Category Archives: Anti-Capitalism

SYDNEY RALLY OPPOSES ENTIRE U.S. AND AUSTRALIAN IMPERIALIST INTERVENTION IN SYRIA AND IRAQ

Dozens of people rallied on November 29 in the inner-western Sydney suburb of Ashfield to oppose the U.S. and Australian military intervention in Syria and Iraq. The united front action was held under the main slogans, “Obama, Abbott and Shorten’s Military Intervention Is Bad For Working Class People – Oppose the U.S. & Australian Ruling Class and Down with Their War in the Middle East!” The demonstration called to “Defend Syria against Western Imperialism and its `Rebels!’”

In introducing the demonstration, rally chair, Sarah Fitzenmeyer, who is also the chairwoman of Trotskyist Platform, demolished the various “rationales” used by ruling class politicians to justify their war drive:

“The rulers of Australia, the United States, Britain and other Western powers are slamming bombs into Iraq and Syria. To save the world from a deadly threat or so they say. But why should working people even think of believing them? Look at what these `great leaders,’ these rulers are doing here!

“… Slamming the poor by making them pay for doctors visits.

Increasing the cost of going to university.

“And they want to leave jobless people up to the age of 30 with absolutely no financial support whatsoever for six months every year that they’re unemployed!

“And low-income single-mothers will never forget how the last Labor government cruelly and treacherously slashed their parenting payments.

“Meanwhile, the ruling class is using a Royal Commission into our trade unions as a precursor to a full-blown union busting attack.

“In this country there is the shocking fact that not one murdering police enforcer has ever been jailed for the hundreds of Aboriginal people that have been killed in custody. In America right now our Black and Hispanic working class sisters and brothers are under a state of siege. They are under siege by a heavily militarized police force. A couple of days ago, The Sydney Morning Herald ran a picture of Ferguson, Missouri looking like some kind of snowy Fallujah at the height of the Iraq War. National guardsmen are patrolling the streets of this American mid-West town in combat gear. All in order to repress the 100% justified acts of outrage after the murder of an unarmed Black teenager, Michael Brown, and the subsequent exoneration of the racist white pig police officer, Darren Wilson, who murdered the boy.

“Sisters and brothers, the fact is that the governments involved in the U.S-led bombing campaign do not serve the interests of ordinary working class people. Capitalist institutions are the enemy of workers and the oppressed. They are the servants of the big business owners – the lackies of the capitalist big end of town. And there is no bigger, more brutal lackey and one that is more dangerous to the working people than the military machine of the capitalist state, armed to the hilt with its monstrous weapons of mass destruction.

“The war that the U.S. and Australian rulers are waging in the Middle East is not in the interests of working class people. It is in the interests of the Andrew Forrests, the Gina Rineharts, the Packers, Lowys, Murdochs and all the other corporate bigwigs. This war is against the interests of working class people, Aboriginal people and all of the oppressed.

“When the U.S. and Australian regimes act abroad, they act with the same hostility to the interests of all working class people as they do at home. But they act with even more brutality. They have arrogant contempt for the masses of the so-called `Third World.’ The big business owners, who the Washington and Canberra regimes actually serve, exploit workers at an even greater rate in the poorer, ex-colonial countries that largely make up what’s known as the `Third World.’ `Fighting terrorism’ is the pretext for looting natural resources and subjecting these countries to the tyranny of debt bondage. To further the imperialist plunder in the Middle East is the reason why they are bombing in Syria and Iraq. Enforcing their predatory, neo-colonial goals is their MAIN aim.”

The theme of the demonstration was that standing against the U.S. and Australian capitalist rulers’ war in the Middle East is part of fighting against their attacks at home on the working class, Aboriginal people, coloured “ethnic” communities, public housing tenants and all the poor. As the rally chair explained:

“It goes without saying that it is the people of the Middle East who will suffer the most from this war. But every bomb landed by the U.S.A and Australia in the Middle East will reverberate at home too. When the capitalist ruling class wages a bullying imperialist war abroad it means they also wage a war at home, a war against our trade unions, against Aboriginal people, against refugees, against single mothers and in fact against all the poor.

“Already, the war fever and the “terrorism” hysteria has helped Abbott to churn up a rabid nationalist and racist climate that has helped him to divert mass frustrations away from his government’s anti-working class budget.

”There have been so many grotesque attacks on Muslim men, women and children ….

“Racism is poison to the unity that working class people need to stand up to their exploiters. Racism is absolute poison to workers unity: an evil brew that the capitalist class likes to concoct and stirs up so intently, practically every passing hour of the working day, in order to try to divide and conquer the working masses. For the working masses of Australia, in fact of the whole world, are a people of a myriad creeds and colors who, by a singular turn of the wheel of history, now find themselves working side by side on the production line. Just as, arms linked – black to white to yellow to white and back to black again – they are fighting together on the picket line, fighting for their common rights as workers. This is the multi-racial, multi-national and united working class that the capitalist robber barons fear the most. Racism is the capitalist class’ final key, a knife that they intend to use to cut this multiracial unity of workers into countless irreconcilable, squabbling and ultimately warring pieces. Right now the bosses are gearing up for a full-scale union-busting attack on the proudly multi-ethnic CFMEU construction workers union as well as other unions. Only a united union, undivided by the scourge of racism and its nasty twin, nationalism, can hope to withstand the union-busting storm that’s on its way. The ruling corporate class wants to wage imperialist war abroad not only for their predatory search for super-profits and world domination of resources and markets but because it helps them to stir up racism and nationalism and thus to suppress the working class and anti-racist movements at home.
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“That’s why we must mobilise the working class and all the downtrodden in mass action against this latest neo-colonial war. Today marks the very beginning of the struggle to build a pro-working class movement against the neo-colonial intervention by the U.S. and Australian ruling classes in Syria and Iraq.”

In motivating the need to oppose this latest U.S.-led predatory war, rally chair Sarah Fitzenmeyer stressed that

“… a major aim of their latest intervention is to push for the overthrow of the Assad government in Syria. The Assad government is itself a capitalist government – except that it is too independent from the Western imperialist powers for the USA and its coalition of the greedy and the ruthless to tolerate.”

This latter point about how the Western powers are using the pretext of opposing ISIS to manoeuvre towards imposing regime change in Syria was explosively underscored just eight days after the Ashfield rally when Washington’s Israeli attack dogs unleashed fighter aircraft to bomb targets inside Syria including the international airport in the capital Damascus.

Addressing the November 29 rally, Behrooz, spokesman for the Supporters of the Iranian People’s Fadaee Guerrillas, also powerfully rebuffed media propaganda that the U.S.-led military intervention in the Middle East is about “fighting terrorism”:

“Is this action in response to terrorism and stopping the reactionary ISIS group, or is it a plan to dominate the Middle East by redeploying its forces in Iraq and occupying Syria?

“United States in the past three and half years actively mobilised and trained all reactionary opposition groups in Syria in cooperation with totalitarian regimes such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, UAE and Turkey. These murderers have free movement in all of the above mentioned countries and military bases with active support of the army and full support from the USA.

“The Liberal, National and Labor governments in Australia unconditionally have supported the invasion of Iraq and destruction of Syria, Australia has aligned itself with the most jingoistic warmongers in the USA; ignoring the loss of lives and devastation of many countries such as Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, these are just a few examples in only the past few years.“

Representing the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) at the November 29 action, Wayne Sonter, Secretary of the Sydney District Committee of the CPA, convincingly took on the arguments he has heard from what he called a “Right Opposition” within the Western Left and the expatriate Syrian community. These people justify their refusal to campaign against the U.S.-led airstrikes with the argument that the Syrian government has not attempted to shoot down the Western fighter aircraft. Sonter pointed out, for one, that Syria is not in a military position to take an action which would trigger a direct war with the U.S. and its lackeys. The fact that Syria has not at this point tried to shoot down NATO aircraft does not make the U.S. empire’s blatant violation of Syrian sovereignty any less a threat to Syria and its independence. And this is a fact regardless of the Syrian government’s immediate stance towards this Western intervention. The CPA representative especially skewered those refusing to oppose the U.S.-led war drive from a seemingly opposite direction to the “Right Opposition.” He emphasised that left groups such as the Cliffite Socialist Alternative are cheerleading for imperialism when they cheer for the imperialist proxy Syrian “Rebels.”

