thepeoplesrecord:

Obama victory infuriates Pakistan drone victimsNovember 9, 2012
The roars celebrating the re-election of U.S. President Barack Obama on television give Mohammad Rehman Khan a searing headache, as years of grief and anger come rushing back.
The 28-year-old Pakistani accuses the president of robbing him of his father, three brothers and a nephew, all killed in a U.S. drone aircraft attack a month after Obama first took office.
“The same person who attacked my home has gotten re-elected,” he told Reuters in the capital, Islamabad, where he fled after the attack on his village in South Waziristan, one of several ethnic Pashtun tribal areas on the Afghan border.
“Since yesterday, the pressure on my brain has increased. I remember all of the pain again.”
In his re-election campaign, Obama gave no indication he would halt or alter the drone program, which he embraced in his first term to kill al Qaeda and Taliban militants in Pakistan and Afghanistan without risking American lives.
Drone strikes are highly unpopular among many Pakistanis, who consider them a violation of sovereignty that cause unacceptable civilian casualties.
“Whenever he has a chance, Obama will bite Muslims like a snake. Look at how many people he has killed with drone attacks,” said Haji Abdul Jabar, whose 23-year-old son was killed in such a bombing.
Analysts say anger over the unmanned aircraft may have helped the Taliban gain recruits, complicating efforts to stabilize the unruly border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan. That could also hinder Obama’s plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan in 2014.
Obama authorized nearly 300 drone strikes in Pakistan during his first four years in office, more than six times the number during the administration of George W. Bush, according to the New America Foundation policy institute.
Since 2004, a total of 337 U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan have killed between 1,908 and 3,225 people.
The institute estimates about 15 percent of those killed were non-militants, although that percentage has declined sharply to about 1-2 percent this year. Washington says drone strikes are very accurate and cause minimal civilian deaths.
The Pakistani government says tens of thousands of Pakistanis have been killed in the fight against militants. Many were civilians caught in suicide bombings. Others were killed by the Pakistani army.
“NO DIFFERENCE”
Getting accurate data on casualties and the effects of drones is extremely difficult in the dangerous, remote and often inaccessible tribal areas. The Taliban often seal off the sites of strikes.
While the aerial campaign has weakened al Qaeda, its ally, the Pakistani Taliban, remains a potent force despite a series of Pakistan army offensives against their strongholds in the northwest.
Seen as the biggest security threat to the U.S.-backed Pakistani government, that faction of the Taliban is blamed for many of the suicide bombings across Pakistan, and a number of high profile attacks on military and police facilities.
“We are amazed that Obama has been re-elected. But for us there is no difference between Obama and Romney; both are enemies. And we will keep up our jihad and fight alongside our Afghan brothers to get the Americans out of Afghanistan,” said Pakistan Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan.
On Thursday, a suicide bomber rammed the gates of a military base in Pakistan’s biggest city, Karachi, killing at least one soldier and wounding more than a dozen people.
Pakistanis were largely indifferent in the run-up to Tuesday’s election, expecting little change to the drone attacks regardless of whether Obama or Republican challenger Mitt Romney won.
“Any American, whether Obama or Mitt Romney, is cruel,” Warshameen Jaan Haji, whose neighborhood was struck by a drone last week, told Reuters on the eve of the election. “I lost my wife in the drone attack and my children are injured. Whatever happens, it will be bad for Muslims.”
Pakistani politician Imran Khan, a vocal critic of U.S. drone strikes, said he believed Obama stepped up the attacks in his first term so he wouldn’t look weak on national security.
“I think Obama essentially has an anti-war instinct,” he told Reuters. “Without the worry of being re-elected, he will de-escalate the war, including the use of drones. This is positive.”
But for Mohammad Khan, who is not related to the former cricketer, the damage is already done.
The February 2009 drone attack that destroyed his home left him as the main provider for 13 family members, forcing him to move to Islamabad and work with a real estate company.
“When the Sandy hurricane came, I thought that Allah would wipe away America,” he said. “America just wants to take over the world.”
Source
Stop the illegal drone wars now! Thousands are dying at the hands of the US government every day. 

thepeoplesrecord:

Obama victory infuriates Pakistan drone victims
November 9, 2012

The roars celebrating the re-election of U.S. President Barack Obama on television give Mohammad Rehman Khan a searing headache, as years of grief and anger come rushing back.

The 28-year-old Pakistani accuses the president of robbing him of his father, three brothers and a nephew, all killed in a U.S. drone aircraft attack a month after Obama first took office.

