DSA Feed
This is a feed aggregator that collects news and updates from DSA chapters, national working groups and committees, and our publications all in one convenient place. Updated at 9:30 AM ET / 6:30 AM PT every morning.


Weekly Roundup: June 24, 2025
Events & Actions
Tuesday, June 24 (6:30 p.m. â 7:30 p.m.):
Ecosocialism Office Gardening (In person at 1916 McAllister)
Wednesday, June 25 (6:45 p.m. â 8:30 p.m.): Tenant Organizing Working Group Meeting (Zoom & in person at Radical Reading Room, 438 Haight)
Wednesday, June 25 (7:00 p.m. â 9:00 p.m.):
Screening of âThey Liveâ (In person at Roar Shack, 34 7th St)
Thursday, June 26 (5:50 p.m. â 7:30 p.m.): Socialist in Office + Electoral Board Meeting (Zoom)
Thursday, June 26 (7:00 p.m. â 8:00 p.m.): Immigrant Justice Working Group Meeting (Zoom)
Friday, June 27 (3:00 p.m. â 5:00 p.m.): No Appetite for Apartheid Consumer Pledge Canvass x Trans March (Meet at the Dolores Park tennis courts)
Monday, June 30 (7:00 p.m. â 8:00 p.m.): Labor Board Meeting (Zoom)
Tuesday, July 1 (6:00 p.m. â 7:00 p.m.): Ecosocialist Bi-Weekly Meeting (Zoom)
Tuesday, July 1 (7:00 p.m. â 9:00 p.m.): Reading Group: The Housing Question by Friederich Engels (Part 1 of 2) (In person at 1916 McAllister)
Wednesday, July 2 (6:30 p.m. â 9:00 p.m.):
New Member Happy Hour at Zeitgeist (In person at Zeitgeist, 199 Valencia)
Saturday, July 5 (12:45 p.m. â 4:00 p.m.):
Homelessness Working Group Outreach and Outreach Training (Meet in person at 1916 McAllister)
Check out https://dsasf.org/events for more events and updates. Events with a are especially new-member-friendly!

Ecosocialism Gardening
Come garden with our Ecoscocialism Working Group to talk socialism and get to know our garden! Weâll start with a discussion of the history of native plants in the Bay Area and then identify the native plants in our office garden. Join us Tuesday, June 24th at 6:30 p.m. at 1916 McAllister.

Summer Social(ist) Events!
Mark your calendars for our Summer Social(ist) event series!
- June 25th @ 7:00 p.m. â Screening of They Live at Roar Shack (34 7th Street) â Letâs watch the classic monster movie inspired by the scariest monsters of them all (Ronald Reagan and Capitalism)!
- July 6th @ 11:00 p.m. â Screening of The Room at the Balboa Theater! Weâll meet outside at 10:30.
- July 11th @ 7:30PM â Comrade Karaoke at the Roar Shack (34 7th Street) â Come hang out and do some FREE karaoke with your fellow DSA SF comrades or cool people you want to impress with your incredible singing voice! No songs refused, no entry denied! Suggested Donation: $10. Drinks: Wine + Beer Available / BYOB
- July 27th @ 1:05PM â Oakland Ballers vs Northern Colorado Owlz baseball game + âHalloween in July Nightâ (at Raimondi Park) â RSVP here by July 13th so that we can put in a group order of tickets! Group tickets are are $15 per ticket, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds!

Apartheid-Free Bay Area Canvassing @ Trans March
Celebrate Trans Pride and build public support for stores that have pledged to go apartheid-free
this Friday, 6/27 from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.! Weâll meet at the Dolores Park tennis courts.
You will receive basic training, and then you will put that training into practice by collecting signatures at the Trans March. RSVP and then sign up for a 1-hour shift. Bring a tote bag and make sure to wear your DSA merch. New members encouraged to join!

Reading Group: âThe Housing Questionâ by Friedrich Engels
Join us in reading the seminal text on the political economy of housing. Written in 1872, âThe Housing Questionâ is Friedrich Engelsâ critique of the housing market and the solutions promoted by his contemporaries. 150 years later, his work resonates just as much, if not more, with tenantsâ current struggles.
This two-part series will have readers discuss the various historical attitudes and debates around housing and apply those lessons to our modern housing crisis.
Join us for session 1 at the DSA SF office at 1916 McAllister St. on July 1st at 7:00 p.m. A full PDF of the book can be found here.
EWOC: How to Talk About Organizing
EWOC (Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee) is a project of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) and DSA working to build a distributed grassroots organizing program to support workers organizing at the workplace. To learn more about the work EWOC does, come by the DSA SF office to pick up a copy of Unite and Win or tune into the Labor Boardâs weekly meetings every Monday at 7 p.m. on Zoom.
The next EWOC event hosted by DSA SF features EWOC staff members conducting a training on generating workplace leads and conducting organizing conversations on July 16th from 6:30 p.m to 8:30 p.m. Let us know if you can make it! Hope to see you there!