The weekend prior to the Ashfield rally, some of the groups backing the pro-imperialist “Rebels” in Syria that the CPA spokesman referred to held a protest in Sydney’s Town Hall Square that opposed the bombing of Iraq but was pointedly silent on the imperialist intervention in Syria. These groups – like Socialist Alternative, Solidarity and Socialist Alliance – do not want to squarely oppose the imperialist intervention in Syria because, for one, a major part of that intervention is the U.S. government’s scheme to greatly increase arming and training of the pro-imperialist Syrian “Rebels” – the same ones that these left groups back. Secondly, after having said little in solidarity with the secular, Syrian-based Kurdish groups for two years when those Kurdish parties were in a defacto alliance with the Assad government against the religious fundamentalist “Rebels,” now that Syrian Kurdish factions have descended into an alliance with the U.S.-led imperialists against ISIS, the reformist left have suddenly re-discovered the cause of the Syrian Kurds and have rushed to join “Solidarity with Kobane” rallies in Australia. Not wanting to alienate their new found Kurdish allies, the soft-on-imperialism socialist groups thus refrain from opposing the U.S.-led airstrikes in Kobane and Syria more generally. Thirdly, even though some healthier gut-level impulses to oppose the U.S.-led airstrikes in Syria may exist within individuals inside these reformist left groups, they are so tainted by their years-long support for the imperialist-proxy “Rebels” in Syria and so exposed and embarrassed by the fact that NATO backing for these “Rebels” has become even more blatant that they would rather not even talk about Syria. In fact, they’d probably prefer that the very word “Syria” wasn’t mentioned in polite company at all!

The November 29 Ashfield demonstration was thus the very first action – and unfortunately as we go to press thus far the only action – in Australia to oppose the entire U.S./Australia imperialist intervention in the Middle East: from their bombing campaigns in both Iraq AND Syria to their arming of proxies in Syria. Yuri Gromov, editor of Trotskyist Platform, outlined the necessity to take such a consistent, anti-imperialist stance when in the course of motivating the need to defend Syria against imperialist-imposed regime change, he demolished the arguments used by those refusing to oppose the entire imperialist intervention:

“… most nominally left wing groups in Australia have, while correctly opposing the bombing of Iraq, failed to oppose the imperialist intervention in Syria. These groups, many of whom falsely claim some connection with the glorious program of Trotskyism, are tainted by their years-long support for the Western-backed `Rebels.’

“Unfortunately, some who have laudably defended Syria against the pro-imperialist `Rebels’ are also refusing to oppose the U.S.-led airstrikes in Syria. On this, they ironically take a similar stance to the pseudo-Trotskyist groups and use a similar rationale for their position: that is that `we can use imperialism.’ But imperialism cannot be used for progressive purposes. Never ever! There are no exceptions! If you allow imperialism to strengthen it is more readily able to carry out its predatory goals. Those who think that imperialism can be used to bolster Syrian independence by weakening ISIS are like a person in a tiger-infested village who thinks he should guide a hungry tiger to eat his cruel, hated neighbor. Except that the hungry tiger then gets a taste for human flesh … and guess who will be up next on the tiger’s menu? If the Western imperialists succeed in their current campaign it will only embolden them for an open attack on Syria. It is worth recalling that what deterred the U.S. rulers from a planned invasion of Syria ten years ago were the blows that their military was taking from insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq. The historical irony that all the insurgents striking those blows in Afghanistan and some of the ones involved in Iraq were religious fundamentalist reactionaries quite similar in ideology to the Syrian proxies backed by the West today does not change this fact. That is why it is in the interest of the Syrian people’s struggle against neocolonialism to see the U.S. and Australian regime suffer setbacks in their war that is nominally against ISIS.

We must stand for the defeat of the U.S. and Australian capitalist rulers in their war in both Syria and Iraq. We must fight for the defence of Syria against Western imperialism and its `Rebels.’ If the imperialist-imposed regime change drive is defeated in Syria then it will spur on the Arab masses to depose the Western puppet governments in places like Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. It will encourage the Syrian working class itself to say: now that we have defeated imperialism and its open agents, we should also take away power from the half-baked, neither here nor there Baathist rulers who are themselves economically dependent on imperialism.”

Also addressing the Ashfield demonstration was Samuel Russell, a trade union activist who happens to be the UNSW Branch Secretary of the National Tertiary Education Union. Speaking at the event in a personal capacity, Russell emphasised the role that the Australian working class movement and the trade union movement in particular must play in opposing this war. He noted that there has been mass opposition to other imperialist wars. In the lead up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq there were huge protests. In that case they were not able to stop the invasion but Russell stated that the Great War (World War I) which just had its centenary was stopped largely due to workers’ strikes and mass actions in many countries – including Russia, Germany, Britain and in the colonies of the European imperial powers.

The speakers at the Ashfield demonstration were listened to by working class people who joined the rally from Western Sydney suburbs like Auburn and Parramatta as well as local people from multiracial, working-class Ashfield, Trotskyist Platform supporters and other anti-imperialist minded leftists. There was no presence at all from people from the middle class and university-based left groups/left milieus. The participants, instead, were mainly working class and/ or from Asian, Middle Eastern, African and South American backgrounds. Many locals from Ashfield passing the rally stopped to listen and take leaflets and several expressed sympathy with the action.

The important thing now is that we take the message emphasised in the Ashfield action out to people in our workplaces, trade unions, activist milieus etc and start preparing for the actions that we must build in the future to oppose the warmongering imperialists and to defend Syria against neocolonialism. As the Trotskyist Platform spokesman, Yuri Gromov, concluded in his speech, the only way we can achieve these tasks is through the methods of the class struggle:

“Some say that the problem with this war is that Canberra does not pursue an `independent foreign policy.’ However, the problem is actually much deeper. The Australian ruling class backs Washington in the Middle East because it relies on the might of its U.S. godfather to defend its own looting and jackbooting in neighbouring countries from Fiji to East Timor to PNG. Simply put, Australia’s imperialist rulers are supporting Obama’s war because it is in their interests do so. They cannot be won over to take another road. To defeat their war we need to mobilise the class whose interests lie with opposing their military adventures: the working class.

“And the interests of the exploited masses really do lie in defeating Abbott and Shorten’s war. Every bit of blood that the regime here draws in the Middle East will make them more savage in their attacks on the oppressed at home: More vicious in their bashing of our unions; still more cruel in their violent attacks on Aboriginal people; more ruthless in cutting public services like public housing, public education and women’s refuges….

“Sisters and brothers, we must understand that unleashing wars is not simply a policy decision for the greedy ruling classes. For it is part of their very DNA. They must seek out new territory to loot in order to make up for the crumbling of their capitalist system at home. From their point of view, unleashing predatory wars is something that they simply must do just as attacking our unions is also something that they must do. But from our point of view, we must wage class war on the capitalist rulers’ wars abroad just as we must wage class war on their attacks on the toilers and downtrodden at home. From the storming of Canberra’s parliament house in 1996 by trade unionists and Aboriginal people to the courageous multi-racial protests in the U.S. against the racist whitewash of the police murder of Michael Brown, we certainly see potential for such struggle. Let’s today build mass working class sentiment to the point that there can be trade union political strikes in opposition to Obama, Abbott and Shorten’s military expedition. Let’s stand for the defence of Syria against neocolonialism. Let’s reject the capitulations of ALP social democracy and Greens progressive liberalism to build a real alternative, that is a revolutionary socialist alternative, to the murderous capitalist order!”

FREEDOM FOR THE REFUGEES! NO TO OFFSHORE OR ONSHORE DETENTION! BUILD A PRO-WORKING CLASS REFUGEE RIGHTS MOVEMENT

FREEDOM FOR THE REFUGEES! NO TO OFFSHORE OR ONSHORE DETENTION!

BUILD A PRO-WORKING CLASS REFUGEE RIGHTS MOVEMENT

The late Reza Berati. The 24 year-old Kurdish asylum seeker was murdered in Australia’s immigration detention hellhole in PNG’s Manus Island by Australian and PNG detention centre guards and at least one Salvation Army employee.
The late Reza Berati. The 24 year-old Kurdish asylum seeker was murdered in Australia’s immigration detention hellhole in PNG’s Manus Island by Australian and PNG detention centre guards and at least one Salvation Army employee.

