Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Please note I have a new phone number...

512-517-2708

Alan Maki

Alan Maki
Doing research at the LBJ Library in Austin, Texas

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

A program for real change...

http://peaceandsocialjustice.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-progressive-program-for-real-change.html


What we need is a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would make it a mandatory requirement that the president and Congress attain and maintain full employment.


"Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens"

- Ben Franklin

Let's talk...

Let's talk...

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Sample resolution on Health Care Reform for precinct caucuses and conventions

Note: This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/ Feel free to circulate.


Resolution on Health Care Reform (267 words)

Where as the for-profit health care system has failed to provide the American people with adequate health care;

Where as this for-profit system of health care has resulted in forcing millions of Americans into poverty as a result of huge health care bills;

Where as a National Public Health Care System would create twelve to fifteen million new jobs providing the American people with free health care which is a human right;

Therefore, be it resolved a National Public Health Care System is required;

Therefore, be it resolved health care should be publicly financed, publicly administered and publicly delivered based on the model provided by public education--- everyone in, nobody out.

Therefore, be it resolved a National Public Health Care System should be funded and financed through these various methods in combination:

1. “Peace dividends” resulting from ending militarism and wars.
2. A hefty tax on the wealthy.
3. A payroll tax levied one-quarter on employees and three-quarters on employers.

Therefore, be it resolved that a single-payer universal health care system of short duration is an acceptable first step in implementing a National Public Health Care System;

Therefore, be it resolved the American people are entitled to free health care as a human right;

Therefore, be it resolved that health care will be publicly delivered through a network of neighborhood and community health care centers and shall include: primary health care including, but not limited to, general health care, eyes, ears, dental and mental health; pre-natal through burial.

Therefore be it resolved this becomes the position of (name of organization/party)

Sample resolution on the Minimum Wage for use in precinct caucuses and conventions

Note: This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/ Feel free to circulate.

Resolution on the Minimum Wage (209 words)

Where as workers who are without jobs are going to be poor;

Where as workers paid poverty wages are going to be poor;

Where as a “living wage” is a non-poverty wage;

Where as hundreds of thousands of working class Minnesotans and their families are poor because of unemployment and poverty wages;

Where as the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares the right to a job with a real living wage to be the criteria for a decent standard-of-living as a human right;

Where as we can not call for a “living wage” and then legislate a poverty Minimum Wage;

Where as “cost-of-living” is the only way to establish what is a decentstandard-of-living” and what constitutes a “living wage;”

Therefore, be it resolved that the Minimum Wage should be a real living wage legislatively tied to all “cost-of-living” factors, empirical data, based on all cost-of-living factors as tracked by the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics indexed to inflation and increased periodically to provide an improved standard-of-living;

Therefore, be it resolved we support a guaranteed annual income;

Therefore, be it resolved that every Minnesotan is entitled to, by legislation, a decent standard of living based on cost-of-living and is also entitled to a guaranteed annual income based on cost-of-living;

Therefore, be it resolved that this becomes the position of the (name of party/organization here).

Sample resolution on the plight of workers employed in the Indian Gaming Industry for use in precinct caucuses and conventions

Note: This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/ Feel free to circulate.

Resolution on the Plight of Casino Workers Employed in the Indian Gaming Industry (140 words)

Where as over 40,000 Minnesotans are employed in the Indian Gaming Industry;

Where as these 40,000 Minnesotans are forced to work in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos and associated enterprises of the Indian Gaming Industry at poverty wages;

Where as these 40,000 workers have no rights defined under state, federal, tribal labor or international laws capable of being enforced to protect them;

Where as the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights clearly declares all workers are entitled to such protections as basic human rights;

Therefore, be it resolved that the “Compacts” creating this Indian Gaming Industry be re-opened and re-negotiated to include the state, federal and international protections enjoyed by all other workers;

Therefore, be it resolved this becomes the position of (name of organization/party).

Sample resolution on Full Employment for use in Precinct Caucuses and Conventions

Note: This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/ Feel free to circulate.
Resolution on Full Employment (705 words)
Where as the politicians talk about “jobs, jobs, jobs” but have not taken on to themselves the responsibility for "Full employment;"
Where as the “free market capitalist system” has proven to be very unstable with boom and bust cycles--- and with the massive unemployment producing bust cycles of economic “slumps,” recessions, and depressions occurring with greater frequency and with full employment failing to be achieved even during the short periods of economic boom;
Where as "Full employment" is all about governmental accountability to the people;
Where as "Full employment" is all about peace and democracy;

Where as "Full employment" is all about the most fundamental human right of all--- the right to a job at a real living wage;
Where as unemployment is the major source of poverty for tens of millions of people;
Where as unemployed workers are going to be poor;
Where as unemployment has been used by government, business and industry as an “economic lever” to keep all wages down instead of controlling prices of food, housing, health care, college tuition, electricity, home heating fuels and gas to create a more stable economy;
Where as wars kill jobs just like they kill people;
Where as the “Full Employment Act of 1945” would have mandated “Full Employment” which was passed by the United States Senate but defeated by the U.S. House after a massive campaign by big business interests who realized they were about to lose super-profits obtained by unemployment pushing all wages down;

Where as the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares in no uncertain terms:

Article 23.
 (1) Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.
 (2) Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.
 (3) Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.
 (4) Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
Article 24.
 Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay.
Article 25.
 (1) Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
 (2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.




