Friday, May 3, 2024

The Palestinian Revolution is Giving Young People Meaning

 

Alon Mizrahi *

Palestine is giving young people meaning the capitalist, corporate world order viciously denied them.

At the most precise moment in history when it seemed a completely mechanical, vertical, and isolated form of existence was about to bury humanity for good, this genocide sparked a long-forgotten truth: that we (the people) are creatures of community; that we only find true joy and meaning in connecting with other people.

That we cannot be happy when others around us suffer.

Palestine is an actual and concrete struggle but it is also, and crucially so, an instrument of philosophical liberation of universal importance. And these kids are holding on to it as a buoy, so as not to drown in an ocean of cold and meaningless rituals that have no resonance with the human soul: be born, learn, learn a craft, accumulate material things, obey the system, have a family die.

They don't want it. They looked into their screens, and while we thought they were vanishing and ceasing to be in them, it is there they found life, and what it really means.

They want Palestinians to stop being mass murdered, displaced, and dehumanized, but they want the same thing for themselves. They want to feel human, and they reject the system that tries so desperately to humiliate, denigrate, and dismantle them.

As propheseid, the revolution is not televised, as establishment media is an essential part of the oppressing mechanism. But rather than let it fool you, see this violent denial for what it is: proof of the magnitude and potential of this movement.

The Palestinian Revolution may yet prove to be more consequential than the French one.

 

* Alon Mizrahi is a published author in Israel, born "to a Jewish Palestinian father and a Jewish Moroccan mother). But fighting for an audience for my nonconformist message of peace, equality, and freedom was always extremely difficult. The post-October 7th Gaza genocide made it quite impossible. It has become the right time for me to use my access to the English language, which is not my mother tongue, and connect with audiences and people from anywhere."


Wednesday, May 1, 2024

US Congress Shreds Free Speech at Home to Defend Israel Abroad.

 

Source

 

Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
HEO/GED

May 1 2024

 

Oh, but this whole country is full of lies
You're all gonna die and die like flies
I don't trust you anymore
You keep on saying, "Go slow"
Go slow


Nina Simone
Mississippi Goddamn


The US House of Representatives voted today on the Antisemitism Awareness Act and passed it 320 to 91 with 70 Democrats and 21 Republicans voting against the bill. This bill has been criticised for basing the legislation on the definition of anti-Semitism put forward by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, which conflates anti-Semitism with criticism of the state of Israel.  The bill now heads to the US Senate. The bill mandates the Department of Education to use the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism, which classifies most anti-Zionism as anti-semitic.

Here are some of the aspects of the bill that I came across:

Calling for aiding, or justifying the killing or harming of Jews in the name of a radical ideology or an extremist view of religion.


Making mendacious, dehumanizing, demonizing, or stereotypical allegations about Jews as such or the power of Jews as collective -such as, especially but not exclusively, the myth about a world Jewish conspiracy or of Jews controlling the media, economy, government or other societal institutions.


Accusing Jews as a people of being responsible for real or imagined wrongdoing committed by a single Jewish person or group, or even for acts committed by non-Jews


Denying the fact, scope, mechanisms (e.g. gas chambers) or intentionality of the genocide of the Jewish people at the hands of National Socialist Germany and its supporters and accomplices during World War Il (the Holocaust)

Accusing the Jews as a people, or Israel as a state, of inventing or exaggerating the Holocaust.


Accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to the interests of their own nations.


Denying the Jewish people their right to self determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.


Applying double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.


Using the symbols and images associated with classic antisemitism (e.g., claims of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to characterize Israel or Israelis.


Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.

Holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel.


Anti-semitic acts are criminal when they are so defined by law (for example, denial of the

Holocaust or distribution of anti-semitic materials in some countries).


Without a doubt, the bill does point to clear examples of anti-semitism, or more accurately hatred toward Jews as Arabs also are Semites. I recall in my youth the term Arab Jews being quite common but then the state of Israel was only 20 years old.


But defending Jews is not the purpose of this legislation, defending Israel is. This is a very dangerous piece of legislation as it equates criticism of the actions of a nation state with attacks on a people because of their religious beliefs.

Is criticizing the historical English and British subjugation and genocidal war on the Irish people racist toward the English?  Not all Germans were Nazis. Is criticizing or referring to Nazis as racist anti-German? Zionism, is inherently a racist ideology and is not and should not be confused with Judaism. One is a political formation the other a religion, Zionism is barely 150 years old. Millions of Jews are anti-Zionist. Read Roger Silverman’s article on Zionism here.  And Mondoweiss: Zionism must be exposedand discredited


Katie Halper of the Katie Halper Show on You Tube writes on X, formerly Twitter: “This Bill is an abomination and anti-semetic in itself because it perpetuates the dual loyalty trope that all Jews are a monolith who support the state of Israel. Truly repulsive stuff.” Katie Halper on You Tube.


“I can’t totally speak to their intent,”
Morriah Kaplan, strategic director at IfNotNow, which is focused on opposing the Israeli occupation, said of the organizations backing the definition, “but these are not people I trust to go after antisemitism.” Jewish Forward 1-26-21.


Jerry Nadler, the informal dean of the congressional Jewish Caucus, voted against the measure,  “Speech that is critical of Israel alone does not constitute unlawful discrimination……The bill sweeps too broadly.” he said. 


Meanwhile the big business press in the US is playing the anti-semitism card to the hilt, “As antisemitism has surged to record levels since Hamas’ attack on October 7, 2023, many Jews feel Israel requires more support now than ever – as a refuge for Jews, who have long been an oppressed minority.”  CNN reports on May 1st as hundreds of students are being beaten, attacked and arrested by US security forces.


