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Columbia DSA Endorses the Capital for Cooperatives Act

With the impending mass of retiring business owners and the COVID-19 pandemic continuing to threaten small businesses, co-operatives must play a key role in the recovery of our economy. We believe that one non-partisan solution, the Capital for Cooperatives Act, is important to the health of our economy, because cooperatives have shown they are more resilient to shocks in the market and promote price stability by the absence of the fundamental employee-employer conflict and the shared risked between workers.

As Americans we believe in democracy, and that includes democracy at work. Cooperatives are businesses organized, owned, and governed by the people that use them. That’s why Columbia DSA has endorsed the Capital for Cooperatives Act and we are calling on all of South Carolina’s Congresspeople and Senators to co-sponsor the same (S. 1736 & H.R.6317).

The Capital for Cooperatives Act would remove bureaucratic measures that keep cooperatives from growing and thriving. It would make it easier for co-ops to receive Small Business Administration loans and collaborate with the Interagency Working Group on Cooperative Development to develop recommendations and cooperate with federal agencies and other entities to “promote, support, and increase the number of co-operatives” in the US.

This act is supported by more than 300 co-operatives and organizations including the Democracy at Work Institute and the U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives. With nearly 30,000 U.S. cooperatives operating at 73,000 locations throughout the U.S., generating over $500 billion in revenue and providing over $25 billion in wages, we call on Senators Graham & Scott and Representatives Clyburn, Duncan, Mace, Norman, Rice, Timmons, and Wilson to cosponsor the non-partisan Capital for Cooperatives Act.

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Statement in Opposition to SC Senate Bill 935

It is no secret that South Carolina's public education system has historically been understaffed and underfunded. Even so, Republican legislators have filed multiple bills, including S.935, that would take even more funding away from our ailing public school system. S.935 would take tax dollars away from public schools in order to create Education Savings Accounts (or ESAs). These ESAs would be used to fund private providers that are not subjected to the same scrutiny and regulations as public institutions, thereby increasing the chances that students will be discriminated against on the basis of their sexuality, gender identity, religion, or disability status. If enacted, S.935 would see an estimated 3 billion dollars be funneled away from our public schools and into these unaccountable private institutions.

S.935 is a copy of legislation written by the American Legislative Exchange Council (or ALEC), which creates legislation for state legislatures on behalf of the capitalist class. ALEC's sole goal is to represent special interests and further entrench corporate control of our government. On top of these concerns, virtually any organization can be deemed qualified to receive these public funds. With no process to prevent misuse, states that have implemented ESAs have seen an increase in cases of fraud. While this bill is being branded as helping the less fortunate, the true purpose of this legislation is clear: the total destruction and privatization of South Carolina's public school system.

Columbia DSA stands with teachers, students, and our communities in opposition to these attacks on our schools. We believe that education is a public good and should not be made subject to the control of capitalist markets.

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Statement in Opposition to the “Reimagine Schools” Proposal

We stand in solidarity with Charleston DSA and with area parents, teachers, and activists in opposition to the “Reimagine Schools” proposal which would subject Charleston County Schools to needless experimentation and open the door to privatization under the state’s Schools of Innovation law. With a $32 million price tag, this proposal would put an unelected private group, Coastal Community Foundation (CCF), in charge of 23 Charleston County schools. 

Education is a public good and a vital service. Allowing privatization of schools would subject them to the many failings of the capitalist market. To start, the proposal would staff these under-served schools with up to 25% uncertified teachers. Given the history of racism, segregation, and inequity in our schools, we need to be raising standards, not lowering them. The proposal would also further erode the already few protections and employment rights teachers have under state law, including the right to appeal their firing.

After protests, the proposal was removed from the agenda to receive community input. But on January 20th, leaked emails show CCF President and CEO Darrin Goss asking the board that it be put back on the agenda at the next meeting, before the community could fully be heard. This kind of undemocratic behavior is typical of capitalist elites who think they know what’s best for the people. They’ll use every opportunity and excuse to make a quick buck, but education is not for sale.

Columbia DSA stands ready to oppose the proposal at the lead of Charleston DSA and area parents and teachers.

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Statement Regarding PSAF/Abortion Rights

Under capitalism, the forces of concentrated wealth inevitably erode democratic institutions to the point of oligarchy and tyranny. Such is the case today in America where, despite a consistent majority of Americans who support legal abortion, we stand on the brink of a total collapse of the federal protection of that freedom. This will result in a large number of states to swiftly ban abortion. Many of these will be former Confederate states whose democratic institutions never properly flourished beyond the autocratic and patriarchal influence of the plantation class due to the premature end of Reconstruction.

