Fascists Bound to Lose
“I'm gonna tell all you fascists, you may be surprised/ People all over this world are getting organized”
Legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie wrote those words in 1944 and here in 2021 they ring truer than ever. The far-right is on the rise globally and socialists, communists, feminists, anarchists, and unionists are joining forces to fight back. Join Revolutions per Minute host Amy Wilson for an hour of antifascist story and song, featuring recordings from the DSA National Antifascist Working Group introductory call on July 11. We’ll hear from DSA members from Long Island, Chicago, Kansas City, Houston, and Portland on what they’ve done to build antifascist response in their community and the lessons they’ve learned. We also hear classic antifascist folk songs recorded specially for Revolutions per Minute.
To learn more about the DSA National Antifascist Working Group, please visit https://www.dsausa.org/working-groups/anti-fascist-working-group/ or follow @DSAAntifascist on Twitter.
Special credits for this episode go to Rob G for audio production, SAREEN for audio composition, and Dan Wyman of Sing in Solidarity, NYC-DSA’s music working group, for musical performance. We send our thanks as well to comrades who participated in this episode who would prefer to stay anonymous, and all those organizing to oppose the rise of fascism where they are.
Coulee DSA Potluck 7/25
Coulee DSA cares about creating a connection amongst our members, where we can form bonds that uplift one another, and our greater community. And there is no better way to build connections than spending time with one another!
Come join Coulee DSA for a late afternoon potluck at Chad Erickson Park, Sunday July 25th at 4 PM! (Facebook event here) It’s been a long year, and we hope that relaxed time together outside and with a good meal will help us connect!
CDSA will be providing the main course (vegetarian options also available) and we’d love for members and friends to bring sides, sweet treats, and drinks to share, as they are able.
If you have questions about the event, or upcoming socials and service activities through Coulee DSA, e-mail couleedsa@gmail.com
The post Coulee DSA Potluck 7/25 first appeared on Coulee DSA.
Solidarity With Cuba!
In 1959 the people of the small island nation of Cuba successfully rose up to overthrow the Tyrant Batista, a ruthless dictator supported and funded by the United States at the expense of the great people of Cuba. This event was a great Revolution to defend the lives of the Cuban people and break their chains set upon them by imperialist nations who only aimed to steal the Cuban people's resources and exploit the Cuban people's labor. Yesterday, July 12th, 2021, some say a new Revolution came about in Cuba, but we know this was no Revolution at all, but the exact effects of an embargo the United States has aimed for. We know that since the foundation of the Republic of Cuba the United States has isolated, invaded, threatened and embargoed the island nation of Cuba, wishing to turn the nation into a puppet of United States Imperialism. We applaud the Cuban Government in its ability to defy the bloody spectre of American Imperialist intervention and ask for all honest Socialists to do the same.
The people of Cuba will never be able to be comfortable until the economic warfare inflicted upon them by the United States comes to an end. To be an internationalist is to stand in solidarity with the working people of Cuba against the two big parties of Imperialism, our President which hopes for the collapse of Cuba, and our Government's embargo and obvious destabilization efforts. We plea for all Socialists, anti-Imperialists and defenders of the sovereignty of peoples to stand in solidarity with Cuba against the United States embargo and destabilization efforts and proclaim to the United States Government, which does represent the American people, to keep their hands off Cuba.
Amazon Will Not Be Good for the Quad Cities
Rust Belt Socialism on the Rise
On June 22, the name India Walton skyrocketed into the mainstream after the DSA-endorsed candidate won the democratic primary for the Mayor of Buffalo. Walton was endorsed by Buffalo DSA and National DSA, as well as the DSA slate in Albany. When elected in November she will be the first socialist Mayor of a large city since 1960, but she joins a number of socialist, like Pennsylvania Representative Summer Lee, who are winning elections in the rust belt. Today we'll be joined by Steven Jackson from Buffalo DSA to talk about India Walton’s incredible victory and the rise of socialism in the rust belt.