The reality is that the movement against Israel’s genocide in Gaza and decades long ethnic cleansing of Palestinians is to a large part led by young Jews. This is certainly the case in the US. We now have young Palestinian children thanking the US students for their support. Are we supposed to think that they don’t know many of them are Jews. I have an Arab friend from Yemen who refers to Jews as “our cousins” and I have never heard an anti-semitic word out of him but I have heard him curse the Israelis.


Naturally, the overwhelmingly Gentile US bourgeois is supporting the legislation along with their conservative Jewish colleagues. Their interests are under threat if the Zionist regime is weakened, it’s the only ally US imperialism can rely on in this important part of the world.

This is the crux of the matter and that’s what drives the US rogue regime and the US Congress to support the genocide.


I have long been an opponent of some Jewish Americans who are too complacent in the view that Jews are safe here from the events that occurred in Europe that led to the Holocaust. But I think it is a bit of a stretch to consider Jews an oppressed minority in the US but that doesn’t mean they can’t become one. Zionism and the actions of the Zionist regime in Israel increases the likely of such a development.


Conservative Jewish groups like the ADL and others are supportive of the legislation but other Jewish groups not to mention the ACLU have opposed it on the grounds that it is a barrier to free speech, First Amendment rights and the right to criticize a nation state.


It is important to remember that the largest Zionist group in the US is right wing or Evangelical Christians, and the US body politic is populated with them. However, this move to conflate Judaism with Zionism is a political strategy taken by US imperialism to defend its settler colony in the Middle East and the Christian right are a useful ally here as they are driven by biblical prophecy. 

The heroic sacrifices the Palestinian people have made in their struggle against occupation, Apartheid and genocide has transformed the situation in Palestine and the world’s perception of events. The endless meetings, talks about a Palestinian state and US guarantees of it at some nebulous point in time are shown now for what they really were: lies, lies and more lies. Decades of cruelty.


The Palestinians struggle has done more damage to the Zionist regime than decades of diplomacy. It has created a nightmare but Palestinians have been living that nightmare with no end in sight for 76 years. The Zionists have already lost the war.  I watched this video today and had to listen to the many Americans who are settlers in Israel and live on stolen land or in houses built on demolished Palestinian ones.


The state of Israel was created by the British and western capital as a foothold in the region after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after WW1 and also as a way of ridding Europe of its centuries old “Jewish problem.” Only after the betrayal of Stalinism and the horror of the Holocaust did the concept of Palestine as a home for Europe’s Jews gain any traction at all and they too are victims on that basis. It was Christian Europe that tried to exterminate Jews, not Arabs or Muslims.


There is a genuine danger here of a wider conflict but the main players are driven by the laws of the capitalist system. The US is under threat from all sides. It is losing in the competition with China. It has lost the Ukraine conflict after spending billions of US taxpayers' money and now its most important proxy in the Middle East that has received untold billions in money and weapons of mass destruction, is losing the battle for influence in the oil rich region.


In the long run, and time is running out, capitalism cannot solve this crisis and there will be more war, more fragmentation and chaos as global capitalism comes apart at the seams. Perhaps the most threatening of all is climate catastrophe which threatens human life as we know it. Only united action by the global working class, the formation of a global federation of democratic socialist states based on economic cooperation in harmony with nature not opposed to it, can show a way out. That is not utopian, it is necessary if we are not to be another one of those ancient civilizations that never made it.

 

Australia. Michael Pascoe: Our biggest China lie

Reprinted from The Austrailian Newspaper, The New Daily 

 


Michael Pascoe

May 01, 2024, updated Apr 30, 2024


Three things: China is winning from Gaza; China growing at 5 per cent now is better than China growing at 7 per cent a decade ago; and Australia’s biggest China lie is that we’re spending half a trillion dollars on boats to protect our sea lanes.


The Gaza angle first. There is a regular pattern to Economist magazine articles whereby the author will eloquently make a reasonable argument about something, but then spin and demolish that case with a better argument for the alternative. It makes for entertaining reading, exercising the reader’s mind.

That pattern broke down earlier this month in a column on China’s diplomacy.


“In China’s telling, America stands exposed as a hypocrite, quick to accuse China or Russia of breaking international law and abusing human rights, while supplying bombs used to kill civilians in Gaza,” opened the Chaguan column.


“In Beijing it is said that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine united the West, but Israel’s conflict with Hamas is dividing it again. It is predicted that if Donald Trump is re-elected his allies will learn, once again, that this is a friendless world and that ‘America First’ means what it says.”


Declining confidence in US

The article cites a south-east Asian survey showing declining confidence in America as a reliable partner and greater scepticism about its “international rules-based order”. Gaza is listed ahead of “aggressive behaviour in the South China Sea” as a matter of concern.


“When asked to choose between America and China, should the region have to pick one of those rivals, 61 per cent of respondents chose America in 2023. Now they are divided 50-50. This year’s survey shows growing wariness of China’s political and military clout. But its economic power is seen as unrivalled.”


The column then attempts the Economist 180-degree turn – but doesn’t land it by listing some of China’s disagreements and problems, noting that it is “pushing Japan, South Korea, Australia and other neighbours to upgrade their armed forces and alliances” and concluding China needed to treat foreigners’ interests with more respect.


The strength of the opening lines, that China is winning from Gaza, stands.