Therefore, be it resolved a “Full Employment Act” to be known as the “21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperityshall be enacted which shall include:

1. A mandate requiring the president and Congress to work together to attain and maintain full employment.

2. Rely on government programs making the the government the employer of first choice whenever required.
3. Include a provision for the enforcement of Affirmative Action to assure people of color, women and the handicapped receive the jobs to which they are entitled.
4. Include a Minimum Wage provision making the federal Minimum Wage a real living wage based on all “cost-of-living” factors as monitored and tracked by the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, indexed to inflation quarterly and periodically increased to provide an improved standard-of-living.
5. A guaranteed annual income the equivalent of a living wage during any period of time when employment is not available for individuals.


Therefore, be it resolved that the 21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperityshall provide the guidance to create jobs by putting people to work solving the most pressing problems of people and society.


Therefore, be it resolved that all funds required to finance “Full Employment” shall come from “peace dividends,” a hefty tax on Wall Street transactions and profits along with taxing the rich.


Therefore, be it resolved this resolution becomes the position of (name of organization/party) on Full Employment.



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Nelson Mandela and the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights

NELSON MANDELA
(Born 1918)

Nelson Mandela ADDRESS OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, NELSON MANDELA, AT THE 53RD UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY:
New York, 21 September 1998

Mr.President;
Mr Secretary General, the Hon.Kofi Annan;
Your Excellencies;
Ladies and Gentlemen,

" Quite appropriately, this 53rd General Assembly will be remembered through the ages as the moment at which we marked and celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Born in the aftermath of the defeat of the Nazi and fascist crime against humanity, this Declaration held high hope that all our societies would, in future, be built on the foundation of the glorious vision spelt out in each of its clauses.

For those who had to fight for their emancipation, such as ourselves who, with your help, had to free ourselves from the criminal apartheid system, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights served as the vindication of the justice of our cause.

At the same time, it constituted a challenge to us that our freedom, once achieved, should be dedicated to the implementation of the perspectives contained in the Declaration.

Today, we celebrate the fact that this historic document has survived a turbulent five decades, which have seen some of the most extraordinary developments in the evolution of human society.

These include the collapse of the colonial system, the passing of a bipolar world, breath-taking advances in science and technology and the entrenchment of the complex process of globalisation.

And yet, at the end of it all, the human beings who are the subject of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights continue to be afflicted by wars and violent conflicts.

They have, as yet, not attained their freedom from fear and death that would be brought about by the use of weapons of mass destruction as well as conventional arms.

Many are still unable to exercise the fundamental and inalienable democratic rights that would enable them to participate in the determination of the destiny of their countries, nations, families and children and to protect themselves from tyranny and dictatorship.

The very right to be human is denied everyday to hundreds of millions of people as a result of poverty, the unavailability of basic necessities such as food, jobs, water and shelter, education, health care and a healthy environment.

The failure to achieve this vision contained in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights finds dramatic expression in the contrast between wealth and poverty which characterises the divide between the countries of the North and the countries of the South and within individual countries in all hemispheres.v It is made especially poignant and challenging by the fact that this coexistence of wealth and poverty, the perpetuation of the practice of the resolution of inter and intra-state conflicts by war and the denial of the democratic right of many across the world, all result from the acts of commission and omission particularly by those who occupy positions of leadership in politics, in the economy and in other spheres of human activity.

What I am trying to say is that all these social ills which constitute an offence against the Universal Declaration of Human Rights are not a pre-ordained result of the forces of nature or the product of a curse of the deities.

They are the consequences of decisions which men and women take or refuse to take, all of whom will not hesitate to pledge their devoted support for the vision conveyed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

This Declaration was proclaimed as Universal precisely because the founders of this Organisation and the nations of the world who joined hands to fight the scourge of fascism, including many who still had to achieve their own emancipation, understood this clearly that our human world was an interdependent whole.

Necessarily, the values of happiness, justice, human dignity, peace and prosperity have a universal application because each people and every individual is entitled to them.

Similarly, no people can truly say it is blessed with happiness, peace and prosperity where others, as human as itself, continue to be afflicted with misery, armed conflict and terrorism and deprivation.

Thus can we say that the challenge posed by the next 50 years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, by the next century whose character it must help fashion, consists in whether humanity, and especially those who will occupy positions of leadership, will have the courage to ensure that, at last, we build a world consistent with the provisions of that historic Declaration and other human rights instruments that have been adopted since 1948."

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Building Progressive Political Power in Minnesota -- around the politics and economics of livelihood...

Calling all activists--- including activists from North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Manitoba and Ontario. Consider coming to this event and setting up table selling books, distributing leaflets about your activities on these issues. Let's all get acquainted so we can participate in joint actions.  There is no charge. It would provide a good basis for united activity on these four important issues: https://www.facebook.com/events/398475413619599/399265223540618/?notif_t=plan_mall_activity

Taking our activities face-to-face into our neighborhoods and communities is essential to winning these struggles.

Exciting Forum scheduled for Saturday, January 11th in Duluth -- Copper Top Church -- 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

"Building Progressive Political Power in Minnesota -- around the politics and economics of: 1) Full Employment; 2) Minimum / Living Wage; 3) "Real" Health Care Reform; and 4) Environmental Sanity!

Presenters include: Liane Gale (Minnesota Green Party); Buddy Robinson (Minnesota Citize...ns Federation - Northeast); Dr. Jim Hart (Physicians for a National Health Program); Reyna Crow (Northwoods Wolf Alliance and Idle No More); Allen Richardson (WaterLegacy); Michael Cavlan (New Progressive Alliance); Alan Maki (Uniting People); and Virgil Boehland (Duluth MoveToAmend).

Arrive a bit early; we have a full schedule; we'll try to start on time. The coffee will be on; the cookie jar(s) full!

For specific questions, call me, Vern Simula: 218.591.5722.