20 March 2014 – Thousands of people have protested in recent weeks against the Abbott regime’s brutal war on refugees. The latest atrocity to spark protest was a rampage against refugees by guards at Australia’s Manus Island detention centre in PNG. On February 17, these guards unleashed murderous violence. Backed up by PNG police – who like other state institutions in Papua New Guinea are largely subservient to Australian imperialism – they attacked the detainees with sticks and machetes, murdering 24 year-old Kurdish asylum seeker, Reza Berati, and injuring 77 other refugees.

The recent large pro-refugee rights rallies have brought out a wide variety of people. Many are youth passionately opposed to racism. Some are small-l liberals who see the cruelty against refugees as a blot on the copybook of an otherwise fair society. Yet the despicable treatment of refugees is actually typical of the record of capitalist Australia – from genocidal terror against this country’s first peoples to the anti-Chinese pogroms of the late 1800s and right through to the 2005 white supremacist riot at Cronulla Beach. Indeed, just three days before the Manus Island rampage, supporters of slain Aboriginal youth TJ Hickey marked ten years of the cover up of his murder by racist police in Redfern. The previous week, one of the four police officers who were surrounding an Aboriginal woman, Sheila Oakley, in her own home south of Brisbane, barbarically fired a taser straight into her eye and blinded it.

The Coalition’s war on refugees is naked. Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott rant hardline refugee bashing speeches. ALP politicians have made some criticisms of Morrison’s lies about the Manus events. But, in case anyone thought that the ALP was considering shifting its own racist policy, ALP immigration spokesman, Richard Marles, made his party’s stance all too clear:

“We cannot afford for the Manus Island detention facility to fall over.”

“It is the cornerstone of Australia’s strategy in terms of reducing the flow of boats from Indonesia.”

Indeed, it was the Keating ALP government that first introduced mandatory detention in 1992. And let’s not forget that the Rudd government Version 2.0 introduced the extreme policy of sending all refugee arrivals to the Manus hellhole. The ALP leaders have as much of the blood of Reza Berati on their hands as does the right wing Coalition!

There are some within Labor ranks that do oppose aspects of the war on refugees. However, the ALP leadership fully embraces anti-refugee racism because that flows naturally from their support for the capitalist order – a system of exploitation that necessarily compels the ruling class to promote racism in order to divide and divert the working class people that they exploit and thus prevent the exploited masses from rising up against them. Today, as the ultra-rich bosses intensify their attacks on workers’ unions and savagely slash jobs – from WesTrac to Holden to Qantas – they and their hounds in government are intensifying the scapegoating of refugees and migrants. That’s why if the working class is going to be able to focus its own against the powerful capitalist enemy then it must actively challenge racist scapegoating of refugees. Mobilise trade union power to demand: Close all the detention centres! Residency with full citizenship rights for all refugees and migrants imprisoned in Manus Island, Christmas Island, Villawood and everywhere else!

People suffering from these problems often have a deep viagra buy on line sense of shame and distress. It, along with proper lubrication, can give online viagra prescription you a rundown of erectile dysfunction solutions to offer relief to your pain. You can buy Kamagra online easily. / Kamagra has an levitra generic canada active life and half-life. The reasons may be any; you will get rid of the disease from a single dose of Kamagra oral jelly helps preserving reproductive functions. order cialis http://amerikabulteni.com/2011/10/27/fx-has-bought-the-rights-to-charlie-sheens-anger-management/ Importantly, at recent pro-refugee actions there has been a presence from some unions including the MUA, Teachers Federation and ASU. This now needs to be urgently converted from the presence of a small number of officials to the actual mass mobilisation of union ranks – thereby laying the basis for actual industrial action. Because striking workers can bring industrial production to a standstill, the working class has the power to defeat all the schemes of the racist, rich ruling class. But how can mass union support be achieved? It is not simply a matter of lobbying union officials. To be able to win significant union support, we must convince the most active layers of the unions that defending refugee rights is an important part of bolstering the union’s very ability to resist the greedy bosses. That means pro-refugee demonstrations need to feature slogans in their rally leaflets that clearly point out how defending refugees is crucial for strengthening workers’ unity across racial lines and achieving the kind of solidarity that can lead to the defeat of the powerful capitalist bosses. The refugee rights movement must bring together the fight for refugee rights with the struggle for workers emancipation into one, unbeatable whole.

However, the current refugee rights groups like the Refugee Action Coalition (RAC) do not have this perspective. RAC has, indeed, worked tirelessly to expose the crimes against refugees. And the left wing groups that dominate RAC like Solidarity, Socialist Alliance (SA) and Socialist Alternative (SAlt) certainly do believe in lobbying unions. However, these groups refuse to make appeals to workers’ class interests part of official rally slogans because they fear alienating pro-capitalist small-l liberals and Greens. And although there are some differences among the leftist groups within RAC – for example, SAlt believe in using the “Fu_k” word in chants while SA are less keen to do so – all these groups ultimately pander to the upper and upper- middle class liberals and Greens by refusing to make RAC actions explicitly pro-working class. They would argue that this is necessary to maintain a “broad” movement. But, in the end, because the interests of the corporate bosses and the working class are in direct opposition, you can only either appeal to one class or the other. By refusing to openly appeal to workers’ class interests, the current refugee rights movement is cutting off the chance of broadening support for refugees amongst the working class. And it is the organised working class and not well-heeled, small-l liberals or two-faced mainstream politicians that has the consistent interest and power to defeat the war on refugees.

Many refugee rights activists have illusions in the Greens who, after all, are the one parliamentary party that at least speaks out against aspects of the war on refugees. However, the flakiness of the Greens’ commitment to refugee   rights was demonstrated all too clearly when it jumped into a coalition with the Gillard ALP government without demanding even the slightest commitment from that government to ease its war on refugees. The Greens’ inability to offer real solutions flows from their middle class refusal to stand unequivocally for workers class interests against those of the capitalist bosses. Thus, in Tasmania, as part of the recently deposed governing coalition with the ALP, the Greens openly supported the anti-worker privatisation of electricity distribution. This refusal to stand for class struggle solutions leaves the Greens coughing up divisive nationalist “solutions” instead. In fact, the Greens are the most hardline of all major parties in whipping up hysteria over foreign ownership of land (see http://www.greens.org.au/land-ownership). Although such Greens jingoism is not directly aimed against asylum seekers, it definitely feeds into the poisonous national chauvinism that inevitably rebounds against asylum seekers who are, after all, in essence the most vulnerable section of migrant Australia.

The 17 February 2014 rampage by detention centre guards at Australia’s immigration detention centre on Manus Island sparked mass protests. The horrific riot by the guards included their murder of asylum seeker Reza Berati. The policy of detaining all asylum seekers arriving by sea offshore and denying them the chance of settlement in Australia was first implemented by the previous Rudd ALP government and is being continued by the right-wing Coalition government.
The 17 February 2014 rampage by detention centre guards at Australia’s immigration detention centre on Manus Island sparked mass protests. The horrific riot by the guards included their murder of asylum seeker Reza Berati. The policy of detaining all asylum seekers arriving by sea offshore and denying them the chance of settlement in Australia was first implemented by the previous Rudd ALP government and is being continued by the right-wing Coalition government.

MOBILISE TRADE UNION POWER IN DEFENCE OF REFUGEES

The struggle to mobilise the workers movement behind refugees depends not only on what the refugee rights movement does. It also depends, crucially, on there being a union leadership that is prepared to stand strongly against racism. Some union officials have come out in support of refugee rights but this is undercut by the overall union leadership’s subordination to the refugee-bashing ALP. Like their ALP mates in parliament, most of the union bureaucracy bows down to the capitalist order. They reject militant industrial action. In response to job slashing, they call for government assistance for local corporations and protectionist measures against overseas producers. In response to the bosses’ exploitation of 457 Visa workers, our union leaders – instead of fighting to win our guest worker sisters and brothers the same conditions as local workers and full citizenship rights – divisively call for local workers to be put ahead of their 457 Visa comrades.

Not only do such policies fuel xenophobic nationalism, they damage the workers’ unity that is needed to fight for workers rights. What the working class so badly needs is a leadership that’s prepared to unleash union power to force greedy bosses to retain jobs at the expense of their profits, all as part of a broader workers’ fightback against the capitalist exploiters. And any union activist who is serious about mobilising industrial action knows that a successful strike depends, above all, on workers’ unity and a clear understanding of who the enemy is (the bosses and their hacks in government) and who the enemy definitely is not (migrant workers and refugees). That is why we communists insist that the fight against racism is crucial to the struggle for workers’ rights. Indeed, with the ruling class on an anti-union offensive – highlighted by the Abbott government’s Royal Commission against the unions – opposing the ruling class’ strategy to divert the masses frustrations onto asylum seekers and 457 Visa workers is actually a life and death question for the union movement itself.