Peopleâs Conference for Palestine: Gaza is the Compass
Come one, come all! Weâre hoping to have a DSA SF delegation at the
Peopleâs Conference For Palestine: Gaza is the Compass
from August 29-31 in Detroit, Michigan. Interested? Weâre gauging interest, so please fill out this form by June 19th at 11:00 p.m. Limited financial aid may be available.
Reports

Immigrant Justice Working Group x East Bay DSA Know Your Rights Training
About 30 attendees filled the DSA office for a KYR training hosted by the Immigrant Justice Working Group (IJWG) and East Bay DSA Migrants Rights Working Group on Tuesday, June 17. A highlight from the training included roleplay scenarios which allowed participants to practice exercising their rights at work and during a traffic stop, among other scenarios.
Special thanks to comrades Caroline G., Cielo, Rashad X, Eric (EBDSA), Kevin (EBDSA) for helping present and facilitate the breakout sessions.
Stay tuned for future trainings. Join the #immigrant-justice channel on the DSA SF Slack for more information.

Behind the Scenes
The Chapter Coordination Committee (CCC) regularly rotates duties among chapter members. This allows us to train new members in key duties that help keep the chapter running like organizing chapter meetings, keeping records updated, office cleanup, updating the DSA SF website and newsletter, etc. Members can view current CCC rotations.
To help with the day-to-day tasks that keep the chapter running, fill out the CCC help form.


Get on the Bus! Retaking Bay Area Public Transit

Peninsula DSA transit campaigners and comrades enjoy an in-person social in San Mateo May 2, 2025.
How DSA Members Can Help Save Regional Services
In the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area, public transportation is in existential crisis. Many of our transit agencies are racing toward fiscal cliffs: By mid-2026, projected revenue for Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), Caltrain, Muni, and others will not be enough to cover operating costs. Though our transit systems have faced structural deficits before, this time is different: Losing one-time COVID relief funds while struggling to regain pre-COVID ridership has blown a combined $800 million-dollar hole in budgets that have already survived multiple rounds of austerity measures.
To avoid financial collapse, these agencies anticipate massive service cuts that will leave more than one million working class people without safe and reliable routes to work, school, shopping, and loved ones. We previewed this ânew normalâ on May 9 when a small malfunction shut down BART and stranded 170,000 weekday commuters all around the Bay. Those who couldnât find a bus turned to predatory ride-share companies, whose services cost 10-20 times more than the usual transit fare.
The financial precarity of Bay Area public transit is the logical result of decades of systemic disinvestment, intentional fragmentation, and unabashed NIMBYism. Each of our 27 transit operators must plan its own infrastructure and negotiate its routes in 101 municipalities, with every project subject to unilateral changes and at risk of last-minute cancellation. Bedroom communities on Peninsula DSAâs home turf are specifically at fault for refusing to participate in regional transit planning. From San Mateo Countyâs withdrawal from the full BART network in 1961 to filthy rich Athertonâs attempt to weaponize CEQA to block Caltrain's electrification in 2015, our local leaders rarely miss an opportunity to subsidize and normalize car dependency. (Thankfully, their latest pet project, a highway-widening scheme connecting Highway 101 to SR 92 / San Mateo Bridge, is facing stiff public opposition because it would remove homes without reducing traffic or commute times.)
The only way forward is securing sustainable new sources of revenue for the public transit ecosystem as a whole. The state Senate passed Senator Scott Weiner (District 11) and Senator Jesse ArreguĂn (District 7)âs five-county regional funding measure (SB 63) that would go to voters in November 2026. The measure would rescue transit agencies in the counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco by levying a sales tax of at least 1/2 cent over 10â15 years, though the revenue still wouldnât be enough to preserve the current level of service.Â
Though we support any solution that prevents transit apocalypse , this âpragmaticâ solution repeats two historical mistakes. First, although San Mateo County and Santa Clara County have the highest median incomes and home values in California, SB 63 allows either county to choose a lower tax rate (1/4 cent) or simply âopt outâ of participation, denying access to their robust tax base. Second, no matter how noble the cause, adding yet another sales tax to everyday items will hit working class people the hardest. Adding insult to injury, weâd end up paying more for less service because even the maximum sales tax wouldnât keep pace with rampant inflation and arbitrary tariffs.
For months, San Mateo Countyâs transit agency, SamTrans, has declined to support or oppose the regional funding measure that would preserve local BART and Caltrain service. (SamTrans has structural deficits too, but not until fiscal year 2027.) Though the nine-member Board of Directors (BOD) has approved another round of polling, they seem fixated on just how much tax âthe publicâ might accept rather than what awful consequences their riders will face should SB 63 fail. Their hesitancy isnât surprising: No SamTrans board members regularly ride public transit, let alone depend on it. And some live in communities such as Hillsborough (median household income $250,000+), which is accessible only by car, and Redwood Shores, which has a single bus route that runs only during school dropoff and pickup hoursâand takes summers off!

