jueves, 2 de abril de 2009

A Working Class Program for the Economic Crisis Print E-mail
Written by Socialist Appeal
Thursday, 02 April 2009
• No more bail outs for the rich. No reward for the fat cats! Nationalize the banks and insurance companies under democratic workers’ control and management. Banking decisions must be taken in the interests of the majority of society, not a minority of speculators. Compensation for nationalized banks and other companies must be paid only in cases of proven need to pension funds, 401k funds (and similar retirement funds), workers and retired workers. The nationalization of the banks is the only way to guarantee the deposits and savings of ordinary people.

• Democratic control of the banks. The boards of directors should be composed in the following way: one third to be elected by the bank workers, one third to be elected by the trade unions to represent the interests of the working class as a whole, and one third from the government.

• An immediate end to the exorbitant bonuses, all executive pay should be limited to the wages of a skilled worker. Unnecessary managers should be reassigned to actual productive tasks needed by the enterprise. If the bankers are not prepared to serve on reasonable terms, they must be shown the door and replaced by qualified graduates, thousands of whom are looking for work and are willing to serve society.

• An immediate reduction of interest rates, which should be limited to the necessary costs of banking operations. Cheap credit must be made available for those who need it: small businesses and workers buying homes, not the bankers and capitalists.

• Quality housing for all. Rent to be fixed at no more than 10 percent of wages. An immediate end to home foreclosures, utility disconnections and rent evictions. Open empty homes to those without shelter. For a massive program of public works to create jobs and quality, affordable public housing.

• Abolish unemployment. Work or Social Security for all. For the immediate introduction of a 30-hour week without loss of pay to provide work for all. A living wage and pension for all. A sliding scale of wages, linking all increases to the increases in the cost of living.

• Down with business secrets. Open the books! Let the workers have access to information about all the speculation, tax evasion, shady deals, exorbitant profits and bonuses. Let the people see how they have been swindled and who is really responsible for the present mess.

• No to factory closures. A factory closed is a factory occupied! Nationalization under democratic workers’ control and management of idle factories and those under threat of being closed!

• For a massive program of public works: an immediate construction program of affordable public housing, schools, hospitals, roads, bridges, public transportation networks and other infrastructure to improve quality of life and create millions of jobs at union wages and benefits. Union-controlled hiring halls and apprentice programs to be immediately established in areas of highest unemployment. Against racism and discrimination: Workers’ unity is the way forward!

• The trade unions, co-operatives and consumer associations must work out the real index of the cost of living in place of the “official” COLA index, which does not reflect the real state of affairs. Set up committees of workers, homemakers, small businesses and the unemployed to control price increases.

• Abolish all indirect and regressive taxation and introduce a heavily progressive system of direct taxation on the rich. Abolish all taxation for the poor; make the rich pay for their crisis!

• For a drastic reduction of energy costs! This can only be achieved through nationalization of the energy companies, which will enable us to impose price controls on gas and electricity. No more profiteering at the public’s expense!

• The right of all workers to join a union, strike, picket and demonstrate. The right to free speech and assembly. No to restrictions of democratic rights under the pretext of so-called anti-terrorist laws!

• Complete independence of the unions from the Big Business parties and the state. An end to compulsory arbitration, no-strike clauses, and other measures intended to restrict the scope of action of the unions. Repeal Taft-Hartley and all similar anti-union laws. Democratize the unions and place control firmly in the hands of the rank and file. Direct election of all union officials with right of recall. Against bureaucracy and careerism: No union official to receive a higher wage than a skilled worker. All expenses to be available for the inspection of the membership.

• For a militant, class struggle program to mobilize workers in defense of jobs and living standards. The workers’ organizations must reject the false idea of “national unity” with capitalist governments and parties under the pretext of the crisis. They are responsible for the crisis and want to present the bill to the working class. For trade union unity on the basis of the above demands.

• For rank and file control, including the creation of shop stewards committees and the creation of ad hoc strike committees during strikes and other conflicts as a means of ensuring the fullest participation of the widest number of workers.

• No to class collaboration! The unions must break with the Democrats. For a mass party of Labor, based on the unions, armed with a socialist program.