The tent “accommodation” on Manus Island where the Australian regime cruelly imprisons asylum seekers.
The tent “accommodation” on Manus Island where the Australian regime cruelly imprisons asylum seekers.

Despite being concerned for the welfare of asylum seekers, bourgeois liberal elements in the refugee rights movement know (while middle class elements think) that they have too much to gain living under a capitalist system. Too much to ever commit to a full frontal attack against the very system that transports asylum seekers to hellhole camps on Nauru and Manus Island. On the other hand, workers have long had an axe to grind with the Australian capitalist state. For the system has been set up to ensure that the yoke of exploitation remains permanently fixed around the broad, many coloured shoulders of the Australian working class. A powerful, united, multi-ethnic workers’ front is what’s needed to finally shake this yoke off. But first the insidious, divisive racism that pits worker against worker, all in the name of profits and dividends for the greedy bosses and shareholders, must be well and truly cast off. The refugee rights movement can assist in the formation of an anti-racist, class-struggle union leadership by ensuring that its slogans appeal directly to the interests that workers have in defending asylum seekers. In turn, the refugee rights struggle urgently needs union power behind it. Otherwise the spirited refugee rights rallies that are taking place, while useful in energising new layers of support, will not be able to stop a determined and rampaging ruling class. So let’s ensure that the refugee rights movement unashamedly proclaims its solidarity with the working class by saying: “Don’t let the bosses and politicians divide and divert workers with racism! Make our unions stronger – Build workers unity Fight for refugee rights!Hamid Kehazaei photo

4 September 2014: Refugee rights supporters hold a protest in solidarity with Iranian asylum seeker, Hamid Kehazaei outside Brisbane’s Mater Hospital. The 24 year-old had been pronounced brain dead by doctors at the hospital three days earlier. Imprisoned at the Manus Island immigration detention centre, he cut his foot and developed septicaemia which led to his death. This highly preventable tragedy was due to the hellish conditions at the Manus Island detention centre, the lack of proper medical facilities there and the criminal neglect of the detention centre authorities. Credit: Robert Leech
4 September 2014: Refugee rights supporters hold a protest in solidarity with Iranian asylum seeker, Hamid Kehazaei outside Brisbane’s Mater Hospital. The 24 year-old had been pronounced brain dead by doctors at the hospital three days earlier. Imprisoned at the Manus Island immigration detention centre, he cut his foot and developed septicaemia which led to his death. This highly preventable tragedy was due to the hellish conditions at the Manus Island detention centre, the lack of proper medical facilities there and the criminal neglect of the detention centre authorities.
Credit: Robert Leech

STOP CAPITALIST JOB SLASHING THROUGH CLASS STRUGGLE

On 2 January 2014, the MUA, CFMEU, CEPU, RBTU and other unions participated in important rallies in Sydney and Melbourne in support of the struggle of Korean railway workers against the privatisation of the South Korean rail network. Class struggle and internationalism is what can turn back the worldwide attacks of the capitalist classes against workers.
On 2 January 2014, the MUA, CFMEU, CEPU, RBTU and other unions participated in important rallies
in Sydney and Melbourne in support of the struggle of Korean railway workers against the privatisation of the South Korean rail network. Class struggle and internationalism is what can turn back the worldwide attacks of the capitalist classes against workers.

STOP CAPITALIST JOB SLASHING THROUGH CLASS STRUGGLE

FORCE BOSSES TO INCREASE HIRING AT THE EXPENSE OF THEIR PROFITS!

8 January 2014 – Billionaire Kerry Stokes has been “busy” cruising around in his luxury yacht. He is riding high. But the same can’t be said for the workers whose toil made him his fortune. Last month, workers at one of Stokes’ Seven Group subsidiaries, heavy machinery supplier WesTrac, were told that 630 of them would be retrenched. These workers are among tens of thousands who are being laid off across the country. Last September, Telstra announced that it was axing 1,100 workers. And this is after its owners made an obscene $3.9 billion profit last year. Although the media like to focus on jobs lost through off-shoring, these recent Telstra cuts – like most job slashing in Australia – has little to do with that. Most of the Telstra jobs axed in this latest round are those of line maintenance technicians – hardly roles that can be off-shored. Telstra’s latest profit grab is about cutting jobs by driving remaining workers harder and by reducing service quality to the public.

What has especially highlighted the jobs crisis was General Motors’ announcement last month that it will axe 2900 jobs and end manufacturing in Australia in 2017. This follows Ford’s announcement that it will slash 1,200 jobs and stop manufacturing here. The combined effect of the closures on parts manufacturers means that over 50,000 workers in all could lose their jobs in the automotive sector. This will not only be devastating for workers but shows the basic irrationality of capitalism in that skills built up over many decades will now be lost. And the trend of workers being ripped away from permanent jobs in unionised workplaces and dumped into insecure, casual jobs – where workers have little chance of learning skills and enjoy minimal rights – will be all the more deepened. As usual, the car bosses have justified the layoffs by crying poor. This is a scam! The $153 million loss that GM made last year in its Australian Holden operations – after paying for fat management salaries – is dwarfed by the $4.9 billion profit that it made worldwide. Thus GM’s owners, who include billionaire Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway which holds a $1.4 billion portion, would only lose 3% of their profits if they kept the jobs of the soon to be axed Holden workers.

Enough is enough! It is high time for the working class and its allies to act. We cannot allow the likes of Kerry Stokes’, whose Seven Group made a huge $486 million profit last year, to get away with his firm axing jobs at its WesTrac subsidiary just so that he can suck even higher profits to buy even more extravagant mansions. We need to say to the capitalist owners: we are simply not going to allow you to slash jobs. We are going to force you to keep employing more people than you think would be ideal for maximising your profits and you will have to wear this. And if that means you are going to have to sell one of your luxury yachts and delay buying your private jet – then tough! And if having a larger workforce means that you will be pushed to lower your prices in order to sell the extra production that a larger workforce could bring then all the better for it!

The  luxury  yacht  that  Australian  billionaire  Kerry Stokes likes to cruise around the world in. In the previous financial year,  Stokes  Seven  Group  made a $486 million profit.  Yet in December 2013, Seven Group subsidiary, heavy machinery supplier WestTrac, announced the retrenchment of a further 630 workers. Workers’ jobs are being  axed to  pay for the extravagant lifestyles of Kerry Stokes and the other capitalist tycoons.
The luxury yacht that Australian billionaire Kerry Stokes likes to cruise around the world in. In the previous financial year, Stokes Seven Group made a $486 million profit. Yet in December 2013, Seven Group subsidiary, heavy machinery supplier WestTrac, announced the retrenchment of a further 630 workers. Workers’ jobs are being axed to pay for the extravagant lifestyles of Kerry Stokes and the other capitalist tycoons.

However the corporate bosses-loving Abbott regime sure isn’t going to help us stop company owners from slashing jobs! Indeed, many in his ministry seemed to be partly happy about the crumbling of the car industry – since they know that workers in this sector are a bastion of trade unionism and once upon a time even had a reputation for class struggle militancy. Yet whether it is the ALP, the Greens or the Palmer United Party, none of the opposition parties also ever talk of measures to make it illegal for the corporate bosses to cut jobs. Thus, while the ALP leaders would actually like to be able to appease their working class support base by campaigning to save the jobs of GM and other workers, their subservience to the capitalist “order” and its principle that business owners have the “right” to do whatever it takes to maximise their profits means that they are completely incapable of preventing the job cuts. All the ALP could propose over the crisis facing Holden workers is to offer more handouts to GM – an idea they soon dropped. For the over $2 billion that governments handed over to the Holden bosses over the last 12 years did not stop them from axing their workers’ jobs. In the end, what handouts to companies actually do is to divide workers as workers in other sectors, whose taxes in good part fund government handouts, are made to feel resentful that they are propping up workers in a particular sector when their own jobs are also on the line. Indeed, any handout to GM effectively means that workers are, in good part through their taxes, handing over tens of millions of dollars to the likes of the billionaire Warren Buffett. One is reminded of the obscene spectacle that took place in November 2008 when the heads of GM, Ford and Chrysler flew into Washington to beg the U.S. government for a bailout, all arriving in their luxurious private jets!