Peninsula DSA showed up to the San Francisco May Day rally to talk transit and Palestinian liberation.
New Polling Provides Hope for Progressive Tax Solution
Fortunately, pro-transit organizations and activists across the Bay Area are uniting to pressure San Mateo County and Santa Clara County to pay their fair share. Our new demand is a gross receipts tax on all business activities, similar to San Franciscoâs GR tax. Bay Area Forward, a group of transit unions (including SEIU), operators, and activists, just surveyed likely 2026 voters and found that 61% would support a gross receipts tax. The race is on to build enough public support to pressure other San Mateo County decision makersâSan Mateo County Transit Authority (SMCTA), the Board of Supervisors, C/CAGâinto advising SamTrans to âopt inâ to SB 63 by the August 11 deadline.Once our county is confirmed to be in play, Peninsula DSA and our coalition partners will have a more than a year to boost public support through canvassing, flyering, and more.
Peninsula DSA now organizes with Transbay Coalition, as part of its San Mateo County cadre, and with Seamless Bay Area. Our chapter has promoted regional socials and led flyering events at BART and Caltrain stations to inform riders of proposed cuts. (The coalitionâs next big event is a rally for public transit at the Millbrae BART/Caltrain station on July 1.) Every month, we mobilize to make public commentsâwhether in person, by Zoom, or via emailâat the SamTrans BOD meetings. Transbay Coalition members now hold three of eleven seats on the SamTrans Citizens Advisory Committee and are actively recruiting like-minded folks for four vacant seats.Â
We call on our fellow socialists to join our fight for public transit in four ways:
Push your chapter to use public transit. Like public libraries, public transit budgets rise or fall with public demand. If the coordinated Montgomery bus boycott ended racial segregation, a coordinated bus-riding effort by California DSA chapters could force more public investment. A great place to start is making all chapter meetings, socials, and events fully accessible by transit!
Join your local transit coalition so we can fight on a unified front. There are pro-transit organizers already at work near you; see this joint letter that Move California sent to Sacramento legislators for 100 different organizations!
Make public comments at agency board meetings. Because the monthly BOD meeting of your local transit agency is probably underattended, your public comment can directly influence decision makers. Use your two or three minutes to air socialist perspectives and solutions! You can show solidarity with Peninsula DSA by commenting in person or via Zoom in favor of SB 63 at the next SamTrans meeting on Wednesday, July 2. (Details at peninsuladsa.org/public-transit.)
Support your local transit workers (e.g, ATU, SEIU, TWU AFL-CIO). Santa Clara Countyâs Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) workers proved so essential that a Superior Court judge ordered them back to work on March 26, 2025. Imagine the transit we could win when we stand in solidarity with the workers who provide it.
Transit coalitions
Bay Area
Bay Area Safe Routes to School
Transit Riders Unions
San Francisco Transit Riders (includes Transit Justice Coalition)
Bicyclists
California Bicycle Coalition
Marin County Bicycle Coalition
San Francisco Bicycle Coalition
Silicon Valley Bike Coalition (includes San Mateo County)


Zohran Mamdani: Why California Socialists Should Care About the NYC Mayoral Race

The biggest city in America will be choosing its next mayor this month on June 24, when the Democratic primary election for the New York City mayoral race takes place. But with summer heating up on the west coast, and our chapters facing a slew of local issues and conflicts, some of us might not care too much about what happens in the Big Apple. However, this race has the potential to be one of the most important events for DSA and American socialism in years. Itâs the first time in over one hundred years an open socialist is running for mayor in NYC. Zohran MamdaniâDSA member and representative for New Yorkâs 36th State Assembly districtâhas built a fiery campaign that has catapulted him to a close second in recent polling. He has a real chance of winning this mayoral race, and California democratic socialists should take notice.
Incumbent mayor Eric Adamâs first term has been fraught with scandal, corruption, and working class antagonism. His rule saw the return of several âtough on crimeâ policies like renewed plain-clothes policing and adding two police officers to every subway train at night. With calls for a ceasefire in Gaza ramping up across NYC over the past two years, Adams has also maintained firm and uncritical support of Israel while refusing to call for a ceasefire.Â
Adams and big money corruption
Last year, Adams was charged with taking bribes and soliciting illegal campaign contributions, including from foreign nationals. This made him the first sitting NYC mayor to be indicted on federal criminal charges. But while the investigation was on-going, Trumpâwho Adams refused to call a fascistâinstructed prosecutors to end the corruption case. The same month Adamâs case was dropped, he joined the Independent party and told critics at a town hall that âall those who are just saying âjust fight him, resist, resistâ â Iâm not part of the resist movement.â Adams now cooperates with HSI and ICE to kidnap the same undocumented migrants he has long housed in his sanctuary city.Â
Adams is another example of how big money corruption and liberal capitulation to fascism has continued to erode the foundations of our democracy. But with Adams condemned to political irrelevancy, there is a new chance for New Yorkers to choose someone who represents their interests.
Mamdaniâs program
Zohran Mamdani is known in NYC for his activism and legislation. He participated in a hunger strike with taxi drivers to help them win access to debt relief; years later he joined another hunger strike in front of the White House to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. His âFix the MTAâ campaign saw  a $100 million increase to NYC metro services and the founding of a successful free bus pilot program.Â
On top of Zohranâs public transit reform and other progressive policy proposals is a bold initiative for free rent for all stabilized tenants. NYC has long been one of the least affordable cities to live in, with renters paying close to 30% of their income on rent. Zohran is also putting forward a public works project to build 200,000 âpermanently affordable, union-built, rent-stabilized homesâ over the next 10 years. These policies aim to give the children of NYC today the option of staying in their city tomorrow. Zohranâs campaign promises appear to be gaining popularity, and scaring the hell out of New York billionaires and their candidate Andrew Cuomo.
Thatâs right, the same Cuomo who was accused by eleven current and former New York State employees of sexual harassment. After a five-month investigation that mounted credible evidence against him, Cuomo resigned in disgrace. Risen once more by his Wall Street backers, Cuomo has been coasting on name recognition back into politics. While leading by double digits for most of the campaign, his checkered past has continued to haunt him on the campaign trail.Â