Follow Buffalo DSA on Twitter at @BuffaloDSA and on Instagram and Facebook
Visit www.IndiaWalton.com to support India's campaign
Join the Gas Bill Strike against National Grid's North Brooklyn Pipeline at www.nonbkpipeline.org/strike
The Battle for the Heart of ASEAN
In April of 1975, the CIA learned they had vastly underestimated the strength of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (referred to then as North Vietnam) and the Liberation Front of South Vietnam (the Viet Cong). It became increasingly apparent to the US military and political establishments that the capture of Saigon, the capital city of South Vietnam, was imminent. By this point the Vietnam war was entering its twentieth year, as Vietnamese people, influenced by the Marxist thought of Ho Chi Minh, had fought alternately against French colonialism and US militarism. The war had devastating consequences for Vietnam including poisoning millions of people with the effects of US chemical weapons, and rendering large swaths of land uninhabitable, but now North Vietnamese victory was well in sight. President Gerald Ford ordered that US military and intelligence personnel—as well as several South Vietnamese officials—be evacuated in what would signal the official end of the Vietnam war. The evacuation was completed on April 30, 1975, after which the army of North Vietnam captured the capital in what would become known as the Liberation of Saigon (or the Fall of Saigon, as it is known in the West.)[5]
On May 23, 2016 US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken—now the current Secretary of State—published an article on his personal Medium account with the headline “On the Future of US-Vietnam Relations” in which he praised the Obama administration’s efforts to strengthen relations between the US and Vietnam. He praised the proposal of the Trans Pacific Partnership, as well as the advancements made by the Vietnamese people in the last few decades (he did not mention the war outright.) Blinken writes, “[The] United States and Vietnam are increasingly collaborating on a range of issues of global importance from international peacekeeping to wildlife trafficking to maritime security, from climate change to civil nuclear energy to global health. Our vision for the future of the region is clear — one where disputes are settled openly and in accordance with the rule of law, businesses excel, innovation thrives, and opportunities abound especially for young people.”[4]
Blinken’s article is a microcosm of the shift in US policy regarding Southeast Asia in the span of forty years after the Liberation of Saigon. That this shift happened in the space of one lifetime, much less that it happened at all, merits discussion and examination. Southeast Asia and the United States’ relationship with the countries therein reveal much about Washington’s goals with respect to trade, militarism, and indeed, its opposition to the government in Beijing.
Development of ASEAN
On August 8, 1967, the nations of Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines signed the document that would convene the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, known thereafter as ASEAN. By 2000, ASEAN had expanded to include the nations of Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia. Listed fifth in the ASEAN Declaration’s purposes of the association is “to collaborate more effectively for the greater utilization of their agriculture and industries, the expansion of their trade, including the study of the problems of international commodity trade, the improvement of their transportation and communications facilities and the raising of the living standards of their peoples.”[9] ASEAN nations are among the most resource-rich on the planet, which has not gone unknown by neoliberal economists in the United States. Southeast Asia is mainly tropical, with numerous sources of fresh water which yields vast amounts of arable land to grow warm-weather fruits and sugar cane. Southeast Asia also possesses great mineral wealth including petrochemical deposits in the South China Sea. All this is in conjunction with Southeast Asia’s geographic position between the Andaman and South China Seas, making it a hub for some of Asia’s most important trade routes.[10]
However the nations and peoples of Southeast Asia have historically been denied the ability to gain wealth and power from these resources due to the legacy of colonialism. For much of the 19th and 20th centuries most of ASEAN countries were colonially occupied by European powers such as France, the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, and the UK. During the second world war, the Empire of Japan colonized Southeast Asia in order to provide Tokyo with resources and labor for the war effort. And of course, the United States military has occupied Vietnam and the Philippines. Despite the deep history of colonialism in Southeast Asia, the 1967 ASEAN declaration was not explicitly anti-colonial or anti-imperialist, instead containing in the preamble that “all foreign bases are temporary and remain only with the expressed concurrence of the countries concerned and are not intended to be used directly or indirectly to subvert the national independence and freedom of States in the area,” a statement included to acknowledge concerns over the US’ expanding participation in the Vietnam War.[9]
Socialist observers should also note the institution of ASEAN was made possible owing to the strong anti-communist sentiments of its founding governments.[11] Both Malaysia and Singapore had elected neoliberal governments since gaining independence.[12] The Philippine government under Ferdinand Marcos was growing increasingly amenable to US political support to entrench his power.[13] Thanom Kittikachorn, the military dictator of Thailand had presided over numerous attacks on protesters and crackdowns against calls for democracy in the name of stomping out communist influence.[14] And Indonesia, under the military dictatorship of Suharto, had carried out mass killings of communists and supporters of the now-ousted communist government. Most importantly, Suharto’s coup and purges were materially and logistically supported by the US military, officials, and CIA.[8]
After the communist victory in the Vietnam War and the growth of communist influence in Cambodia and Laos, the five ASEAN countries met to clarify the purpose of the organization, and agreed to the terms of the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. Articles 2 and 11 of the treaty call for each nation to be free from interference in their internal affairs from both external sources and other ASEAN governments. The treaty does not define the scope of what is meant by “interference” nor does the treaty use the language of anti-colonialism or anti-imperialism at all. The lack of this kind of specificity would ultimately leave ASEAN open to invasion by foreign capital the moment that invasion would be possible.