Workers leaving work at Toyota’s Altona plant. An estimated 2500 jobs in total will be lost as a result of the closure of Toyota’s assembly plants in Australia. The combined impact of the announced closures of the Holden, Ford and Toyota plants and the flow on effects to supplier firms will see up to 50,000 workers lose their jobs in the automotive sector.
Workers leaving work at Toyota’s Altona plant. An estimated 2500 jobs in total will be lost as a result of the closure of Toyota’s assembly plants in Australia. The combined impact of the announced closures of the Holden, Ford and Toyota plants and the flow on effects to supplier firms will see up to 50,000 workers lose their jobs in the automotive sector.

IF THE CAPITALISTS CAN’T PROVIDE JOBS FOR WORKERS THEN THE ECONOMY SHOULD BE TAKEN OUT OF THEIR HANDS

Despite the nature of all the current parliamentary parties, the working class is far from powerless to stop job cuts. Strong union industrial action could force companies planning job cuts to retain their workers. For such action could compel business owners to realise that industrial action could cost them far more than the profits they will save by having a smaller workforce. The potential to stop the job cuts at Telstra and WesTrac is especially strong as not only could workers’ strikes shut down their hugely profitable operations in Australia but many of the workers in these firms are union members. Moreover, solidarity action by workers at other parts of Stokes’ Seven Group – including Channel 7, equipment hire company Coates Hire and lighting supplier AllightSykes – could really bulldoze his moves to bury jobs at his WesTrac subsidiary.

The situation is slightly different at Holden given GM plans to shut down its manufacturing in Australia. Yet, if Holden workers were to occupy GM plants at Elizabeth (in Adelaide) and Port Melbourne insisting that they will not allow GM to sell the billions of dollars in equipment there then these workers would find thousands of workers at supplier companies and hundreds of thousands of other sympathetic workers supporting their battle to save their jobs. However, to override GM’s job slashing also requires workers at GM’s profitable operations in places like South Korea and the U.S. to take solidarity action with Holden workers here. Workers at GM’s South Korean subsidiaries have already waged militant struggles and although U.S. GM workers have not taken such action for years, U.S. GM plants are still among the most unionised sites in the U.S.A. In 1998, the knock-on effect from a 54 day strike by over 9,000 workers at GM’s Flint component plant in Michigan ended up shutting down nearly 30 GM assembly plants and 100 components plants across the U.S. and ended up costing GM bosses nearly $3 billion.

However, if we are going to have the struggle that we need, there needs to be a radical change in our unions. Reflecting the politics of their ALP mates in parliament, most current union leaders accept the notion that for workers’ jobs to be safe, company profits must be maximised. Yet it is precisely in the drive to maximise profits that bosses are slashing jobs. The dominance of this ideology that workers’ welfare depends on capitalist business success has allowed the bosses to gut workers’ rights, casualise large chunks of the workforce and weaken our unions without our side putting up the resistance that could have smashed these attacks. Furthermore, the union tops’ approach makes the workers movement vulnerable to bosses’ threats that unless workers accept reduced conditions, profits will suffer and the bosses will be “forced” to cut jobs. This is precisely the threat that Toyota is making as they callously feed off workers fears following the Holden layoffs.

Workers at unionised workplaces will be the spearhead in the fight to defend jobs and a powerful struggle waged by these workers could spur on the building of unions at currently non-unionised sites. However, in the struggle against job losses, we need to unite union workers with workers at currently non-unionised sites as well as with unemployed workers and with working class youth worried about their future job prospects. To build such united struggle, we should launch a campaign of industrial action and rallies to demand laws that restrict the “right” of profitable businesses to slash jobs. In waging a struggle for such demands we should have no illusions that the pro- capitalist governments will in any way be on our side. Instead, we should see our fight as being aimed at forcing concessions from the enemy – just like in the past our struggles have won laws granting certain minimum leave entitlements and maximum working hours. Among the demands that such a movement could fight for are:

  • That no enterprise can retrench workers’ jobs if it or its parent company is currently making a profit.
  • That no firm can slash jobs if its total profit over the previous four years exceeds the total wages of all the potentially axed workers.
  • An end to and a reversal of all the draconian public sector job cuts which Liberal and ALP state governments have implemented in recent years and which Abbot’s Liberal/National Coalition want to deepen at the Federal level.

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Fighting for such demands will help start to mobilise action around the truth that fighting to save workers’ jobs means forcing the bosses to wear lower profits. As a class- struggle movement for jobs develops, our demands should not stop with this. We must emphasise the demand for full employment at the capitalist bosses’ expense – through reducing the working week with no loss in workers’ wages to the level needed to spread the available work around among all those who want to work.

MUA maritime workers union leadership’s campaign for “Local Jobs” against overseas labour on local shipping. Such divisive campaigns set local workers against their overseas sisters and brothers and undermine the necessary workers’ unity needed to defeat “multinational” corporate bosses through class struggle. The unions should instead focus the struggle on fighting for overseas workers to get the same wages and conditions as local workers and should unite all workers in industrial action to force the capitalist exploiters to cede improved conditions and more jobs for all.
MUA maritime workers union leadership’s campaign for “Local Jobs” against overseas labour on local shipping. Such divisive campaigns set local workers against their overseas sisters and brothers and undermine the necessary workers’ unity needed to defeat “multinational” corporate bosses through class struggle. The unions should instead focus the struggle on fighting for overseas workers to get the same wages and conditions as local workers and should unite all workers in industrial action to force the capitalist exploiters to cede improved conditions and more jobs for all.
June 30: Workers at Woolworths Distribution Centre in Warnervale (in NSW’s Central Coast) take strike action after the company issued many warnings for workers “taking too much time between jobs”. A program of industrial action is needed to defend workers’ jobs and to fight to force the capitalist bosses to accede to hiring more workers at the expense of their bloated profits.
June 30: Workers at Woolworths Distribution Centre in Warnervale (in NSW’s Central Coast) take strike action after the company issued many warnings for workers “taking too much time between jobs”. A program of industrial action is needed to defend workers’ jobs and to fight to force the capitalist bosses to accede to hiring more workers at the expense of their bloated profits.

As we fight for such demands, the capitalists will howl that this will drive them out of business – just as they do every time workers call for a pay rise. To this we must respond: if you cannot operate enterprises in a way that provides jobs for workers then you should not own these enterprises. They need to be ripped from your hands and brought into public ownership so that production can be planned to provide jobs for all and to utilise all available labour to serve society. However, not only are all current parliamentary parties thoroughly hostile to this idea of confiscating the factories, banks, transport systems and mines from the capitalists, any party that in the future attempted to do so would face fierce resistance from the judiciary, police, army and top echelons of the bureaucracy. For the current state apparatus has unbreakable, generations-old connections to the rich capitalist elite. That is why for our struggles to triumph, they must culminate in the working class leading all of the oppressed in a revolutionary movement to sweep away the current capitalist state and to build a new workers state that will implement a socialist system – a system based on people’s common ownership of the economy.

THE WORKERS UNITED WILL NEVER BE DEFEATED: TURNING THE SLOGAN INTO A REALITY

Key to unlocking the necessary fight back is to expose any illusions that local workers’ jobs can be protected through collaborative schemes with the bosses. Today, manufacturing union heads run a “Make it Here Or Jobs Disappear” campaign that appeals for government support for manufacturing firms and protectionist laws to favour local firms over overseas producers. Yet, the experience with Holden proves how little handouts to companies actually guarantee jobs. Protectionist measures don’t save jobs either for just as one country can take measures to protect its own firms, other countries can do the same. In the end all that protectionist appeals do is to set workers in different nations against each other while their greedy bosses – happy that workers are divided and looking out for the interest of their “own” firms rather than uniting against the bosses internationally – are left laughing all the way to the bank.

Yet, despite the failure of protectionist appeals to save jobs, most union leaders continue to make such calls because they fear the alternative: a strategy based on hard-fought industrial action. About the only time that most union leaders are taking any stand against job losses is if these layoffs are the result of off-shoring. The capitalist exploiters indeed do seek out lower paid labour they can find overseas just as they seek to replace workers here with lower- paid youth. However, our response to off- shoring should not be to counterpose the interests of local workers to their overseas comrades. That only serves to undercut the global workers’ unity that we so badly need if we are to defeat job slashing by multi- national corporate giants like Rio Tinto, Ford and GM, all of which have operations in many countries. Instead, we should say: we are happy if our working class comrades overseas get new jobs but there should be absolutely no job cuts locally. Furthermore, when a firm sets up a new operation in any country, we will fight for those workers to get the same conditions as the best paid workers at any of the firm’s global operations. Yet, instead of such an approach, Laborite union leaders promote divisive slogans like “Stop Aussie Jobs Going Overseas!” Similarly, instead of uniting the struggle of local workers with 457-Visa workers in the fight to defend the conditions of all workers, the current line of most union leaders is to make the divisive call to “Keep Out Guest Workers.”

