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U.S.: Reinventing Trade Unionism for the 21st Century William H. Hinton
(19192004) Can the Working Class Change the
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April 2006, Volume 57 Number 11 REMEMBERING HARRY MAGDOFFA roundtable discussion of Harry Magdoff's work will take place on Saturday, May 6th, 5-7pm at the Brecht Forum, 451 West Street in Manhattan's Greenwich Village. A memorial service for Harry Magdoff will be held Sunday, May 7th, 4pm at the New York Society for Ethical Culture, 2 West 64th Street. For directions, visit http://www.nysec.org/contact-us/ As we write this in late February, threats of a U.S. military intervention in Iran are intensifying in response to Washingtons claims that Iran is attempting to develop nuclear weapons capabilities. The International Atomic Energy Agency has voted to take the issue of what it views as Irans noncompliance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Safeguards Agreement to the United Nations Security Council in early March. Meanwhile, the Bush administration has repeatedly stated that a military strike against Iran by the United States is now on the table. Washingtons waving of its big stick coupled with its feeding of misinformation to a U.S. media system that has not hesitated to pass these distortions on to the general public have already had their effect. A Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll taken in January indicated that 57% of Americans favor military intervention if Irans Islamic government pursues a program that could enable it to build nuclear arms (Los Angeles Times, January 27, 2006). A few days later President Bush declared in his State of the Union address that the Iranian government is defying the world with its nuclear ambitions, and the nations of the world must not permit the Iranian regime to gain nuclear weapons. America will continue to rally the world to confront these threats.| more |. REVIEW
OF THE MONTH Agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) have enhanced transnational capitalist power and profits at the cost of growing economic instability and deteriorating working and living conditions. Despite this reality, neoliberal claims that liberalization, deregulation, and privatization produce unrivaled benefits have been repeated so often that many working people accept them as unchallengeable truths. Thus, business and political leaders in the United States and other developed capitalist countries routinely defend their efforts to expand the WTO and secure new agreements like the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) as necessary to ensure a brighter future for the worlds people, especially those living in poverty. The Lawyers Typist: Variations on a
Theme by Paul Samuelson Nora, who was Improving her Mind with a night school course in introductory economics, settled down to do her homework. That weeks assignment was the chapter on international trade in the textbook for the course (which the instructor had assured the class was The Very Best, being the seventh edition of Paul Samuelsons Economics: An Introductory Analysis. Poetry: Buyer Beware If you subscribe to a magazine about
dogs, Rebel in the
House: Vito Marcantonio was the most consequential radical politician in the United States in the twentieth century. Elected to Congress from New Yorks ethnically Italian and Puerto Rican East Harlem slums, Marcantonio, in his time, held office longer than any other third-party radical, serving seven terms from 1934 to 1950. Colorful and controversial, Marcantonio captured national prominence as a powerful orator and brilliant parliamentarian. Often allied with the U.S. Communist Party (CP), he was an advocate of civil rights, civil liberties, labor unions, and Puerto Rican independence. He supported social security and unemployment legislation for what later was called a living wage standard. And he annually introduced anti-lynching and antipoll tax bills a decade before it became respectable. He also opposed the House Un-American Activities Committee, redbaiting, and antisemitism, and fought for the rights of the foreign born. He was a bold outspoken opponent of U.S. imperialism. BOOK
REVIEWS A review of 1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus by Charles C. Mann. NEW
THIS WEEK! A review of Letters from Young Activists: Today's Rebels Speak Out by Dan Berger, Chesa Boudin, and Kenyon Farrow, eds., with preface by Bernardine Dohrn. Darwins Materialism A review of Darwin: Discovering the Tree of Life by Niles Eldredge. Index to Volume 57 March 2006, Volume 57, Number
10 On January 1923 the African session of the Polycentric World Social Forum held separately in 2006 in Africa, Asia, and the Americastook place in Bamako, Mali. On January 1819 on the eve of the World Social Forum in Mali a group of around eighty antiglobalization political activists and intellectuals, including Marxist economists and organizers, met to conduct sessions independent of the World Social Forum itself, under the auspices of the Third World Forum, the World Forum for Alternatives, and the Forum for Another Mali. Samir Amin, director of the Third World Forum and author of the Review of the Month in this issue of MR was the leading organizer of the pre-WSF gathering, which he referred to as a Peoples Bandung Conference in honor of the recent fiftieth anniversary of the conference of nonaligned nations in Bandung, Indonesia in 1955.| more |. REVIEW
OF THE MONTH The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were adopted by acclamation in September 2000 by a resolution of the United Nations General Assembly called "United Nations Millennium Declaration." This procedural innovation, called "consensus," stands in stark contrast to UN tradition, which always required that texts of this sort be carefully prepared and discussed at great length in committees. This simply reflects a change in the international balance of power. The United States and its European and Japanese allies are now able to exert hegemony over a domesticated UN. In fact, Ted Gordon, well-known consultant for the CIA, drafted the millennium goals! Why the United
States Promotes Indias Great-Power Ambitions In March 2005, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced Washingtons decision to make India a global power. No doubt U.S. arms manufacturers can now look forward to large contracts from India; but this course is dictated by broader strategic considerations. The combination of technological change and globalization is bringing about fundamental changes in who does what work where, when, and how. This has implications which are profoundly contradictory for the nature of jobs, for the people who carry them out, and hence for the nature of cities. Privatizing
Education Education is an essential part of modern economic progress, yet in recent decades, the right wing has consistently been unfriendly to public education. For example, the Walton family's donation of $20 billion to help conservative causes was weighted toward the privatization of public education. The right wing expresses a number of objections to public education. Some religious conservatives protest that public education collides with their most cherished theological beliefs. The most public examples are sex education and the gap between the scientific explanation of evolution and a fundamentalist religious belief about God's creation of the world. THE
2005 DANIEL SINGER MILLENNIUM PRIZE ESSAY Every socialist has surely indulged in speculation about an ideal society from time to time. The realities of our own society certainly encourage such flights of fancy. But they should not be considered entirely fanciful: without imaginative thinking, it is quite impossible to see how the world might be changed for the better. Yet without any practical grounding, such exercises cannot take us any nearer to the "realistic utopia" that should be our goal. |
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