Such is the American-centric nature of our media and politics that we don’t see the world as most of the world does, we only view it through the narrow lens of a totally compliant US ally and military base.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong repeating what had been long-standing bipartisan policy of a two-state resolution and noting that “the international community is now considering the question of Palestinian statehood as a way of building momentum towards a two-state solution” caused Australian media and political conniptions.


Welcome perspective

That is mainly a condemnation of our commentariat’s myopia. For a little of the perspective that is so sadly lacking, Paul Heywood-Smith recorded in Pearls & Irritations that 141 of the 193 United Nations members already recognise the State of Palestine. “Other countries that have intimated a likely recognition in the near future are Spain, Ireland, Belgium and Slovenia,” he wrote.

On top of that, France, Japan and South Korea – none of which currently recognises the State of Palestine – were in favour of admitting Palestine to full UN membership in a Security Council vote on April 18 that was inevitably vetoed by the US.  Twelve of the 15 Security Council members were in favour, the UK and Switzerland abstained.


Australia, remaining in policy lockstep with the US, is increasingly out of step with the world.

Beyond its massive military power, the US is steadily mattering less to that world. Hypocrisy over “the rules-based order” comes at a price.


(You want hypocrisy? Don’t forget Australia withdrew from the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea dispute resolution procedures and the equivalent International Court of Justice jurisdiction two months before East Timor achieved independence – so much for “rules-based”.)


Economic gains

A major economic milepost was passed last year when China started exporting more to the rest of the world than it did to “the West”.


The US-led attempt to isolate China is demonstrably failing, but Australians tend to be only fed the American view.


For as long as China has been rising, there has been an industry devoted to forecasting China’s fall. Whatever Beijing’s economic policy failings and problems – and there certainly are failings and problems – such forecasts continuously underestimate Chinese pragmatism, entrepreneurial drive and resilience.


I’ve been watching China for long enough to remember when the country’s GDP growth falling below 10 per cent was called a disaster when of course growth had to slow as the economy grew bigger. In very simplistic terms, 7 per cent of 200 is 40 per cent bigger than 10 per cent of 100.


It’s happening again now with China’s GDP growth of about 5 per cent, down from 7 per cent a decade ago.


In 2013, the recorded GDP growth of 7.7 per cent for a $US9.57 trillion economy meant an extra $US737 billion. In 2023, 5.2 per cent growth for a $US17.52 trillion economy means an extra $US911 billion ($1.4 trillion in our money).


Yes, China’s statistics have a rubbery quality and GDP doesn’t tell you everything, but that sort of growth is still enough to underwrite much of Australia’s economy.


(By way of comparison, US real GDP grew by a strong 2.5 per cent last year, delivering current-dollar growth of $US1.61 trillion – about a trillion US dollars less than the rise in American government debt to $US34 trillion. China isn’t the only country with challenges.)


It was while checking China’s trade flows that the obviousness of our big bipartisan China lie hit me:

We have been told we are spending $384 billion – and the rest, of course, call it an easy half-trillion – to buy nuclear-powered submarines to “protect our sea lanes”.


That is the lie. We are buying the subs to threaten China’s sea lanes, specifically in its “front yard” of the South China Sea where American nuclear strike forces have been patrolling ever since they existed.

It’s that perspective thing, yet again. How might the US react if China had nuclear-armed battle groups cruising the Caribbean?


It’s a perspective the rest of the world can see, but we can’t or choose not to.

So we’ll just keep repeating the big lie instead.

 


Saturday, April 27, 2024

Genocide Joe Biden is Very Clear Here.

As unintelligible as Genocide Joe's speeches are today, think long and hard about what he says in this video. He is very clear and he is absolutely right. He doesn't talk about defending Judaism, protecting Jews and the right of Jews, in particular Arab Jews to live in this region that they have lived in for thousands of years. He is defending US capitalism's political and economic interests in the region. He is defending US capitalism's colonial outpost there. He is defending Zionism.

The British had the same view about Hong Kong. That important colonial outpost of British capitalism was signed over to Britain in Perpetuity. This term, according to my dictionary, means, "the state or quality of lasting forever". The British meant it. A ruling class always considers its rule and the system that birthed it is eternal.  But history put that issue to rest as British colonial power declined and China's rose. Hong Kong is back as a part of China. 

If we learn anything from history it's that the only thing constant is change.

Friday, April 26, 2024

Israel's Strike on Iran: THEY KNEW THERE WAS NO BOMB

 Reprinted from Seymour Hersh on Substack

Why Israel did not attack Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons facility

Apr 24, 2024
Paid
Satellite imagery from 2013 of the Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant in Iran. / Satellite image (c) 2020 Maxar Technologies.

The tit-for-tat attacks between Israel and Iran that consumed much of the world’s attention over the past two weeks reached a crescendo on April 13, when an Iranian drone and missile assault on Israel failed after an armada of allied fighter planes—secretly organized by the Pentagon, with the support of Russia—shot down more than three hundred armed Iranian drones and missiles headed for targets in Israel. 

The Middle East and the Western world anxiously waited for the Israeli response. It came a few days later when two Israeli fighter planes, operating outside Iran’s border, fired supersonic missiles at a high-tech Iranian defensive missile site that was protecting Iran’s most important nuclear enrichment site, near Natanz, eighty miles north of Isfahan. 

The New York Times, in a dispatch from Washington, depicted the attack as limited but a ‘potentially big signal” to the Iranian leadership, The message was that Israel was willing and capable of attacking the heart of the Iran’s most important weapons complex: “The taboo against direct strikes on each other’s territory was now gone.” Similar worried assessments were published around the world. A later Times report told of a conversation between President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which the unpredictable Israeli leader was said to have been talked out of further, and far more aggressive, attacks. The world had perhaps moved away from the brink.

