MICHAEL YATES | 1 Feb 01:06
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new book: On the Global Waterfront


Monthly Review Press has just published a book by Suzan Erem and E. Paul Durrenberger, titled "On the Global
Waterfront."  It details an important laobr struggle on the Charleston, SC docks and tells us much about
the US labor movement, racism, global capitalism, and the heroism of dedicated. mostly black dock workers.

  "On the Global Waterfront tells the story of how longshoremen in South Carolina confronted attempts to
wipe out the state’s most powerful black organization. When a Danish shipping company shifted its
transportation to a nonunion firm in 1999, Local 1422 in Charleston, South Carolina, mobilized to
protect their hard-won rights. What followed culminated in a protest in which 660 riot police were
deployed against fifty dockworkers, a group that grew to 150 before the night was over. Four black and one
white longshoreman — subsequently known as the Charleston 5 — were held for twenty-two months under
house arrest on trumped-up felony charges of inciting a riot.

  Within the politically conservative, racially charged, and intensely religious climate of the South,
the unassuming local union president, Ken Riley — supported behind the scenes by key AFL-CIO staffers
— crafted an international campaign in defense of the arrested longshoremen. Their ultimate success
vaulted Riley to higher leadership in the powerful transportation union the International
Longshoremen’s Association and laid the foundation for successful rebuffs in ports around the world.
This compelling narrative of a local struggle, a transformed union leader, and a newly energized
international worker movement highlights the resounding importance of the international labor
movement that is not only still vital, but still capable of stopping global commerce on a dime." 

Order the book, see the streaming video and read more at www.ontheglobalwaterfront.org 

Spread the word!!

Michael Yates
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Dbachmozart | 1 Feb 01:08
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US has killed one million in Iraq


<http:/hhttp:/<WBR>/<WBR>www.informationclhttp:/<WBR>/<WBR> 

**************Start the year off right.  Easy ways to stay in shape.     
http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489
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Dbachmozart | 1 Feb 01:29
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The free market - Haitians resort to eating dirt


By JONATHAN M. KATZ, Associated Press Writer Tue Jan 29, 7:43 PM ET  

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - It was lunchtime in one of Haiti's worst  slums, and 
Charlene Dumas was eating mud. With food prices rising, Haiti's  poorest can't 
afford even a daily plate of rice, and some take desperate  measures to fill 
their bellies. Charlene, 16 with a 1-month-old son, has come to  rely on a 
traditional Haitian remedy for hunger pangs: cookies made of dried  yellow dirt 
from the country's central plateau.  
The mud has long been prized by pregnant women and children here as an  
antacid and source of calcium. But in places like Cite Soleil, the oceanside  slum 
where Charlene shares a two-room house with her baby, five siblings and two  
unemployed parents, cookies made of dirt, salt and vegetable shortening have  
become a regular meal. 
"When my mother does not cook anything, I have to eat them three times a  
day," Charlene said. Her baby, named Woodson, lay still across her lap, looking  
even thinner than the slim 6 pounds 3 ounces he weighed at birth. 
Though she likes their buttery, salty taste, Charlene said the cookies also  
give her stomach pains. "When I nurse, the baby sometimes seems colicky too,"  
she said. 
Food prices around the world have spiked because of higher oil prices, needed 
 for fertilizer, irrigation and transportation. Prices for basic ingredients 
such  as corn and wheat are also up sharply, and the increasing global demand 
for  biofuels is pressuring food markets as well. 
The problem is particularly dire in the Caribbean, where  island nations 
depend on imports and food prices are up 40 percent in  places. 
The global price hikes, together with floods and crop damage from the 2007  
hurricane season, prompted the U.N. Food and Agriculture Agency to declare  
states of emergency in Haiti and several  other Caribbean countries. Caribbean 
leaders held an emergency summit in  December to discuss cutting food taxes and 
(Continue reading)

Duroyan Fertl | 1 Feb 02:17
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Re: WSWS on Heath Ledger

Not the best article, but, yes, Ledger was at the March 2003 protest in Melbourne. 
Photos here: http://www.viewimages.com/Search.aspx?mid=1859410&epmid=1&partner=Google

He was also interviewed around the same time, and called John Howard a "dick". He comes across as a bit
naiive, but genuine. The relevant part of the transcript is here:
http://togsplace.blogspot.com/2008/01/do-you-remeber-when-heath-ledger.html

Les Schaffer <schaffer <at> optonline.net> wrote: Louis Proyect wrote:
> http://wsws.org/articles/2008/jan2008/ledg-j31.shtml

thank god for socialist newspapers. by following this guy's death in the 
regular US channels you would never have known he took a public stand 
against the Iraq war.

Les

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"Dejerme decirle, a reisgo de parecer ridiculo, que el revolucionario verdadero esta guiado por grandes
sentimientos de amor!!!"

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Greg McDonald | 1 Feb 03:04
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Iraq of '08 Eerily Like Vietnam of '68

Published on Thursday, January 31, 2008 by The Times Union (Albany,  
New York)

Iraq of ‘08 Eerily Like Vietnam of ‘68

by Thomas A. Bass and Maurice Isserman

The last time the United States lulled itself into thinking that a  
military surge was working was January 1968, just before the Tet  
lunar New Year ushered in the Year of the Monkey. Gen. William  
Westmoreland, commanding America’s half million troops in Vietnam,  
assured President Johnson that 65 percent of the South Vietnamese  
population was living in secure areas, with “victory in sight.”

