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NEWS & LETTERS, May 2002     

Feature: Readers' Views

TURNING THE U.S. INTO 'JUDGE, JURY AND EXECUTIONER' 

The question about whether the U.S. should be the "policeman of the world" was answered by George Bush by using the events of September 11 to turn the U.S. into the "judge, jury and executioner of the world." The present U.S. administration claims it has a God-given right to overthrow unsympathetic regimes or leaders, whether in Iraq or Venezuela, and to interfere in any country's internal affairs if they feel U.S. corporate interests might be jeopardized. "You are with us or you are against us" makes it simple to declare anybody guilty of harboring a terrorist. According to this theory, by harboring, training, and even decorating Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma bomber, the U.S. itself qualifies as a terrorist state.

Giorgio
Vancouver


Bush called for Sharon to voluntarily "show restraint" while he did everything possible to enable Sharon to continue his criminal blitzkrieg against the Palestinians. It reminded me of his calls for industry to "voluntarily" study the problem of worker safety while workers continue to get hurt by the thousands. Like with his father's "thousand points of light," there's as much "voluntarism" in corporate America and in Sharon alike as there is in a werewolf's hunger to devour everything in its path.

Hospital worker
California


The Catholic hierarchy took the position that the mission of their institution was more important than the lives sacrificed when a pedophile priest is moved to another parish.

Politically, it would be easy for the U.S. justice system to indict and convict criminal priests. But when the U.S. is on a mission like getting rid of Hussein, our government sacrifices untold lives to further it. If it is wrong for the Church to sacrifice lives for its aims, it's just as wrong for institutions like nations.

Jan
Chicago


In the April 20 demonstrations in D.C. that brought out tens of thousands, I liked that the issues were diverse—globalization of capital, Palestine, nuclear weapons, the School of the Americas and more. The demonstrators moved from signs and speeches about one issue to another, learning new things from each other and how the issues intersect. It stimulated people to feel we can accomplish something.

George
New York


TERROR IN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE

After what happened in Jenin, I thought it would replace Lidice as a horrible example of collective punishment. But when I reminded my brother, who lives in Tel Aviv, of  this, he forbade me to ever speak to him again on politics in Israel. What I wanted to know was how even a hundred suicide bombers could justify the destruction of the whole Jenin refugee camp, home of 14,000 Palestinian, killing hundreds of men, women and children. How can the so-called "civilized" Jews justify not letting ambulances take care of the wounded, cutting off water and electricity, and keeping hundreds of thousands of Palestinians locked for weeks under curfew? Bush keeps repeating the word "terror" as if it applied only to the Palestinians. He doesn't speak of the state terror committed by the Israelis.

Outraged Jew
Canada


The archives column in the April N&L, dealing with the past and present of the Palestinian situation, disclosed the unchanging terrorist character of Ariel Sharon. However, although Dunayevskaya declared that the world will never forget the horror of the Shatila massacre and Sharon's responsibility for it,  it would appear that too many Israelis did forget, or Sharon would not be in the position he holds today, betraying the grand vision of Israel's founders.

Old Radical
Detroit


I do not have any disagreement with what the April editorial said. My problem is with what was left unsaid. There was no critique of the suicide bombings.  These have for the most part been directed not at military targets in Israel, but at civilian populations—buses, a restaurant, shopping centers. A so-called culture of terror cannot represent any kind of emancipatory alternative. Yes, the main critique should be against Sharon, but to remain silent on these suicide attacks is wrong, in my view.

Teacher
Oregon


Many of Israel's actions were designed to humiliate the Palestinians. I read that they drew the star of David on the walls of houses in Ramallah with a number written in the center of the star. It made me only more determined than ever to fight against both imperialism and fundamentalism everywhere.

Supporter
California


I ran into a large group of pro-Palestinian demonstrators in Dearborn, home to many Middle Easterners, and had an impulse to stop and pass out the last issue of N&L. But I decided against it because the crowd was very emotional and the possibility of being attacked seemed very real. I was frustrated because I thought many would be receptive to the paper.

Subscriber
Detroit


Reading  Raya Dunayevskaya's 1982 "Stop the slaughter of the Palestinians" and then the editorial on "Israel-Palestine at boiling point," in the April issue showed how philosophy can give action a direction. Dunayevskaya's insight that "Begin-Sharon are out to destroy the very idea of Palestinian national self-determination" set the ground for the editorial in the same issue.

Terry Moon
Memphis


PUNISHING THE POOR

Some reality is needed to challenge Bush's lies and distortions regarding welfare. The whole emphasis on marriage as the solution to child poverty is built on a distortion. While it's true that statistics say children with both a mother and father do better, that's because those kinds of families usually have two incomes and thus more money. Statistics also show that children of single moms with good incomes do just as well as children from two-parent families. Of course, that's not the only thing wrong with Bush's punitive plan.

Women's Liberationist
Tennessee


LOSING OUR RIGHTS 

Attorney General Ashcroft's arrest of New York attorney Lynne F. Stewart is really frightening. A noted defender of unpopular criminal defendants, Stewart and her translator were charged with providing material support for terrorism by allegedly passing messages from a client who had been convicted of planning terrorist activities to his supporters. Ashcroft made up this nonsense after secretly taping their conversations in the client's jail cell.

