2/23/10

2/24: Obama's War Plan in Afghanistan

1. Obama's War Plan in Afghanistan
Wed, Feb 24, 7pm, UW School of Social Work room B14

Join us for a discussion about the US occupation in Afghanistan. We will be analyzing the current offensive on Marja and the capture of a Taliban leader in Pakistan in the larger context of US imperial strategy in the Middle East and Central Asia. Why is Obama escalating the war, is his strategy different from Bush, and what will it take to end the occupation? Discuss these and other pressing questions!

Recommended reading:
Manufacturing a 'victory' in Afghanistan
Editorial: Meet the new boss
Afghanistan: Sinking Deeper


2. Committee Meetings
In part two of our meeting we'll break into Committees -- Education, Outreach, Anti Budget Cuts Organizing, LGBT Rights Organizing, and Seattle Teachers Union Organizing. After 35 minutes to meet, each Committee will report back to the group for 5 mins.

2/10/10

2/10 How the Movement Was Built: 50 Years Since the Civil Rights Sit-ins

How the Movement Was Built:
50 Years Since the Civil Rights Sit-ins


Guest Speaker Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
from Northwestern University in Chicago

WED, Feb 10th 7pm
UW Architecture Hall Room 147
Map here



This February marks the 50th anniversary of the student lunch-counter sit-ins protesting segregation in the south. The act of four college students in Greensboro, NC sparked a wave of student activism which transformed the political landscape, striking a serious blow against racism and inspiring a generation of activists. Where did these protests come from and how were they built? What lessons can activists today learn from this inspiring history? Come hear our guest speaker and join this important discussion!

KEEANGA-YAMAHTTA TAYLOR is a doctoral candidate in the department of African American Studies at Northwestern University. She is a long time LGBT rights activist, most recently active in Join the Impact Chicago and as a central organizer of the group’s mobilization to Washington DC for the National Equality March. Taylor is author to several articles on racism in the United States for publications like CounterPunch, The Black Commentator, the International Socialist Review and others. She is on the editorial board of the International Socialist Review and a member of the International Socialist Organization in Chicago.

Resources to lean more:
Download or stream talks given by Keeanga or having to do with the history of the Civil Rights Movement

Read Articles written by Keeanga:
Black Reconstruction in America 1860–1880
Millions More, A Tale of Two Cities: From DC to Toledo
The Bride Wore Black: The Shooting of Sean Bell and the Resurgence of American Racism
New Orleans since the storm: An American travesty
"Life ain't been no crystal stair" Blacks, Latinos and immigrant civil rights



2/4/10

Why Militant Struggle?



Why Militant Struggle?
In a January 28 UW Daily article, Keep violence out for fairer budget Rebecca Kuensting attacks the International Socialist Organization (a UW registered student organization) for proposing “militant struggle” to oppose budget cuts and tuition increases. She feels that militant struggle must mean violence, or at least unproductive “stubborn displays of anger.” The ISO would like to respond and explain our position on responsible militant organizing.

First of all, is anger justified?
Let’s look at the facts: On the Federal level, the government gave $700 Billion plus to the largest banks and backed them up with trillions in loan guarantees. It spends over $100 Billion yearly to kill and occupy the people of Iraq and Afghanistan. At the same time, millions of people lose their homes, jobs and health care. Students face continual and massive tuition increases. Where is the bailout for workers and the poor?

The State of Washington has the most regressive tax structure in the U.S. The poorest 20% of the population in Washington pays 17% of its income in state taxes, while the richest only pay 3%. A modest increase in taxes on the rich or closing tax loopholes would end the budget shortfall at once. At the UW level, we have many administrators that make $150,000 plus a year. President Emmert makes nearly $1 million a year—and that doesn’t count $300,000+ from corporate boards, or his free mansion etc. At the same time the UW lays off janitors and TAs, cuts back on office staff, increases class sizes, cuts course offerings, raises tuition, and closes and cuts back libraries etc. The priorities of the system from top to bottom favor the rich over the poor, business over labor, top paid administrators over students etc. While ordinary people suffer, the rich get bailed out and laugh all the way to the bank.

If this situation doesn’t make you angry, where is your compassion or sense of justice? The excuse that there is no money for education or social programs because of the recession does not fly! The money is there—it just goes to the wrong people for the wrong purposes.