“The same person who attacked my home has gotten re-elected,” he told Reuters in the capital, Islamabad, where he fled after the attack on his village in South Waziristan, one of several ethnic Pashtun tribal areas on the Afghan border.

“Since yesterday, the pressure on my brain has increased. I remember all of the pain again.”

In his re-election campaign, Obama gave no indication he would halt or alter the drone program, which he embraced in his first term to kill al Qaeda and Taliban militants in Pakistan and Afghanistan without risking American lives.

Drone strikes are highly unpopular among many Pakistanis, who consider them a violation of sovereignty that cause unacceptable civilian casualties.

“Whenever he has a chance, Obama will bite Muslims like a snake. Look at how many people he has killed with drone attacks,” said Haji Abdul Jabar, whose 23-year-old son was killed in such a bombing.

Analysts say anger over the unmanned aircraft may have helped the Taliban gain recruits, complicating efforts to stabilize the unruly border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan. That could also hinder Obama’s plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan in 2014.

Obama authorized nearly 300 drone strikes in Pakistan during his first four years in office, more than six times the number during the administration of George W. Bush, according to the New America Foundation policy institute.

Since 2004, a total of 337 U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan have killed between 1,908 and 3,225 people.

The institute estimates about 15 percent of those killed were non-militants, although that percentage has declined sharply to about 1-2 percent this year. Washington says drone strikes are very accurate and cause minimal civilian deaths.

The Pakistani government says tens of thousands of Pakistanis have been killed in the fight against militants. Many were civilians caught in suicide bombings. Others were killed by the Pakistani army.

“NO DIFFERENCE”

Getting accurate data on casualties and the effects of drones is extremely difficult in the dangerous, remote and often inaccessible tribal areas. The Taliban often seal off the sites of strikes.

While the aerial campaign has weakened al Qaeda, its ally, the Pakistani Taliban, remains a potent force despite a series of Pakistan army offensives against their strongholds in the northwest.

Seen as the biggest security threat to the U.S.-backed Pakistani government, that faction of the Taliban is blamed for many of the suicide bombings across Pakistan, and a number of high profile attacks on military and police facilities.

“We are amazed that Obama has been re-elected. But for us there is no difference between Obama and Romney; both are enemies. And we will keep up our jihad and fight alongside our Afghan brothers to get the Americans out of Afghanistan,” said Pakistan Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan.

On Thursday, a suicide bomber rammed the gates of a military base in Pakistan’s biggest city, Karachi, killing at least one soldier and wounding more than a dozen people.

Pakistanis were largely indifferent in the run-up to Tuesday’s election, expecting little change to the drone attacks regardless of whether Obama or Republican challenger Mitt Romney won.

“Any American, whether Obama or Mitt Romney, is cruel,” Warshameen Jaan Haji, whose neighborhood was struck by a drone last week, told Reuters on the eve of the election. “I lost my wife in the drone attack and my children are injured. Whatever happens, it will be bad for Muslims.”

Pakistani politician Imran Khan, a vocal critic of U.S. drone strikes, said he believed Obama stepped up the attacks in his first term so he wouldn’t look weak on national security.

“I think Obama essentially has an anti-war instinct,” he told Reuters. “Without the worry of being re-elected, he will de-escalate the war, including the use of drones. This is positive.”

But for Mohammad Khan, who is not related to the former cricketer, the damage is already done.

The February 2009 drone attack that destroyed his home left him as the main provider for 13 family members, forcing him to move to Islamabad and work with a real estate company.

“When the Sandy hurricane came, I thought that Allah would wipe away America,” he said. “America just wants to take over the world.”

Source

Stop the illegal drone wars now! Thousands are dying at the hands of the US government every day. 

democracylookslike:


Three High School Students Arrested in Sit-In at JPMorgan Chase, Banking Skyscraper Completely Shut Down to Public

Posted by Devon Whitham 450.80k on October 24, 2012





FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 24, 2012
Contact: Devon Whitham; (562) 370-8411; devon@99Rise.org Guido Girgenti; (646) 249-6500; guido@99Rise.org
Students Demand Full Disclosure of All Secret Political Spending in Run Up to Most Expensive Election In History…

democracylookslike:

Three High School Students Arrested in Sit-In at JPMorgan Chase, Banking Skyscraper Completely Shut Down to Public