At first the nations of ASEAN (including Brunei after 1984) attempted to grow their economies by trading primarily with each other, which failed because most ASEAN members could not justify such massive imports while also producing national surpluses. Thus, by the 1990s the economies of Southeast Asia began attempting to attract foreign capital and corporations under the euphemistic term “foreign direct investment.”[11] This growth strategy culminated in the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which resulted from speculation and divestment of foreign capital from Thailand, causing a cascading crash that stagnated rising wages and collapsed the export markets of ASEAN. This crisis was compounded by US support for Southeast Asian regimes that would accede to neoliberal economic policy, as well as IMF trade policies that favored capital over the Southeast Asian working class.[16]
ASEAN, Washington, and Beijing
The late 90’s also saw Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia each attain full membership of ASEAN. The increased membership prompted ASEAN to revise both its collective trade policy as well as the organization’s stance on human rights. Though with regards to the latter concern, ASEAN members have agreed to abide by their policy of noninterference, the organization has shifted their economic model to one largely favoring imports and exports, refining raw materials into consumable products. The story of the exploitation Southeast Asia can be seen in the structure of its exports to other countries: every member state of ASEAN (except Myanmar and Indonesia) imports and exports more as a percentage of their GDP than the global average.[17] Of the exports of ASEAN nations the most common include electronics parts, and integrated circuits, raw metals such as copper, nickel, and iron, petroleum both crude and refined, clothing and footwear items, and tropical plant products such as rubber, bananas and palm oil.[18] These exports are not driven by serendipitous surpluses in ASEAN countries, but rather to fulfill the United States’ desire for inexpensive electronics, tropical fruits, and oil.
Because presence in global trade is a central concern of both the governments of the United States and China, both nations have taken initiative in cementing trade relations with ASEAN countries. Both the United States and China are one of the top five export partners for every single ASEAN nation (except for Brunei).[18] But because Washington cannot pass up a chance to obstruct Beijing’s operations anywhere, these trade relationships too have become a front in the US-China conflict.
I’ve written here before about Washington’s intrusion into the South China Sea sovereignty dispute, but one aspect frames the dispute. In December 2019 Admiral John C. Aquilino, now the commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, claimed that Beijing’s installations on the South China Sea “absolutely have military purpose in order to present an optic to partners and nations in the region that show military strength and ultimately coerce and bully the nations in the region.”[20] By using the language of bullying Admiral Aquilino de-emphasizes the US’ role in the South China Sea conflict, claiming to be acting on behalf of nations in the region whom an empowered Beijing might be a danger to. Four ASEAN nations (Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, and the Philippines) have conflicting claims with Beijing in the South China Sea, which Washington is eager to exploit to build an international bloc ready to conflict with Beijing. Even countries with no territorial disputes with Beijing might be persuaded to join such a bloc if the US can stoke fears of Beijing’s expanding influence well enough.
