AnarchoBolshevik

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While many of those close to Netanyahu, such as the rabidly racist Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir, praised Gallant’s termination, many […] settlers objected to the action.

Several high-ranking Israeli officials used the X social media platform to blast Netanyahu’s decision. Israeli president and centrist-Zionist Isaac Herzog stated that Gallant’s termination was “the last thing Israel needs.” (The Guardian, Nov.5)

Protests broke out in Tel Aviv and occupied Jerusalem following the announcement of the former defense minister’s dismissal. Protesters took to the streets, many clashing with Israeli police, and several people committed civil disobedience. Al Jazeera footage from Nov. 6 shows protesters demonstrating outside of Netanyahu’s residence and storming gates near his home.

Unfortunately, the Israeli demonstrators were mostly one-sided, as they solely focused on releasing Israeli hostages. Their demands ignored the plight of Palestinian prisoners who have been unjustly incarcerated much longer and at a higher rate. Most of the protesters also waved Israeli flags, viewed by the Palestinian community as a symbol of terrorism and genocide.

The rallies against Netanyahu were nonetheless a blow to the Likud-led coalition government. They reflect the growing discontent being expressed by occupier residents of the settler-colonial state. More than 130 courageous IOF “reservists” signed off on a letter refusing to fight in Gaza and Lebanon. The October 9 letter reads: “For some of us, the red line has already been crossed, and for others, it is rapidly approaching: the day when, with broken hearts, we will stop reporting for service.” (CNN, Oct. 25).

 

On the evening of Nov.6, a group of nine individuals — most of whom were wearing MAGA hats — went to the Global Gender and Sexuality Studies (GGSS) department in Clemens Hall on UB’s north campus. The GGSS department historically attracts many transgender scholars as well as other women.

These nine individuals went through the department, harassing students and staff, with a special focus on gender minorities. They trashed several classrooms by turning over bookshelves, upturning tables and throwing chairs around the room. The UB Police Department was quickly notified of these events, but all reports seem to indicate that the UBPD officers decided to stay in their office monitoring the camera feeds until the Trump supporters were gone.

The university president issued a statement the next day stating that students and staff should report these kinds of incidents to the UBPD and that the campus police are there to “protect and serve.” This empty public relations statement from the president was countered by another statement from the CSL, wherein the individuals who attacked the GGSS department were called out, the community was urged to report instances of fascist activities to progressive forces for the purpose of community solidarity and antifascist action, and the university was condemned for once again failing to protect women (cisgender, transgender and demigender) and other gender oppressed persons on campus from right-wing violence. (tinyurl.com/NovStmtCSL)

Build worker solidarity!

On Nov 7, many professors and graduate students in the humanities departments at UB were privately urged to work from behind closed and locked doors “as if you are under a modified lockdown,” to quote one professor who wishes to remain anonymous.

On the same day, many Black students at Buff State were receiving copies of a racist mass text which was sent out to students of color nationwide. Once again the administration, this time of Buff State, issued a message to the university community saying that the FCC and FBI are handling things and that the university community doesn’t need to worry. This event was also discussed and condemned in the CSL letter from Nov. 7 cited above.

Between the continued genocidal devastation of occupied Palestine and southern Lebanon, U.S. imperialism’s continued aggression against Russia and China and the U.S. fascist movement gaining the win of a second Trump presidency, it has become clear that united action of progressive forces is necessary to overcome the choke hold of fascist violence and decaying capitalism.

In Buffalo, as in many other cities, in the interests of community solidarity against capitalism, white supremacy and cis-hetero-patriarchy, as well as in solidarity with our oppressed siblings abroad, a variety of progressive forces — including the CSL and Workers World Party’s Buffalo branch — are working together to organize upcoming actions, educate members of the working class and empower our fellow working-class and oppressed folks to exercise our power together.

(Emphasis original.)

 

“The Peoplehood Parade joyfully lifts up PEOPLE, especially the everyday Philadelphians working toward collective liberation,” is how Spiral Q describes their yearly event. Coming just days after the election of ultraright former President Donald Trump as the next U.S. president, the spirited event proved that people are not taking a step back from organizing in their communities.

