Sunday, 9 March 2025

A DAY LATE

 Sorry I'm a day late posting this, but life gets hectic, y'know ?


Socialist roots of International Women’s Day

The following edited excerpts come from an article that first appeared at workers.org on March 8, 2017. 

International Women’s Day, traditionally held on March 8, began in 1908 as a day of action organized by socialist working women in the U.S.  In 1907, German socialist Clara Zetkin organized an International Conference of Socialist Women where participants, including Russian Bolshevik Alexandra Kollontai, discussed ways to publicly support a struggle for women’s equality and liberation.

Socialist women in New York City acted on this discussion in 1908 by holding a mass meeting on women’s suffrage on March 8. Women workers also held a march of 15,000 women immigrant garment workers, organized by socialists, calling for an end to sweatshops, and child labor and for a shorter workday.

In 1910, Zetkin proposed an International Women’s Day at the Second International Conference of Socialist Women in Copenhagen, and European socialists began to celebrate IWD in 1911. (Marian Sawer, “International Women’s Day,” Canberra Times, Feb. 17, 1997)

The focus of these efforts was not to establish a day of speeches and floral bouquets but rather to bring poor and working-class women and women of oppressed nationalities into the class struggle and support the liberation of these women, as well as that of their sons, husbands, brothers, fathers and comrades.

Kollontai described IWD as “a day of international solidarity in the fight for common objectives and a day for reviewing the organized strength of working women under the banner of socialism.” (“International Women’s Day,” Encyclopedia of Marxism, marxists.org)

The fiery power of working women in class struggle erupted on International Women’s Day in Russia in 1917 in an event that culminated in the first of two revolutions that year. In Petrograd, on Feb. 23 in the Gregorian calendar, now March 8, thousands of women needletrade workers walked out of their factories and marched through the streets, chanting their demand for “Peace, bread and land!”

As working-class men joined them, the crowd swelled to 90,000, and the spark of revolution lit that day led first to the overthrow of the czar and then to the class struggle that culminated eight months later, in the communist revolution in Russia.

Reviving IWD as a day of struggle

Spanish women demonstrated against the fascist forces of Gen. Francisco Franco to mark International Women’s Day in 1937. Italian women observed IWD in 1943 with militant protests against fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, who sent their sons to die in World War II.

But in the U.S. during the Cold War witch hunts of the McCarthy era, IWD demonstrations in the streets ended. By the 1950s, IWD celebrations were mainly small, indoor commemorative meetings.

Yet by the 1960s, a revolutionary wind was blowing new force into the struggle against women’s oppression. Many women of all nationalities were increasingly inspired by the power of a people’s fight — the Black Civil Rights and anti-war movements, La Raza and the American Indian Movement.

The women’s liberation movement emerged out of the confluence of these great mass movements. And many women began to study Marxism and communist history, inspired in part by Mao Zedong’s statement that, “Women hold up half the sky,” as exemplified by Vietnamese women armed and fighting in a communist-led war for national liberation.

In 1968, socialist Laura X wrote an article calling for a renewal of IWD after watching Pudovkin’s 1929 Soviet film “The End of St. Petersburg,” which highlighted the 1917 women workers’ demonstration on IWD. In 1969 she joined with members of Berkeley Women’s Liberation to organize an IWD street demonstration, which she believed to be the first in the U.S. since 1947.

In 1970, 30 events took place worldwide on International Women’s Day.

The 1970 Youth Against War and Fascism (YAWF) revival celebrating IWD as a militant day of struggle in the streets was followed by biweekly meetings of the Women’s Caucus. YAWF women combined theory with practice. They read and discussed Dorothy Ballan’s “Feminism and Marxism” based on Frederick Engels’ “The Origins of the Family, Private Property and the State.” And they studied works by Zetkin, Kollontai and V.I. Lenin that chronicled the revolutionary communist approach to women’s oppression and struggle for liberation.

Today, the importance of that 1970 rally and the march to the Women’s House of Detention blazes out from the past. With that event, the YAWF Women’s Caucus, a  division of Workers World Party, re-ignited the celebration of International Women’s Day in the streets of New York City as part of the militant, communist tradition.

Remembering the fighting spirit of that day, Deirdre Griswold, a founding member of Workers World Party, explained how its lessons are crucial in today’s struggles: “Economic pressures today in the U.S. are forcing more and more women into the army or into prison.

“They need an alternative — a multinational, international movement against women’s oppression that is part of a worldwide struggle against imperialism and war.”

Friday, 7 March 2025

OF COURSE THEY'RE LYING

 If anyone actually believed that the netanyahu fascist israeli regime would actually follow through with a genuine ceasefire, it's time to pull your head out of your ass. That government had zero intention of doing so, and the genocide will continue as soon as it's convenient for them, the lying fucks.

What is happening with the Gaza ceasefire?

Will it be possible to proceed with the second phase of the ceasefire as agreed to and signed by Israel and Hamas in February? While exchanges of dozens of Israelis held by Hamas in Gaza and hundreds of Palestinians imprisoned for years by Israel took place under phase one, Israel has seriously limited promised material supplies from entering Gaza. It is now calling for an extension of phase one’s prisoner exchanges, which expired March 1, rather than proceeding with the second phase of the original ceasefire agreement.