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 24, 2012

Contact: Devon Whitham; (562) 370-8411; devon@99Rise.org 
Guido Girgenti; (646) 249-6500; guido@99Rise.org

Students Demand Full Disclosure of All Secret Political Spending in Run Up to Most Expensive Election In History…

Re: US ‘Election’

Just thought I’d link to >this< again. I refuse to participate in any rituals that are just bullshit simulacra substituted for real democracy. I thought about voting Barr-Sheehan as a symbolic fuck-you to the establishment, but honestly, that was mostly because I thought the Peace & Freedom Party could potentially become the (very rough) analog of SYRIZA if it got the grassroots organized into coherent enough entities. I think Stein is great, don’t get me wrong, but there’s just no way I’m going to lend even a shred of tacit credibility to the system unless I can clearly be exploiting that system for Marxist-revolutionary purposes. As always I remain open to arguments, i.e. I remain open to changing my mind (as I have many times since January). Anyway, here’s a quote from my personal heroine:

“Thereby the Bolsheviks solved the famous problem of “winning a majority of the people,” which problem has ever weighed on the German Social-Democracy like a nightmare. As bred-in-the-bone disciples of parliamentary cretinism, these German Social-Democrats have sought to apply to revolutions the home-made wisdom of the parliamentary nursery: in order to carry anything, you must first have a majority. The same, they say, applies to a revolution: first let’s become a “majority.” The true dialectic of revolutions, however, stands this wisdom of parliamentary moles on its head: not through a majority, but through revolutionary tactics to a majority – that’s the way the road runs.” 

canadian-communist:

Anti-Drone Protesters Set off on Historical March in Pakistan, Despite Threats 
Anti-drone peace protesters from the United States, Pakistan and around the world set off from Pakistan’s Islamabad on Saturday, at the start of a two day march heading into South Waziristan, a region in Pakistan heavily bombarded with US drones.
The march, organized by former cricket star-turned-politician Imran Khan, formed a long vehicle convoy, including hundreds of Pakistanis and dozens of US activists represented by the anti-war group CODEPINK.
The group plans to march to the edge of Pakistan’s tribal belt on Saturday and then head to the village of Kotkai in South Waziristan to hold a demonstration on Sunday.
According to CODEPINK, rumors continue to circulate that local militants are planning to attack the march, and the US embassy has said that it cannot guarantee that drones will not strike during the march, but the group decided to forge on anyway, expressing the importance of protesting the murder of innocent civilians by US drones in the region.
When asked about the serious security risks, Dianne Budd, a medical doctor from San Francisco, and CODEPINK activists answered, “Of course I’m concerned about our security, but I am even more concerned about the security of the people of Waziristan who face constant threats and terror from the drones flying above their heads twenty-four hours a day.”
Khan has continued to emphasize that he has been assured by South Waziristan tribal leaders that the march would not be attacked.
“A huge welcome is awaiting us,” Khan said before the vehicle caravan began its journey. “The government is making efforts to sabotage the march because it fears the support we will get from the people.”
Khan, however, added that the prospect of entering the tribal area might not be possible, and that the marchers would hold their rally wherever they may have to stop.
“This is a peace march, an effort for peace in Pakistan on our part … We are not going to fight anyone,” Khan said as he launched the motorcade, which had around 150 vehicles, from Islamabad.
Khan has maintained that he expects some 100,000 to join the rally.
Leaving with the caravan of protesters, Shahzad Ahmed, a 19-year-old college student told Associated Press, “This is the convoy of peace and that is why am in it. Imran Khan is leading us to peace and peace is the key to stability in the country.”
“It feels great. I’m hoping that what it will show is that the Pakistani people and American people and even the people in the tribal areas want peace,” said Joe Lombardo, a representative of the U.S. group.
James Ricks, another U.S. activist, said he was going along with the convoy despite the danger. “I am taking this risk because my government is committing international war crimes and we want to stop this,” he said.
“We also feel this march will put significant pressure on the Obama administration to come clean about these drone attacks, to recognize how inhumane and counterproductive they are,” said CODEPINK cofounder Medea Benjamin. “We will continue to find ways to protest these barbaric assassinations until they finally end,” she added.
Source

canadian-communist:

Anti-Drone Protesters Set off on Historical March in Pakistan, Despite Threats

Anti-drone peace protesters from the United States, Pakistan and around the world set off from Pakistan’s Islamabad on Saturday, at the start of a two day march heading into South Waziristan, a region in Pakistan heavily bombarded with US drones.