Participating organizations included activists fighting for an end to genocide in Palestine, fighting the building of a billionaires’ sports arena in Chinatown, fighting against the climate crisis and fighting the city’s use of police to clear drug users from the Kensington neighborhood — instead of investing more in drug treatment, health care and a host of other needs.

The Philadelphia Alliance Against Imperialism — which includes ANAKBAYAN, Black Alliance for Peace, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Friends of Swazi Freedom, Korea Peace Now, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and World World Party — marched as a contingent for the first time in Peoplehood.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago

I would say that these Herzlians have more in common with the antisemitic provocateurs at Christie Pits than any of Kristallnacht’s victims.

“Let the IDF win, and f*** the Arabs! […] everybody die”

Wishing violence and death on millions of your cousins is not okay.

 

The ballot stated, in part: “Funding to Israel costs $3.8 Billion,” and “Israel is recognized as an apartheid regime with a track record of human rights violations.”

“It was just an incredible effort of a diverse coalition committed to justice, peace and human rights. And it was, it was a united movement,” said Jessica Yasin, a member of Champaign-Urbana Muslim Action Committee.

“It was by not only CUMAC but Urbana-Champaign Jews For Ceasefire […] and countless individuals who believe our tax dollars [should] not fund a country accused of serious human rights abuses.” (ipmnewsroom.org, Nov. 6)

The recommendation has no binding effect on lawmakers, but the organizers hope it sends a message to policy makers that the war in Gaza should end.

Whether or not the proposal impacts legislation, it is a clear indication that there is powerful growing antipathy to the genocide in Gaza and to its cost and its inhumanity. More and more people of different backgrounds but similar passions are willing to struggle together for what they believe in.

 

While being denied their demand for a full guaranteed pension, workers won a $12,000 bonus and improvements to their 401k individual retirement funds. Nevertheless roughly 40% of the striking union members voted against the latest contract, with pensions likely being a major issue for them.

This Tyrannosaurus rex-style company produces a vast array of military and related technological equipment, including F-15 and F-18 jet bombers and the bombs they drop. These terror weapons are used in Palestine, elsewhere in West Asia, North Africa and the rest of the world to maintain [neo]imperialist rule.

Boeing is the number one military contractor involved in the U.S. genocide against Palestine. The company has used layoffs, outsourcing, threats and a partnership with the government to keep the union in a subservient position and deny workers needed compensation for the last 16 years.

[…]

The strike caused a $6.4 billion loss for Boeing in the third quarter, but Boeing was bailed out by Wall Street when the company was allowed to gain $20 billion with a huge sale of stock in November. This put Boeing in a position to hold out longer against the IAM strike and to refuse the workers’ demand for their full pension.

The strike was an uprising against the vicious attacks that monopoly capitalists imposed on the working class. The IAM was able to respond with a high level of organization and strength on the picket lines for over seven weeks. For weeks before the strike began on Sept. 12, workers marched through their plants daily to raise their demands and build support.

Strikers were encouraged by the growing upsurge of labor in recent years, such as the UAW strike against Ford, General Motors and Stellantis in 2023 and the Starbucks Workers United organizing drive.

The machinists gained strong support from the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA), whose members refused to do the Machinists’ jobs during the strike. Striking members from UNITE HERE! (hotel workers) joined the strikers on the picket lines. Running parallel with the lies and false promises of the presidential election, the strike showed that fighting unions can win against the top capitalist monopolies like Boeing.

 

In total, voters supported legal abortions in 14 of the 17 states where referendums were on the ballot. And in 11 of those 14 states, the constitutions were amended to include the right to legal abortions. These victories, made possible by the organized movement of thousands of activists and voted on by millions of people, should be applauded. Even though it was through the ballot box, in several states reproductive-rights forces beat back the right-wing scheme to outlaw abortions.