The Israeli decision to strike the Iranian missile defense site, and not the enrichment facility at Natanz itself, was seen in a far different light by political and weapons experts in the American intelligence community. Targeting the missiles was viewed as what a poker player would call a “tell”—a hint of a far deeper meaning.

For decades, the Israeli leadership—especially Netanyahu—has repeatedly warned the world of Iran’s burgeoning nuclear capability and dismissed the fact that the Iranian program has been under supervision, and constant camera watch, of the International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards. Two highly secret American National Intelligence Estimates, in 2007 and 2011, made public by this reporter in the New Yorker, also concluded that Iran had made no effort to fabricate its suspected highly enriched nuclear materials into a warhead. America’s nuclear weapons experts, despite years of efforts, have failed to find any evidence of an underground Iranian facility capable of turning highly enriched uranium into a weapon. 

Now, given free rein and a rare measure of international support, to respond to the Iranian missile barrage, Israel chose not to attack the enrichment facility itself. 

“This was it,” an American intelligence official told me. In a series of backchannel talks, the Israelis were advised that they had three options for retaliation. The first was “a massive crippling strike that would escalate the war and further degrade Israel’s world standing.” The second was “a limited strike on the greatest threat to you and the world by taking out Natanz—if you in fact believe that Iran has the bomb or are about to. You can justify the strike as restrained and justified.” And the third: “If you know that Iran does not yet have or is not about to have the bomb, show your hidden hand—preemption ability—standoff hypersonic targeting at will, but pass on [targeting] the enrichment facility at Natanz.

“Here’s your chance,” the Israelis were told, “to tell the world,currently paralyzed by fear of the Iranian nuclear threat, not to worry. Iran does not pose a threat and you know it. This opens a new opportunity for risk-free negotiating strength for the West and the Middle East. You will begin to show balanced judgment and to put Gaza behind and shed the rogue elephant rep.”

Some states in the Middle East got the message, the American official said. It was his impression that the officials running foreign policy in the Biden Administration “had no clue” about what had gone on.

In essence, he said, “Israel called the bluff,” as in a poker game, “on itself. We say to ourselves that we are glad that the Israelis were moderate” in their attack on Iran, “but nobody here has asked the right question. Did Israel really want to show to the world that it could hit an Iranian air defense site with a hypersonic super weapon?

“The Israeli decision not to take out Natanz could lead to a whole new Middle East and Iran will now be free to join the world,” the official said. “Israel showed that the Iranian bomb was a false alarm. Something potentially great has happened.”

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Pro Palestinian Protests Erupt on US Campuses. Labor Cannot Stand on the Sidelines

Richard Mellor

Afscme Local 444, retired
GED/HEO

4-23-24

It is heartwarming to witness students at Yale, Harvard, Columbia and other US universities protesting the Biden regime’s arming and overall support of the horrific genocidal war against the Palestinian people and particularly in Gaza where some 34,000 Palestinians have been killed with US weapons paid for by the US taxpayer. The same taxpayer that needs to borrow money for health care.


The US mass media is attempting to paint the protests as anti-Semitic. The New York Times and USA today makes the point that protesting the Gaza genocide or criticism of Israel is an attack on the Jewish people and their religion; according to these sources, Jews are in fear of their lives on College campuses. “The pro-Palestinian student movement has disrupted campus life, especially for Jewish students. Many have said they no longer feel safe in their classrooms or on university quads as the tone of protests at times has become threatening.”, writes thepro-Zionist New York Times.


But there is no evidence of this. This argument has been debunked by Jewish students, many of who are in the leadership of the protests.  Simone Zimmerman, a co-founder of ifnotnow, aJewish organization that opposes the Israeli Apartheid regime and calls for a Cease Fire in Gaza wrote on X, formely Twitter:

“Spent the first night of Passover at the student seder in the Gaza solidarity encampment at Columbia. The Jewish flank of the Palestine solidarity movement is growing and it is so beautiful to behold. Judge for yourself how unsafe these Jewish students look.”  Students at Columbia responded to the mass media's efforts to portray their protests as anti-Semitic  at a live broadcast today. You can see that here.


As a retired union activist and socialist it is wonderful to witness these developments. I was very moved watching the live press conference that the Columbia students held today.

One young Jewish woman talked of her Jewish ancestors and her great grandfather who was in the Russian Revolution of 1905 fighting against the oppressive Tsarist regime that forced Jews to live in a certain area (the pale).  She also talked of the Jewish Bund. She called it the Labor Bund. I was surprised as very few young Jews other than leftists have a clue what the Bund was.


The Zionists do not teach about the Bund which played such a hug erole in Jewish life in Europe before the betrayal of Stalinism and the rise of Nazism.MOst Jewish workers belonged to the Bund. I've met Jewish Israeli tourists in the US and when I mention the Bund they have no clue what I'm talking about. Joshua Freeman's book, Working Cass New York touches on the Bund's role here in the US.

 

Another young woman, an Iranian Jew,  was very powerful in her remarks and how her Jewish faith drives her to do what she is doing as part of the protests. It was so uplifting for me to watch it. One of the speakers, I can't recall which, explained how "Jewishness lives on with solidarity with the Palestinians" 


Things are happening so fast it's difficult to determine what will happen next. Columbia University's administration called the police on protestors and hundreds were arrested and 120 were arrested on Monday at NYU.   However faculty have come out to defend students and there is increasing anger at what is considered an assault on academic freedom.