We can see how campaigns that pit local workers against their overseas counterparts play out when we look at the results of the July 2012 “Local Workers First” rally in Perth. The trigger for the rally were moves by greedy billionaire Gina Rinehart and the likes of Rio Tinto to bring in overseas labour for their projects. Yet, when this same Rio Tinto announced last November that it was axing 1,100 jobs – including those of many Aboriginal workers – at its Gove alumina refinery in the NT, union leaders failed to organise any serious opposition. They could mobilise nearly 10,000 people to march for the blatantly divisive demand that Australian workers’ jobs be put ahead of those of overseas workers yet when capitalists are actually slashing Australian workers’ jobs in a move that had nothing to do with bringing in overseas workers, the union officials concerned didn’t want to organise any resistance at all. By channelling local workers concerns about their jobs into opposition to overseas workers, pro-ALP bureaucrats have diverted workers from the struggle that is actually needed – the one against the job-slashing exploiters.

Furthermore, consider what the July 2012 Perth rally means for potential efforts to save jobs in the automotive sector. Among the guest workers being rebuffed by the “Local Workers First” campaign are Korean workers. Yet, workers in South Korea’s GM plants are key to any struggle to stop job losses at Holden, not only because South Korea is where GM’s profits could seriously be hurt by solidarity strikes with Holden workers but because currently South Korean workers are much more willing to take action against their bosses than Australian workers are. Last month, rail workers in South Korea courageously faced down violent police attacks in a weeks long anti-privatisation struggle that triggered massive solidarity rallies by other workers. Yet, how in hell are Korean workers going to be convinced to risk their jobs to support their Australian sisters and brothers at Holden when they see Australian workers marching to put Australian workers ahead of overseas workers?

The influence of Laborite nationalism is so insidious that even many left wing groups like Socialist Alternative (Socialist Alternative, 3 July 2012) and the Communist Party of Australia (The Guardian, 11 July 2012) hailed the July 2012 “Local Workers First” rally. To be sure, these groups sought to distance themselves from the most jingoistic aspects of the rally. Yet, no matter in how cleansed a form they present it, as the rally’s main banner slogan “WA Kids Miss Out When Miners Use Overseas Workers” made all too clear, this is a poisonous campaign that pits local workers against their overseas comrades. It is a complete violation of the main call of The Communist Manifesto, which all nominally Marxist groups claim to stand on, “Workers of All Countries Unite.” It is not that there are no healthy feelings of solidarity toward overseas workers amongst sections of the Australian working class. After all, on January 2, officials of the MUA, CFMEU and the Rail, Tram and Bus Union held a rally outside the South Korean Consulate in solidarity with Korean rail workers. Yet what is needed is not only a show of solidarity but Australian workers truly standing as one with their overseas comrades. As The Communist Manifesto stresses:

The Communists are distinguished from the other working-class parties by this only: 1. In the national struggles of the proletarians of the different countries, they point out and bring to the front the common interests of the entire proletariat, independently of all nationality…

That means just as at an individual workplace one group of workers should not ask the boss to favour them at the expense of other workers, workers in one country should not ask capitalists to favour them at the expense of their overseas comrades.

Trotskyist Platform works to contribute to the building of union leadership that will be based on The Communist Manifesto’s principles. We do, of course, understand that capitalists hire guest workers in order to drive down wages. Yet, we maintain that this should be entirely met by union demands for guest workers to be given the same wages as the best paid local workers, to be given citizenship rights and to be fully unionised and not at all by divisive demands to “keep out guest workers.” If you understand that the only way to protect jobs is by struggle against job-slashing bosses then you will do everything to build workers unity – without which struggles are doomed to failure. That is why our unions must also oppose racist scapegoating of Aboriginal people, refugees and “ethnic” communities which is used by the exploiting class to divert workers’ anger away from the true source of their problems – the corporate bigwigs. Kerry Stokes epitomises how the capitalists use such methods. Although Stokes likes to present himself as an enlightened person – all the better to promote his Asian business interests – the Channel 7 station that he owns churns out a stream of hostile stereotyping against the likes of refugees. How better for Kerry Stokes to divert workers at his WesTrac subsidiary from the fact that it is his greed that is the sole cause of the job cuts there!

The class struggle leadership of the unions that needs to be built must be linked to a revolutionary party that will organise the workers struggle in all political arenas. Such a party would draw around the class struggle all those downtrodden by capitalism – from Aboriginal people suffering terrible racism, to “ethnic” youth, to working class youth facing joblessness and to low-income women and single mothers facing hostile stigmatisation and enforced poverty. We badly need such a struggle against capitalism. For capitalism has proven that it cannot guarantee workers’ livelihoods and periodically falls into crises that bring untold suffering – like the Great Depression of the 1930s and the recent Great Recession that has ravaged the masses in Europe, America and the rest of the capitalist world. If workers here did not suffer the same unemployment level during this recent crisis it is only because the Australian economy was saved by surging exports to socialistic China’s booming state-owned steel and energy producers. Yet China’s ruling Communist Party is moving that country to focus more on services and high-end manufacturing – that is, to an economy that will need smaller increases in imports of Australian iron ore and liquefied gas. This means that when the inevitable, next capitalist crisis hits or if this one lingers for much longer, even socialistic China will not be able save the Australian economy. Unless we reject the capitalists’ “right” to sack workers whenever their profits demand it, as part of beginning to challenge their whole system, we will end up here with the catastrophic situation that our working class sisters and brothers in Greece and Spain face right now – where three out of every five young workers is unemployed.

FIGHT FOR PROPER MAINTENANCE OF PUBLIC HOUSING. STOP THE NEGLECT AND STOP THE SELL-OFFS

One of the damaged pipes that the NSW Department of Housing and wealthy maintenance contractor Spotless had left in a terrible state of disrepair at a public housing residence in Waterloo in inner city Sydney.
One of the damaged pipes that the NSW Department of Housing and wealthy maintenance contractor Spotless had left in a terrible state of disrepair at a public housing residence in Waterloo in inner city Sydney.

FIGHT FOR PROPER MAINTENANCE OF PUBLIC HOUSING

STOP THE NEGLECT AND STOP THE SELL-OFFS

THE SUFFERING OF A PUBLIC HOUSING TENANT

The tenant, sixty year-old Virginia Hickey, wants her story told as she knows that many others living in public housing are going through similar experiences. Ms Hickey (known affectionately as “Aunty Bowie”) has lived in her house in Douglas Street in the inner city Sydney suburb of Waterloo for many years. She is the primary carer for two of her grandchildren and, additionally, two younger grandchildren, one with a serious diabetic condition, stay with her on weekends.

28 June 2014: Members of the Illawarra-based Public Housing Union, Millers Point public housing tenants, supporters of public housing and Trotskyist Platform rally in Auburn to defend public housing. The main rally banner reads: “Stop the Sell Off of Public Housing! Smash the Attacks on Services That Working Class People Need the Most. Massively Increase Public Housing – Just Like What China Is Doing”
28 June 2014: Members of the Illawarra-based Public Housing Union, Millers Point public housing tenants,
supporters of public housing and Trotskyist Platform rally in Auburn to defend public housing. The main rally banner reads: “Stop the Sell Off of Public Housing! Smash the Attacks on Services That Working Class People Need the Most. Massively Increase Public Housing – Just Like What China Is Doing”

The family’s ordeal actually began several years ago. Maintenance on the home was so neglected by the housing authorities that the whole place was falling apart the stove was not working, the taps were faulty and everything from the roof to the walls to the flooring were in a terrible condition. Eventually, after pressing the Continue reading FIGHT FOR PROPER MAINTENANCE OF PUBLIC HOUSING. STOP THE NEGLECT AND STOP THE SELL-OFFS

U.S./AUSTRALIA: HANDS OFF IRAQ AND SYRIA!

A home in Kfar Derian in Syria’s western Aleppo province destroyed by U.S.-led air strikes. The imperialist bombing has already killed dozens of Syrians.
A home in Kfar Derian in Syria’s western Aleppo province destroyed by U.S.-led air strikes. The imperialist bombing has already killed dozens of Syrians.