America was shocked when it got the news that early on the morning of  
Jan. 31, 1968, a hole had been blown in the wall of the United States  
Embassy in Saigon. The compound was occupied by Communist forces,  
while other targets throughout Saigon and a hundred other cities in  
South Vietnam were under attack.

The last of the communist offensive was repulsed by Feb. 23. That  
allowed the U.S. military to claim victory, but the Tet Offensive was  
a major blow. Only when the cable traffic was released after the war  
did we learn that U.S. commanders had contemplated using nuclear  
weapons to counter the attacks. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of  
Staff called it “a near thing,” while advising Johnson that this  
“major, powerful nationwide assault has by no means run its course.”

This was indeed the case when the Communists launched another mini- 
Tet offensive three months later, shelling Saigon with 122 mm Russian  
(Continue reading)

Walter Lippmann | 1 Feb 04:37
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THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia): Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face

(When I was a youngster, older formerly left-minded relatives said
to me that anyone who wasn't a socialist at 20 had no heart, but
anyone who was still a socialist at 40 had no brains. This person,
if the story is accurate, has already bought into capitalism and
found a berth for himself among the union staff, at just 26. He
doesn't think very highly of Cuba today. Surprise, surprise.) 
=================================================================

THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia)

Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face
January 30, 2008

At 26, former Trotskyist Paul Howes is now a leading figure in
Australia's labour movement, writes Tony Wright.

PAUL Howes was barely into his teens when France's insistence on
testing nuclear devices in the Pacific propelled him into the world
of far-left demonstrators. He joined Resistance and the Democratic
Socialist Party, which meant, effectively, that he was a Trotskyist.

A bit over a decade later, he represents 130,000 mainly blue-collar
Australian workers, and he has journeyed a long way from the left and
from any ideological objection to the nuclear industry.

These days he insists Australia has to have cheap energy to ensure it
maintains a manufacturing industry and advocates a bipartisan debate
on whether Australia should embrace nuclear power. "No one with any
credibility disputes climate change," he says.

(Continue reading)

Richard Fidler | 1 Feb 05:20
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Re: THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia): Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face

Come off it, Walter. This guy -- if he really was in Resistance --
left it at the ripe old age of 16. He has nothing to sell out.
Never had it.

-----Original Message-----
From: marxism-bounces+rfidler_8=sympatico.ca <at> lists.econ.utah.edu
[mailto:marxism-bounces+rfidler_8=sympatico.ca <at> lists.econ.utah.edu
] On Behalf Of Walter Lippmann
Sent: January 31, 2008 10:37 PM
To: rfidler_8 <at> sympatico.ca
Subject: [Marxism] THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia): Nuclear no
nightmare,says unionism's new face

(When I was a youngster, older formerly left-minded relatives said
to me that anyone who wasn't a socialist at 20 had no heart, but
anyone who was still a socialist at 40 had no brains. This person,
if the story is accurate, has already bought into capitalism and
found a berth for himself among the union staff, at just 26. He
doesn't think very highly of Cuba today. Surprise, surprise.) 
=================================================================

THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia)

Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face
January 30, 2008

At 26, former Trotskyist Paul Howes is now a leading figure in
Australia's labour movement, writes Tony Wright.

PAUL Howes was barely into his teens when France's insistence on
(Continue reading)

Cedric Beidatsch | 1 Feb 05:22
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Re: THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia): Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face

To clarify for non Australian readers, the AWU is a resolutely right wing
union, and the initials are often disparagingly cited as "Australia's Worst
Union" by left wing unionists. More interestingly, why do so many
Trotskyists become rabid right wingers?

THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia)

Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face
January 30, 2008

At 26, former Trotskyist Paul Howes is now a leading figure in
Australia's labour movement, writes Tony Wright.

Cedric Beidatsch, Perth, Western Australia

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dave.walters | 1 Feb 05:31
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Re: THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia): Nuclear no nightmare, says unionism's new face

Cedric ponders:
> More interestingly, why do so many
> Trotskyists become rabid right wingers?

You only think this because they are more public 
about it. Maybe becuase they are more intellectally 
inclined...it's the only reason I  can think of. All 
the other leftists (Stalinists, social-dems, 
Maoists, whatever) also become rightwing...
but they go into business instead of politics. 
There are probably hundreds of ex-Maoists 
doing their damnest as consultants 
for investors in China.

David
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Walter Lippmann | 1 Feb 05:38
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Monument to John Paul II almost ready in Cuba

Further confirmation that the religious
in Cuba are free to practice their faith.
Not at all the image you would get if all
you knew about Cuba came from the MIAMI 
HERALD or most of the other U.S. media.

Much more about Cuba and the Pope here:
http://www.walterlippmann.com/pope.html
===================================================

Americas 
Monument to John Paul II almost ready in Cuba

[listen to the report and see a YouTube video
including Fidel and the Pope together below.]
http://catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=11644

Havana, Jan 31, 2008 / 06:52 pm (CNA).- A tower, a bell, a cross and
a statue of John Paul II make up the new monument dedicated to the
late Pontiff who visited Cuba a decade ago and that will be
inaugurated on February 23 by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican
Secretary of State.

The monument, which will be erected in the city of Santa Clara, where
the Pope celebrated his first Mass on Cuban soil, is the first one
ever on public lands, that is, on land that is not the property of
the Church.

The project was developed by the construction office of the Diocese
of Santa Clara and was designed by architect Luis Orlando Fernandez
(Continue reading)


Gmane