The efforts of the Biden Administration and the US body politic to portray these protests as anti Jewish or anti-Semitic is not faring well, made difficult by the fact that so many young American Jews are in the forefront of the movement. While in these initial stages, it seems that some Ivy League universities are ahead of the game one wonders at what point public universities with a more working class base or community colleges might enter the fray.


The prospect of a wider student movement arising is a major concern for the US Congress which is overwhelmingly pro-Zionist for the reasons I have stated many times. The Zionist regime is the only reliable ally the US has in the Middle East and any defeat for the Zionist regime is a blow to US imperial power and influence already under threat from China. The US support for Israel has nothing to do with a love for Jews or preserving the Jewish identity; the US ruling class is rife with anti-Semites.


Having said all this, it is without question that there are anti-Semites, Jew haters, that will use the movement in support of the Palestinian cause and non Jews in the movement in particular must give them no quarter. We must take them up in the strongest manner possible.  But the students and young people protesting at Columbia and other universities, many of them Jewish, are on the right side of history and their demands include divestment from Israel, and amnesty for the students and faculty disciplined or arrested from the demonstrations.


These developments have undoubtedly caused concern in the halls of Congress and among the US ruling class in general. The owner of the New England Patriots, Robert Kraft, himself a Zionist, has pulled his support for Columbia University. “I am deeply saddened at the virulent hate that continues to grow on campus and throughout our country,” Here again, we witness how equating Zionism with Judaism serves the interests of people like Kraft who is worth about $12 billion.


Great social upheavals tend to open up the class divisions in society and that's what we are witnessing here. Kraft no doubt has lucrative investments in the Middle East, probably in Israel and Arab states. Fortunately, through the sacrifice of the Palestinian people, and the response to their resistance in Gaza by the Zionists, claiming that the protests are ant-Jewish or that criticism of Israel and the Zionists is anti-Semitic doesn't work any more.


As the students on the university campuses take the lead here we should recall that the same situation existed in 1968 when the French students opened up the floodgates of protests.  Before long, some ten million French workers ended up occupying their workplaces in what we know as the French General Strike. There was at that time a possibility of a genuine socialist transformation of French society leading to a wider movement to end capitalism.


I am not saying that is happening here, but the student protests will undoubtedly have an effect on the working class and our organizations. As they occupy campuses, the UAW, is attempting to organize more workers at the non union plants in the US South. I think the ILWU is still in negotiations though we wouldn't know it with the media black out and the ILWU leadership's silence on the matter.But organized labor will not be left out in the inevitable battles with capital that are on the horizon.


Yes, we are a divided country is many ways as the right wing has made serious headway over the past period, in my view due to the failure of the left to respond to the offensive of capital with an offensive of our own. The trade union leadership, the Dogs That Never Bark, as I call them, have disgracefully done little to change the situation and will no doubt campaign for Biden in the next few months.


It is inevitable that there will be turmoil within the ranks of organized labor at some point in time as the anger that simmers beneath the surface of US society rises to the top.

 

Let's give our support to the students on the front lines.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Iranian attack on Israel: higher risk of regional war?

Reprinted from the UK Socialist Website Left Horizons

 


By John Pickard

The Iranian missile and drone attack on Israel over the weekend has changed nothing fundamental in the political and military balance in the Middle East, but it has increased by a notch the possiblity of a generalised war in the region. The growing splits within Israeli politics and the divide between Biden and Netanyahu will both be intensified by the Iranian attack and Israeli efforts to drag the US into a war with Iran will almost certainly fail.

The Iranian assault, involving hundreds of missiles and drones, was really a statement, a gesture carefully calibrated to satisfy militants at home and in the region, but not so damaging to Israel that it would provoke a reaction from the USA. Indeed, the USA was warned of the attack in advance, and Iran would have known that there would be little damage done to Israel, given the latter’s formidable air defence system. The drones took hours to travel the hundreds of miles across Iraq and Jordan to reach their targets and would have been tracked for hours before they were shot down. The Iranian attack is an escalation of the conflict with Israel, but it is a measured one.

Despite its failure to make much impact in Israel – apparently the only casuality was a young Bedouin woman injured by shrapnel – Iran will count the exercise as a political and military victory. Militarily, it has allowed its forces to scope out the capabilities of Israel’s air defence system, gaining knowledge that might have some future value. Future missile attacks from Iran or from its proxy, Hezbollah in Lebanon, would use swarms of missiles with the aim of overwhelming Israel’s defences and the weekend for them would constitute a test run.

Jordan exposed as a military ally of Israel

But it has also been a useful political exercise for Tehran, in so far as it has exposed the Kingdom of Jordan, as not only a political ally of Israel, but in helping to shoot down Iranian missiles, a military ally. The Jordanian government has been pushed by Iran’s action into treading a fine line, supporting Israel and the West, but dreading the half of its population who are Palestinian. Also, according to the Israeli news website ynetnews, the cost of Israeli’s deployment of its multi-layered air defence system was staggering – more than $1bn – over one night, a figure far higher than the cost to Iran of its missiles and drones.

The Western press are apoplectic with rage over the Iranian missile attack and politicians are falling over themselves to condemn the assault on Israel’s “sovereign territory”. There was no such rage, of course, when Israel attacked a wing of the Iranian embassy in Damascus on April 1, killing seven people, including an Iranian general.

The international diplomatic protocol, accepted by all governments including the USA and UK, is that embassies are deemed to be the “sovereign territory” of the state whose embassy it is. Iran used the attack by Israel in Damascus to justify its own assault, but the Israeli assault on “Iranian territory” has been quietly forgotten by Western politicians, who, we know, apply double standards whenever and wherever it suits them.