DEFEND SYRIA AGAINST WESTERN IMPERIALISM & ITS “REBEL” PROXIES!

WORKERS CAUGHT IN THE CROSS HAIRS OF CAPITALISM: DON’T LET THE JINGOISTIC BEAT OF WAR DIVERT YOU FROM JUSTIFIED ANGER AT THE EXPLOITERS & THEIR BUDGET

ABBOTT/SHORTEN’S WAR AND “ANTI-TERROR LAWS” ARE BAD FOR WORKING CLASS PEOPLE

October 1 – The most fearsome force on the planet is once again slamming missiles into the Middle East. Over the last few weeks the U.S. imperialists have bombed Iraq. Last week, they and their Saudi, Qatari and other lapdogs started bombing inside Syria. That was done without Syrian government consent – a violation of Syria’s sovereignty. Shortly after this attack, the Syrian Foreign Minister asserted that: “We have already stated that we consider any violation of Syria’s sovereignty as aggression.”

Australia’s capitalist rulers could not wait to get involved. The Liberal government– with 100% support from the ALP “opposition” – deployed troops to the Middle East to join the U.S. before any other country. These forces include 200 special forces troops as well as a RAAF group with eight Super Hornet fighter- bombers. Today, Abbott announced that these forces would start operations. Continue reading U.S./AUSTRALIA: HANDS OFF IRAQ AND SYRIA!

Smash Abbott’s Budget

Photo Credit: AMWU Triumphant workers at the Ausreo site in western Sydney after learning that their struggle had forced the company to grant them a real wage increase. The workers, members of the AMWU manufacturing workers union, picketed the site for 10 weeks after the bullying bosses locked out the workers and refused to negotiate a pay rise. The workers defiant struggle won solidarity from many other trade unionists. Class struggle methods are the road to workers victory!
Photo Credit: AMWU
Triumphant workers at the Ausreo site in western Sydney after learning that their struggle had forced the company to grant them a real wage increase. The workers, members of the AMWU manufacturing workers union, picketed the site for 10 weeks after the bullying bosses locked out the workers and refused to negotiate a pay rise. The workers defiant struggle won solidarity from many other trade unionists. Class struggle methods are the road to workers victory!
Ausreo workers locked out. AMWU late Aug last day lockout. Photo Credit: AMWU
Ausreo workers locked out. AMWU late Aug last day lockout.
Photo Credit: AMWU
Melbourne, 1987: Members of the Builder Labourers Federation (BLF) protest against their persecution. The BLF trade union was deregistered the year before by the then Hawke Labor government with the assistance of the NSW Wran Labor government and the Victorian Cain Labor government. Governments sent in police to raid union offices and to surround major building sites in order to violently prevent BLF members from going into their jobs. The capitalists and their social democratic servants targeted the BLF because it dared to use militant industrial action to fight for workers’ rights and other progressive social justice causes. The ALP’s smashing of the BLF was criminal treachery against the ALP’s working class base.
Melbourne, 1987: Members of the Builder Labourers Federation (BLF) protest against their persecution. The BLF trade union was deregistered the year before by the then Hawke Labor government with the assistance of the NSW Wran Labor government and the Victorian Cain Labor government. Governments sent in police to raid union offices and to surround major building sites in order to violently prevent BLF members from going into their jobs. The capitalists and their social democratic servants targeted the BLF because it dared to use militant industrial action to fight for workers’ rights and other progressive social justice causes. The ALP’s smashing of the BLF was criminal treachery against the ALP’s working class base.

Rely on Class Struggle Not Campaigning for ALP/Greens Governments. Unleash Industrial Action Now to Reverse Three Decades of Attacks on Working Class People.

3 July 2014 – Over the last four months, tens of thousands of people have been marching in large rallies protesting against the right wing Abbott regime. The first budget of the Liberal-National government has rightly enraged working class people, students and leftists. In measures that will hurt the working class, retrenched workers and the poor the most, Treasurer Hockey’s budget has slashed funding for public hospitals and will make people pay a $7 fee for each doctor’s visit. The latter measure is likely to be the thin edge of a wedge aimed at slicing up any semblance of universal health care. Resources for Aboriginal services will be slashed, public funding for universities will be cut by 20% and graduates will have to pay their tuition fee debts back when their incomes are lower. People on the Disability Support Pension are to face nerve-wracking “re-assessments” of their eligibility for the pension. Most cruelly, unemployed people under the age of thirty are to be thrown off payments for six months a year. This will surely lead to even more homelessness, poverty and youth suicide.

Sensing public sentiment, opposition parties have come out against several budget measures. Even greedy tycoon Clive Palmer and his conservative party have stated their intention to vote against some measures. ALP leaders have tried to restore their battered credentials with their working class base by denouncing the unfairness of the budget to low and middle income people. But let us not forget that the previous government, for the most part a de facto Labor-Greens coalition, also made life harder for the poor. The former ALP/Greens government cruelly drove 84,000 low income single parents mainly single mothers – into extreme poverty when they threw them off the parenting payment onto the much lower Newstart Allowance. Furthermore, the last government undermined public housing. In 2010, then housing minister Tanya Plibersek a supposed “Left” who today is Labor’s main spokesperson at anti-Abbott rallies worked together with the then state ALP government to plan the sell-off of public housing from NSW’s biggest public housing estate at Claymore. Plibersek’s program, which saw a large number of public dwellings sold off, is now being carried through further by the present state Liberal government. Continue reading Smash Abbott’s Budget

An Eye Witness Account of Capitalist South Korea

An Eye Witness Account of Capitalist South Korea

Seoul’s subway at 7pm where 33 or more homeless people are resting. This situation in South Korea is in stark contrast to that in its northern socialistic neighbour where housing has been expropriated from the landlords and collectivised to provide free public housing.
Seoul’s subway at 7pm where 33 or more homeless people are resting. This situation in South Korea is in stark contrast to that in its northern socialistic neighbour where housing has been expropriated from the landlords and collectivised to provide free public housing.
An elderly working class man doing it tough in South Korea: it is common to witness many resorting to collecting recyclables for petty cash in a country where an aged pension is virtually non-existent.
An elderly working class man doing it tough in South Korea: it is common to witness many resorting to collecting recyclables for petty cash in a country where an aged pension is virtually non-existent.
South Korean Ssangyong workers armed with metal pipes during their 2009 industrial struggle with the car company. In South Korea workers have a strong history of resisting their exploiters and subsequently being brutalised by the capitalist state.
South Korean Ssangyong workers armed with metal pipes during their 2009 industrial struggle with the car company. In South Korea workers have a strong history of resisting their exploiters and subsequently being brutalised by the
capitalist state.

I met relatives for the first time at Incheon Airport, South Korea. As we travelled towards Seoul, I looked out the car window. Out there were signs of highly urbanised life: tall, twenty storey buildings clumped together in the distance and we hadn’t even reached Seoul, the capital city, just yet. I remember being eager to see every aspect of South Korea, especially the ‘development’ of an ‘Asian Tiger Economy’ under capitalism. In the following article I will share my experiences of and some of my discoveries about South Korea: conversations with the people, a rally for workers’ rights that I attended and my thoughts on the situation in general of socialists and left-wing activists in South Korea. Continue reading An Eye Witness Account of Capitalist South Korea

Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!

ALP’s Slashing of Payments to Poor Single Parents Proves Once Again that None of The Current Parliamentary Parties Should Be Supported at The Upcoming Elections

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Don’t Let Our Fellow Workers Who Lose Their Jobs Become Destitute!

Unleash Militant Class Struggle to Restore the Single Parent Payment and Massively Increase both the parenting Payment and Newstart Allowance!

Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!