The march, organized by former cricket star-turned-politician Imran Khan, formed a long vehicle convoy, including hundreds of Pakistanis and dozens of US activists represented by the anti-war group CODEPINK.

The group plans to march to the edge of Pakistan’s tribal belt on Saturday and then head to the village of Kotkai in South Waziristan to hold a demonstration on Sunday.

According to CODEPINK, rumors continue to circulate that local militants are planning to attack the march, and the US embassy has said that it cannot guarantee that drones will not strike during the march, but the group decided to forge on anyway, expressing the importance of protesting the murder of innocent civilians by US drones in the region.

When asked about the serious security risks, Dianne Budd, a medical doctor from San Francisco, and CODEPINK activists answered, “Of course I’m concerned about our security, but I am even more concerned about the security of the people of Waziristan who face constant threats and terror from the drones flying above their heads twenty-four hours a day.”

Khan has continued to emphasize that he has been assured by South Waziristan tribal leaders that the march would not be attacked.

“A huge welcome is awaiting us,” Khan said before the vehicle caravan began its journey. “The government is making efforts to sabotage the march because it fears the support we will get from the people.”

Khan, however, added that the prospect of entering the tribal area might not be possible, and that the marchers would hold their rally wherever they may have to stop.

“This is a peace march, an effort for peace in Pakistan on our part … We are not going to fight anyone,” Khan said as he launched the motorcade, which had around 150 vehicles, from Islamabad.

Khan has maintained that he expects some 100,000 to join the rally.

Leaving with the caravan of protesters, Shahzad Ahmed, a 19-year-old college student told Associated Press, “This is the convoy of peace and that is why am in it. Imran Khan is leading us to peace and peace is the key to stability in the country.”

“It feels great. I’m hoping that what it will show is that the Pakistani people and American people and even the people in the tribal areas want peace,” said Joe Lombardo, a representative of the U.S. group.

James Ricks, another U.S. activist, said he was going along with the convoy despite the danger. “I am taking this risk because my government is committing international war crimes and we want to stop this,” he said.

“We also feel this march will put significant pressure on the Obama administration to come clean about these drone attacks, to recognize how inhumane and counterproductive they are,” said CODEPINK cofounder Medea Benjamin. “We will continue to find ways to protest these barbaric assassinations until they finally end,” she added.

Source


Reprieve’s Founder Clive Stafford Smith has asked Barack Obama for a guarantee that an international protest march through North West Pakistan will not be hit by the CIA’s Predator drones.

This blog started back when I began fully waking up to the horror of Barack Obama&#8217;s systematic campaign of slaughter abroad. That waking up process matured into political radicalization, while at the same time all of these events and actions were symptomatic of a larger personal awakening. The content of this blog has also matured and taken on hues of a more spiritual philosophy I did not initially expect it to take. But now I very soberly dedicate this moment to expressing my full and complete solidarity with these protestors. My whole heart is with you.
In every sense this tumblr is about peace for everyone without exception. 

Reprieve’s Founder Clive Stafford Smith has asked Barack Obama for a guarantee that an international protest march through North West Pakistan will not be hit by the CIA’s Predator drones.

This blog started back when I began fully waking up to the horror of Barack Obama’s systematic campaign of slaughter abroad. That waking up process matured into political radicalization, while at the same time all of these events and actions were symptomatic of a larger personal awakening. The content of this blog has also matured and taken on hues of a more spiritual philosophy I did not initially expect it to take. But now I very soberly dedicate this moment to expressing my full and complete solidarity with these protestors. My whole heart is with you.

In every sense this tumblr is about peace for everyone without exception. 


In Pakistan there are 800,000 people playing Russian Roulette. They do it 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It&#8217;s not a voluntary game. Someone else holding the gun, refusing to tell how many projectiles there are in the chamber, or even who the weapon is currently aimed at.
According to a report published today by Stanford University and New York University, CIA drones are inflicting this terror on the communities of Waziristan, in North-West Pakistan. The report, originally commissioned by Reprieve, warns that the United States&#8217; drone campaign is terrorizing the men, women and children who live in the region night and day. Nobody in the region knows who the drones are targeting or what some CIA informant has to say to place a target on someone. Those living underneath the constant presence of circling Predators are left helpless, with no known means of keeping themselves or their families safe.
The CIA suggests that no innocent people are dying in their drone campaign, a claim that I find beyond improbable - I met at least one innocent youth, the 16-year-old Tariq Aziz, three days before he was killed. Regardless, there are 800,000 innocent victims of this illegal, undeclared drone war, the rest of the Waziristan population.
One local resident described the sound of the drones as a horror washing over the community, leading &#8220;children, grown-up people&#8230; to scream in terror.&#8221; This constant fear, according to the Stanford report, leads to widespread &#8220;psychological trauma among civilian communities.&#8221; Parents, fearful of attracting the attention of the Predators - or, more accurately, the drone operators sitting behind a computer thousands of miles away in Nevada - refuse to allow their children to congregate in groups of more than two or three. &#8220;The children are crying and they don&#8217;t go to school. They fear that their schools will be targeted by drones,&#8221; reported one parent.