But despite loud and vociferous political and diplomatic backing by Western politicians, there is also a generalised clamour among the same leaders for restraint by Israel. The Financial Times reports that the French President Emmanuel Macron advised the international community to do “everything we can to avoid flare-ups” and to “try to convince Israel that we shouldn’t respond by escalating, but rather by isolating Iran”.

Biden does not want the USA to be dragged into a war with Israel, six months before a presidential election

David Cameron, British Foreign Secretary, made a similar comment: “We’re saying very strongly that we don’t support a retaliatory strike. We don’t think they should make one.” Biden called on Israel to “take the win”, assuming Netanyahu will dress up the downing of so many drones and missiles as a victory.

Armed Jewish settlers running amok in the West Bank

The last thing these leaders want is a generalised war in the Middle East, tipping an unstable region over the edge. After the murder of a teenage youth from one of the Jewish settlements, armed settlers have gone on the rampage in the West Bank. At least ten Arab villages have been attacked.

There is a low-level civil war developing in the West Bank, as the October 7 Hamas attack and the war in Gaza have unleashed a wave of pogroms and assults against Arabs in the occupied areas. There is a possibility, notwithstanding the huge imbalance in terms of arms – the Israeli settlers and the IDF are far more heavily armed than Palestinians – of a major conflict developing. Then there is the war in the North between the IDF and Hezbollah, at present a slowly accelerating war of attrition, but it is another major conflict waiting to happen.

Even without the pogroms and ongoing ethnic cleansing in the West Bank, Israel’s relentless and bloody collective punishment of Gaza for the attack by Hamas has shifted global politics. Latest figures show over 34,000 deaths in Gaza, overwhelmingly non-combatants. Gaza has been bombed back to the Stone-Age. A humanitarian crisis has been deliberately created by Israel’s refusal of access to food, water and medical supplies.

Gaza is a war of genocidal proportions and it is unprecedented in its one-sided ferocity in modern times. But more than any other similar conflict in history, it is one beamed live into televisions sets around the world and particularly in the Arab Middle East. It is as a result of this that the political world has turned upside down.

There is overwhelming sympathy among workers and youth around the world for the Palestinian people. No issue in recent times has provoked such large numbers of participants in rallies, protests and demonstrations, as over the merciless bombing of Gaza. Politicians in the West – who in reaility care nothing for Palestinian rights, and never have done – have been forced by popular pressure to call for an end to the Israeli onslaught. Even as they continue to arm Israel, European and American leaders are squirming over the actions of the Israeli government and are calling for a ceasefire.

Huge shift in globabl opinion

Israel is now a pariah state, if not among political leaders, then certainly in the Global South and among workers and youth in Europe and the USA. There has been such a shift in global opinion that is has had an inevitable effect even in Israel, where there is growing opposition to Prime Minister Netanyahu.

The article by regular Haaretz columnist, Gideon Levy, penned in the early hours of Sunday, even as Iranian missiles were heading for Israel

There is still widespread popular support for the war in Israel, but that should not be misinterpreted. It is a sentiment that reflects a public perception, fed by the likes of Netanyahu, that Israel – and by definition its population – faces an ‘existential’ threat. That is particularly true over the missile attack, given that Iran is a reactionary theocratic regime with not a shred of political appeal for Jewish workers. But even if the majority in Israel support the actions of the army, there is growing opposition to the conduct of the war and the actions of this government.

Israelis can see that even after more than six months, Hamas has not been defeated and the hostages have not been freed. Netanyahu’s strategy of fighting to the end, to “completely” destroy Hamas, is running out of road. Increasingly, it is looking to Israelis like Netanyahu is prolonging the war – with the support of the extreme right of his Cabinet – only to stay in power.  Gideon Levy, columnist in the liberal Haarezt newspaper, blunted wrote on Sunday that if Iran attacks Israel, the blame lies with the Israeli government. That is a profound level of domestic opposition.

It looks like it is Netanyahu’s aim to drag the USA into a war with Iran. Having pulverised the population of Gaza, without succeeding in his war aims, he has in the process pulverised Israeli support across the globe. So he has turned instead to Iran. The bombing of the Iranian embassy in Damascus was an escalation by Netanyahu that was not sanctioned by the White House, and nor would it have been.

Why the USA does not want to be dragged into a war with Iran

While the USA, supported by the UK and Jordan, helped Israel destroy the swarm of Iranian missiles and drones over the weekend, none of these states want to be dragged into a war with Iran. The right wing of Netanyahu’s cabinet will be demanding some kind of tit-for-tat response, possibly through a direct attack by Israel on Iran. But if that were to occur, it would more than likely happen without US logistical support, like comms and satellite guidance.

Why does the US not want to be dragged into a war with Iran? It is not that the USA could not do significant damage to Iran and its military infrastructure with its huge arsenal of weapons and large number of bases in the region. It is because even in defeat, Iran would exact a huge and punishing cost to the USA and its allies.

There are something like 57,000 US military personnel in the region. There is a US base of 900 in Syria, nearly 3,000 in Iraq, a huge naval base in Bahrain (300 km from the Iranian coast), other US bases in Egypt, Jordan and in the Gulf. All of these would be targeted by Iran or its proxies in a regional war and the most sophisticated air defence systems would not prevent large numbers of casualties.

As much as Israel has pulverised Gaza, it has ground the international standing of Israel into the dirt

Even with the huge preponderance of US arms in the region, a war with Iran would create a huge loss of life of US military personnel and the last thing Biden wants in an election year is a succession of aircraft bringing home body bags – what’s more, in an unnecessary war provoked by a ‘rogue’ leader in Jerusalem.

