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NEWS & LETTERS, AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2003

Readers' Views

WAR, RESISTANCE & THE NEEDED ALTERNATIVE

The part of the Draft for Marxist-Humanist Perspectives printed in the July issue of N&L that spoke most strongly to me is the quote from the Constitution of News and Letters Committees on the opposition to war. The key is the phrase “to a man, woman and child control their own lives.” When we talk about the battle of ideas, we’re not talking about tenured professors doing battle with other tenured professors at international forums. We’re talking about the “man, woman and child” of the streets being able to argue those ideas. Intellectuals may think that ideas are for the learned. But as long as the ideas affect me, I want to have something to say about it. The unqualified man on the street cannot be treated as someone who has no responsibility to dig into dialectics.

N&LC Member, Bay Area


I agree on “the servility the mass media displays to the prevailing powers in this country.” I’m especially concerned about the radio companies like Clear Channel and Infiniti who have been buying up more and more stations and channels, which will then broadcast only conservative positions. Artists more and more will have to project only what the government leaders believe in order to get recording contracts. That’s how they will perform censorship.

P. Dan, Detroit


In its obvious thrust to achieve world hegemony, Mr. Bush managed to abrogate almost all international treaties regarding anti-ballistic missiles, nuclear testing, Kyoto, and on and on. Now they even want to develop smaller atom bombs to be used in front-line attacks. The U.S. has the greatest arsenal in the world of every kind of weapon and wouldn’t let the UN or any international body inspect or supervise it.

Correspondent, Canada


On this 100th anniversary of George Orwell's birth, everyone is getting to understand how “Orwellian language” works in 2003--“war is peace” and “occupation is liberation.”

Ron B., Oakland, CA


Some left-liberals accept the idea of the U.S. going into Iraq and taking Saddam out of power. They see it as a liberation. Christopher Hitchens broke with THE NATION over the Iraq war, saying the U.S. should take care of Hussein as if that would establish democracy.

Computer analyst, Memphis


If the U.S. really wanted to convince the Iraqis about democracy, they would have gotten Hussein’s sons alive and put them on trial. There wouldn’t have been any question of their identity, either.

Asian American, California


Some leftists make it sound as if they hate everything about American culture, including Americans, and then think they will be able to influence them! It amazes me.

Labor activist, Memphis


I would not have said “impotence in peace.” After all, the oil is flowing, but the water and electricity are not. That is deliberate. On the other hand, I couldn’t agree more that Bush’s contention that outside military intervention is the only way to liberate people is dangerous. The looming threat of Islamic fundamentalism taking over is especially not lost on the women who have a lot to lose in the most secular of Middle East countries.

Hospital worker, California


I thought the view of experts was that an anti-ballistic missile is totally useless in destroying the multiple warheads of any incoming missile or even to sort out which of the warheads are dummies and which one is actual. It’s obvious you can’t use anti-ballistic missiles against commercial airlines or people armed with box cutters or suicide bombers. The only reason I can see for going ahead with a renewed “Star Wars” project is to provide huge profits to Boeing, Raytheon and the other such beneficiaries of the industrial-military complex. Surely, people know that the millions they are throwing out the window would be better spent giving people half decent living conditions, lessening the reasons for terrorist activities.

Giorgio, Vancouver


I’m struck with how the principle, “to the barbarism of war, we pose the new society,” is key to the whole Perspectives. It opposes that to the ideological pollution that says people can’t free themselves but need the U.S. to do it for them. Spontaneous movements do look for organization and a set of ideas to guide them. One of the pitfalls of the 20th century was that shortcuts were always offered that stopped the revolutions short. In the Iranian revolution the ideology of Islamic fundamentalism took over and was able to present itself as the revolution in place of the activity of the masses. That’s why it’s so important to have a philosophy that projects a new society as growing out of the spontaneous forms so they can preserve their own significance.

Supporter, Tennessee


The most startling part of the Perspectives Draft was pointing out that the current military adventure is cheaper than during the height of the Cold War. Those arguing that we can’t afford this war, would be shocked by the fact that it’s kind of cheap. It means that the refutation of the war has to be at a deeper level. It’s true that terrorism and war are in a vicious circle and despite their mutual animosity they are reinforcing one another. A war has a way of making you choose sides, which most of the Left is doing.