This is particularly cruel in a state like South Carolina, with an underfunded healthcare infrastructure that results in a maternal death rate from childbirth that is forty times larger than that of complications from abortion. This will of course disproportionately affect the poor and people of color who already suffer worst health outcomes from the vicissitudes of for-profit healthcare, crumbling hospital systems along with twin evils of environmental and medical racism.

How did we get here? The blame does not lie solely with the right. In recent years we socialists have witnessed pro-choice organizations go out of their way to endorse liberal candidates over left-wing ones, when both candidates supported abortion rights. While some leaders of these organizations may have prioritized their own idealogical preferences over the mission of their organizations, many may have simply taken liberal leaders at their word that they are the only force preserving abortion rights. Unfortunately liberalism is not up to this challenge presented today by a stacked Supreme Court that stands ready to strike down Roe v. Wade, offering only meek dissent where radical action is required.

Liberals have failed to prevent the slow but persistant rollback of abortion rights at the state and federal levels over the last 50 years. Rather than excerise the Democratic Party’s control over both houses of Congress and the Presidency (as they had in 2009-2011 and currently have since 2021) and pass a federal bill guaranteeing the right to an abortion, they instead neglected this opportunity either from a lack of foresight or political will or worse yet, from a crass desire to perpetually fundraise off of the issue, rather than resolve it. Neither Senate Democrats nor the last two Democratic presidents have exercised authority they possessed to resist anti-abortion judicial appointments, expand the Supreme Court, or even fight back against Republican obstruction of their own judicial appointments. Yet they have the audacity to continually run for office on promises of defending the right to an abortion.

It is truly a confusing time to be a liberal.

However, for socialists, the task is clear. As socialists we reject liberalism, but we do not reject the freedoms promised by it. We disagree with liberalism’s incoherent or sometimes non-existent strategy and theory of power, and we insist that liberal freedoms can only be truly guaranteed under socialism. Freedom for some is not the same as freedom for all. As such abortion rights cannot be protected for some (ie, those lucky to live in states with functioning democracies). Further, just as we understand that we must go beyond public healthcare schemes that seek only to secure the nebulous concept of “access” rather than guarantee it by making it free at the point of service, we also understand that abortion is not truly a right if those who need it lack the means to pay for it.

We socialists are presented with an opportunity to be the vanguard in the defense of reproductive rights in ways that liberal so-called “leaders” lack the will to do. Not only do our political ideals demand it, but prioritizing the defense of abortion rights can help socialists build power by broadening our ideological and electoral coalitions. This can be wielded in both electoral challenges to establishment liberal Democrats, and in attempts to recruit liberal activists, often passionate about abortion rights, to our side.

We must seek to abolish for-profit healthcare entirely, prioritize public health, standardize care, and guarantee abortion as a right no matter a person’s geography or ability to pay. We must require our elected leaders to not only resist the temptations of the medical, pharmaceutical, insurance and of course the anti-abortion lobbies, but possess the political courage to reform or abolish undemocratic institutions that thwart majoritarian rule in order to guarantee these radical transformations. And until the time such leaders are in power and can pass Medicare For All, which as proposed would guarantee all forms of healthcare, including abortion, to be free at the point of service, we must support organizations that directly fund abortion.

It is with this in mind that Columbia DSA endorses the foundation of the Palmetto State Abortion Fund. Furthermore, Columbia DSA encourages its members and allies to donate to and/or volunteer with the Palmetto State Abortion Fund (@PSAbortionFund) as well as the Carolina Abortion Fund (@CarolinaAbtnFnd) and Access Reproductive Care - Southeast (@ARC_Southeast), the other funds covering South Carolina. We also encourage other chapters and socialists everywhere to donate to and fundraise for their local abortion funds, which can be found at the National Network of Abortion Funds.

Medicare For All!

Abortion For All!

Solidarity Forever!