230 East Skyline Parkway, Duluth, Minnesota 55811

Friday, December 6, 2013

Homeless man threatened with arrest for trespassing for using a public restroom in Duluth, Minnesota.

In Duluth, Minnesota a homeless man was threatened with arrest by a security guard for using a public bathroom too many times.

Well, I suppose we should give this homeless guy the benefit of the doubt; but, we shouldn't be too quick to jump all over this security guard--- perhaps the guard thought he was committing a crime because he thought the guy wanted to keep warm?

This guy could have just been making up the excuse that he had to pee so he could get warm.

I mean, look; society has to have some limits and restrictions on this kind of deviant behavior. People have to realize they can't just be walking into places to pee or keep warm. We need security guards, the police, the courts and politicians to protect us from such deviant behavior.

Let the guy go buy a house and he won't be homeless. I'm sure if he walked down the street he could find a kind and sympathetic lender at one of Duluth's local banks like US Bank, Wells Fargo or CITI Bank... none of these bankers are going to allow people to be homeless in the middle of the winter with sub-zero temperatures. We have compassionate capitalists at the helm in our country.

Poverty is not an accident...















But...

What actions does it take to eliminate poverty?

Workers without jobs are going to be poor.

Workers paid poverty wages are going to be poor.

The primary solutions to ending poverty is:

Full employment with real living wage jobs.

We need a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would mandate the president and Congress to work together to attain and maintain full employment.

Enforce the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The peoples of the world say "good-bye" to Comrade Nelson Mandela... how will we remember this hero?


















How will we celebrate Nelson Mandela Day... in the true spirit of what he really stood for, or as the phony caricature now to be created in his passing by the imperialists in their attempt to maintain domination and control?

Nelson Mandela Day: Celebrating Madiba`s revolutionary legacy


Blade Nzimande, General Secretary

On Saturday 18 July 2009, on the 91st birthday of one of the greatest heroes produced by the South African revolution, our movement and government will be launching what will be the first of an annual event, the Nelson Mandela Day. On this day we shall celebrate, honour and seek to emulate the revolutionary example set by Cde Nelson Mandela, former President of the ANC and the first President of a democratic South Africa.

The SACP pledges its full support to this and will seek to actively participate in the Nelson Mandela Day activities, both as part of the Tripartite Alliance and in its own right as an independent political party of the working class. Celebrating the contributions and sacrifices of Madiba also coincides with the SACP`s 88th anniversary, founded on 31 July 1921 in Cape Town. During this anniversary month of the SACP, we shall also be celebrating the contributions of Nelson Mandela and many other revolutionary patriots, with whom we have been in the trenches for the past 88 years.

As the SACP has correctly and consistently argued before, Cde Nelson Mandela should in the first instance be recognized and celebrated as a revolutionary, and indeed one of the most prominent revolutionaries of the 20th century. Much as we appreciate that Nelson Mandela is respected globally by a wide variety of people drawn from across all social classes, it is important that the legacy of Nelson Mandela as a revolutionary, a former combatant of Umkhonto WeSizwe, and a leader of a revolutionary national liberation movement, must never be allowed to disappear.

Nelson Mandela became what he is today, principally because he understood that our revolution was about the liberation of millions of ordinary workers and the poor. Madiba also understood that much as leaders are important in any revolution, but it is the masses themselves who are their own liberators and architects of their future. It is important to constantly elevate this reality not only rhetorically, but practically, by continuing to mobilize the mass of our people to be at the forefront of consolidating and deepening our national democratic revolution.

It is even more important today to highlight the revolutionary ideals that Madiba embodies, as our movement is faced with many challenges now that it leads government in our country. As we have pointed out before, liberation movements in power face many complex and new challenges, some of which have led to the degeneration and even decimation of many former progressive liberation movements. Some of these challenges include managing the relationship between the state and the movement, and overcoming the temptations of replacing the movement with the state, and combating the dangers of using state power to advance narrow class interests that are at variance with the core historical values of many such movements. Therefore, celebrating Nelson Mandela Day must centrally be about safeguarding our movement as a people`s movement, placing service to the people and progressive transformation of the lives of ordinary people at the centre of its agenda.

Our country is launching Nelson Mandela Day in the midst of one of the worst global capitalist economic crisis in the history of capitalism. The current working class struggles underway in our country are in part also a response to the effects of the impact of the current capitalist crisis on ordinary workers and the poor. This crisis, as has been highlighted by many others, is not merely a financial or economic crisis, but it is a crisis of capitalist values and a crisis of the ideology of the ‘free-market` and its current neo-liberal variant. It is also for this reason that Nelson Mandela Day must also be a re-affirmation of the values he has come to represent - that of social solidarity, selflessness, dedication, equity and fairness! It is through the consistent inculcation of these values that we can roll back the greed, corruption and selfishness of capitalism.

The SACP will be using this anniversary month, and in celebrating the life of Madiba, to convene public Red Forums to assess the impact of this crisis on the lives of ordinary people and discuss practical ways and means to involve our people in mitigating its impact. The SACP, over the coming few months, will mobilize as many of its cadres as possible to spend 67 minutes and more on the mobilization of our people in the struggle against the current crisis.

Our Red Forums also aim to expose the extent to which ordinary people are suffering, and come up with concrete alternative proposals guided by the Framework agreement adopted at NEDLAC as a response to the crisis.