Anti-war activist, California


One graduate student I know wasn’t happy about the $5 tax rebate on his check that he got the other day. He said sarcastically, “Oh this is really going to stimulate the economy!” Coming from a right-winger I thought it was significant.

Activist for patients rights, Memphis


THE INVINCIBILITY MYTH

The article by Raya Dunayevskaya on “The myth of the invincibility of totalitarianism” (June N&L) was a terrific bit of history but the question is whether it has any meaning for today. I think it has several layers of meaning. It certainly shows empirically, even if you are neither a Marxist, a humanist, nor a dialectician, that you would be wrong to deny the continuous possibility of human beings taking their lives into their own hands and trying to remake their world. That is important to grasp for those who have given up on social revolution, whether due to claims that the masses’ thinking is too confused by patriotism, consumerism, or whatever to be able to include the idea of an alternative.

The question of whether meaningful change comes only from the outside is also still being hotly debated. The issue Dunayevskaya presents is deeper than “don’t rely on any state power.” Who can you rely on when you don’t have the strength to win by yourself? Her ideas inform our political practice, such as our advocacy of “people to people” solidarity work with freedom fighters, from women in Afghanistan to students in Acheh. But even more we can see how Dunayevskaya’s writing on events such as the East German and Vorkuta revolts concretized theoretically such abstract concepts as continuous negation, self-movement from within, and transformation into opposite in her continuous development of philosophy as crucial to social transformation.

Anne Jaclard, New York


HISTORIC FREEDOM MARCH

Well over 10,000 people took part in a 40th anniversary “Walk to Freedom” here on June 28. They were marking the historic march for freedom that took place in 1963 when thousands marched down Woodward Ave. in Detroit with Martin Luther King Jr. That march had ended with King reading his first version of what became his famous “I have a dream” speech a few months later in Washington, D.C. After this year’s march, the president of the Detroit Branch of the NAACP, Rev. Wendell Anthony, said “We are here not just to march or dream. The problem comes when we march but have no destination. We have unfinished business in America.”

Many of us who marched had been there in 1963. It is noteworthy that there were a lot of politicians there, as well as workers from the Detroit Department of Transportation who were picketing against the mayor.

Still marching, Detroit


BLACK STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM

I just came across John Alan’s column in the July 2002 N&L titled “‘Racial Privacy’ Fraud” and want to commend him for his stand on the issue. We have little time left to mount an effective campaign to defeat the heinous lie of Ward Connerly’s “Racial Privacy Initiative.” Perhaps we can get the sides of city buses covered with signs that read “Connerly Code: Racial Privacy=Jim Crow Revived,” to redirect people’s fears in the proper direction. As Alan says, it isn’t about keeping government out of our private lives. It’s about keeping government from telling the public what it already knows it’s doing wrong. It’s about a Police State and everybody too scared to challenge its lies. Let’s look at where Connerly’s money comes from. Perhaps you can do another piece on that specifically?

Steve Greaves, San Rafael, CA


As a longtime activist, I remember well the Black nationalist movement which is making a resurgence today. To Black nationalism, everything in Africa is the “motherland” and it’s all good. It shows people don’t know their own history. Part of the new society we envision will have to have a confrontation with cultural relativism. It’s not as simple as thinking that the West is all bad and the rest is all good.

Black Christian feminist, Tennessee


Why do you capitalize “Blacks” to refer to African ancestry but do not capitalize “whites” to refer to European ancestry? Are “Blacks” superior to “whites”? Do you think that such reverse racism is helpful to organize the people here and now to defeat fascism?

Prisoner, Texas

Editor's note: It took a decades-long struggle by African Americans against the attempt of white racist America to render them invisible, before they succeeded in getting first Negro and then Black capitalized. For the history of this struggle, consult the work of Carter G. Woodson, the founder of Black History Month.