• Unite private and public schools into a single, fully funded public education system, to provide free, quality, lifelong education for all. The immediate abolition of tuition fees and the introduction of a living grant to all students who qualify for higher education. A guaranteed job for every graduate, at a living wage. End the domination and exploitation of education by big business. For fully equipped youth clubs, libraries, sports centers, movie theaters, swimming pools and other recreational centers for young people.

• For a socialized national health care system. Abolish private health insurance and HMOs. Massively fund research and treatment for AIDS, cancer and other curable and preventable diseases. Nationalize the pharmaceuticals giants that squeeze their profits out of the health of working people.

• Break with the anarchy of the capitalist free market. Nationalize the Fortune 500. Socialist planning would mean the end of unemployment and ensure democratic control of production, distribution and exchange, using all available information and technology. Environmental plans would be measured in generations, not fiscal quarters. The unions would play a key role in the administration and control of every workplace. Trade unionism is not an end in itself, but only a means to an end, which is the socialist transformation of society.

• For the immediate withdrawal of all the troops and military contractors from Iraq and Afghanistan. Slash the military budget and massively increase social spending. Full civil rights for soldiers, including the right to join unions and the right to strike. Hands Off Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia, Latin America, the Middle East and the world!

• Against racism and discrimination! Defend the rights of all oppressed and exploited people. For the unity of all workers, regardless of gender, color, ethnicity, nationality or religion.

• For working class internationalism. For a Socialist Federation of the Americas as part of a World Socialist Federation.
Workers of the world unite!

New Members Meeting
Thursday, April 2nd @ 7 pm @ UTEC building, 1313 5th St. SE, Minneapolis, room 112C

Interested in organizing against the war? Want to get involved? We meet weekly, and new members are always welcome. However, this week's meeting is particularly orientated for new members. Come check out the Anti-War Committee!

American Indians and Palestinians - Parallel Injustice
Saturday, April 4, 2009, 11 a.m. @ Hoversten Chapel, Augsburg College, 2211 Riverside Avenue S., Minneapolis

For the first time in Minnesota, Native Americans and Palestinians unite to address shared experiences of dispossession and genocide of their people. SPEAKERS: CAIR National Director Nihad Awad, American Indian Movement leader Clyde Bellecourt, Nick Boswell of Red Indian Dawa, and Marvin Manypenny of The People's Land. For more information, call 612-327-6700 or email parallelinjustice@gmail.com The forum is co-sponsored by: Al-Aqsa Institute, the American Indian Movement, the Anti-War Committee, Augsburg American Indian Studies Program, Augsburg Coalition for Student Activism, Coalition for Palestinian Rights, CAIR-MN, Minnesota Gaza Coalition, Minnesota Peace Now, Palestinian Institute, Red Indian Dawa, Students for a Democratic Society at the University of Minnesota, the University of Minnesota American Indian Student Cultural Center, and Women Against Military Madness.

Unfortunately It Was Paradise: A Celebration of the Life of Mahmoud Darwish
Saturday, April 11, 2009 7pm. Reception and Book Signing immediately following program @ Target Performance Hall, Open Book (Loft Literary Center) @ 1011 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis

Mahmoud Darwish, who died last August at age 67, was not only the national poet of the Palestinian people, but a world poet whose more than 20 books of poetry, essays, and memoirs place him among the ranks of Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, and Akhmatova. Headlining the event is Fady Joudah, a Palestinian-American poet, translator, physician and member of Doctors Without Borders. Joudah is the winner of the 2007 Yale Younger Poets Competition for his collection The Earth in the Attic, and translator of The Butterfly’s Burden from Cooper Canyon Press, a bilingual edition of several of Darwish’s most recent collections. Joining him are Minnesota poets David Mura, Anya Achtenberg, and Raed Abughazaleh. The event also features a musical performance by Salah Abdelfattah and a sampling of Middle Eastern food provided by Shish of St. Paul. Admission: $5 suggested donation. Cosponsored by the Loft, Meeting Minnesota’s Muslims, Minnesota Poets Against the War, The University of Minnesota’s Institute for Global Studies, and Shish Cafe.

Demand a People's Bailout! Protest on Tax Day!
Wednesday, April 15th @ noon @ State Capitol, St. Paul

Protest on Tax Day for a People's Bailout. Organized by the Coalition for a People's Bailout (http://sites.google.com/site/mncrisis/). Endorsed by the Anti-War Committee.