However Washington is not only in willful ignorance of the consequences of raising alarm over militarism, it also appears to be in willful ignorance of the flaws in its own strategy. For one, although ASEAN members have similarly-sized export relations with the United States and China, all ASEAN members are far more reliant on China for imports of raw materials to manufacture goods for export. Washington cannot feasibly ask the governments of ASEAN to withdraw from these relationships while maintaining their current economic models. Furthermore, China has much older and closer cultural and linguistic ties with the nations of ASEAN than the United States. And thirdly, Washington’s insistence on setting the rules for human rights (while it violates those rules both domestically and abroad) is bound to become irksome for ASEAN nations Particularly, the governments of the Philippines, Thailand, Myanmar, and Brunei would be the most reluctant to subscribe to the US’ inconsistent vision of human rights.
The case of Vietnam is of particular interest as it is the ASEAN member whose relationship with both Washington and Beijing has changed the most rapidly. Hanoi has South China Sea disputes with Beijing, which Washington has capitalized on, pledging greater military cooperation with the country in maritime affairs, and becoming Vietnam’s largest export destination. The Blinken article quoted at the beginning of this piece reflects Washington’s endeavor to tempt Hanoi into an anti-Beijing bloc by deepening trade, military, and scientific ties. But even so the specter of war still remains and Hanoi remembers that it enlisted Beijing’s help to fight off the imperialism of the United States even as the direct effects of the Vietnam War grow more remote.[6] To this end Hanoi has vocally rebuffed attempts to “undermine” its relationship with Beijing, as observers try to explain Hanoi’s tenuous position.[3]
The Effects of Imperialism
A 2021 survey from the ISEAS-Yusok Ishak Institute gathered poll respondents from all ten ASEAN nations about ASEAN-specific political issues. The surveyors asked “If ASEAN were forced to align itself with [either China or the United States], which should it choose?” and found that 61.5% of respondents chose the United States, up from 53.6% the year prior. Immediately after, the survey team asked another question: “ASEAN is caught in the crossfire as Beijing and Washington compete for influence and leadership in Southeast Asia. How should ASEAN best respond?” The survey found an outright majority, 53.8% said that ASEAN should build “resilience and unity to fend off pressure from the two major powers.” Another 30% of respondents believed that ASEAN continuing its policy of non-alignment was best.[15]
Many pundits and opinion writers from major news outlets were quick to give their interpretations of the first question while ignoring the second. The popular interpretation among these pundits was that the people of ASEAN have greater faith that the incoming Biden administration would serve their strategic interests, as opposed to the Trump administration who acted as if all international relations were categorically destructive to the United States.[24] This interpretation is incomplete as the Biden administration has been wholly neglectful of Southeast Asian affairs and diplomacy. Of the ten ASEAN countries, only six have ambassadors from the United states that have been officially appointed. Of those six, only Vietnam has an ambassador nominated and appointed by the Biden administration. Both Washington and Beijing have arranged diplomatic tours of ASEAN nations centered largely on the ASEAN governments, neglecting the people.[1][19]
As to the people of ASEAN, Washington believes it can win their popular support by stoking fears of Chinese influence, and using individual governments’ diplomatic grievances with Beijing as leverage. This approach is fundamentally misguided so long as the effects of US imperialism and economic hegemony are much more immediate to the people of Southeast Asia. It was the interests of the US capitalist class that caused the 1997 Asian financial crisis which robbed many Thai and Indonesia workers of their livelihoods. The United States has also, through its appetite for inexpensive consumer goods, altered the industry and export markets of Southeast Asia to satisfy consumer demand in the metropole. And in the case of Vietnam specifically, US corporations and their suppliers have been some of the most egregious violators of Vietnamese labor law.[23] US military buildup in the South China Sea has also placed the people of Southeast Asia against their wishes on the front lines of a potential global armed conflict. If the best overtures Washington can make to the people of Southeast Asia is to become the primary game pieces in Washington’s new Cold War while having their industries consumed and their wealth expropriated by American interests, they’d be right to reject them.