FIGHTING EXTREMISM

Eric Robert Rudolph is one of Uncle Sam’s ex-soldiers. It seems to me that when you are looking for someone who kills for right-wing causes you don’t have to look far. It seems as though all you have to do is look to some branch of the U.S. armed forces or somebody who has some dealing with law enforcement (FBI, DEA or even CIA) connections. The FBI we are told was looking for five years and spending who knows what trying to find Eric Robert Rudolph and came up empty-handed. Luckily for the government, a rookie deputy who was not complacent about his job finally caught the “good old boy.” It leaves me wondering whether this puts the rookie deputy on the KKK/neo-Nazi hit list?

Nouveau Toussaint, Illinois


Bush has now sent warships to Liberia, where rebels are trying to overthrow the murderous Liberian dictator Charles Taylor. Taylor is a business partner of the TV evangelist Pat Robertson, an extremist who would severely curtail freedom in the U.S. if he could and whose connections abroad have in the past included many repressive regimes. He tried to get the ban on Taylor lifted so the dictator could visit the U.S. He was also in business with Mobutu, the ruthless former-dictator of the old Zaire. In fact, Robertson has been deeply involved with repressive regimes around the globe. Wherever they are found, fundamentalists, whether Muslim or Christian or any other sort, are not known for respecting human rights. We need to oppose the Christian fundamentalists here as strongly as we oppose the fundamentalists in Muslim nations.

D.T., Louisiana


A small victory against the Bush administration’s decimation of our civil rights was won on July 22 when a federal judge dismissed the charge of supporting terrorism against lawyer Lynne Stewart. Attorney General John Ashcroft had publicly overseen Stewart’s arrest in April 2002 in the first case based on evidence obtained under Ashcroft’s new rule allowing the government to monitor jailhouse conversations between lawyers and their clients who may commit “future acts of violence or terrorism.” Her client, an Egyptian cleric convicted of plotting to blow up New York landmarks, was hardly allowed to speak to anyone but her. She was accused of aiding his efforts to send a message to his followers while visiting him in prison.

Federal District Judge John G. Koeltl called the charges unconstitutionally vague and ruled that the anti-terrorism statute could not apply to a lawyer doing her job. Charges that she lied and defrauded the government still stand. The U.S. has not announced whether it will appeal the dismissal of the more serious charges.

Observer, New York


SUPPORT REGIME CHANGE--DUMP BUSH

I wore my “Dump Bush” T-shirt all day today, and I can’t tell you how many stares I got, how many quizzical looks. I had maybe half a dozen people walk up to me and talk about the war. I directed those who wanted to buy one of the T-shirts to go your offices. I hope they follow up on that.

Chris, Chicago


CUBA--WHAT COMES AFTER

Despite the bourgeois media in the U.S. writing about “Castro’s revolution,” what should really be commemorated is the courage of the Cuban people who overthrew Batista and took history into their own hands. The fact that the revolution turned into its opposite and now wears the face of one man shouldn’t stop revolutionaries from saying that there is an alternative to the way things are, one that lies in masses in motion and not the authoritarian Party or cult of personality of Castro.

Brown Douglas, Memphis


I don’t agree with the Draft Perspectives printed in the July issue of N&L. I read an interview with Castro who said that Cuban hijackers, when they get to the U.S. get asylum, even with their weapons, and the U.S. arrests the innocent passengers. The three guys who were killed were tried under Cuban laws and executed. I may not agree with their laws, but Castro was just trying to protect his country from being invaded. The Draft Perspectives is a lot of over-analyzing and no solutions. What are we calling for the masses to do? Come to meetings?

Carlos, California


A group of Cuban women from different provinces have joined together to appeal for international solidarity with Martha Beatriz Roque Cabello and to pressure the Cuban authorities to release her from prison. She is an economist and was the only woman among the 75 oppositionist intellectuals sentenced to long terms a year ago. She is 58 and has not received the medical attention she needs. These women fear she may die in prison. Readers can email <a href="mailto:ilk@mail.interlog.com">ilk@mail.interlog.com</a> to get information on how to help them.

