest against solitary confinement called Dying to Live in June, which has continued until this day.

We will protest the use of solitary confinement, protest prison slavery, and protest white supremacy in solidarity with both the Dying to Live hunger strikers, and prison rebels everywhere.

More details TBA soon!

More information also at: http://sfbayview.com/2016/08/sept-9-strike-against-prison-slavery-strike-against-white-supremacy/

And: http://peoplespowerassemblies.org/sept-9-2016-nationwide-prisoner-action/

An International Tribunal Declares the Impeachment of Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff an Illegitimate Coup

The grounds for it are baseless, and many of the legislators pushing it are themselves under indictment for serious crimes.
Azadeh Shahshahani

On July 19 and 20, I served as a juror for the International Tribunal for Democracy in Brazil, held in Rio de Janeiro. The tribunal was modeled on the Russell Tribunal, also known as the International War Crimes Tribunal, that put US foreign policy and military intervention in Vietnam on trial in the 1960s.

The tribunal was organized by Via Campesina International, the Brazil Popular Front, and the Brazilian Jurists Front for Democracy, and was supported by several academic and grassroots organizations, such as the Landless Workers Movement (MST).

The social movements in Brazil invited me and eight other jurors from various European and Latin American countries to analyze and render a judgment on what they described as a “break in the democratic process” and “a new type of coup.”

Only a few of the pro-impeachment deputies gave as their reason the “crimes” for which Rousseff was being impeached.

The tribunal was tasked with examining the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff that was unleashed in Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies. This past April, the anti-Rousseff forces secured the simple majority vote necessary to begin the impeachment process, with each deputy required to state his or her reason for their vote for or against impeachment. Tellingly, hardly any of the pro-impeachment deputies gave as their reason the “crimes” for which Rousseff was being impeached.

The Senate recently voted to go forward with the impeachment. Sometime in the next few days, the Senate is set to hold a final vote on whether to permanently remove Rousseff from office and install former Vice President Michel Temer until the 2018 election.

The official reason for impeachment—that Rousseff improperly moved funds from a federal bank to cover cash-flow shortfalls in government programs (all the funds were repaid to the federal bank)—is a practice that Brazilian presidents have used in the past and is not a crime. Rousseff has not been accused of any personal enrichment or of being connected with Brazil’s widespread political corruption.

Impeachment should require indisputable evidence of the commission of a crime by the president. As is clear from the wording of the Constitution, impeachable offenses are serious and are committed intentionally against legal interests directly linked to the structure of the Constitution and, consequently, the Brazilian state. The applicable law does not include budgetary accounting errors or funding shortfalls as impeachable crimes.

A recent report by the Public Prosecutor’s office found that Rousseff is not guilty of any crime.

A recent report by the Public Prosecutor’s office found that Rousseff is not guilty of any crime. In contrast, many of the pro-coup deputies are under indictment for political corruption which has engulfed about 60 percent of the members of the lower house. Temer himself, for example, is accused of accepting 1.5 million reals (about $430,000) in bribes from a construction company doing business with the Brazilian oil giant Petrobras. A series of leaked wiretap recordings have also revealed that some of Rousseff’s main rivals conspired with the Supreme Court to oust her and stall the corruption investigations.

In the proceedings for the tribunal, several witnesses were called for both sides. One witness, Professor Marcia Tiburi, described the misogynistic attacks on Rousseff, including various sexist depictions of her and the implicit condoning by right-wing lawmakers of the rape that she suffered when, as a leftist guerrilla in the early 1970s, she was captured by the military dictatorship and tortured.

Another witnesses testified that allowing the impeachment to succeed will be disastrous for Brazil’s working class, as Temer and his all-white-male cabinet have quickly moved to cut social programs championed by Rousseff and her Workers’ Party.

Based on the extensive evidence presented to us, we found that what is happening in Brazil is a conspiracy against democracy. Impeachment is being used for partisan purposes to depose a democratically elected leftist president. This is, in effect, a coup, and those who engineered it are guilty of massive corruption and grave crimes, and must be held to account.

Our panel of international jurists also unanimously found that the removal of Rousseff from office “violates all the principles of the democratic process and Brazilian constitutional order.”

This coup is an attempt by Brazil’s elite to regain power through non-electoral means and re-implement the neoliberal agenda. As one witness reminded us, whether a democratically elected president can continue her term should not depend on whether the majority in Congress are members of her party.

The US government’s stance on the coup, effectively supporting it, must also be condemned. This is similar to its position on Paraguay and Honduras, when similarly process-based coups overthrew democratically elected governments that were acting against the interests of the US government.

The world has witnessed what transpired in post-coup Honduras, where the militarized brutality of the regime drove many to flee for their lives and seek refuge in the United States. Several activists have been murdered, including Berta Cáceres.

In 2013, I met with Cáceres, who was living underground even at that time and was on a death list because of her work. This indigenous and environmental-rights activist was murdered by forces allied with the regime, at least one of whom was trained US Special Forces. Several other members of her group have since also been murdered.