Socialists and communists in the West must realize what’s at stake for the people of Southeast Asia, and the sheer breadth of education we must engage in to be understanding at all. The politics of the nations of Southeast Asia do not map easily onto typical western binaries of imperialist or anti-imperialist, capitalist or anti-capitalist, or even left vs. right. Against the wishes of the people of ASEAN, their fortunes are lassoed to those of Washington and, to a much lesser extent, those of Beijing. Imperialism has resulted, around the globe but in Southeast Asia particularly, that the peoples in possession of the greatest material wealth become the poorest as their surpluses are extracted to feed the appetites of consumers in the imperial metropole. To remedy these injustices, the governments doing business with the people of ASEAN must respect the dignity and well being of the people, which explicitly means that the extracted profits of the labor of the Southeast Asian working class must be returned to them, and their communities be allowed to develop on their own terms. Thus anti-imperialism informs how the people of Southeast Asia deserve autonomy, and reprieve from the extractionist west, which has exploited them for several centuries too long.
Sources
- https://thediplomat.com/2021/05/amid-chinese-push-us-official-to-visit-three-southeast-asian-nations/ – Amid Chinese Push, US Official to Visit Three Southeast Asian Nations
- https://thediplomat.com/2021/05/china-and-the-us-who-has-more-influence-in-vietnam/ – China and the US: Who has more influence in ASEAN?
- https://www.voanews.com/east-asia-pacific/vietnam-vows-firmly-resist-schemes-undermine-relations-china – Vietnam Vows to ‘Firmly Resist’ Schemes to Undermine Relations with China
- https://medium.com/foggy-bottom/on-the-future-of-us-vietnam-relations-fea6c43997ff – On the Future of US-Vietnam Relations
- https://www.thoughtco.com/vietnam-war-fall-of-saigon-2361341 – A description of the liberation of Saigon
- https://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-lam-vietnam-liberation-defeat-day-20150430-story.html – An op-ed about the current Vietnamese peoples’ perspectives on the end of the Vietnam war (I’ve become more critical of this one as I’ve researched more so tread carefully)
- https://asiatimes.com/2021/06/biden-leaves-asean-in-the-diplomatic-cold/ – The Biden administration’s numerous flubs with respect to ASEAN cooperation
- https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/10/the-indonesia-documents-and-the-us-agenda/543534/ – An explanation of the US’s role in an anti-communist purge in Indonesia in the 60’s
- https://asean.org/the-asean-declaration-bangkok-declaration-bangkok-8-august-1967/ – Text of the original Bangkok declaration
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780080251165500132 – A summary of the natural resources possessed by Southeast Asian nations
- https://www.efsas.org/publications/articles-by-efsas/the-asean-way-regional-integration/ – An explanation of “The ASEAN Way” and how the current country governments plan to mix with the global economy
- https://www.jstor.org/stable/24491269?seq=2#metadata_info_tab_contents – A criticism of the implementation of capitalism in Malaysia
- https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2020/09/23/mart-s23.html – A socialist retrospective of the government of Ferdinand Marcos
- https://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/jun/21/guardianobituaries.johnaglionby – An obituary of Thanom Kittikachorn describing his regime’s multiple crimes against humanity
- https://www.iseas.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/The-State-of-SEA-2021-v2.pdf – The State of Southeast Asia 2021 survey results
- https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14672710121733 – A economist’s class-based analysis of the 1997 Asia financial crisis
- Imports and Exports as a percent of GDP of world countries, World Bank
- OEC trade profiles for Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Cambodia
- https://apnews.com/article/asia-pacific-east-asia-china-asia-southeast-asia-cae32a9616686a6d3732326a1acff432 – China hosts Southeast Asian ministers
- https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/12/14/us-navy-commander-china-bullying-southeast-asian-neighbours/ – US Navy officer claims China’s SCS actions are “bullying.”
- https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/2124795/thailand-must-get-its-act-together-on-us – Bangkok Post opinion on how Thailand could take lead on US-ASEAN relations
- https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/06/07/indonesia-china-jokowi-natuna-sea-military-bri-cooperation-biden-united-states/ – Opinion piece on Indonesia’s relations with China
- https://www.borgenmagazine.com/vietnamese-factory-workers/ – US culpability in the suffering of the Vietnamese working class
- https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2021/04/01/what-southeast-asia-wants-from-the-biden-presidency/ – Analysis of the ASEAN survey
DSA Big Big Newark July Weekend
Thursday, July 8th, 2021, Newark NJ
This weekend in Newark, the North New Jersey Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) will be kicking off a very socialist summer. Local DSA members and their comrades will be leading a host of events across the city on Saturday, July 10th, and Sunday, July 11th. Between political education discussions and rallies, to tenant organizing and mutual aid, we’re painting Newark red. Here’s what’s going on, and how to get involved:
Friday, July 9th
Start the weekend off early and join our #FreeThemAll phonezap, hosted by DSA organizers and coalition partners across New Jersey and New York. Build up to Sunday’s immigration justice rally by targeting the politicians that allow ICE detention to continue in NJ jails. 12:00pm over Zoom.