Nelson Mandela spent most of his life in the struggle being in the trenches with communists and trade unionists in, amongst others:

The Defiance Campaign and SACTU-led workers struggles of the 1950s
Underground and armed struggle from the 1960s into the early 1990s
Debates about the direction of our struggle on Robben Island
The mass struggles, negotiations and the adoption of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) in the early 1990s
The struggle to roll back and defeat the counter-revolutionary violence waged against our movement in KwaZulu-Natal and other parts of the country
The setting up of a democratic government, and the struggle for the reconstruction and development of our country after the 1994 democratic breakthrough

In all the above and many other struggles that Madiba participated in, he placed great emphasis on the unity of the Tripartite Alliance, and the need for consistent unity in action. Nelson Mandela Day should therefore also be a day of celebrating his role in building a united Alliance that led the struggle to defeat the apartheid regime and build a democratic South Africa.

The launch of Nelson Mandela Day also coincides with the year in which the SACP will be celebrating its adoption of the Native Republic Thesis by its predecessor, the Communist Party of South Africa, in January 1929. The adoption of this Thesis laid the foundation for the building of the Tripartite Alliance from the 1930s onwards.

It is therefore important that we also use Nelson Mandela Day to build upon President Jacob Zuma`s continued commitment to Nelson Mandela`s legacy of placing our Alliance at the centre of consolidating and deepening the national democratic revolution. President Zuma has correctly emphasized that the unity of the Alliance is not a luxury but an absolute necessity in strengthening our democracy.

Of course we could have given Madiba no better birthday present than the ANC`s overwhelming April electoral victory, despite a concerted media onslaught on the ANC and its allies in the run up to this election. The election campaign was a reflection of Alliance unity in action at its best. Let Nelson Mandela Day be another important platform to safeguard the unity of our alliance as the best way to safeguard April`s electoral victory as a victory for the workers and the poor of our country.

To Madiba, the revolutionary, we say, Happy Birthday and Happy Nelson Mandela Day!