How do we actually win the change we want to see?
The crux of Rebecca’s argument is at the end, “We need to enter dialogue with Washington decision makers and propose reasonable solutions…”

This would be true if our goals and interests were the same. The problem is that they are not. The corporate heads and the politicians that represent them pursue the goal of the current economic system, maximization of profit—or as they often put it “creating a good business climate.” Their goal is not fundamentally the well being, jobs, health care or education of the majority. Since the goals are different, what is “reasonable” to them is not reasonable to us. A “reasonable dialogue” will achieve their goals, not ours.

The way to make them grant some of our demands, which do cut into their profit margin, is to wage a struggle that interferes with their profit and power. This is what we mean by “militant” struggle—struggle that interrupts business as usual. Militant struggle will often be non-violent. As Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who Rebecca cites, put it:

“If we realize how indispensable is responsible militant organization to our struggle, we will create it as we managed to create underground railroads, protest groups, self-help societies and the churches…”

The need for militant struggle (disruptive, confrontational actions: sit-ins, strikes, and occupations such as the recent ones in California) is not just theoretical. As the great abolitionist and ex-slave Frederick Douglass put it:

“If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will. Find out just what a people will quietly submit to, and you have found the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them.”

The validity of Douglass’ attitude has been shown over and over again in U.S. history. It took a civil war (an extreme form of “militant struggle”) to free the slaves. It took a mass, very disruptive civil rights movement to win legal equality for African Americans. It took militant sit-down strikes and even battles with the police and National Guard for workers to win their right to organize unions, Social Security, Welfare, Unemployment Compensation, the 8 hour day and the weekend.

The fundamental structure of power has not changed since these struggles. We still live by the Golden Rule—those with the gold make the rules. As long as society is divided by class, by wealth and power, it will take militant struggle threatening the interests of the rich to make them give us reforms.

Let’s leave the last word to Howard Zinn, radical historian and activist, author of “A People’s History of the U.S.”, who tragically died on Jan. 27:

“Yes dissent and protest are divisive, but in a good way, because they represent accurately the real divisions in society. The divisions exist—the rich, the poor—whether there is dissent or not, but when there is no dissent, there is no change. The dissent has the possibility … of challenging the reality of that division. Changing the balance of power on behalf of the poor and oppressed.”

If you want to fight the budget cuts and tuition increases, join the UW Student Worker Coalition that meets every Thursday at 6 PM in the Suzzallo Library Café.

If you want to find out more about the International Socialist Organization, come to our weekly meetings at 7 PM Wednesdays in B-14 Social Work, check out www.seattleiso.org for details. And on Feb. 10, we are hosting a public forum that will take up the history of building a mass militant movement that is actually capable of winning change—“50 Years Since the Civil Rights Sit-ins: How the Movement Was Built” with guest speaker Keeanga –Yamahtta Taylor, doctoral candidate in African American Studies from Northwestern University in Chicago. Join the discussion about this inspiring history and what lessons activists today can learn for our current struggles, Wed. Feb 10th at 7pm in Architecture room 147.

2/3/10

2/3 Howard Zinn: You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train

Join us for a Movie Screening
Howard Zinn:
You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train

Wednesday at 7pm, Room B14 in the basement
of the UW School for Social Work (Corner of 15th N.E. and N.E. 41st)  

Howard Zinn died of a heart attack last Wednesday at the age of 87. With his death, we lose a man who did nothing less than rewrite the narrative of the United States. We lose a historian who also made history. Howard was a fixture of countless struggles for justice and equality in the U.S. over many long decades. He was as determined in his 80s as he was many years before as a witness and participant in the great battles of the civil rights movement and the fight against the Vietnam War.

This week we will honor his life with this documentary film that that is not only the story of Zinn's life, but essentially a very inspiring history of American radicalism for the last 87 years!


The people's historian Nation columnist Dave Zirin honors the author of A People's History of the United States and a fighter in many struggles over half a century.

A historian who made history Alan Maass pays tribute to a historian who helped make history.

Who's afraid of the big, bad Zinn? Brian Jones takes on the right-wingers who attacked Howard Zinn's The People Speak