Zohran Mamdani has been drawing big crowds to his campaign events.
Encouraging polling
During the first Democratic primary debate, Cuomo was at the bottom of a savage dogpile, with Zohran landing some of the best punches of the night. Claiming to be âDonald Trumpâs worst nightmare,â Zohran stated that âthe difference between myself and Cuomo is that my campaign is not funded by the very billionaires that put Donald Trump in D.C.â Post-debate polling is now showing Cuomoâs double digit lead shrinking to single digits.Â
With endorsements from multiple unions, progressive representatives, organizations (including NY-DSA), and a recent tap from AOC, we gotta keep the momentum up. While NYC may be on another planet for us, a socialist mayor in NYC could be the spark that the progressive left desperately needs. Putting an immigrant, Muslim, socialist mayor in the heart of American capitalismâin Trumpâs home cityâwould be a huge blow to the fascist oligarchy gripping our nation.


Prelude to a Rural Organizing Committee Application

Humboldt DSA members Justin M and Sam S get the message out at Eureka's Friday Night Market. They report a very positive reception.
The first thing was the visceral body-memory of what it felt like the first time this president roiled the nation. The repulsion. The dread. The fear.
I don't want to go through this again, every cell of me said last autumn, as I imagined 2025 and beyond. The temptation to pull up the covers and hide, or stay frozen, doomscrolling, was familiar and strong.
Then I remembered how horrible I felt when I could do pretty much nothing but doomscroll, due to how very sick I was during much of Trumpâs first term. I knew nothing would feel worse than doing nothing at all. Better frontline than sideline.Â
Good medicine and care had been making me stronger since then. Perhaps I could blow the dust off my at-large DSA membership and do something useful with that?
In Search of a Real Socialist Organizer
So I started looking around, figuring I would just pitch in wherever Real Socialist Organizers had already decided to respond. I combed through national DSA's website and started slogging through a few of the (many) emails I'd previously ignored. The more I read, the more evident it was that working class-focused DSA chapters were core units of necessary political power.
Only problem was, the closest DSA chapter was...five hours away? Gulp.
Surely somebody more capable was forming a chapter nearer to here? I showed up at a few virtual gatherings of California DSA and the national organization to find who they might be. By happenstance, on one of the California DSA zooms I saw someone identify themself as local to my area. I reached out. We connected. We knew some of the same people from the Bernie campaigns. I learned there had been previous efforts to get DSAers organized locally. So I dug out some old contacts, begged for a few more, and started making calls.
I called people I knew who might have a connection to those prior efforts, or might fancy a new one. I asked who else might be interested. I called, messaged, read, asked questions, and tried to take it all in. Doomscrolling would start to seize me again. Then Iâd stop and make some more calls. Â
Through weeks of this, I kept looking for the Real Socialist Organizer who would SURELY materialize with a poof to assure me that theyâcompetent, valorous, and presumably abledâwere already ON IT, making a DSA chapter magically appear.
Meanwhile, as the president's malice befell the world again, something weird was happening. In between doomscrolling relapses, my conversations with all these other people who cared about working class power the way I did prompted a feeling I'd nearly forgotten. In spite of the onslaught of devastating news, I was feeling actually...hopeful?Â
Eventually, I had to face facts. The local Real Socialist Organizer I sought was not going to materialize at my convenience. Improbablyâabsurdly evenâit was going to have to be mostly-housebound, introverted, middle-aged, cranky, chronically ill, disabled me. Not because I was an ideal person for the job nor particularly wanted it, but because sometimes, I could do some part of this work somewhat competently, and it so very much needed to get done. I was the organizer now.Â
All Hail the Real Socialist Organizers
All those calls and messages brought me into contact with actual Real Socialist Organizers who lived far away. Each time I found one, I begged them for help. No dignity here! This is fascism, not a drill.
They said, absolutely! We'll help! Because, after all, that's what a Real Socialist Organizer does. They get people doing socialist organizing -- that's the whole point! California DSA leaders were particularly gracious and helpful, and as I got better plugged in I found folks at the national org were, too.Â