Asikhulume!!
Red Alert
Nelson Mandela Day: Celebrating Madiba`s revolutionary legacy
Blade Nzimande, General Secretary
On Saturday 18 July 2009, on the 91st birthday of one of the greatest heroes produced by the South African revolution, our movement and government will be launching what will be the first of an annual event, the Nelson Mandela Day. On this day we shall celebrate, honour and seek to emulate the revolutionary example set by Cde Nelson Mandela, former President of the ANC and the first President of a democratic South Africa.
The SACP pledges its full support to this and will seek to actively participate in the Nelson Mandela Day activities, both as part of the Tripartite Alliance and in its own right as an independent political party of the working class. Celebrating the contributions and sacrifices of Madiba also coincides with the SACP`s 88th anniversary, founded on 31 July 1921 in Cape Town. During this anniversary month of the SACP, we shall also be celebrating the contributions of Nelson Mandela and many other revolutionary patriots, with whom we have been in the trenches for the past 88 years.
As the SACP has correctly and consistently argued before, Cde Nelson Mandela should in the first instance be recognized and celebrated as a revolutionary, and indeed one of the most prominent revolutionaries of the 20th century. Much as we appreciate that Nelson Mandela is respected globally by a wide variety of people drawn from across all social classes, it is important that the legacy of Nelson Mandela as a revolutionary, a former combatant of Umkhonto WeSizwe, and a leader of a revolutionary national liberation movement, must never be allowed to disappear.
Nelson Mandela became what he is today, principally because he understood that our revolution was about the liberation of millions of ordinary workers and the poor. Madiba also understood that much as leaders are important in any revolution, but it is the masses themselves who are their own liberators and architects of their future. It is important to constantly elevate this reality not only rhetorically, but practically, by continuing to mobilize the mass of our people to be at the forefront of consolidating and deepening our national democratic revolution.
It is even more important today to highlight the revolutionary ideals that Madiba embodies, as our movement is faced with many challenges now that it leads government in our country. As we have pointed out before, liberation movements in power face many complex and new challenges, some of which have led to the degeneration and even decimation of many former progressive liberation movements. Some of these challenges include managing the relationship between the state and the movement, and overcoming the temptations of replacing the movement with the state, and combating the dangers of using state power to advance narrow class interests that are at variance with the core historical values of many such movements. Therefore, celebrating Nelson Mandela Day must centrally be about safeguarding our movement as a people`s movement, placing service to the people and progressive transformation of the lives of ordinary people at the centre of its agenda.
Our country is launching Nelson Mandela Day in the midst of one of the worst global capitalist economic crisis in the history of capitalism. The current working class struggles underway in our country are in part also a response to the effects of the impact of the current capitalist crisis on ordinary workers and the poor. This crisis, as has been highlighted by many others, is not merely a financial or economic crisis, but it is a crisis of capitalist values and a crisis of the ideology of the ‘free-market` and its current neo-liberal variant. It is also for this reason that Nelson Mandela Day must also be a re-affirmation of the values he has come to represent - that of social solidarity, selflessness, dedication, equity and fairness! It is through the consistent inculcation of these values that we can roll back the greed, corruption and selfishness of capitalism.
The SACP will be using this anniversary month, and in celebrating the life of Madiba, to convene public Red Forums to assess the impact of this crisis on the lives of ordinary people and discuss practical ways and means to involve our people in mitigating its impact. The SACP, over the coming few months, will mobilize as many of its cadres as possible to spend 67 minutes and more on the mobilization of our people in the struggle against the current crisis.
Our Red Forums also aim to expose the extent to which ordinary people are suffering, and come up with concrete alternative proposals guided by the Framework agreement adopted at NEDLAC as a response to the crisis.
Nelson Mandela spent most of his life in the struggle being in the trenches with communists and trade unionists in, amongst others:
  • The Defiance Campaign and SACTU-led workers struggles of the 1950s
  • Underground and armed struggle from the 1960s into the early 1990s
  • Debates about the direction of our struggle on Robben Island
  • The mass struggles, negotiations and the adoption of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) in the early 1990s
  • The struggle to roll back and defeat the counter-revolutionary violence waged against our movement in KwaZulu-Natal and other parts of the country
  • The setting up of a democratic government, and the struggle for the reconstruction and development of our country after the 1994 democratic breakthrough
In all the above and many other struggles that Madiba participated in, he placed great emphasis on the unity of the Tripartite Alliance, and the need for consistent unity in action. Nelson Mandela Day should therefore also be a day of celebrating his role in building a united Alliance that led the struggle to defeat the apartheid regime and build a democratic South Africa.
The launch of Nelson Mandela Day also coincides with the year in which the SACP will be celebrating its adoption of the Native Republic Thesis by its predecessor, the Communist Party of South Africa, in January 1929. The adoption of this Thesis laid the foundation for the building of the Tripartite Alliance from the 1930s onwards.
It is therefore important that we also use Nelson Mandela Day to build upon President Jacob Zuma`s continued commitment to Nelson Mandela`s legacy of placing our Alliance at the centre of consolidating and deepening the national democratic revolution. President Zuma has correctly emphasized that the unity of the Alliance is not a luxury but an absolute necessity in strengthening our democracy.
Of course we could have given Madiba no better birthday present than the ANC`s overwhelming April electoral victory, despite a concerted media onslaught on the ANC and its allies in the run up to this election. The election campaign was a reflection of Alliance unity in action at its best. Let Nelson Mandela Day be another important platform to safeguard the unity of our alliance as the best way to safeguard April`s electoral victory as a victory for the workers and the poor of our country.
To Madiba, the revolutionary, we say, Happy Birthday and Happy Nelson Mandela Day!
Asikhulume!!
- See more at: http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=3081#sthash.Uv65Mzz5.dpuf
Red Alert
Nelson Mandela Day: Celebrating Madiba`s revolutionary legacy
Blade Nzimande, General Secretary
On Saturday 18 July 2009, on the 91st birthday of one of the greatest heroes produced by the South African revolution, our movement and government will be launching what will be the first of an annual event, the Nelson Mandela Day. On this day we shall celebrate, honour and seek to emulate the revolutionary example set by Cde Nelson Mandela, former President of the ANC and the first President of a democratic South Africa.
The SACP pledges its full support to this and will seek to actively participate in the Nelson Mandela Day activities, both as part of the Tripartite Alliance and in its own right as an independent political party of the working class. Celebrating the contributions and sacrifices of Madiba also coincides with the SACP`s 88th anniversary, founded on 31 July 1921 in Cape Town. During this anniversary month of the SACP, we shall also be celebrating the contributions of Nelson Mandela and many other revolutionary patriots, with whom we have been in the trenches for the past 88 years.
As the SACP has correctly and consistently argued before, Cde Nelson Mandela should in the first instance be recognized and celebrated as a revolutionary, and indeed one of the most prominent revolutionaries of the 20th century. Much as we appreciate that Nelson Mandela is respected globally by a wide variety of people drawn from across all social classes, it is important that the legacy of Nelson Mandela as a revolutionary, a former combatant of Umkhonto WeSizwe, and a leader of a revolutionary national liberation movement, must never be allowed to disappear.
Nelson Mandela became what he is today, principally because he understood that our revolution was about the liberation of millions of ordinary workers and the poor. Madiba also understood that much as leaders are important in any revolution, but it is the masses themselves who are their own liberators and architects of their future. It is important to constantly elevate this reality not only rhetorically, but practically, by continuing to mobilize the mass of our people to be at the forefront of consolidating and deepening our national democratic revolution.
It is even more important today to highlight the revolutionary ideals that Madiba embodies, as our movement is faced with many challenges now that it leads government in our country. As we have pointed out before, liberation movements in power face many complex and new challenges, some of which have led to the degeneration and even decimation of many former progressive liberation movements. Some of these challenges include managing the relationship between the state and the movement, and overcoming the temptations of replacing the movement with the state, and combating the dangers of using state power to advance narrow class interests that are at variance with the core historical values of many such movements. Therefore, celebrating Nelson Mandela Day must centrally be about safeguarding our movement as a people`s movement, placing service to the people and progressive transformation of the lives of ordinary people at the centre of its agenda.
Our country is launching Nelson Mandela Day in the midst of one of the worst global capitalist economic crisis in the history of capitalism. The current working class struggles underway in our country are in part also a response to the effects of the impact of the current capitalist crisis on ordinary workers and the poor. This crisis, as has been highlighted by many others, is not merely a financial or economic crisis, but it is a crisis of capitalist values and a crisis of the ideology of the ‘free-market` and its current neo-liberal variant. It is also for this reason that Nelson Mandela Day must also be a re-affirmation of the values he has come to represent - that of social solidarity, selflessness, dedication, equity and fairness! It is through the consistent inculcation of these values that we can roll back the greed, corruption and selfishness of capitalism.
The SACP will be using this anniversary month, and in celebrating the life of Madiba, to convene public Red Forums to assess the impact of this crisis on the lives of ordinary people and discuss practical ways and means to involve our people in mitigating its impact. The SACP, over the coming few months, will mobilize as many of its cadres as possible to spend 67 minutes and more on the mobilization of our people in the struggle against the current crisis.
Our Red Forums also aim to expose the extent to which ordinary people are suffering, and come up with concrete alternative proposals guided by the Framework agreement adopted at NEDLAC as a response to the crisis.
Nelson Mandela spent most of his life in the struggle being in the trenches with communists and trade unionists in, amongst others:
  • The Defiance Campaign and SACTU-led workers struggles of the 1950s
  • Underground and armed struggle from the 1960s into the early 1990s
  • Debates about the direction of our struggle on Robben Island
  • The mass struggles, negotiations and the adoption of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) in the early 1990s
  • The struggle to roll back and defeat the counter-revolutionary violence waged against our movement in KwaZulu-Natal and other parts of the country
  • The setting up of a democratic government, and the struggle for the reconstruction and development of our country after the 1994 democratic breakthrough
In all the above and many other struggles that Madiba participated in, he placed great emphasis on the unity of the Tripartite Alliance, and the need for consistent unity in action. Nelson Mandela Day should therefore also be a day of celebrating his role in building a united Alliance that led the struggle to defeat the apartheid regime and build a democratic South Africa.
The launch of Nelson Mandela Day also coincides with the year in which the SACP will be celebrating its adoption of the Native Republic Thesis by its predecessor, the Communist Party of South Africa, in January 1929. The adoption of this Thesis laid the foundation for the building of the Tripartite Alliance from the 1930s onwards.
It is therefore important that we also use Nelson Mandela Day to build upon President Jacob Zuma`s continued commitment to Nelson Mandela`s legacy of placing our Alliance at the centre of consolidating and deepening the national democratic revolution. President Zuma has correctly emphasized that the unity of the Alliance is not a luxury but an absolute necessity in strengthening our democracy.
Of course we could have given Madiba no better birthday present than the ANC`s overwhelming April electoral victory, despite a concerted media onslaught on the ANC and its allies in the run up to this election. The election campaign was a reflection of Alliance unity in action at its best. Let Nelson Mandela Day be another important platform to safeguard the unity of our alliance as the best way to safeguard April`s electoral victory as a victory for the workers and the poor of our country.
To Madiba, the revolutionary, we say, Happy Birthday and Happy Nelson Mandela Day!
Asikhulume!!
- See more at: http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=3081#sthash.Uv65Mzz5.dpuf