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QCDSA supports striking IAMAW union

We at the Quad Cities DSA would like to voice our unequivocal support for the striking workers of Lodges 388 and 1191 of the IAMAW union. We are seeing more and groundswells from workers across industries who are demanding their rightful dues, especially when we consider that their efforts are the only reasons companies, such […]
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QCDSA, the QCTimes, and Thurgood Brooks

We condemn the Quad-City Times article published on February 16th regarding Thurgood Brooks. The characterization of Thurgood is built entirely on a one-sided portrayal, one that is rooted in anti-Blackness. This publication uncritically printed accounts from various officials and executives who described Thurgood as “unprofessional” (Rock Island Interim City Manager John Gripp), “threatening” (Alderperson Mark […]

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Peninsula DSA Endorses James Coleman for CA State Assembly (AD 21)

Peninsula DSA Endorses James Coleman for CA State Assembly (AD 21)

On February 20, 2022, members of Peninsula DSA (PDSA) voted to enthusiastically endorse PDSA member James Coleman in his grassroots, corporate-free campaign for California State Assembly in newly redrawn District 21, which now represents eastern San Mateo County from Brisbane and South San Francisco down to East Palo Alto. Because James favors bold, uncompromising action to effect popular progressive policies such as raising the minimum wage, instituting higher taxes on the ultra wealthy, and increasing spending on health care, education, and infrastructure, he is the best candidate to bring about transformative change for working people on the Peninsula, and he is well positioned to win the primary election in June 2022. In 2020, James successfully ran as a Democratic Socialist against 18-year incumbent and mayor Richard Garbarino, winning a city council seat in his hometown of South San Francisco with over 52 percent of the votes. As South San Francisco’s first openly LGBTQ+ and youngest-ever City Councilmember, James has a track record of looking out for the interests of the working class. So far he has been instrumental in

  1. building broad support for the Early Care and Education for All South San Francisco ballot measure campaign (modeled after Portland DSA’s successful measure in Multnomah County, OR) to bring universal preschool to all working families in South City;
  2. passing a citywide Medicare for All resolution, which helped secure outgoing CA Assemblymember Kevin Mullin’s commitment to vote Yes on CalCare (AB 1400); and
  3. advocating for union-constructed multi-family housing—including mixed-income social housing—to solve the dual crises of decreased housing stock and increased numbers of unhoused neighbors on the Peninsula.

In addition to organizing with PDSA, James was actively involved in Harvard College Students for Bernie Sanders, and in spring 2020 helped transition the group to a Young DSA chapter (Harvard Young DSA). A proponent of bold action on climate, James has also been involved with the Alliance for Climate Education, the Harvard Undergraduates for Environmental Justice, and Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard. James Coleman has also earned the endorsements of SEIU California, the San Francisco Berniecrats, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Courage to Change PAC, Daybreak PAC, Project Super Bloom, Reach Coalition (allyship), Downballot Progress, Run for Something, and current DSA-endorsed elected officials: CA Assemblymember Alex Lee (AD 25), Redwood City Councilmember Lissette Espinoza-Garnica, and San Francisco Supervisor Dean Preston.

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War is A Racket: Defund and De-Escalate

Considered on its own, the New York Police Department is in the top ten largest armies in the world. Why? As working-class New Yorkers struggle to stay fed and safely housed, the NYPD enjoys nearly unlimited resources and sees no issue with using those resources to oppress and surveil the city’s population. On tonight's show, we speak to Khalil from NYC-DSA’s Defund NYPD campaign on why socialists’ commitment to REAL public safety remains strong. We also take calls live from the WBAI audience.

 

In international news, capitalists and war-mongers are pushing for further escalation in the Russia-Ukraine dispute. We’ll hear from Gerard of the Democratic Socialists International Committee on their recent statement opposing US militarization and interventionism in Ukraine and Eastern Europe and calling for an end to NATO expansionism.

 

Join NYC-DSA's campaign to Defund NYPD: https://www.defundnypd.com/get-involved

 

Read the International Committee's statement in English, Russian, or Ukrainian: https://international.dsausa.org/statements/no-war-with-russia/

 

On this episode, Lee Ziesche shares a brief public service announcement about this month's sky-high ConEd bills. We will be covering this issue more in depth on future episodes, but visit bit.ly/conedbill to learn more about how this situation was created by New York politicians' climate inaction and how DSA is fighting back. 

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Vermont AFL-CIO endorses Vermont Progressive Party city council candidates

“The Burlington Progressive Slate has actively supported labor issues in Burlington. From passing the Responsible Contractor legislation to helping AFSCME Local 1343 fight layoffs, wage cuts, and an abusive Airport Director. They have been in the fight with us to build working-class power in Burlington and in the state of Vermont. On behalf of our over 11,000 members, the Vermont State Labor Council AFL- CIO Executive Board endorses Burlington's Progressive Slate of candidates.” - Dwight Brown, the Vice Chair of the Vermont AFL-CIO and a leader in the Burlington school employees union


List of Endorsed Candidates:

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Register to vote HERE

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