But the fight isn’t over in Missouri, home to a conservative government. Planned Parenthood clinics are suing the state to eliminate the maze of rules and obstacles that abortion providers have to navigate to provide abortions, end the restrictions on dispensing medication abortion pills and eliminate criminal prosecutions for abortion providers. (Springfield News-Leader, Nov. 8)

And in Florida, where the state requires a 60% supermajority vote to change the constitution, the measure narrowly failed, gaining 57% of the required votes. Reactionary Gov. Ron DeSantis had vociferously denounced Proposition 4, which would have legalized abortion. So now, without abortion access in that state, a reproductive health care “desert” exists throughout the Southeast.

 

Throughout the past week, Zionist hooligans have been attacking the people of Amsterdam and causing destruction in the city and its neighborhoods. People walking on the streets wearing keffiyehs, taxi drivers and random Muslims and Arabs have been beaten up by these hooligans. The windows of homes with Palestinian flags were smashed and the flags stolen. The police did not intervene, the media was silent, and the mayor stood by and watched as these Zionist hooligans caused chaos in the city.

Yet how different is the situation after a night in which the people of Amsterdam — Muslims, Christians and Jews, Dutch, Arabs and Palestinians — defended themselves and their city against this violence?! The police arrested dozens of people, the media speaks outrageously with sensationalistic lies, and the mayor speaks of very serious “antisemitic” incidents. It is as if the world turned upside down.

Where in occupied Palestine the [neo]imperialist powers declare their support for the Israeli genocide and fulfill it with military, diplomatic and economic assistance, here in Amsterdam the ruling powers express their support for [neo]fascist Zionist hooligans who attack our city and our people. Where in Palestine, the Palestinian resistance is repressed with life sentences, here the defenders of Amsterdam are beaten up and arrested by the police. These are, we note, the same police forces that were responsible for arresting tens of thousands of Amsterdam Jews during World War II.

The reaction of the people of Amsterdam to the [neo]fascist hooligans is normal and natural. First, because we do not accept any attack on our city and people, and second, because these attacks are racially motivated. It is very clear that the attacks of the Maccabi hooligans are anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab. This also makes them anti-Amsterdam, because these groups are a crucial part of Amsterdam, of our city, our people and our community. This whole week, Amsterdammers have been attacked and harassed, and last night they decided to defend themselves and not turn the other cheek anymore.

The self-defense of the people of Amsterdam against [neo]fascist attacks is indeed exactly what we mean by “Globalize the Intifada.” This is part of the boycott movement to isolate and weaken “Israel.” Just as we fight for the exclusion of the Zionist régime from education, culture and sports, we also want [neo]fascist Zionists to have nowhere that they find free rein to celebrate genocide and attack Palestinians, Arabs and entire communities.

The self-defense of the people of Amsterdam also follows months of political and media attacks against Palestinians and their supporters, especially the student activists who have unleashed a student intifada since May. This includes the Dutch entry ban against our European coordinator Mohammed Khatib, which we demand be lifted immediately.

The people of Amsterdam declared last night that Zionism will not be tolerated here. Amsterdam is a Zionism-free city. And if it is not yet, we will make it so.

And no, anti-Zionism is not anti-Semitism. This movement is made up of people of all backgrounds, religions and ethnicities. This movement is a popular movement that is against genocide and wants to liberate Palestine from the river to the sea. This movement is not led by one or even several organizations. It is the masses of Amsterdam and the Netherlands, the so-called “ordinary, hard-working Dutch people,” who defended the city against [neo]fascist hooligans last night.

We call for the immediate release of all those arrested and the dropping of all charges against them. This is the moment to escalate the fight against genocide and for the liberation of Palestine, together against Dutch support for “Israel” and for the total isolation of the Zionist régime, in sports and all other arenas.

 

The protests defended reproductive rights and protested Trump’s xenophobic immigration policies, such as his plan to order mass deportations and his ban on immigrants from Muslim countries. Also, they demanded the government cancel student debt, protect the environment, raise the minimum wage and affirm the rights to organize unions and to bargain collectively.

Besides the street protests, unions issued statements responding to the challenges of Trump 2.0. The AFL-CIO wrote, “Now we are faced with the reality of a second Donald Trump term. The Project 2025 agenda promises to dismantle labor unions.” The federation goes on to say that “labor’s task will be to defend working people.” (aflcio.org, Nov. 6)

The AFL-CIO statement explains, “It is clear that the economic struggle working-class people are facing is causing real pain, and neither party has sufficiently addressed it.”