After September 11, when the  government moved to deprive immigrants of any rights or civil liberties, U.S. citizens were not immediately affected. Now we had better realize that we have all lost the right to confidentiality with our attorneys. This harassment of attorneys can be the slippery slope to the loss of many more of our rights.

Scared
New York


John Alan's column in the April N&L was really interesting. Black culture did not just enrich the American culture. It enriched the idea of freedom. If it wasn't for the Black movement, white America wouldn't have all the civil rights they are now struggling to defend.

Iranian exile
Berkeley, Cal.


WORKERS' CONCERNS

At the end of your article on the "Piqueteros" in Argentina (March N&L)  one worker is quoted as saying that "everything is still divided, the movement hasn't yet united, we still go out only for our own individual battles." I thought of this when I read about how Chinese workers in Liaoyang, having been booted out of formerly state-enterprises that were converted to private enterprise, are organizing all laid-off workers across diverse industries as one unit. One worker says he doesn't have illusions that the demonstrations will necessarily produce jobs but wants to emphasize that "we exist and want work." They are struggling for something beyond only jobs.

American worker
California


Thanks for your support during our very successful Truth Tour in March. As you know, the struggle for dignity and fairness in the fields continues. We hope all who can will join us for a full day of action on Thursday, May 16, in Louisville, KY for the annual stockholders meeting of Tricon, Taco Bell's parent company. We plan to greet the shareholders in the morning, to educate them about Tricon's role in the continuing poverty and exploitation of Immokalee farmworkers and propose solutions they can take with them inside. In the afternoon we will be marching, singing, leafleting, and talking with folks at several Taco Bell restaurants in the Louisville area. We will conclude the day in a joint event with Kentucky Jobs with Justice. You can be back on the road by early evening. Email us at TBTruthtour@aol.com for specific details and directions and meet us in Louisville.

Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Florida


I know you don't often mention the Labor Party concept but campaign "finance reform" seems to require that it be considered. It is more than an abstract issue of constitutional rights, namely the First Amendment. Last September Oklahoma passed a "right-to-work" law, which was partially touted as limiting political contributions from unions to "liberal causes" such as PAC, abortion rights, and so forth. So far, the only effect of the "right-to-work" legislation is to keep public school teachers' salaries among the lowest in the U.S.

Allan Mui
Oklahoma


MULTIPLE HATE CRIMES

The beautiful murals on the Women's Building in San Francisco, which hosts several nonprofit activist groups,  were vandalized by being spray-painted with the words "Kill Arabs" in foot-long letters. The mural is a pastiche of famous women throughout history including Georgia O'Keeffe and Rigoberta Menchu. The original muralists invited the community to come help them begin repairs.

Women's liberationist
San Francisco


For the first time, the 1994 Hate Crimes Sentencing Enhancement Act is being applied to a case of violence based on sexual orientation. It is the only federal law that addresses violence against lesbians and gay men that takes place on federal property. It also increases the severity of the crime and allows for the introduction of additional types of evidence, including motive.

The anti-human side of this is that the Attorney General has stated that this law makes it easier to request the death penalty. It will be used against a man accused of killing two women hikers in the summer of 1996 in the Shenandoah National Park. The indictment states that Julianne Marie Williams and Laura Winans, both in their 20s, were intentionally targeted because of the man's hatred of women and homosexuals.

Suzanne Rose
North Carolina


HOMELESSNESS

The article on homelessness (N&L April 2002) took me on an imaginary trip. It's important to understand that even when you're out of work you have a full time job just surviving. It may look like you're trying to milk the system when you're trying to just survive. This writer is working hard but losing the fight.  I tended to look at homeless people as the result of a horrible system that makes people who are only a little better off their source of survival. You can't give money to everybody who asks without going broke. Those who are the most responsible for creating the situation don't ever have to run into these people. The problem is a lot deeper than just getting active to feed people.

David
California


ALTERNATIVES TO CAPITALISM

Activist-thinker (N&L April 2002) sees the left's problem as "knocking down the ruling ideology of capitalism." This is part of the problem. Having convincing alternatives is essential. But there are material difficulties which must be solved on both a theoretical and practical level as well. One of these was posed by Engels in his 1891 Introduction to Marx's THE CIVIL WAR IN FRANCE, where he described a class of professional politicians organized to "dominate and plunder" society. He saw this could only be bettered by measures proposed by the Paris Commune with delegates elected by "all concerned," subject to recall at any time and paid the same as ordinary workers.

Among the problems to overcome today are what to offer the large number who have a vested interest in the present system. Another is whether genuine democracy can start alongside the present system or whether it is necessary to "capture" the state machine to transform it. That takes us to questions of power and force, on which history has taught us much. Let's have readers' ideas on these questions.

R. F. Price
Melbourne, Australia


I wish N&L had more discussion of the way forces like the Zapatistas in Chiapas have sought to go beyond the traditional concept of the seizure of power. Political power is a corrupting force and history shows we have to avoid the tendency of radical projects to get sucked into it.