CD trainings for the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Coalition
Wednesday, April 15 @ 7:30pm @ Bethany Lutheran Church @ 2511 East Franklin Avenue, Minneapolis

Three CD trainings building up to an action at ICE headquarters in Bloomington, Minnesota this spring.
For 3 years now people have been marching, petitioning, lobbying for change. We have heard hopeful words from the Obama administration, yet as we write, more national guard are being sent to the border, families are being torn apart, our communities are being terrorized, and workers are sitting in detention centers, where documented human rights abuses have occurred.
May 1st will mark the 100th day of the Obama administration. In the first days of his administration, Obama signed an executive order to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay. There is no reason he can’t do a similar executive order to immediately stop the wave of immigration raids and deportations that are tearing apart families and communities around the country. We will not wait for justice, we will not wait as mothers and fathers are torn from their children. We will not be silent while community members live in fear. We will not tolerate workers being exploited.
OUR DEMAND IS SIMPLE: We demand that President Obama sign an executive order declaring an immediate moratorium on raids and deportations until a JUST immigration law is passed.

Repression and Resistance, Then and Now: Lecture and Reception with Ramona Africa of the MOVE Organization
April 19, 2009 @ 2:00 p.m. @ Location to be Announced

Ramona Africa is international spokesperson for the MOVE organization, a revolutionary back-to-nature organization whose main belief is in life. This organization has experienced violent repression at the hands of the government, with nine members--known as the MOVE 9--incarcerated for a crime it is obvious they did not commit. In 1985, Philadelphia police dropped a military-grade bomb on MOVE headquarters, killing six adults and five children. Ramona is the only adult survivor of that attack.
Ramona will speak about the nature of political repression and resistance as experienced by members of the MOVE family, including Mumia Abu-Jamal, and how these threads run to the prosecution of the RNC 8 and others. A reception will follow.

Don’t Enlist! Resist! A day of actions to stop recruitment
Thursday, April 23rd

President Obama has failed to keep his promise of ending the war in Iraq. His plan to keep 50,000 troops in Iraq through 2011 will continue an unjustified military occupation for almost 3 more years. An escalation is planned for Afghanistan, where Obama just deployed 17,000 additional troops. Maintaining these wars and occupations requires military recruiters to entice young people with false promises. Recruiters, who already disproportionately target low income people, will use the economic crisis to intensify pressure on vulnerable youth. We have to shatter the illusion that the war is ending and that new soldiers won’t have to fight.
On April 23, 2009, different actions, using a diversity of tactics, will occur simultaneously at recruiting centers across Minnesota. All will have the shared goal of opposing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and preventing military recruiting that day. Join us, to help make this day a success.
Join a picket: Various groups will stand in front of different stations that day. Check here to find one of these actions, and join us!
Organize an action: Work with your friends, or a group at your school, your church or in your neighborhood. "Adopt" a recruiting center and plan an action there. Contact us to coordinate, and we'll list your plans on this site.
Call in day: If you can't take the day off, use your break to call a recruiter. Check here soon for a listing of numbers, and suggested talking points. If they're talking to you, they're not recruiting someone else!
Initiated by the Anti-War Committee

Palestine Day
Sunday April 26, 2009, from 4pm-8pm @ Robbinsdale Middle School. 3730 Toledo Ave N, Robbinsdale.

Directions: From Hwy 100, take 36th Ave E, turn right onto Regent Ave, turn left onto 38th Ave then turn left onto Toledo Ave. The school will be on your left hand side.
Featuring: Allah Made Me Funny, Sanabil-Alquds Dabka Group (Dance troupe from Milwaukee)m & Speaker: Br. Hussein Khatib. Refreshments and light meals will be served.

Protest for Immigrant Rights
Friday, May 1st @ 4pm @ Lake St. & 13th Ave., Festival from 5- 8 pm @ Nicollet Ave & 29th

We demand: Stop the raids & deportations! Legalization for all now! Pass employee free choice act! Drivers licenses for all! For more info: tcmay1solidarity@gmail.com or 612 389 9174. Organized by the MN Immigrant Rights Action Coalition (Mn.ImmigrantRights.net). Endorsed by the AWC.

REVIVIENDO MOMENTOS HISTORICOS.