Next thing I knew, DSAers and DSA friends were regularly meeting locally, because I, of all people, invited them to! We were quiet and loud, new to politics and multiply burned out, young and not-at-all young. Everybody brought something different to the room, and it felt fresh, somewhat scary, invigorating, comradely and rich. I managed to revive a few useful skills from my pre-sick political life and started sharing them where I could. I drafted agendas, cooked meals, got others doing both, and kept making calls. Little by little, others stepped up and together, as a group, we started to bloom.
Not a Glide Path
As we get to know each other, we identify our shared political dreams, what we are into, and what we aren't. We keep gathering and a sense of coherence slowly emerges, keeps emerging. We start out a hodge-podge of isolated, worried, interested, idealistic folks, and gradually become comrades. When it felt like we had enough of this groupness together, we applied to be a DSA Pre-Organizing Committee.
Do we know what we're doing? Sometimes! A little! We are learning. We've had challenges around matching our skills and experience to the very big lift of building local working class power. Five of us spent a weekend in a DSA leadership training and came out with renewed cohesion and resolve. Now we're an interim steering committee! So much to learn, connections to make, campaigns to lead.Â
Sometimes it seems harder than it should be to figure out the obvious things we need for this process. Like, where is the universal, easy-to-read introductory DSA literature for tabling, flyering, and working the ever-growing protest crowds, which could make it so much easier for a new DSA group like ours to rapidly grow? We had to look high and low to find materials to adapt for our purposes, hindered by the fact our local members aren't very experienced creating such lit. Meanwhile, in California, 28% of adults struggle to read English at the most basic level. This is the working class we all say we care about, and people marginalized in this way need power -- and accessible materials -- even more than those of us who take reading for granted. Â
The deadliest places in California
The deadliest places in California for people aged 15-44 are all up here in the fabulously gorgeous rural north, and none have DSA chapters. "Deaths of despair" here are commonplace. According to a December 2024 state Legislative Analyst's Office report, "The counties with the highest young adult death rates are all in the rural northern part of the state." The untimely deaths correlate to our widespread poverty and have been on the rise, particularly for people of color and for men. We are lucky to have many strong Native Tribes in the region, but life can be exceedingly difficult because of the genocides and ongoing trauma brought by settler colonialism, and hard for other working class folks too in the wake of the collapse of multiple extractive industries. Yet Shasta is currently the only county in this region with a DSA Organizing Committee (shout-out and huge props to them!).
Many of our communities have either no broadband Internet, or its availability is very uneven. On-camera zoom meetings can only get us so far (not to mention spotty public transit and our landslide-prone rural roads). Where is the network of other DSA organizers who are also overcoming these things? How can we easily find, get to know and support each other?
So many rural people share our socialist values but don't come with a background (or interest) in dense political theory and jargon. Some are too busy cobbling together a living, caregiving and generally staying alive, to be interested in fractious online DSA spaces. Meanwhile, we are constantly weathering climate and economic disasters together. The same face-to-face community relationships that hold small places tightly together through thick and thin are also essential to the power-building work socialists believe in. Marginalized rural peoples' shared connections are as valuable as any other kind. Calloused hands hold precious keys to our collective freedom.
I find myself wondering what we can do to keep every new and aspiring DSA organizer and group from having to navigate daunting challenges in isolation. It would be great to have a DSA Rural Network and Skill-Share!
Coming Together
In spite of the challenges, earlier this month nine members joined together to submit an Organizing Committee Application for Humboldt DSA! We know it's a humble start but we're proud of it, because every single name on that application reflects trust we've earned with and extended to each other amid frightening times.
Now, just a few months after I first paused my doomscrolling habit, a whole room full of determined Real Socialist Organizers gather regularly here. We draw on the moral and practical support of our comrades afar. Our movement is only beginning. Our solidarity is strong and is deepening. Onward we grow.


