Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Against War & Imperialism. Comments Off
A leaflet distributed by the WSA New York Branch
There are millions of people today in this City who are living in fear for their lives and safety. A devious and secretive group of enemies are daily hatching new schemes to ruin their way of live and to terrorize them into submission. Their enemies claim to be fighting for righteousness and are fanatical in pursuit of their goals. For many of its victims just to speak out against this enemy is to draw its anger and spite. Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Against War & Imperialism. Comments Off
So goes one of the verses of an old union anthem, “Solidarity Forever”
They have taken untold millions that they never toiled to earn
but without our brain and muscle not a single wheel can turn
we can smash their haughty power, take our freedom when we learn
that the Union makes us strong
Ralph Chaplin, Solidarity Forever
Those words ring as true today as they ever did before.
Those who can end terror and war are those who are forced to die in it and produce it, the working class, both here in the U.S. and in the “enemy” countries. Let Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Powell and their friends have to load the bombs, drive the trucks, fly the planes while the working people fold their arms and refuse to cooperate, and see how far they get with their war with Iraq. Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Against War & Imperialism. Comments Off
A response to the Sept. 11th 2001 terrorist attacks
It is tragic that, in a world half-mad and wholly chaotic, emotion seems to have overwhelmed reason. The good, the intelligent and the humane side of women and men has been drowned in a sea of lies, ignorance and cruelty, and many of those who seek freedom and well being for all humanity grow discouraged and apprehensive. Yet hope remains alive as long as we can stop, reflect and ask ourselves hard questions and do not accept the current alternatives as being the only ones available. Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under WSA. Comments Off
This is the story of one of the major rent strikes of the 20th century.
Barcelona is the capital of the province of Catalonia in northeastern Spain. In the 1920s Barcelona was the fastest growing city in Europe. Modernization and industrialization were proceeding at a rapid pace. Migrants from nearby regions were flooding into the city to take jobs. The population of Barcelona expanded by 62% during that decade. Adjacent blue-collar suburbs like Hospitalet and Santa Coloma doubled and tripled in population. By the 1930s the province of Catalonia, with about 6 million residents, contained about 70% of the manufacturing capacity of Spain. Barcelona had become Spain’s largest city, with 1.5 million people. Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Rebel Legacies. Comments Off
by Don Fitz
This article was published in ideas & action #11, Summer, 1989.
Containerization has devastated port labor throughout the world. Spanish struggles over containerization have been unique becausea “socialist” government has spearheaded port reorganization and it has met stiff resistance from the revolutionary union of longshoremen, La Coordinadora. Coordinadora’s unique combination of hiring hall job rotation, industrial unionism, and Spanish anarcho-syndicalist assemblyism has earned it a reputation as one of the most democratic labor organizations anywhere in the world.
The Technological MarvelMaritime unions have historically been strong in Spain because ports are a nerve center for its economy. At one time, longshoring provided jobs for 20,000 men. They worked in tight-knit groups, making sure that cargo was hauled in and stacked properly. But the days of lifting bundles of cowhides, rolling barrels, and wheeling crates on dollies are two decades past. Cargo is now packed into 40′ x 8′ x 8′ containers (the smaller sizes are 20′ long). Straddle carriers, giant forklifts and cranes load containers into ships or unload them directly onto trucks and trains. |
“The unity maintained during our difficult strike [in 1976] taught us that this unity was too precious to be destroyed by endless sloganeering and sectarianism. We understood that our decisions could not be delegated to union bureaucrats.”To hand over our proletarian responsibility to representatives is to throw away our need as a class to participate in social transformation. We realized that we would never arrive at the social revolution through leaders or liberators. Those caught up in and distracted by the obligations of their positions and the representative function they flaunt end up distancing themselves from those they represent. As they are not affected by the same problems, troubles or struggles, they end up almost unable to to recognize them. The estrangement is inevitable.
“We want this to be an organization of unity and struggle which shuns bureaucratization and bosses. All decisions are to be arrived at through the assembly. No one is obligated to belong to it, neither are they excluded from it. Being dockers is what counts.” — OEPB (Barcelona affiliate of La Coordinadora) |
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Rebel Legacies. Comments Off
TODAY IT IS just another bank holiday in the UK and is not even recognized in the United States. Not many people know why May Day became International Workers Day and why we should still celebrate it. One more piece of our history which has been hidden from us. Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Rebel Legacies. Comments Off
When 600,000 workers seized control of their workplaces
The following article was originally presented as a talk at the Conference on Workers’ Self-Organization in St. Louis in 1988. © Tom Wetzel
During the month of September, 1920, a widespread occupation of Italian factories by their workforces took place, which originated in the auto factories, steel mills and machine tool plants of the metal sector but spread out into many other industries — cotton mills and hosiery firms, lignite mines, tire factories, breweries and distilleries, and steamships and warehouses in the port towns.
But this was not a sit-down strike; the workers continued production with their own in-plant organization. And railway workers, in open defiance of the management of the state-owned railways, shunted freight cars between the factories to enable production to continue. At its height about 600,000 workers were involved.
This movement blew up out of a conventional trade union struggle over wages. But the wage demands were only the official occasion for the fight; the real aspirations and desires that motivated the workers involved in this struggle go much deeper.(1) Read more
Posted on December 29, 2008, filed Under Rebel Legacies. Comments Off
A review of Maurice Brinton’s For Workers Power
By Tom Wetzel
I was attracted to radical politics in the late 1960s/early ’70s when I was in my twenties. Most of the people who were drawn to serious revolutionary politics back then ended up in Leninist organizations of some sort, if only for a time. Third World revolutions were one influence. Various Marxist-Leninist parties had come to power based on guerrilla struggles, in places like China and Cuba, and this augmented the claim of Leninism that it was “successful” in charting a way to a post-capitalist future.
But it seemed obvious to me that workers did not have power in production in the various Communist countries. They’re subordinated to a managerial hierarchy. Thus, I reasoned, workers must be a subjugated and exploited class in those countries.
A work I found particularly helpful in the ’70s was Maurice Brinton’s The Bolsheviks and Workers Control. This clear-headed and well-researched little book was an indispensable source of arguments to explode the myth of the Bolshevik party building “proletarian power” in Russia. AK Press has now re-issued this booklet as part of an anthology, For Workers Power. Brinton was the main writer for the London libertarian socialist group Solidarity. This anthology collects in one place many of Brinton’s writings, including The Irrational in Politics and Paris: May 1968. In this review I’ll mainly focus on the Russian revolution. Read more