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Obama and "economic inequality."

Obama's speech on "economic inequality"... text and video: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/12/obama-income-inequality-100662.html

This speech should be widely discussed.

Here is my position:

The Democrats have a mean and cruel strategy for 2014 and 2016 which goes like this...

They intend to pass all these phony Minimum Wage increases across the country where they have Democratic majorities--- claim the Republican Congress prevented a Minimum Wage increase nationally, run on that along with all the rhetoric about how they are the party of "jobs, jobs, jobs"--- elect us--- we raised the Minimum Wage where we could and now we are going to put American back to work. 

I would note that for all the talk about "living wages" that when the discussion turns to the Minimum Wage these Democrats pass so-called "increases" that enforce a continued poverty wage when that Minimum Wage is compared to the actual "cost-of-living." Is there anything other than "cost-of-living" that the Minimum Wage can be fairly compared to? No.

Obama talks about putting people to work; but, do you hear Obama or any other Democrats calling to create legislation that would make it mandatory for the president and Congress to work together to attain and maintain full employment? No. Without such full employment legislation, there is no way to enforce accountability from politicians like Obama who talk about "jobs, jobs, jobs."

Obama says he wants to hear from people who have ideas contrary to his own--- but, who does he ask? Republicans. He should be asking liberals, progressives and leftists just like President Franklin D. Roosevelt did.

Roosevelt, unable to get around and confined to a wheelchair, sent his wife, Eleanor, and Frances Perkins out across the country to ask the victims of the economic depression what kind of help they required. They met with Communists and Socialists, trade unionists and activists struggling against racist injustices and inequality.

Who does Obama go to talk to? The Center for American Progress; a bunch of foundation-funded hypocrites who receive their funding from the "philanthropists" who are the same Wall Street parasites growing fatter and richer from paying workers poverty wages--- the very group who helped create a phony image of Obama in the first place. The very group which, along with the Campaign for America's Future and the Century Foundation and the AFL-CIO leadership, helped to smash the movement for single-payer universal health care.

The Democrats had every opportunity to pass a real living Minimum Wage when they had a super-majority; but, like here in Minnesota with a Democratic super-majority, these Democrats CHOSE to do nothing.

Now, with Obama's record being one continual Wall Street assist, these Democrats opportunistically jump in a self-serving way saying they support "living wages" when in fact their passage of poverty Minimum Wage legislation across the country tells their real story--- and whose side they are on.

Obama rewarded Wal-street, whoops, I mean Wal-mart, by appointing the head of the Wal-mart foundation to be the Director of Management and Budget and billionairess Penny Pritzker as Secretary of Commerce.

Where is the Eleanor Roosevelt, Frances Perkins, Harry Hopkins, Victor Perlo, Fred Stover, Rex Tugwell or Henry Wallace in the Obama Administration? They don't exist.

And, as far as the people's movements... where are the Harry Bridges, Wyndham Mortimers, Art Biggs, Phil Raymonds, Albert Fitzgeralds, Charles Hayes and Roger Jourdains?

To win real change it takes a combination of sympathetic and empathetic people in government and people's organizations and movements with militant and determined leaders brought forward through the ranks of these movements.

We don't have the kind of people in government, the massive organizations behind huge movements with the kind of left wing leaders required to win real change... so, Obama pulls off another one of his infamous dog-and-pony shows standing in front of a bunch of his hand-picked "people's advocates" paid by Wall Street who will applaud for him on cue... but, what do we get from Obama and the Democrats? Shit.

We need a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity;" the only way we are going to get this is when we are able to elect politicians from within our movements.