This Dumpster Fire of a Reichstag Fire

Trumpâs military crowd was handpicked for supporters.
At this moment you might be forgiven for asking, âSo where are we at now with the fascism thing?â My answer: âWell on the way.â
Think of the moment after World War II, with fascism crushed, and the alliesâCapitalist Democracy and Soviet Communismâstanding briefly side by side over its inert body, each believing with differing forms of relief that this thing had been put away for good. Then imagine the big screen slo-mo in reverse of something broken in pieces at first slowly and then with a rush coming back together, whole again.Â
Thatâs what the past few months have felt like to me here in MAGA America. The elements have been coming together steadily. Letâs summarize: the president freeing convicted violent right wing insurrectionists; a furious scapegoating of immigrants, in a formerly proud nation of immigrants, to draw attention away from the looting of the public sector and destruction of government services by billionaires; armed masked men seizing people off the street, in workplaces, shopping centers and courtrooms, and taking them away in unmarked vehicles to privately operated detention centers, or to their countries of origin where they face harm, or to countries they hadnât come fromâmore than fifty thousand people newly behind borders, bars and fences; a judge arrested; a union leader arrested; a mayor from the opposition party arrested; a U.S. Senator from the opposition party arrestedâeach while peaceably defending immigrants against state-sanctioned kidnapping; and a massive ongoing chorus of right wing media spewing a toxic smokescreen of lies to reshape reality into a public narrative greasing the skids to fascism.Â
And now, the murder of elected leaders of the opposition party. No, Iâm not fantasizing this act resulted from a direct order from Trump; it didnât need to be. Itâs the logical outcome of his continuous encouragement of violence within his MAGA movement base and amplification in the conservative media ecosphere.
[Note: I wrote this article a week ago. So the ânowâ of the last paragraph is too old, because ânowâ the United States has gone to war, and this new step pretty much completes the fascism checklist. (Is there such a thing? Sort of. See my previous articles on the topic here, here, here and here.)]
Throughout, some of us have kept thinking, âThereâs a path out of this nightmare. We have four tests. If the courts donât hold, thereâs the 2026 elections. If the elections donât hold, thereâs mass action in the streets. And finally, if the streets fail us, the American military wonât let their old enemyâfascismâprevailâŚwill they?â

The question of the military
The question of the military, however, is a fraught one. Although legally and (mostly) historically neutral on American soil, it is the foundation of American imperialism abroad and has never been constrained in that role by the democratic pieties to which it proclaims allegiance here. Since the end of World War II and about-face on former ally Soviet Union, during which Communism was essentially refashioned as the replacement ideological âismâ for vanquished fascism, every international military adventure by the United States has been draped in the robes of Democracy against Communism or some other form of authoritarianismâeven when all too obviously it was democratically elected forces that the US itself was overturning.Â
So thatâs a key question: what does democracy mean to US military forces inside the country today? Despite local (city and state) government objections, including a star turn by Gavin Newsom on prime-time national TV, muted oppositional muttering within the National Guard, and a temporary restraining order by a judge (on hold at the moment), we have yet to see the reversal of Guard deployment to L.A. Trumpâs dispatch of a contingent of Marinesâas if Los Angeles were Iwo Jimaâhas pushed the boundaries of acceptable military usage on American soil (along with our willing suspension of disbelief) out to the vanishing point. Juxtaposed with that you have the president encouraging soldiers on duty to jeer his hallucinatory perceived enemies (including a former president) and cheer as if theyâre at a campaign rallyâwhich, due to the presence of a vendor selling MAGA paraphernalia to the soldiersâit was.Â
All of this is real, in real time.Â
Dumpster fire of a Reichstag fire
The fascist president of the United States and his followers have been working overtime to set up a plausible illusion of lawless chaos and rebellionâa right wing media-fueled dumpster fire of a Reichstag fireâin order to justify bringing the iron fist of the state repressive apparatus onto downtown Los Angeles. But what Trump is trying to do is much bigger than that singular local action.
In a political democracy that sits on top of a coercive economic foundationâcapitalism, which does not require political democracy to reproduce itselfâthe fragile edifice of control by the people over the plutocrats has always faced deep challenges and in fact can never be fully realized. People power versus money power, especially after Citizens United, has become a race against time, and with Trump in the White House and MAGA control over the other branches of federal government, weâthe people, the climate, the future, the immigrants who built and continue to build Americaâare at this moment losing that race.

The 4,000 National Guard troops in LA have detained exactly one person, whom they then released; a bargain for the $134 million of taxpayersâ funds it took to bring them there.
Well on the way to fascism
Trump and MAGA are testing how far they can push the membrane of political democracy before it breaks. Ultimately, he can ignore the courts, and he may be able to shut down the 2026 elections. But if they are large enough, he cannot ignore the demonstrations in the streets, at which point he needs know about the militaryâs inclinations. He is probing now, with his illegal military deployments and his immoral political speeches to the troops and sickening encouragement of MAGA violence, whether that key portion of the membrane is his or democracyâs.Â
This is no longer an early stage of the process. We are well on the way to fascist America. History says that itâs not inexorable. The direct action of thousands of ordinary peopleâas we saw on April 5, May 1, and June 14 on âNo Kings Dayââestablishes a bump in the road that, with continued organizing, can enlarge itself to millions of people and thus a powerful barricade to the dismantling of our incomplete but essential political democracy. It takes me and you; thereâs no one else, and now is the time. It will continue to be time until the job is done.