The American Federation of Teachers said: “Our guiding principle will be to continue to do the work to improve people’s lives: to fight for our children’s future.” (aft.org, Nov. 6) Trump plans programs that put AFT members in the administration’s crosshairs twice — most are public employees, a particular target of the MAGA movement, and educators, another target.

The context of these statements is that most of the organized labor movement mobilized time and funds for the election of the Democrats, and this effort failed. For example, union members knocked on a million doors in Pennsylvania and lost the state. Labor spent $47 million, engaged in phone banks, canvassing operations, education and persuasion efforts with their members and outreach to nonunion working-class households to no avail. (opensecrets.org)

These statements analyze the current political situation from the labor movement’s perspective but contain no call to action.

Professional Staff Congress, NYC


Professional Staff Congress in anti-Trump march, New York City, Nov. 9, 2024. Photo: PSC/CUNY

AFT Local 2334, also known as the Professional Staff Congress (PSC), which represents 30,000 full-time and adjunct professors, librarians, laboratory assistants and some technical staff at the City University of New York, made an analysis of the dangers the victory of Donald Trump represents for the New York City working class.

Union President James Davis said in a message to PSC members: “It is a wake-up call for organized labor that Trump’s movement has effectively harnessed such broad support of working people and the poor. … [Trump] and his acolytes aim not only to discredit and defund educational institutions but also to undermine the values and principles on which the public education system is built.” (psc-cuny.org, Nov. 6)

The PSC not only issued a statement, it joined a march of 5,000 protesters on the Trump International Hotel with a coalition of community groups, including Make the Road (Se Hace Camino Nueva York), the Working Families Party, Jews for Justice, other unions and other groups. The protesters are part of “Protect Our Future,” a coalition in formation.

The PSC is also actively fighting for a contract with picket lines and civil disobedience at CUNY board meetings. The union’s old contract expired in early 2023.

(Emphasis original.)

 

Dan Shae, president of Portland Veterans for Peace, shown above, said: “We need to put maximum pressure on the Biden Administration in the next two months he has left to right his wrongs on Cuba and to close the Guantanamo Bay Industrial Prison Complex, among others.”

For some time, the 30 men still detained at Guantanamo have been approved for release by a high-level U.S. government review process. However, after the October 7 Hamas uprising, the President Joe Biden administration refused to release them. Of the 30 prisoners, 16 have been waiting two to four years to be released and three for nearly 15 years.

There is a protective order in place that prevents attorneys for the prisoners from talking about the injustices taking place. The gag order is a further indictment of the U.S. government for how it operates at Guantanamo.

From Palestine to Guantanamo, stop the U.S. War Machine!

 

The demonstration rallied at the base of the Space Needle and marched downtown. It was called by the International League for Peoples Struggle, an internationalist organization with many Filipino members. The lead banner read, “Build the Peoples Movement — Fight Repression, War & Genocide!”

Other march banners read, “U.S. Out of Everywhere — Cut Ties with Boeing — Free Palestine” and “Immigrants Fight Back.” Large numbers of immigrant rights supporters were on the march, protesting Trump’s threat to deport thousands of immigrants with national guard troops.

Speakers included a spokesperson for SUPER (Students for Palestinian Equality & Return), a culinary worker speaking about organizing a union at the University of Washington, anti-police brutality activist Castile Hightower and a representative of the International Migrants Alliance. Several speakers denounced the two party system, saying that neither the Democrats nor Republicans are options.

Marchers chanted, “From Palestine to Mexico, border walls have got to go!” A spokesperson for ILPS said, “We are here to show just how connected our struggles are and what we have to do in order to win a new system to win our true liberation.”

 

U.S. [neo]imperialist hegemony is reliant on an intricate global network of military bases, which are jumping-off points for [neo]imperialist wars and occupations, and as logistics hubs for the entire U.S. military supply chain. Their geographic spread allows for rapid deployments worldwide. This base system continues to expand, as evidenced by the current encirclement of China.