Latin American solidarity activist
Chicago


HARDT, NEGRI AND 'THE MULTITUDE'

I think the essay on Hardt and Negri in the April N&L was too kind to them. I find their work full of postmodernist jargon. What is the point of using words like "the multitude" to define mass struggles? It effaces the differences between different revolutionary subjects.

Activist
New York


Capital has invaded every aspect of everyday life and the struggle against it has become universal as well. That's why I find the concept of "the multitude" attractive. It gets us away from the old notion of there being one privileged revolutionary subject ("THE proletariat") without giving up on the working class.

Bob
Oakland


I've been wondering if books such as Empire could be used by Marxist dialecticians to put things in perspective in the world. Lenin, like any serious revolutionary,  often emphasized the need to read others to clarify one's own views. This time maybe the U.S. is the weakest link in the chain, as Lenin would say, opening the way to social revolution.

Revolutionary
Fremont, Cal.


There seems to be an assumption in Hardt and Negri's book that Marx was Eurocentric. How can they say that in light of all the work Marxist-Humanism has done over the past two decades to bring out the writings from Marx's last decade on Third World societies? Are they unaware of all this, or are they just pretending not to know?

Teacher
Indiana


The biggest problem with Negri and Hardt, in my view, is that they do not discuss the problem of the failed revolutions of the 20th century. In their eyes the revolutions succeeded simply by virtue of proving the power of "revolutionary subjectivity." But unless we confront the reasons for the failure of the 20th century revolutions to get beyond capital, we'll keep on repeating their mistakes. It's fine to sing paeans to "subjectivity"  but the key question remains—what happens AFTER the revolution?

P. W.
Illinois


WOMEN FIGHTING TERROR AND WAR

I must point out one error in the excellent Lead article on "Women fight terror and war in South Asia and the Middle East" (N&L March 2002). Current conditions in Afghanistan are not "beginning to wear away the confidence of Afghans in the ability of the interim government to move the country toward democracy" because people never had any confidence in that Northern Alliance-dominated, U.S.-imposed government. They experienced the same men in power prior to the Taliban and know them to be just as guilty of abusing the population. Women explain that is why many have not abandoned the burka. They don't feel safe. The Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) has consistently advised the world that the new government is not to be tolerated.

In addition to all the countries Maya Jhansi discussed, women's groups are active in combating the repression being imposed in the name of "fighting terrorism" further east. In the Philippines women's groups predominate in opposing the recent re-institution of U.S. troops in their country. In Aceh, Indonesia, women are very active in the independence movement and oppose the government's recent imposition of religious law and dress code police.

Women's Liberationist
New York


THE BRITISH SCENE

A thousand attended a socialist alliance conference here.  A revival in the unions would be welcome but it remains a defensive reaction. New ideas and new ways of doing things are long overdue. But the most reactionary ideas remain a powerful current as can be seen in the efforts here to generate a strong law and order debate. The main winners in this at the moment are the far right and the new-fascist groups.

Patrick
England


The Marxist-Humanists of the London Corresponding Committee were the only tendency at the Socialist Alliance conference connecting the question of organization to the abolition of capital and creation of a new society. The others did not even get beyond disaffiliation from New Labour and creation of a new organization! The conference raised more questions than answers, although the attendance of a thousand was reflective of the general resurgence in union struggle which has brought the connection of the unions to New Labour to the forefront.

Marxist-Humanist
England


HAVES AND HAVE-NOTS

This is how the World of Haves and Have-nots is divided.

The Haves: More necessities, more leisure time, more chance to go to any schools, more places to travel willingly.

The Have-Nots: Less necessities, virtually no leisure time, barely a chance to go to one school, barely allowed to stay where they are now.

Conclusion: The world has a recipe with the needed ingredients to set the world on fire literally and physically. The only question left is when?

George Wilfrid Smith Jr.
Chicago


Caught in a spiral of violence today are the civilians of the West Bank and Israel. The accelerating terrorism began one and a half years ago when Sharon, protected by his army, visited an Islamic mosque and provoked all the violence that followed. Yet where is there discussion of the fundamental causes of the clash—the vast disparity of daily living conditions between the haves and have-nots. It is not only between Israelis and Palestinians but throughout the whole Middle East between the rulers and the people. The class differences exist in all countries, yet the media focuses only on religious, racial or cultural differences.

Asian American
Los Angeles


PRISON VOICES

The Illinois Department of Corrections is so corrupt that I cannot figure out why the federal government does not touch them. Now they claim they cannot give prisoners raises on the details (jobs) they do, because of the state pay freeze. But if you look at the law, you will see that profits on sales from commissary stores are expended by the department for special benefit of committed persons, "which shall include but not be limited to the advancement of inmate payrolls." So how could any budget crisis stop the prisoners' pay increase when it has nothing to do with the state budget? I would like to read up on revolutionary history but have no funds for books. Thanks to the donor who paid for my sub to N&L I do know what is going on today.

Prisoner
Illinois


Editor's Note: All contributions to our special Donor's Fund are used to send N&L and requested copies of our pamphlets to prisoners who have no funds of their own. Can you help out?

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