Capture
The three big stooges of the big business elite. Although they have outlined slightly different plans about how to administer Australia (in the interests of the capitalist exploiting class), all have shown contempt for the plight of low income single mothers.
Mission Impossible: A jobless single mother trying to get by following the government’s slashing of the single parenting payment. Her Centrelink payment form, shown above and typical of the situation faced by many other single mothers, shows that, after payments for rent (which are shown here after Rent Assistance is deducted from rent costs), electricity and loan repayments for basic household electrical goods (this woman elected to have these repayments and her electricity costs automatically deducted), there is hardly anything left over! Even if the small court fine repayment did not exist, the amount she has left is not anywhere near enough to cover her own food, phone bills, medicine and transport for a fortnight – let alone clothing or any hope of entertainment! That means she is forced to use some of the meagre Family Tax Benefit payments, meant to help her pay for some of her three dependent children’s expenses, in order to survive. Her whole family is thus dragged into poverty. Tens of thousands of other families in Australia headed by single mothers face the same plight.
Mission Impossible: A jobless single mother trying to get by following the government’s slashing of the single parenting payment. Her Centrelink payment form, shown above and typical of the situation faced by many other single mothers, shows that, after payments for rent (which are shown here after Rent Assistance is deducted from rent costs), electricity and loan repayments for basic household electrical goods (this woman elected to have these repayments and her electricity costs automatically deducted), there is hardly anything left over! Even if the small court fine repayment did not exist, the amount she has left is not anywhere near enough to cover her own food, phone bills, medicine and transport for a fortnight – let alone clothing or any hope of entertainment! That means she is forced to use some of the meagre Family Tax Benefit payments, meant to help her pay for some of her three dependent children’s expenses, in order to survive. Her whole family is thus dragged into poverty. Tens of thousands of other families in Australia headed by single mothers face the same plight.
Beijing, March 2010: Deputies from southwest China’s Yunnan Province arrive for a sitting of China’s parliament, the National Peoples Congress. Although undermined by bureaucratic deformation and a degree of capitalist intrusion, socialistic rule in China has brought a big leap forward for women’s rights. This is especially clear when comparing the status of women in China with that of capitalist developing countries like India and Pakistan. When socialism triumphs in Australia, women will be liberated from the oppression that they face today.
Beijing, March 2010: Deputies from southwest China’s Yunnan Province arrive for a sitting of China’s parliament, the National Peoples Congress. Although undermined by bureaucratic deformation and a degree of capitalist intrusion, socialistic rule in China has brought a big leap forward for women’s rights. This is especially clear when comparing the status of women in China with that of capitalist developing countries like India and Pakistan. When socialism triumphs in Australia, women will be liberated from the oppression that they face today.
Wodonga, Victoria, October 2012: Unionised disability service workers protest against poor wages and conditions. Women workers, united together in workers’ organisations with their male counterparts, are destined to play a key role in the struggle against exploitation and oppression.
Wodonga, Victoria, October 2012: Unionised disability service workers protest against poor wages and conditions. Women workers, united together in workers’ organisations with their male counterparts, are destined to play a key role in the struggle against exploitation and oppression.
 Trotskyist Platform “Marriage is Sex Slavery. Poverty is Not Newstart” - Sydney, March 2013:  A contingent of single mothers at the International Women’s Day march protested against the ALP government’s cruel cut to the single parenting payment. However, desperate not to upset the electoral prospects of the ALP and the Greens (who had been in a defacto coalition with the ALP at the time of the cutback), march organisers gave the single mothers’ struggle short shrift in the official part of the rally.

Trotskyist Platform
“Marriage is Sex Slavery. Poverty is Not Newstart” – Sydney, March 2013:
A contingent of single mothers at the International Women’s Day march protested against the ALP government’s cruel cut to the single parenting payment. However, desperate not to upset the electoral prospects of the ALP and the Greens (who had been in a defacto coalition with the ALP at the time of the cutback), march organisers gave the single mothers’ struggle short shrift in the official part of the rally.

The Government do Not Care Bears

Women from the masses will play a leading role in the revolutionary struggle against Australian capitalism as they did in the victorious Chinese Revolution that toppled capitalist rule there in 1949. The above scene from the world famous Chinese ballet, The Red Detachment of Women, celebrates the contribution of Chinese women to the revolution. Based on the true stories of Chinese women who joined a company of the communist liberation army in Hainan Island, the ballet tells of the life of a peasant woman who wrests herself from brutal oppression at the hands of the landlords and goes on to become a leader of the anti-capitalist forces. The above ballet scene is taken from a performance by the renowned National Ballet of China in Tianjin city on 26 September 2009 as part of celebrations to mark the 60th anniversary of the Chinese Revolution/founding of the Peoples Republic of China.
Women from the masses will play a leading role in the revolutionary struggle against Australian capitalism as they did in the victorious Chinese Revolution that toppled capitalist rule there in 1949. The above scene from the world famous Chinese ballet, The Red Detachment of Women, celebrates the contribution of Chinese women to the revolution. Based on the true stories of Chinese women who joined a company of the communist liberation army in Hainan Island, the ballet tells of the life of a peasant woman who wrests herself from brutal oppression at the hands of the landlords and goes on to become a leader of the anti-capitalist forces. The above ballet scene is taken from a performance by the renowned National Ballet of China in Tianjin city on 26 September 2009 as part of celebrations to mark the 60th anniversary of the Chinese Revolution/founding of the Peoples Republic of China.
Sydney, December 2012: Picket outside Sargents Pie factory.
Sydney, December 2012: Picket outside Sargents Pie factory.

March 8, 2013: At the turn of the year, Australian billionaire James Packer and his family were enjoying first use of their latest family toy: a 52-metre super yacht costing over $50 million! However, for tens of thousands of low-income, single parents the reality could not be more different. They are now going to struggle, even more than before, to buy their children medicine let alone merely a $2 toy. The ALP federal government has thrown over 84,000 low-income single parents off the Parenting Payment and on to the much lower Newstart Allowance. If this isn’t bad enough, those single parents who have part-time jobs face even more savage cuts to their income as the Newstart Allowance is more ruthless than the Parenting Payment in cutting payments to those who do manage to find any part-time work.

Single parents with children over eight years old who were new applicants for income support were actually first thrown onto the lower unemployment payment back in 2006 by the Howard Liberal government. However, those already receiving payments were allowed to continue to receive the higher Parenting Payment until their child turned 16. When the ALP came into office, it not only maintained the policy of dumping new applicants onto Newstart but in the 2011 budget additionally threw those still receiving the Parenting Payment with children over 12 onto Newstart as well. Now, continuing to maintain the disgusting direction first taken by Howard, it has dumped onto Newstart those with children between 8 and 12 who, previously under their old rules, had still been receiving the Parenting Payment.

Continue reading Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!

Rally: Just Like What China is Doing, Massively Increase Public Housing

Rents are rising. Wages are too low. And bosses are sacking workers. With rents so high, millions are struggling to make ends meet. The working poor and especially their children are suffering! People try to get lower rents by joining the public housing waiting list. But governments are selling off public housing! People are driven into ruin paying high rents while waiting up to twenty years on the public housing list! And it’s gotten so hard now to even get on this list that even full-time workers on the minimum wage aren’t eligible for it.

Yet while all this is happening, governments are letting big business owners like Gina Rinehart, Andrew Forrest, Frank Lowy and Richard Pratt get away with making billions by doing nothing other than exploiting other people’s labour. We need to fight to ensure that the wealth of this country is used to fund the public housing that we so badly need (and for properly funded public hospitals and schools). So we must rally to demand:

JUST LIKE WHAT CHINA IS DOING
MASSIVELY INCREASE
PUBLIC HOUSING
3:30PM SATURDAY MAY 4
Corner of Rawson St and Northumberland Rd, Auburn
(Near the Northern Exit of Auburn Railway Station) Continue reading Rally: Just Like What China is Doing, Massively Increase Public Housing

Unleash Militant Class Struggle. Fight for a Huge Increase in the Newstart Allowance and Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!

Don’t Let Our Fellow Workers Who Lose Their Jobs Become Destitute!
Unleash Militant Class Struggle

Fight for a Huge Increase in the Newstart Allowance and Smash the ALP Government’s Attackon Low-Income Single Mothers!

ALP’s Slashing of Payments to Poor Single Parents Proves Once Again that None of The Current Parliamentary Parties Should Be Supported at The Upcoming Elections

March 8, 2013: At the turn of the year, Australian billionaire James Packer and his family were enjoying first uses of their latest family toy:  a 52-metre super yacht costing over $50 million! However, for tens of thousands of low-income, single parents the reality could not be more different. They are now going to struggle, even more than before, to buy their children medicine let alone merely a $2 toy. The ALP federal government has thrown over 84,000 low-income single parents off the Parenting Payment and on to the much lower Newstart Allowance. If this isn’t bad enough, those single parents who have part-time jobs face even more savage cuts to their income as the Newstart Allowance is more ruthless than the Parenting Payment in cutting payments to those who do manage to find any part-time work. Continue reading Unleash Militant Class Struggle. Fight for a Huge Increase in the Newstart Allowance and Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!