According to The Cradle on Feb. 27, “Israel has made extensive plans to resume its genocidal war on Gaza. …Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said that Tel Aviv will not withdraw its army from the Philadelphi corridor on the southern Gaza Strip’s border with Egypt, marking a stark violation of the ceasefire agreement signed last month.”

Israel stops all aid trucks

credit: al Jazeera

Katz called phase one of the ceasefire agreement “complete.” He also said that Israel only agreed to a deal to return its captives and that it is ready to return to war. Israel then stopped all aid trucks going into Gaza.

The Islamic Resistance Movement of Hamas’ answer to this was that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to avoid the ceasefire agreement, including moving on to its second phase. Hamas stated that preventing humanitarian aid into Gaza is “a cheap act of blackmail, a war crime and a blatant violation of the agreement.” Hamas called Netanyahu “a war criminal,” noting that “he is trying to impose political realities on the ground that his fascist army has failed to establish over fifteen months of brutal genocide, thanks to the steadfastness and courage of our people and their resistance.

“He [Netanyahu] seeks to overturn the signed agreement for his narrow, internal political interests, at the expense of the occupation’s captives in Gaza and their lives.” Hamas added that the only way to recover the remaining Israeli captives will be to continue with the ceasefire agreement as already negotiated.

“We [Hamas] hold the occupation and, behind it, Washington [is] responsible for obstructing the agreement by proposing unacceptable terms.” (Resistance News Network, March 2)

The Government Media Office in Gaza also called on the mediators to pressure Israel to fulfill all aspects of the ceasefire, including allowing humanitarian aid, rescue equipment and machinery into Gaza.

The Popular Resistance Committees stated: “The closure of Gaza’s crossings and the halt in aid entry to our people in Gaza is a new zionist violation of the agreement signed through the mediators and an open declaration of the starvation war that the enemy has been waging for over 17 months. …

Hamas also called for the Palestinian government to prosecute hoarders and traders raising prices of food and that journalists and activists cease the use of zionist news outlets, and combat their false rumors. “We call on the relevant authorities in the Palestinian government in Gaza to take immediate action against these criminals, to impose the harshest penalties on them, confiscate their goods and ban them from doing business.” (RNN, March 2)

The response from Yemeni Senior Ansarallah leader Nasr al-Din Amer, in an interview with Shehab Agency, was as follows: “The zionist enemy must understand that a renewed aggression on Gaza means the full resumption of Yemeni military operations, with occupied Yafa (Israel) and all occupied territories once again coming under strikes from Yemen.” (RNN, March 2)

Senior Hamas leader Mahmoud Mardawi stated: “We will not accept an extension of the first phase and insist on implementing the agreement in all its stages as it was signed. There is no room for renegotiation; the mediators must compel the occupation to implement the agreement’s terms as signed. … Egypt has repeatedly informed us of its rejection of the displacement plan, to protect its national security and in support of Palestinian rights.” (RNN, March 2)

A very important development also occurred in Jerusalem (occupied Al Quds) in response to Israel’s rejection of the ceasefire. Resistance News Network aired a video of violent confrontations between the Israeli occupation police and Zionist settler demonstrators who tried to breach security barriers near Netanyahu’s residence during an event demanding the completion of the prisoners exchange deal. (March 2)


Sunday, 2 March 2025

MORE, MUCH MORE OF THIS !

 There are times when you feel that everything is futile and the " people " in power are untouchable.
That's why we need to see , hear , and support actions like this one !


Veterans lead protests at U.S. military bases

Guest article

This article is based on a report sent to us from Gerry Condon, who is on the Board of Directors of Veterans For Peace (VFP).

One of the demonstrations Veterans For Peace held Feb. 23 to protest genocide in Gaza and the use of the military against migrants. Travis Air Force Base, northern California.  Credit: Veterans For Peace

There was a great action on Sunday, Feb. 23, at Travis Air Force Base in northern California, part of ongoing actions by the People’s Arms Embargo, of which Veterans For Peace is a part. Our sizable group included people from many organizations.

We heard from a Palestinian doctor about the devastation of Gaza, the persecution of medical workers and the deep determination of the Palestinian people to be free.

We remembered the supreme sacrifice of Airman Aaron Bushnell, who self-immolated in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C., one year ago, Feb. 25, 2024, saying he could not be complicit in genocide.

Several speakers denounced Trump’s unconstitutional misuse of the military in his racist campaign of mass deportation, calling it another form of “ethnic cleansing.”

At the demonstrations we said: “No to Genocide in Palestine. No to mass deportation in the U.S. We support GIs who say No!”

 Veterans held signs directing GIs to the  GI Rights Hotline, 1-877-447-4487, and to the Appeal For Redress, a way for active-duty military to communicate their concerns to members of Congress. encouraged by positive honks and cheers from people driving in and out of the base, we returned early Monday morning, Feb. 24, to greet GIs and civilians as they arrived for work.

And we will be back soon!