REVIVIR ES VIVIR......VIDEOS DEL GANE DE NUESTRO PUEBLO EL PASADO 15 DE MARZO.


1ª PARTE FMLN El Salvador jornada de victoria 15 de marzo 2009 Gano el pueblo salvadoreño!!







SOLO EL PUEBLO SALVA AL PUEBLO........

REVIVIENDO MOMENTOS HISTORICOS.

Movimientos sociales se oponen a capitalización del BID


ALAI AMLATINA, 30/03/2009, Medellín.- Diversos movimientos sociales de América Latina y el Caribe se oponen a la capitalización del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (BID) tal como lo ha venido proponiendo el presidente de ese organismo financiero multilateral, Luís Alberto Moreno, en la 50º Asamblea Anual de Gobernadores que sesionará hasta este 31 de marzo en Medellín, Colombia.

En su asamblea anual, el punto central de las discusiones es la solicitud de recursos líquidos que han hecho los directivos del BID por una suma cercana a los 180 mil millones de dólares. No obstante, las cerca de 85 organizaciones que suscribieron la
Declaración Final de Medellín: 50 Años del BID ¡nada que festejar¡, rechazaron esa capitalización, tras considerar que perpetuaría el modelo de inequidad que impera en la región.

“De seguro esa capitalización será para repetir los mismos errores: financiar megaproyectos que generan altos impactos negativos al medio ambiente y a las poblaciones más vulnerables, ampliando así la concentración de capitales entre unos pocos y la brecha de desigualdad en estos países”, declaró Laura Carlsen, integrante de la Alianza Nacional de Comunidades Latinoamericanas y Caribeñas (Nalacc).


Esta postura crítica y contraria a los intereses del Banco y de algunos países de la región, recoge el consenso alcanzado durante cinco días de deliberaciones en el marco de la Asamblea de los Pueblos, evento que se desarrolló en Medellín de manera alterna a la cumbre oficial de gobernadores del organismo multilateral y que finalizó el pasado domingo 29 de marzo.

Al igual que la máxima cumbre del BID, que finalizará este martes, la Asamblea de los Pueblos logró convocar a importantes académicos, activistas en derechos humanos y representantes de la sociedad civil de América Latina y el Caribe, quienes debatieron sobre el fracaso del modelo económico y de desarrollo actual, la crisis del sector financiero y el aumento de la pobreza y la desigualdad en el hemisferio; “aspectos en los que el BID ha tenido una gran responsabilidad”, según lo consideraron en su declaración final.

Además de cuestionar el modelo de desarrollo que ha financiado el organismo multilateral, basado en la premisa de que un crecimiento económico sostenible puede generar riqueza en todos los niveles de la población, los movimientos sociales hicieron un llamado para que el Banco haga una rendición de cuentas por las violaciones a los derechos humanos cometidas contra los pueblos latinoamericanos con sus préstamos y en nombre del progreso.

“Es claro que el BID tiene una deuda política y social sobre la que tiene que dar explicaciones, pues sus préstamos, en muchos casos, sirvieron para sostener gobiernos ilegítimos, opresores y violadores de derechos humanos en el continente. Ellos (el Banco) nunca dejaron de cobrar a pesar de la realidad política de sus deudores; entonces, la pregunta es: ¿sí están interesados en generar desarrollo?”, comentó Jana Silverman, integrante de la organización Social Watch, presente en el evento.

Propuestas alternativas

Más allá de las discusiones académicas y políticas, lo que más destacaron los organizadores de este evento fue la masiva asistencia de público en cada una de las actividades, que incluyeron movilizaciones, foros académicos y eventos barriales.

“Para nosotros fue muy importante este contacto con las personas directamente afectadas con las políticas del BID, lo que refuerza mucho más nuestro trabajo de reflexión sobre el papel de la banca multilateral”, añadió Silverman.

Dicho trabajo continuará a lo largo y ancho del continente dado que, como lo apuntó Laura Carlsen, “los movimientos sociales quedaron muy fortalecidos con este encuentro y dejó una agenda de trabajo y unas propuestas que hay que consolidar”.