A vital base for U.S. geostrategy is Diego Garcia, the largest island in the Chagos archipelago. Located in the middle of the Indian Ocean, Diego Garcia has housed

B-1 and B-2 bombers and B-52 Stratofortress bombers, which were used in Iraq and Afghanistan during the U.S. wars of aggression. The island was an early testing ground for drone technology.

On world maps the Chagos Islands are named, “British Indian Ocean Territory” (BIOT), giving no indication that Diego Garcia is a U.S. base. The French first colonized the islands governing them as part of Mauritius in the 18th century, bringing enslaved Africans to the Chagos Islands before ceding them to the British in 1814

Shortly before Mauritian independence in 1968, the British split Chagos from Mauritius to maintain its control over the archipelago under the newly created BIOT. (Al Jazeera, Oct. 3)

 

The proposed temporary truce does not fulfill the main demand, which is to stop the genocide. Hamas has not turned its back on any contacts aimed at finding a solution. Our goal is withdrawal, a fair exchange deal and the return of the displaced. The U.S. side only wants a superficial agreement regarding Gaza. We cannot hand over the occupation’s captives while it continues to kill our people.

We informed the mediators that the proposal presented to us does not meet our demands. “Israeli” massacres are escalating, but the occupation is trying to suppress the media. We believe that the occupation is not ready to conclude an agreement at this time. The resistance is strong and inflicting daily losses on the occupation.

The occupation only wants to retrieve its captives and then resume bombing, which we reject. Negotiations are at a standstill due to the occupation’s unwillingness to conclude an agreement. What is currently being offered is a temporary truce for several days in exchange for a number of the occupation’s captives. The proposed truce has no connection to any serious agreement for a ceasefire.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

Let's pretend, for the sake of argument, that these legislators want to help ordinary Jews: how does this help them? Where are the talks with lower-class Jews? Where are all the Rabbis? Where can we find somebody talking about expanding education on Jewish history or Judaism? How about maybe funding Synagogues so that nobody has to pay a membership fee? How about funding Jewish musea? Theatres? Musical events? Language courses? How about giving Shoah survivors reparations directly instead of blowing money on a worthless apartheid régime that can't even protect its own snotty citizens?

If this were really about reducing antisemitism then it is the most uncreative and laziest fecking effort that I have ever seen. They can't even be bothered to record each other making performative gestures like visiting Synagogues or eating Ashkenazi cuisine. What an absolute joke.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 week ago

The pogroms (veritable mass murder episodes) that took place in 1940 and 1941, such as the Iași Pogrom, were publicly justified by alleged Jewish armed subversion against [Axis] soldiers.⁴⁰

Reading about the alleged Jewish attacks against the army in Iași (June 1941), some better-informed Romanians, such as former Prime Minister Argetoianu, recorded their disbelief in the accusations: “The [insert slur here] have no weapons.”⁴¹ Despite the antisemitic slur, Argetoianu was right. Romanian Jews lacked weapons and military organization, key elements for any armed resistance.

(Source.)

The agreement that the Jews of Kiev had to be killed in “retaliation” for the bombings and arson amounted to a diversionary maneuver. The [Axis] officers merely seized on them as a justification for the murders, which had been planned in advance on ideological grounds. The term “retaliation” was intended to create the impression of military necessity and thus justify it in the eyes of soldiers and members of the SS.⁸⁷

(Source.)

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

One Sunday I saw some [Fascist] soldiers enter an Ethiopian church and ring the bells. Sixteen old men thought it was time for prayer, but before they could enter the church the [Fascists] killed them. I heard the words of these poor men: ‘Egziabher Yasywo’ (May God open your eyes to the truth!) I could not help crying, but the [Fascists] were laughing. The dead bodies lay for two days on the steps of the church.

(Source.)