Saturday, Juy 10th
North NJ DSA member and Newark activist, Chigozie Onyema, is kicking off his candidacy to represent the West Ward in Newark’s City Council! The campaign launch will be from 12:00pm to 2:00pm at Akwaaba Gallery.
And our Caucus of Rank-and-file Education Workers (CREW) is meeting to discuss getting cops out of schools. Join teachers and organizers in Branch Brook Park from 1:00pm to 2:00pm.
Sunday, July 11th
At noon on Sunday the 11th, DSA is organizing a rally with the Abolish ICE NY-NJ coalition to demand releases, not transfers, of people from ICE detention. While the state legislature approved a bill to ban future ICE contracts, the current ICE jails in NJ are dangerously transferring people to other detention centers around the country. Join us in the fight to unite the working class against the racism and nationalism of our borders! 12:00pm at the Rodino Federal Building.
Meanwhile, our housing justice working group continues its efforts to build a tenants union and confront the landlord of Ivy Hill Apartments, which is the largest, privately owned housing complex in the state. It is rife with building issues like rodents and roaches, security issues, and tenant harassment by management, including illegal evictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. DSA is joining with Homes for All Newark, Brick City Mutual Aid, and Newark Water Coalition to canvass the buildings, distribute know your rights materials, get tenants to sign a petition, and join an organizing committee. Join us at 1:00pm!
And Brick City Mutual Aid will be conducting its regular monthly food and resource share at Peter Francisco Park! We share food, water, hygiene, and self care products unconditionally with the community as well as engage people on issues happening in and around the city. On our tables you can also find water from Newark Water Coalition, Naloxone kits and fentanyl test strips, zines on police abolition, tenant’s and immigrant’s rights, where to get vaccinated and more. Come say what’s up on the second Sunday of every month. 12:00pm to 2:00pm.
Newark has long been home to radical thinking, activism, and community organizing. The North NJ DSA is grateful to play a part in this legacy today, learn from the Newark community, and grow the movement for democratic socialism together. Next weekend is just the start to what will be another summer of socialism! With so much going on, stay up-to-date by following @NorthNJDSA on Twitter and @north_nj_dsa on Instagram.
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Democratic Socialists to Host Action-Packed Weekend in Newark
Insider NJ July 8, 2021, 2:01 pm
NEWARK — This weekend in Newark, the North New Jersey Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) will be kicking off a very socialist summer. Local DSA members and their comrades will be leading a host of events across the city on Saturday, July 10th, and Sunday, July 11th. Between political education discussions and rallies, to tenant organizing and mutual aid, we’re painting Newark red. Here’s what’s going on, and how to get involved:…..
https://www.insidernj.com/press-release/democratic-socialists-host-action-packed-weekend-newark/
The post Democratic Socialists to Host Action-Packed Weekend in Newark first appeared on North NJ DSA.
Shifting Tides in The Middle East
The United States exports many things, but democracy is certainly not one of them. The U.S. government has supported undemocratically elected leaders and regimes that practice undemocratic practices. The apartheid state of Israel is a shining example of the a government propped up by the enormous economic support of the U.S. and evangelical right religious groups.
U.S. aide to Israel is $3.8 billion per year. That’s over $10 million a day! That kind of money buys a whole lot of influence. And what the US gets is an ally in the Middle East. The buffer state of Israel was founded in May 1948 and occupies one of the holiest cities in the Middle East: Jerusalem. Historically, Israel has had contentious relations with its neighbors in Lebanon, Jordan, and Syria.
With such close relations with the American Empire, it is no wonder that Israel is one of the most militarily advanced and well-protected states in the world. Among their arsenal is the state-of-the-art defensive weapon known as the Iron Dome. It can track thousands of missiles simultaneously and shoot them out of the sky while, allowing only a few of them to make any impact. It was developed by the Israeli firms Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and Israel Aerospace Industries with financial and technological support from the U.S.A.