Getting Grounded: Advice to Garden Newbies
by Elizabeth Henderson
If you havenât gardened before, there are tons of resources and local workshops to help you. Growing food is a millennial project â human beings have perfected their know-how over thousands of years. No need to try to invent it yourself! The best way to learn is to find a mentor â many of the community gardens in Rochester have gardeners with roots that connect back to those millennial practices. At the Magnolia Street Childrenâs Garden where I help out, there are three elders who together have over 200 years of experience! They may have trouble bending over â but thatâs where you swoop in to help them and learn.
The basics of producing healthy food are simple â as my friend Joe (80 years of experience) says â SWANS: Sunshine, Water, Air, Nutrients and Soil â in other words, an ecological system. In organic farming, there is one orthodoxy: healthy soils give you healthy plants and then the critters who eat those plants are healthy. Organic practices and permaculture derive from millennial peasant wisdom in Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas. Beware of silver bullets â substances that are advertised as eliminating all pests will probably kill you too, if not all at once, then slowly. Once you have healthy soil, you will not need to add fertilizers, only organic matter to feed the gazillions of microorganisms and members of the soil food web that feed the crops. Pests and diseases will be fewer in a healthy system. Google Ruth Stout for ideas about how to use as little energy as possible.
Here is a quick guide:
- Keep the soil covered in green plants for as many months as possible â Maximize photosynthesis â
- Keep the fungi happy! Fungi go deep with their hyphae for all the best plant food. Tillage disrupts their delicate network of hyphae.
- Keep a diversity of species above ground to enhance species diversity below ground
- Support microbes, fungi and bacteria, to keep them working â feed them with compost, vermicompost
- Minimize tillage â bare soil loses carbon â use permanent vegetable bed systems
- Over the winter plant cover crops or mulch
The post Getting Grounded: Advice to Garden Newbies first appeared on Rochester Red Star.


The time for fence-sitting, apolitical unionism must come to an end.
Note: posts by individual GMDSA members do not necessarily reflect the views of the broader membership or of its leadership and should not be regarded as official statements by the chapter.
Below is a speech made by Green Mountain DSAÂ labor chair, Andy Blanchet, on June 10th, 2025 at the Burlington, VT ICE OUT protest. The protest brought together people across the Vermont community - from union & migrant workers to retirees and community organizers - to stand in solidarity with the community of Los Angeles, CA in their resistance to government repression.Â
GMDSAâs Labor Committee recently worked with rank and file union members in putting on a Union Power organizing training in April 2024, and was a key organization in coordinating and organizing the May Day 2025 March in Williston, VT where 2,500 people came out to celebrate international workersâ day and stand in solidarity with Vermont migrant farm workers in their Milk with Dignity picket line at Hannaford Supermarket.Â
Repeat after me:Â An Injury to One, is an Injury to all! (x3)
Hello! My name is Andy Blanchet and I am a full-time worker at Howard Center, and speak today as president of our labor union, AFSCME Local 1674, and as chair of the Green Mountain Democratic Socialists of America Chapterâs Labor Committee. I come with an urgent message for fellow working class people and our role in combating Trumpâs Authoritarian cruelty as witnessed in LA and beyond. I first want to state clearly: AFSCME Local 1674 stands in solidarity with all who have been kidnapped by ICE and DHS and we demand the immediate release of those currently detained. We stand in solidarity with every Union member on the streets exercising our right to freedom of speech in calling for an end to the cruel ICE raids. These unacceptable state sponsored acts of kidnapping are both horrific and unsurprising from this administration. Unsurprising, considering capitalismâs fundamentally authoritarian nature.Â
We currently live in a world where bosses who run corporations have full authority over workers. This is an ugly dictatorship of capital - where those who make profits from the blood, sweat, and tears of workers can decide exactly what kind of lives we are allowed to live by exploiting our time and energy for the sake of profit. Not only that, but the capitalist landlords, who pay for their new pools and 2nd homes with our meager wages we break our backs for, decide exactly how much to extort from us in exchange for shelter. Workers have historically worked to combat this dictatorship of the bosses by forming our own labor and tenant unions.
And with that collective organizing, working class people have tried to exercise our natural rights to free speech, organizing, freedom of association, and collective bargaining to win both better wages and working conditions, as well as political change. However, every step of the way, the rich have fought us tooth and nail for even the most meager of wins. They hire union busting lawyers from an industry that reaps profits by convincing employers to keep them on retainer in order to fight their own workers simply pursuing dignity and respect in the workplace. They call the police on striking workers, like they did to Starbucks Workersâ United members during their sit-down strike earlier this year. The rich have even gone so far as to OUTLAW the ability to strike, to withhold our labor, in different industries. That didnât stop unions like the Newton Teachersâ Association of Newton Massachusetts from organizing a successful, and illegal, strike to win their demands.Â
But now, it seems, the rich bosses want more. They criminalize working people from speaking out in support of Palestine through the critique of our own countryâs complicity in the ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Palestinian people. ICE beat & detained the President of SEIU California, David Huerta, while he exercised his freedom of speech. The rich are willing to target unions, union workers & leaders, and immigrant workers to maintain their full control over our economic, political, and social lives. And it is essential that every union, be they local or international, answer the question: Which side are you on?
The time for fence-sitting apolitical unionism must come to an end. There are numerous examples of unions trying to play-nice with overtly hostile political administrations, thinking this would save them, and it never has. All this does is allow those in power to exercise their will over organized labor and know they can get away with it. Worse than that, the do-nothing Democratic party has used the plight of working class people as their political platform for decades. Workers are not pawns to be used in rhetoric and then discarded when itâs time to make good on policy promises - working people are who have built and sustained society and we deserve money for healthcare, prenatal & child care, education, housing, and food, not money for bombs and deportation! It is well past time for unions, big and small, to recognize these trends and organize to win the future we all deserve.
We can win these demands, and more, if we recognize and internalize that when we are divided, and alone, we are at risk. But when we practice safety through solidarity, we are unstoppable! Look at what organized labor did to energize the working class of South Korea in 2024. By organizing workers in huge companies into strike-ready unions and collaborating with farm workers, Korean workers were able to mobilize and fight back against President Yoon Suk Yeolâs declaration of martial law in a fight for democracy. We, the workers and organized labor, must find the political will to commit to this version of organizing for the common good in order to have a lasting impact. We deserve lives of dignity, honor, love, and justice!
The workers, united, will never be defeated! (x3)
Thank you! Solidarity Forever!