Our delegation in 2013 documented massive electoral fraud and intimidation during the elections. The US ambassador called them “a festival of democracy.”

As was stated several times during the tribunal in Brazil, the impact of the coup there would not be limited to that country but would reverberate across Latin America and beyond. This coup must be defeated. As Americans, we must hold our elected officials accountable for their stance and their actions in this crucial moment.

Azadeh Shahshahani is legal and advocacy director with Project South and a past president of the National Lawyers Guild.

Copyright c 2016 The Nation. Reprinted with permission. May not be reprinted without permission. Distributed by Agence Global.

Madison, September 17: Black/Revolutionary/Socialist, Community Conversation with Monica Moorehead, Presidential Candidate for Workers World Party

Community meeting with Monica Moorehead, Workers World Party Presidential candidate

Villager Mall, Room A, 1-3 p.m.
2312 S Park St / Madison, WI 53713

Monica Moorehead has been an activist and organizer for more than four decades. Moorehead has long been a supporter of people’s struggles in Wisconsin including the 2011 people’s occupation of the state capitol in Madison to fight for union rights, the struggle for justice for Tony Robinson and Dontre Hamilton and others killed by cops, joining protests against the right-wing Bradley Foundation, supporting the latest Milwaukee rebellion by Black youth and defending Black Lives Matter organizations such as the Coalition For Justice and Young Gifted and Black. Moorehead and her Vice Presidential candidate Lamont Lilly are on the 2016 presidential ballot in Wisconsin.

A member of Workers World Party since 1975, Moorehead now sits on the Party’s national secretariat and is a managing editor of Workers World newspaper. She was WWP’s candidate for president of the United States in 1996 and 2000; in 1996 and 2016 she sought the nomination of the Peace & Freedom Party in California.

Born in Alabama during segregation, Moorehead became politically active as a teenager in Hampton, Va., distributing the Black Panther Party newspaper. She was banned from her high school band for refusing to play the racist song “Dixie.” A graduate of Hampton Institute [now University], Moorehead is a former kindergarten teacher.

She is a founding member of Millions for Mumia of the International Action Center—an anti-death-penalty project—and she co-chaired the historic May 7, 2000 rally of 6,000 people in Madison Square Garden Theater demanding freedom for political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.

Moorehead has written extensively on the prison-industrial complex and anti-racist issues. She co-authored “Mumia Speaks– An Interview with Mumia Abu-Jamal.” She wrote the pamphlet “South Africa—Which Road to Liberation?” and the essay “What Is a Nation?” in the book “A Voice from Harper’s Ferry.” She edited the 2007 book “Marxism, Reparations and the Black Freedom Struggle.”

She is a co-coordinator of the International Working Women’s Day Coalition in New York City. She is also an executive board member of the International Women’s Alliance—a global network of women organizers and women’s organizations that fight imperialism, racism, sexism and all forms of oppression.

Moorehead has represented Workers World Party on many international solidarity trips including South Africa, Iraq, Cuba, Nicaragua, North Korea, South Korea, France the Dominican Republic, the Philippines and the U.S. internal colonies of Puerto Rico and Hawai’i. From the movements against racism, police killings and mass incarceration; to the struggle against imperialist war and neocolonialism; to solidarity with Cuba, Palestine, Zimbabwe, the Philippines, the DPRK, and all peoples struggling for self-determination and sovereignty; to the struggles for women’s and LGBTQ liberation; to battles for union rights, disability rights, immigrants rights, environmental justice—from local struggles to international movements, Monica Moorehead has devoted her entire life to the great cause of building a better world.

vote4socialism-opg-meme-cant-vote-away-racism

Madison, September 17: 15th Annual Freedom Health Day

Join Freedom Inc. as we put on our 15th Annual Freedom Health Day this year on Saturday, September 17 from 8am – 5pm at Penn Park to build community and claim space at one of the most over policed neighborhood in Madison. Let us make our presence known! There will be free food, a 3v3 basketball tournament and for the first time, an all styles 2v2 dance battle.

5k Walk/Run:
$30 per person
$100 for a team of 4
$10 for seniors and youth (17 & under)
*For questions about the 5k, contact Zon Moua at mouazon@gmail.com

Basketball Tournament (3v3):
Registration Fee: Sliding Scale of $15 – $30
Registration Deadline: Saturday, September 10, 2016
First Place : Trophy & Medals
Second Place : Medals
Third Place : Medals
*For questions about basketball, contact Kayleb Hawj at khawj09@gmail.com

All Styles 1v1 Dance Battle
*For questions about the dance battle, contact Peyton Yang at zhonghmonguy@gmail.com

Check in and onsite registration begins at 8am at Penn Park. The walk/run will start promptly at 9am. Set up and check in for the sports tournament ends at 10:45am. The sports tournament will start at 11am.

Contact us:

Freedom Inc

www.freedom-inc.org

info@freedom-inc.org

Health Day Freedom Inc. September 17 2016