Men whom Boaglio had considered fair and honest […] were ‘grinning coldly’ as they calmly shot the people running out screaming from their burning homes.⁴⁷

Accounts by witnesses in the Feransay Legassion district mention the use of hand grenades. This was confirmed by the French consul-general, who wrote that the killing turned into a pogrom: ‘They were killing for the fun of killing; they pillaged for the joy of destroying and getting drunk; they then set fire, through an imperious need to complete the devastation […] The tukuls, roofed with thatch and serving as houses for the natives, were burned; sometimes with their occupants inside, due to the impossibility of escaping before the forces liberally unleashed. Flame-throwers and grenades served to exacerbate the evils.’⁴⁸

[…]

Liqe Tebebt was shot and also fell, seriously injured, into the water. In his state of shock he saw that the major was trampling on the dead and the dying on the riverbank, and laughing at one of his victims who was in agony and begging to be given the coup de grâce.

[…]

‘After the three days of rampaging in the town, Fascist beasts who had returned from Holetta [military academy] with a truck tied the legs of Ato Ar’aya to the back of the truck. Before the vehicle moved, Ar’aya sang a mission song:

Heaven is opening for me to enter
– I will see Jesus there.
I am happy! I am happy!
– I am happy!

Unmoved, the laughing Blackshirts told him that it would be better for him to listen to their song instead, and chanted their ‘war cry’: ‘Du-ce! Du-ce!

(Source.)

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

That's how the petty bourgeoisie rolls.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Neofascists: 'We are going to be oppressive.'

Neoliberals: 'Can you maybe try to be just a little bit less oppressive.'

Neofascists: 'No.'

Neoliberals: 'Oh, okay I guess.'

Communists: 'We are going to make life more tolerable.'

Neoliberals: 'SOMEBODY SEND IN THE ARMY! DEPLOY THE NUKES! SANCTION EVERYTHING! LEAVE NOTHING STANDING! NOW!'

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

That is strange... of course, I am sure that she does not have his régime's dealings with the Axis or horrific atrocities against Africans in mind when calling him an awful man. It's like how conservatives never bash Barack Obama for his régime's atrocities in the Middle East even though that would actually be a good argument for opposing him.

Now that I think about it… conservatives in general don't really have that many complaints about the Fascist empires. They have this grossly exaggerated notion that they controlled every aspect of life (especially businesses and guns), they can name one perpetrator of the Shoah, they think that he supported welfare along with secularism (including evolution), they are vaguely familiar with the Third Reich's disrespect for America, sometimes they'll gripe about its (somewhat) accessible healthcare along with the presence of abortions, and some of them are gullible enough to believe that the Fascists approved of the LGBT+ community. Oh, and of course there is the Molotov Cocktease Pact, the single most important event in all of history, next to the head of state's meetings with the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem!

Other than those… they don't seem to care all that much. The violence against Libyans and other Afrasians? Irrelevant. The violence against the LGBT+ community? Unimportant. The dealings with the White Russians? Whatever. Haʻavara? Meh. The unofficial alliance with Finland? Big deal. The annihilation of dozens of millions of Soviets? Who cares. The Third Reich's colonial inspirations? Snore. The Samudaripen? Couldn't care less. The dealings with the neutral states? Least concern. Need I go on? They don't even seem especially interested in the Fascist colonisation of Poland despite being vaguely familiar with it, and something tells me that their understanding of the Shoah is ridiculously basic.

I don't joke around when it comes to understanding fascism. I even wrote a thread about the Third Reich's persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses when, quite frankly, I loathe their attitudes and their religious beliefs, but it had to be made.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Your great aunt probably misses António de Oliveira Salazar.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

BOW DOWN BEFORE YOUR NEW MASTER!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Hamzah Saadah says that there is a gay bar in Ramallah. (The IOF have probably flattened it by now, though.)

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

Wow… there was even one instance where he wrote the word 'Nazi' and another where he mentioned the head of state, but of course he preferred the terms 'German' and 'Germany' because those sound friendlier and downright neighbourly compared to 'Nazi', 'Fascist', 'Reich', or 'Axis'. Most people don't tense up when they hear the word 'German'. You got your German shepherds, your German Spitze, your German pancakes, your German fries, your German lutes, your German biscuits, your German chocolate cakes. Those sound friendly! You hear 'Want some German beer?' and you go either 'Yeah, sure' or 'Eh, no thanks.' You hear 'Want some Nazi beer?' and you go 'Wait, WHAT‽'

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