Supporter, Florida


WORKERS FIGHTING AGAINST CAPITALISM

Formal negotiations between the UAW and the Big 3 (GM, Ford and Daimler-Chrysler) are underway to replace the present contract due to expire Sept. 14. The biggest issues are a major push to force workers to pay more for their health care and to get concessions from the unions on flexibility in the work place (in other words, speed up in production) and more freedom to close plants. Unlike the more militant Canadian UAW which split from the American-dominated UAW years ago, the UAW here has consistently lost ground and will lose more with the new contract with its concessionary union policies. Rank-and-file sentiment is clearly opposed to the leadership. Facing layoffs, speed-up and plant closings they don’t feel they are in the “same boat” as a management that is paid millions while they face hardship and uncertainty.

Contract watcher, Detroit


I want to send my best wishes from Britain to the Tennessee nurses in their efforts to unionize reported in the July N&L. Their story is the same around the world--under-resources and attacks on labour. In some cases the attacks come not just from management but the unions themselves. Lip service is paid to democracy at work, while the workers pay a heavy price in bad backs, stress, violence and depression. I have often thought that more feminist theory and support should be given to this group.

Male nurse, Britain


In the article on “War, resistance, and the need for a new alternative” (July N&L) you say that “the key question facing us is whether the forces of revolt will project a viable alternative to this stage of capitalism.” I would suggest that what the proletarian movement needs is a shock and awe campaign of our own against capitalism.

Retired postal worker, Michigan


THE ISRAELI SCENE

The neo-conservatives have cast their shadow over Israel, and our new economic reform is, wouldn’t you know it, good for the rich and bad for the poor. Vicky Knafo, a gutsy single mother who walked into Jerusalem from her home in the Negev, managed to inspire dozens of Israelis to join her at her encampment opposite the Finance Ministry (now headed by former Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu). Those joining have included not only other down-and-outers, but also contingents from both the peace and social justice movements. These movements are finally building bridges to each other after many years of working in unproductive isolation. A spur-of-the-moment feminist conference, in which all the women’s organizations are participating, was called in the park adjoining Vicky’s encampment.

Gila Svirsky, Jerusalem


THE WALL

At least George Bush called it a “separation wall” and condemned it. The Israeli government calls it a “security fence,” trying to tone down its immense size and ascribe to it powers of “security” that it does not have. It commits two cardinal sins: First, it is constructed inside Palestinian territory and not on the original border between Israel and Palestine. That means it is destroying more homes, cutting more Palestinians from their property and land, and directly harming at least 210,000 Palestinians. Second, the area adjacent to the wall will probably be declared an “open-fire zone” endangering the lives of anyone who approaches it. The last thing we need is an open-fire zone in our backyard.

Outraged Israeli, Jerusalem


On July 30 the front page of the CHICAGO TRIBUNE carried a picture of the hideous “security wall” that is being constructed in the West Bank. The very next day, July 31, their front page carried, among other stories, a headline “New neighbors draw the line at Cabrini” with an accompanying picture on the back page that showed a seven-foot-high wrought iron fence that has separated residents of two different areas of Orchard Park--one side housing the low-income residents, the other their more affluent neighbors. This complex was billed two years ago as “the future of public housing” where former Cabrini-Green residents would live side by side with those who could afford expensive condominiums. I was stunned because I had not heard anything about such a fence now being constructed. Whether or not the CHICAGO TRIBUNE had intentionally run these stories one right on top of the other, the message was powerful. And sickening.

For a human world, Chicago


THE SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE

I think you need to explain the Socialist/Communist alternative better. Explain why there will be no exploitative social relations, how we get rid of money, buying and selling, accumulation cycles and such. You also need a better critique of media “head fixing.” The bosses’ media attacks Marxism regularly. Is it asking too much to counterpunch them a bit? Your paper is informative/educational on workers' activity but the “activity” must have a forward motion and linkages. Otherwise it is turned backwards. To sum up, you need to get into the ABCs of socialism for ordinary workers more. A lot more. Here’s my subscription renewal.

Longtime subscriber, Los Angeles


NEWS & LETTERS is my link to the outside world internationally in a more direct and realistic manner than usual news provides. You assume the reader is an informed person, and the paper takes it from there. Yet it will take time to decipher/understand the Marxist-Humanist philosophy. I’m trying because you show how important those ideas are for all of us. Please thank the one who gave me my donor sub.

Prisoner, California

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