Ironically, Israel is the oppressor of the native people that have lived in the area for hundreds of years. The occupation of Palestinian lands began in 1948, known as Nakba. It translates as “disaster” or “catastrophe.” Which is exactly what struck the Palestinian people when Jewish settlers took the land they had no claim to. Israel essentially has rounded up people into Gaza or the West Bank.
Finally, in 1987, the intifada began: an uprising from the Palestinian people to stay on their land and keep the property their ancestors had a claim to. Intifada literally means “tremor” or “shivering,” from the root, nafada, mean “shake off” or “get rid of.” They stood up to the oppressors and the shameful killing of innocent civilians, children, the sick, and the elderly.
In 2003, Israel restricted Palestinians to Gaza and in 2007, imposed a blockade forcing people to live in horrid conditions with very little. Israeli human rights group Gisha has compiled an extensive list of things that are not allowed to be imported. Items such as cement and iron, so that it ‘doesn’t fall into the hands of Hamas.’ Yet, it also prevents civilians from rebuilding their homes. Which Israeli forces manage to destroy rather often. While the Israel Foreign Minister denies that this contraband list even exists.
The Palestinian Authority has been the main negotiating body for the Palestinian people for decades. However, in recent years, the people have elected Hamas leaders in their elections. The people are sick of burying their loved ones and are hopeful that Hamas will bring about the change necessary to bring peace and return Palestine to the country that it ought to be. However, as long as the U.S. backs Israel, that proves to be difficult.
For the first time in history, the narrative has finally shifted. The world is starting to understand that Israel is an oppressive force in the Middle East. The world is starting to see how many atrocities are occurring daily. With Israel targeting traditional media outlets in Palestine, social media outlets and the internet have made it possible for everyone to see a glimpse into what occurs without a filtered lens Israel puts on for media outlets.
Israel has committed many crimes against humanity, such as bombing hospitals, bombing journalism buildings, and arresting protestors and trying children in military courts. Israel doesn’t acknowledge the International Criminal Court. Without international pressure, they will not be held accountable for the crimes they have committed in the past 73 years. They must to be held accountable.
In Grand Rapids, there are many individuals and organizations marching to Free Palestine. Palestinian and Arab American activists as well as the Grand Rapids Anti-War Committee, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Democratic Socialists of America, Bimose Ode (Walk Along with Heart) and the Institute for Global Education, and many others came together in May to bring the message to the streets. There have been many rallies. And there will be many more.
Those of us who have all the privileges of living in the safety of Grand Rapids must use our voices to amplify the needs of the oppressed peoples of Palestine. The injustices carried out against them cannot go unnoticed.
The post Shifting Tides in The Middle East appeared first on Grand Rapids Democratic Socialists of America.
We Who Believe In Freedom
In the words of civil rights giant Ella Baker, “Until the killing of black men, black mothers' sons, becomes as important to the rest of the country as the killing of a white mother's son, we who believe in freedom cannot rest until this happens.”
As the summer of 2021 continues to heat up, reactionaries and conservatives are escalating their assault on our struggle for multi-racial working-class liberation -- but socialists are continuing to fight back and rack up gains. On tonight’s show, we’ll speak to members of Suffolk County DSA about the recent election of DSA member Colin Palmer to the Riverhead Central District school board and how school boards are a crucial front for community control and democracy. We’ll also hear from the DSA’s new National Antifascist Working Group which is working to connect anti-fascists and anti-racists across the country.
RSVP for the AFWG introduction call on July 11 here: https://dsausa.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_uOOnljlAR0mn7UzUHlv83Q. Follow the working group on Twitter at @DSAAntifascist or subscribe to their mailing list: https://actionnetwork.org/forms/national-dsa-antifascist-working-group-mailing-list-registration
Follow along with Suffolk DSA’s efforts to organize for socialism in the suburbs on Twitter @SuffolkDSA or at suffolkdsa.org. Follow Colin Palmer, Riverhead Central School District board Trustee and the first democratic socialist elected in Suffolk County, at @CJTPalmerEsq.