Statement on ICE and Deportations
Columbus DSA condemns, in the strongest possible terms, the actions of President Trump and his administration, the United States armed forces, ICE, and the LAPD in their relentless brutality against peaceful protestors fighting to protect their communities from the thugs abducting their friends, family, and neighbors. We condemn the violence of ICE and their campaign of mass deportations that has come to our city of Columbus. On June 3rd ICE arrested Leonardo Fausto at a court hearing for a dismissed misdemeanor traffic violation. Fausto has lived in Columbus legally for 4 years while waiting to be granted asylum. Ohio senators have also passed a bill that will require public officials to allow the arrest of suspected undocumented immigrants with or without warrants, while other Ohio lawmakers have proposed the âAmerica First Actâ, making it a felony to be in Ohio undocumented. We stand in unshakable solidarity with our undocumented neighbors: no oneâs existence is illegal.
The recent protests in Los Angeles and other cities demonstrate that the American people are aware of the cruelty that this administration inflicts upon our families, our neighbors, and people in our communities, and we demand that these abuses stop.
Left unchecked, this administration, alongside ICE and local law enforcement, will continue to hide what the âland of the freeâ has become from the world. They obscure their names and faces so that no one knows who to hold accountable for their crimes, all while they vanish our neighbors, family, and friends. ICE has only existed since 2003 but is being used like the Gestapo of Nazi Germany to create terror among us. We have lived without their presence for most of our existence, and we donât need them now. To that end, we demand the following from our own community of Columbus:
We demand ICE be abolished. We demand that undocumented citizens be given amnesty and a swift path to citizenship. And we call for the immediate release of every person that ICE has arrested in LA and across the nation.
We demand that Columbus City Council end their contracts with ICE, make Columbus a sanctuary city, and protect its residents from these illegal abductions.
Columbus DSA will continue to fight for the power of the working class and the freedoms of people all over the world, immigrants or not. We will not stand by as the people of our community are abused by state violence. An injury to one is an injury to all. Free the prisoners, abolish ICE, and end the authoritarian regime currently in power.


Freedom: A Dream of Liberation and Freedom from Juneteenth and Beyond


Defend Preschool For All!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE â June 19 2025
Update: sign our petition to tell Gov. Kotek hands off!

In an article published on June 18 by Willamette Week, Governor Tina Kotek is quoted as suggesting to Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pedersen a restructure of the Preschool for All tax, a levy on Oregonâs top 5% which funds universal preschool for everyone, regardless of their ability to pay. This is an unacceptable capitulation to the demands of Oregonâs rich and super-rich, whose feelings have been hurt by being required to contribute to the society that made it possible for them to get so very rich.
Portland DSA led the fight for universal preschool in Multnomah County, and we count its adoption as one of our largest victories. The law levies a very small tax on Portlandâs very highest incomes, and the programs funded by that small tax have broad and powerful impact. In the Willamette Week article, Kotek is described as making the argument that the tax is causing Portlandâs wealthy âjob-creatorsâ to flee the city. This assessment couldnât be further from the truth.
Kotekâs argument is based on spurious data: in a chart created by economist Mary King and posted on Bluesky by DSA City Councilor Mitch Green, the data clearly show that the percentage of high-income earners in Multnomah County is dramatically increasing.Â
Kotekâs fear-mongering about the loss of the cityâs tax base because of a tax which funds a universal program for every resident of the county is a great disappointment, but not unexpected. It shows how subservient our political class is to the moneyed elite, who pay high prices to get access to them and their political power.
It also hinges on the tired myth that Portland is a city in decline, burnt out after so much conflict. The reality is that Portland is a vibrant, thriving city that the rich want to live in, along with the rest of us. In part because of its social programs, not in spite of them. Working-class voters won this social program and will defend it â and Portland DSA is proud to be a part of that fight.
In Solidarity,
Portland DSA
The post Defend Preschool For All! appeared first on Portland DSA.