That is leaving aside the economic cost of a war involving Iran. The Houthis at the Southern end of the Red Sea have been able to make enough impact that many ships are now being forced to avoid the Suez Canal and are taking a longer (and more expensive) journey from East to West via Southern Africa. A war with Iran would mean the blocking of the Hormuz Straits through which a quarter of the world’s tankers carry their oil. A deep economic recession would follow.

A war between the USA and Iran is not likely

On the balance of probabilities, therefore, a wider war in the Middle East, certainly one involving the USA and Western states, looks unlikely. The USA doesn’t want war with Iran and Iran doesn’t want war with the USA. The Iranian embassador to the UN tweeted after the missile attack, that the matter was now “concluded”.

But on the other hand, the possibility of war has gone up a notch. What will also have increased a notch, will be the determination of Biden to engineer a change of government in Jerusalem. Assuming Netanyahu can even last that long – there are still widespread demands for immediate elections in Israel – and assuming Biden is elected, regime change will be at the top of the ‘to do’ list in the White House at the end of the year.

What has been absent from all of the conflicts and near-conflicts in the Middle East has been any intervention by the organised working class. Around the world workers are expressing their outrage at the Israeli savagery in Gaza, and sometimes this has  been expressed in trade union boycotts of arms exports bound for Israel. But where the labour movement is bound by state repression, such as in Egypt and the other Arab states, or where it is blinded by the ‘security’ Klaxon of the right-wing, such as in Israel, the organised working class is largely absent from the picture.

In the longer run, however, the lessons of this conflict will begin to sink in among millions of workers. In Arab countries, particularly Egypt, where there is a potentially powerful working class, many workers and youth will digest the events they have witnessed on Al Jazeera and will have taken note of the inactivity of their governments in the face of the destruction of lives and all Palestinian identity in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

And in Israel itself, the war and all the events around it will exacerbate the divisions that already exist, between those whose entire political modus operandi is based on racism and apartheid – and ‘security’ to guarantee it – and the rest, who pay for this fake ‘security’ in money and blood. The Middle East world has shifted on its axis and although we can as yet only see outlines of change today, they will be as nothing to the profound and permanent changes we will see in coming years.

Nauseating: Joe Biden Speaks to IBEW Tops. Bring Me the Vote

Richard Mellor

 

Here is Genocide Joe Biden speaking to a meeting of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) last Friday, 4-12-24. I have to say it was not bad in the sense that he didn’t appear to be out of it, slurring his speech, walking in the wrong direction when he entered or left the podium or forgetting which country he was in.

The mass media and his opponents, including the serial sexual predator and rival for the White House Donald Trump, like to focus on the issue of Genocide Jo’s memory but that is a side issue; it’s not the reason workers should see him for what he is, an enemy of the working class, both here and abroad.  He will go down in history as the man who could have stopped the genocide in Gaza but instead, armed it and wore the Zionist badge with pride.

 

It's nauseating listening to it. Kenneth Cooper, the IBEW Secretary Treasurer, on around $400,000 a year for his efforts keeping the books, gives him a heroes welcome. He's the "strongest champion" of the working class, the "Man the IBEW can rely on every day". Cooper goes on, "He's the most union friendly pro-labor president in the history of this great nation"

 

What Cooper means is he is the man the union hierarchy can rely on, people like himself. The Democratic Party and its leader, in this case Joe here, the former Senator from Du Pont, is the party of the clique that sits atop organized labor, not the members who pay the dues and the obscene salaries most of them earn. For decades the union leadership at the highest levels have been been, as De Leon once said, the labor lieutenants of capital within organized labor.

 

In response to this heroes welcome Biden spews out protectionist and nationalist language about how great the IBEW is, America is and so on. The IBEW has about 800,000 members, it is one of the most sort after unions to join given the pay and benefits its members enjoy.  That is a good thing, the living standards the IBEW members (those who do the work) have should be had by all. All workers have lost ground including union members.


Biden is speaking to them because the IBEW and the other building trades will benefit from any infrastructure or social spending that comes out of Washington as these huge projects require union labor. In addition, if non union labor is used it has to comply with the Davis Bacon Act that requires all contractors pay the "prevailing wage" for the area. This sounds good but as wages decline, so does the prevailing wage. Not only that, as I see it, it is very popular with the labor hierarchy as it gets them off the hook from having to  organizing new members. It's some free time for them.


The labor officials that do the rounds for the Democrats (and organized labor has spent billions over the years in campaign contributions) often find a way in to lucrative government office through the Democratic Party, a reward for using their members' money and resources; there are numerous political figures that rise this way in Democratic Party Administrations.


This has gotten harder and harder over the decades though as union members' response to their leaders pushing a party they have abandoned, either opt out of the electoral process altogether or turn to more conservative alternatives or a degenerate like Trump. With the absence of any labor or left alternative, and the failure of groups like Labor Notes or TDU to offer one, the growth of the right wing or the search for a "strongman" to take a hold of the reins can become a serious option.


Openly supporting Democrats is not such a useful tool for political purposes as workers have suffered under Republican and Democratic regimes alike. I remember first noting this change in the mid nineties when I attended National Conventions of my union AFSCME

when the focus changed and the issue became not supporting a Party  but the candidate as an individual. We support those that are best for "working families".