Propuestas que también quedaron consignadas en la declaración final. Una de las más importantes es la necesidad de crear una nueva estructura financiera que apalanque el desarrollo y sustituya al BID en la región. En ese sentido, los asistentes a la Asamblea hicieron un llamado a los gobiernos de América del Sur para que impulsen en definitiva el llamado Banco del Sur, propuesta de banco multilateral para esta parte del continente y que es liderado por Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina, Chile y Venezuela.

“La idea es que este banco tenga unas políticas y un modelo de funcionamiento diferente al que tiene el BID en este momento. Que la participación de los países allí sea parecida a la de la Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA), donde las decisiones son tomadas en pie de igualdad y no de acuerdo al número de acciones que poseen, como lo es el BID actualmente”, sostuvo Silverman.

De igual forma, se planteó la posibilidad de crear una moneda única para América Latina y el Caribe, que sustituya al dólar como referente para cualquier transacción comercial. También se escuchó por parte de los movimientos asistentes propuestas más “radicales” como declarar el no pago de la deuda externa y el retiro de los países latinoamericanos del organismo multilaterla.

“Las propuestas son muy diversas, es cierto, pero también lo es que hay un punto en común y es el rechazo al modelo de desarrollo que ha financiado el BID”, indicó Carlsen, quien junto a Silverman, son conscientes que la actual coyuntura económica mundial constituye una oportunidad histórica para presionar cambios profundos en la estructura de la banca multilateral y del sistema financiero en general.

“Ya quedó demostrado que este sistema de desarrollo es un callejón sin salida. La crisis mundial es un reflejo de ello. Es ahora cuando tenemos que presionar para que se den los cambios porque si no, nos pueden esperar 50 años más de lo mismo”, sentenciaron las dos activistas.

- Agencia de Prensa IPC, Medellín, Colombia. http://www.ipc.org.co

PRESIDENTE ELECTO DE EL SALVADOR PARTICIPA EN CUMBRE DE COSTA RICA



El presidente electo de El Salvador, Mauricio Funes, participa hoy en la cumbre de presidentes y jefes de Estado de Centroamérica con el vicepresidente de Estados Unidos, Joseph Biden, en la que se analizan temas de interés regional.

Funes arribó a San José, la capital costarricense, a las 09:45 (hora local) en un vuelo privado, acompañado de su asesor en temas económicos, Alexander Segovia, el diputado Hugo Martínez y otros de sus colaboradores.
Tras su llegada a San José, Funes y su comitiva fueron trasladados a la casa presidencial costarricense, donde se instaló la reunión a las 10:40 AM. La cumbre es presidida por el mandatario anfitrión, Óscar Arias, y asisten, además del vicepresidente Biden, los presidentes de El Salvador, Elías Antonio Saca; de Guatemala, Álvaro Colom; y de Panamá, Martín Torrijos. Los mandatarios de Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, y de Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, enviaron a sus respectivos representantes.

Funes asiste a esta reunión regional luego que el pasado sábado regresó a El Salvador de una gira por Brasil, su primer viaje al exterior como presidente electo, tras su triunfo electoral el pasado 15 de marzo. El nuevo jefe de Estado salvadoreño ya ha confirmado su participación en la próxima Cumbre de Las Américas, a celebrarse a mediados de abril en Trinidad y Tobago.

Luego de la reunión plenaria en la cumbre de San José, en la que dirigió un discurso de 10 minutos, Funes se reunirá con el presidente de Costa Rica, para tratar asuntos bilaterales.

Luego del encuentro con Arias y de asistir a una conferencia de prensa, Funes regresará este mismo lunes a El Salvador, donde el martes visitará casa presidencial para un primer encuentro con el presidente Saca.

Mañana también asistirá a la ceremonia en la que el Tribunal Supremo Electoral le entregará la credencial oficial que lo acredita como Presidente de la República a partir del próximo primero de junio, lo mismo que a Salvador Sánchez Cerén, vicepresidente para el mismo períodO

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VICTORIA 2009, AHORA VIENE EL CAMBIO SEGURO !!!
“Ningún pueblo de América Latina es débil, porque forma parte de una familia de doscientos millones de hermanos que padecen las mismas miserias, albergan los mismos sentimientos, tienen el mismo enemigo, sueñan todos un mismo mejor destino y cuentan con la solidaridad de todos los hombres y mujeres honrados del mundo entero.” (Segunda declaración de la Habana)


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