How is economic equality achieved when Affirmative Action is not being enforced and the Nation's wealth is being squandered on militarism and these dirty imperialist wars?

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Protesting poverty wages lands them in jail

by: Matthew Voges
December 3 2013
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ST. PAUL, Minn. -- At the intersection of Snelling and University Avenues here, 26 were arrested on Black Friday afternoon, Nov. 29, for protesting poverty wages. This busy intersection is normally congested, but Friday's protestors, seated cross-legged with arms linked in a circle, had stopped traffic completely.
Hundreds cheered from the safety of the large intersection's four corners, holding signs, beating drums and chanting slogans such as "This is what democracy looks like!" and "The people united, will never be defeated!"

Protesters are trying to raise support for legislation raising the minimum wage. "We just want to get a fair wage for the minimum and low-wage workers." said Christina Holly, a protester with TakeAction Minnesota. "A fair day's work deserves fair pay."

The Snelling-University protest followed a march past various St. Paul retailers. In addition to and in support of the Target and Walmart workers on the scene were a variety of organizations including the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the Service Employees International Union, Healthcare Minnesota, the Teamsters and Communist Party, USA. "It's a good conglomeration of people from different service fields that said, 'enough is enough. This is the Holidays.'" said Steve Miltich with the SEIU.

One by one, the St. Paul police read the seated protesters their rights, tied their hands, and led them to an awaiting van. The crowd greeted each protester with applause, praise, and cheers. After the last protester was arrested, the crowd headed west on University behind a large banner reading, "End Poverty Wages in Minnesota."

Protester Darrel Paulsen said, "Hopefully this brings more light to corporate America. You can't treat your workers like that and expect that they're going to work for you."

The march continued on past various Midway retailers. As I dropped out of the marching crowd, a woman in a silver SUV stopped to ask me what was happening, and when I told her that they were marching to end poverty wages, she replied, "I should join them."

Photo: Matthew Voges

Stop the cuts to Food Stamps! Increase the Minimum Wage to a real living wage! Don't let the Democrats get away with cutting Food Stamps and then hypocritically claiming to be for an increase in the Minimum Wage.

Please Note: 

I think every single individual and every single organization should go on record as opposed to these Food Stamp cuts and use this statement from the Emergency Labor Network as their guide. This is an emergency. 

At a time when the Democratic Party and its front groups are trying to push another poverty Minimum Wage down our throats completely unrelated to real "cost-of-living" factors, they are cutting Food Stamps. 

Just between these Food Stamp Cuts and rising unemployment and the growing trend towards part-time employment, the miserly Minimum Wage "increase" will be eaten up.

These Food Stamp cuts are a direct attack on the "standard-of-living" of working people at a time when the "cost-of-living," especially for food, is skyrocketing. 

As far as I know, this is the only national organization that has taken on these Food Stamp cuts. I think it is very important to note over and over again, that all these Democratic Party front groups like TakeActionMinnesota have not pointed out these Food Stamp cuts as they support a miserly "increase" in the Minimum Wage to $9.50 an hour which will not even off-set this cut in Food Stamps. This is the meanest and cruelest kind of hypocrisy. 

The Democrats have a mean and cruel strategy for 2014 and 2016 which goes like this:
They intend to pass all these phony Minimum Wage increases across the country where they have Democratic majorities--- claim the Republican Congress prevented a Minimum Wage increase nationally, run on that along with all the rhetoric about how they are the party of "jobs, jobs, jobs"--- elect us--- we raised the Minimum Wage where we could and now we are going to put American back to work.  

We simply can't allow this scenario to be played out without a very significant challenge to this kind of crap. Letter to the Editor, petitions, more statements like this, resolutions for precinct caucuses and organizations, demonstrations, pickets, confronting these politicians face-to-face. Everyone has to be brought together into this struggle against Food Stamp cuts. 

Justice requires an increase in Food Stamp allotments.

December 10 marks the 65th Anniversary of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This occasion should be used to fight the cuts to Food Stamps and to fight for the Minimum Wage becoming a real living wage in line with the actual "cost-of-living." 

Alan L. Maki


HOW CAN LABOR SUPPORT A POLITICAL PARTY WHOSE LEADERS VOTE TO CUT FOOD STAMPS?

On June 10, 2013 the U.S. Senate, with its Democratic majority, approved a farm bill that included a $4.1 billion cut in food stamp funding over a 10-year period. According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), under this proposal 500,000 households would lose $90 in food stamp benefits each month. Despite that, the Senate passed the measure by a 66-27 margin, making clear that it had bipartisan support.

Only one Senate Democrat voted against the farm bill.

Of course the Senate measure will not become law because it must be reconciled with the Republican-dominated House of Representative's version of a farm bill. 

On September 19, the House passed a farm bill cutting food stamp spending by $39 billion over 10 years. The vote was 217-210. The AFL-CIO sent members of Congress a letter blasting the House's action as "cruel." The letter stated in part:

"The Nutrition Reform and Work Opportunity Act of 2013 [passed by the House] would deny millions of children, seniors, people with disabilities, low-income and unemployed Americans food assistance during a prolonged period of anemic job growth, declining or stagnant wages and growing income inequality."

[Incidentally, 15 members of Congress are the beneficiaries of subsidies provided by farm legislation, the same legislation that includes food stamp funding. As an example, one of these, Rep. Stephen Fincher, a Republican from Tennessee, and his wife collected nearly $3.5 million in subsidies for 1999-2012. Yet Fincher is one of the loudest voices in Congress demanding steep cuts in food stamp funding!]  