 

The IBEW leadership like all of them, will ignore the fact that Biden denied the rail workers the right to strike last year despite having the "legal" right to do so. Biden and Pelosi and the rest of the gang in Congress introduced legislation overnight that took that right away. Profits come first folks and the rail workers were forced to accept a contract they'd already rejected.


Biden's language about American jobs and American greatness sounded more like a return to the Smoot-Hawley era prior to the Great Depression and the advent of WW2. And he used the term Malarkey that proves he's just a regular Joe and and Irishman at that. It was just a show where everyone would agree.


And the fate of workers in other countries, those in Vietnam, China, Bangladesh, Cambodia or anywhere else where unions  are illegal and violence against union organizers rife ,never came up. Nor did the Genocide in Gaza and it should, after all, it's one of Joe's successes. But international issues have nothing to do with our wages and conditions here so why mention them? There will have to be some turmoil within organized labor to root out the present pro-market clique.


So suffer a little nausea on a Sunday and watch Biden in action here.

Mondoweiss: Zionism must be exposed and discredited

Zionism threatens political freedom in the United States and international order. There is only one way to fight this ideology. Those who oppose it must explain the truth to Americans: Zionism is racist.

You could not get a better picture of Zionism than from two recent events. Israel bombed a consulate in a foreign country – Syria – killing top Iranian military officers, among others, and Israel supporters in the U.S. forced the cancelation of the valedictorian address at the University of Southern California because the speaker opposes Israeli genocide in Gaza.

Today Zionism threatens political freedom in the United States and international order.

These actions are consistent. They are expressions of a maximalist ideology that operates on a global level to support the Israeli regime. That ideology, of course, is Zionism, the belief that Jews need a state in order to be safe. Today Zionism threatens political freedom in the United States and international order. It threatens the political tradition of liberalism in the United States by compelling Democratic politicians to pay for more bombs to advance a genocide.

After 150 years of struggle and practice, it is plain that Zionism is dedicated to the neverending subjugation of Palestinians, who resist their persecution.

There is only one way to fight this ideology. Those who oppose it must explain the truth to Americans: Zionism is racist. Its supporters must be called out and cornered and discredited—as adherents of a Jim Crow ideology.

There is only one way to fight this ideology. Those who oppose it must explain the truth to Americans: Zionism is racist.

I have always said that I might have been a Zionist in an earlier age. Zionism was a perfectly understandable ideology in light of European oppression of Jews. Jews left Europe as refugees, not supremacists. If Zionism had focused only on Jewish safety it might be a tolerable ideology today.

But from the beginning maximalist Zionists won out. They wanted more land with fewer Palestinians. For at least 75 years now this is the Zionist credo, and they repeatedly used terrorism to achieve that goal.

–In the 1920s the socialist leader Chaim Arlosoroff sought to advance ideas of national coexistence with Palestinians. He was murdered on the beach in Tel Aviv in 1933 by Zionist militias that later produced the highest officials in Israel.

–In 1949 a U.N. diplomat, Folke Bernadotte, who had saved thousands of Jews from Nazis during the war, sought to advance plans to keep Jerusalem an international city, as designated by the UN Partition plan. He was assassinated in Jerusalem by a Zionist gang that – again – later produced the highest officials in Israel.

–In the 1990s a Labor Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, declared that Israel would only have peace if it returned land to Palestinians so as to allow them to have sovereignty. Rabin was murdered by a rightwinger who enjoys deep political support to this day.

These murders arose from a consistent program: Israeli leaders have again and again told us that they will not accept a Palestinian state alongside the Jewish state.

Because of Israel’s defiance on that score and because of Israel’s consecration of higher Jewish rights in the nation-state law in 2018, human rights groups worldwide have stated that Israel is an apartheid state.

Zionists have one answer to those charges — it’s antisemitism, you just hate Jews. (No, we hate segregationists.)

Israel has used overwhelming violence to quash resistance. It has repeatedly massacred Palestinians, and in Gaza, in the last six months has indiscriminately killed tens of thousands of women and children, and aid workers. Any sensible person understands that this onslaught will only foster radical resistance.

I don’t support violence against civilians. It is why I have been outspoken against Hamas’s October 7 attacks, and the dehumanization that occurs on both sides in a war.

But clearly Zionism is the root problem. Zionism destroys every good thing in its path. It is an ideology that treats Palestinians as lesser, in their own land. It brought religious nationalism to the Middle East and destabilized a region long before ISIS. It attacks villages so as to solidify “the Jewish majority,” and even the liberal wing rationalizes its actions. (“My father…. was a terrorist,” says Jeremy Ben Ami of J Street – an organization started to oppose Zionist settlements that has achieved nothing for that agenda in 15 years.)

Today Zionism is undermining American freedom. Zionists and sympathizers in the U.S. government pushed the Iraq war that destroyed Arab cities and the American image too. Zionist sympathizers are today justifying a genocide and denying the famine in Gaza– and getting Biden to sign off. The Zionist lobby has corrupted our elections, canceled free speech on a routine basis, wrecked the American Jewish community, and compromised some of the best minds of my generation (including Jewish writers in whom I have observed the tragic loss).  

There is only one way to defeat Zionism. It must be indicted and described, as the racist antithesis of everything the American experiment has achieved. Its support must be harried, hectored, and starved. It must be defeated in the United States, in Congress, and at the University of Southern California. We will win, because we must.

Saturday, April 20, 2024

After Ten-Year Battle, a Younger Generation Leads the Way at Volkswagen

Reprinted from The American Prospect. Mike Elk is the founder of Payday Report

The UAW has high hopes for success in organizing the non-union plant in Tennessee, as a first step to campaigns across the South.

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