So now representatives from the House and Senate are meeting in an attempt to reconcile the different versions. The question is how deep the cuts to the food stamp program will be. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, who chairs that body's agriculture committee, has already expressed a willingness to cut food stamp funding even more than the Senate bill did.

President Obama is on record as opposing major cuts in food stamp funding, meaning that he favors cutting such funding providing that the cuts are not too drastic. Labor should demand that the president declare that he will veto any farm legislation that contains any cuts to food stamps!

What makes the proposed cuts so much worse is that food stamp funding took a big hit on November 1 of this year, when monthly benefits for all 47 million recipients of the program were cut by roughly 7 percent. This occurred due to the expiration of a benefit increase that resulted from the 2009 stimulus program. A number of Democrats supported  the November cuts, saying that the money should be used to forestall the states laying off teachers. This is a crass example of robbing Peter to pay Paul at a time when there is plenty of money available from other sources to maintain teachers' jobs while not only maintaining funding for food stamps but increasing that funding.

So unless labor intervenes in alliance with its community partners to build a powerful movement that demands no cuts to food stamp funding, further cuts are inevitable in addition to those implemented in November. In fact, we should be demanding not only that the program be maintained, it should be expanded to guarantee more adequate nutrition for children (who make up half of food stamp recipients), disabled people, seniors, veterans, military families and others who rely so heavily on food stamps.

What Happened to Labor's Proclaimed Congressional Allies?

Those politicians who like to identify themselves as "friends of labor" have, in fact, compromised away any claim to solidarity with working people. Instead of drawing a line in the sand and forcefully opposing all cuts to food stamps, they caved in, claiming that a farm bill was needed and cutting food stamps was the only way to get it passed. They also point to the fact that in the Senate they voted for an amendment to restore food stamp funding, but it was defeated 26-70. In addition, they take pains to condemn the much more extreme cuts voted by the House.

None of these rationalizations should carry any weight with trade unionists. Voting to deprive children and their families of essential meals cannot be justified under any circumstances -- period. The Senate could have voted to separate food stamp funding from the rest of the farm bill but it chose not to do so. The lopsided vote defeating the effort to restore the $4.1 billion food stamp funding shows where things now stand. Since that failed, then it was incumbent to vote against the farm bill as a whole, as only one Democratic senator did. If a majority had taken that position, the Senate would have been in an infinitely stronger position in negotiating with the Republican-dominated House and preventing additional millions from experiencing greater malnutrition.

As for the Republicans pressing for greater cuts, that hardly justifies voting for lesser cuts. That is part and parcel of the old discredited game the politicians play of supporting lesser evil legislation and claiming victory in averting a worse outcome, no matter the damage done to the working class majority by whatever is enacted. It has never occurred to Democratic Party leaders to call upon masses of people to descend on Washington to oppose any and all food stamp cuts in this epic struggle. Since when have these leaders ever sought to mobilize the people for any progressive cause?

Labor's Role

The failure of labor to mount an aggressive campaign against food stamp cuts, starting with condemning the Senate's June 10action, is due to its failed strategy of relying on Democratic Party leaders and the president to protect workers' interests. We in labor will continue to suffer painful setbacks so long as this strategy is pursued. What is needed instead is for labor to act independently in the interests of the working class majority. The immediate need is to pull out all the stops in the weeks ahead to ensure the largest possible mobilizations demanding "NO Cuts!" to food stamps. This is a needed step forward for labor and its allies to have a real voice in determining national policies, culminating in forming a party of our own: a workers party based on the unions and our community partners. The public as a whole, according to the latest polls, gives the Democratic Party a low favorability rating.  Over 60 percent have lost faith in both major parties and are looking for an alternative. Labor can provide that alternative.

It's time for a change! 


Also see my letter to the editor: 
Another "Letter to the Editor" gets published; this time about cuts to food stamps

Notice on page 1 is an article about the Food Shelf needing donations because food stamps have been cut: 

http://www.trftimes.com/news/index.php?option=com_flippingbook&view=book&id=250%3Anovember-30-2013&catid=1%3Adefault-category&Itemid=18

On page 4 is my Letter to the Editor about the cut to Food Stamps.

If the links don't work, just google "northern watch" and click on November 30 edition.

The buttons on the bottom enable you to flip through the pages.


-- 
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
 
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763

Phone: 218-386-2432
Cell: 651-587-5541

Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

I signed U.S. Congressman Keith Ellison's MoveOn.org petition to increase the Minimum Wage with addinng this message...

#93627Alan MakiDec 3, 2013Warroad, MN
There is only one way to assure the Minimum Wage becomes a real living--- non-poverty--- wage; this can be accomplished by legislatively tying the Minimum Wage to all the cost of living factors as monitored by the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics indexed for inflation and increased periodically to provide an increased standard-of-living.

Along with this we need a guaranteed annual income for all Americans that would correspond to a living Minimum Wage.

All of this should become part of a package extending the New Deal reforms which must include making the President and Congress legislatively responsible for attaining and maintaining Full Employment. What we need is a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would include all of this and real job creation programs.

Kathleen Blake of TakeActionMinnesota has stated: "The wages of low- and middle-income working Minnesotans continue to stagnate, while the cost of housing, utilities, food, childcare, transportation and health care continue to increase. It costs a family of three (one adult and two children) approximately $46,000 a year to meet basic needs" If this reflects the actual and true cost-of-living then this is what the Minimum Wage should be based on.

Besides, what is with you politicians talking about everything under the sun except for two things: "cost-of-living" and "standard of living?"

You politicians should be willing to make whatever you establish the Minimum Wage at as your own pay... and most people in this country are so fed up with the whole darn bunch of you that they probably think this would be far too generous.

Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council