More on war crimes

In Pakistan there are 800,000 people playing Russian Roulette. They do it 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It’s not a voluntary game. Someone else holding the gun, refusing to tell how many projectiles there are in the chamber, or even who the weapon is currently aimed at.

According to a report published today by Stanford University and New York University, CIA drones are inflicting this terror on the communities of Waziristan, in North-West Pakistan. The report, originally commissioned by Reprieve, warns that the United States’ drone campaign is terrorizing the men, women and children who live in the region night and day. Nobody in the region knows who the drones are targeting or what some CIA informant has to say to place a target on someone. Those living underneath the constant presence of circling Predators are left helpless, with no known means of keeping themselves or their families safe.

The CIA suggests that no innocent people are dying in their drone campaign, a claim that I find beyond improbable - I met at least one innocent youth, the 16-year-old Tariq Aziz, three days before he was killed. Regardless, there are 800,000 innocent victims of this illegal, undeclared drone war, the rest of the Waziristan population.

One local resident described the sound of the drones as a horror washing over the community, leading “children, grown-up people… to scream in terror.” This constant fear, according to the Stanford report, leads to widespread “psychological trauma among civilian communities.” Parents, fearful of attracting the attention of the Predators - or, more accurately, the drone operators sitting behind a computer thousands of miles away in Nevada - refuse to allow their children to congregate in groups of more than two or three. “The children are crying and they don’t go to school. They fear that their schools will be targeted by drones,” reported one parent.

More on war crimes

On September 11, remember ALL the victims of US imperial policy, especially those Barack Obama is slaughtering, torturing, dismembering, illegally detaining, disfiguring, bombing, orphaning, harassing, widowing, and leaving hopeless. For all you willfully blind Obama supporters, giddy after the DNC’s pretty light show, remember that all of posterity will judge you for your actions in light of the knowledge you had at this time. When your intellectual allergy to facts and information can no longer provide you enough protection against your conscience, how will you look at yourself in the mirror? Your precious sense of convenience will not fucking hold up against the screams of incinerated children

In U.S. electoral politics, for just one example, the richest one-quarter of one percent of Americans make 80 percent of all individual political contributions and corporations outspend labor by a margin of 10-1.

Profit Over People  (via noam-chomsky)

::SIGNAL BOOST::

On August 4th, Roseanne Barr tweeted: “Peace and freedom: we will seize the narrative!”

I STAND IN SOLIDARITY with the Peace & Freedom Party as the Barr/Sheehan ticket continues to raise the people’s consciousness, standing in solid opposition to the corporate-dominated system of endless war, poverty, racism, sexism and mass violence:

The Peace and Freedom Party, founded in 1967, is committed to socialism, democracy, ecology, feminism and racial equality. We represent the working class, those without capital in a capitalist society. We organize toward a world where cooperation replaces competition, a world where all people are well fed, clothed and housed; where all women and men have equal status; where all individuals may freely endeavor to fulfill their own talents and desires; a world of freedom and peace where every community retains its cultural integrity and lives with all others in harmony. We offer this summary of our immediate and long-range goals: 

Socialism 

We support social ownership and democratic management of industry and natural resources. Under capitalism, the proceeds of labor go to the profits of the wealthy few. With socialism, production is planned to meet human needs. 

To us, socialism is workers’ democracy, including the principle that all officials are elected, recallable at any time, and none receives more than a worker’s wage. Socialism can only be brought about when we, the working class, unite and act as a body in our own interests. Our goals cannot be achieved by electoral means alone. We participate in mass organization and direct action in neighborhoods, workplaces, unions and the armed forces everywhere. 

While organizing for the future, we work in the present, challenging the system with the following immediate and transitional goals: 

Labor and Full Employment

We demand a socially useful job at union pay levels or a guaranteed dignified income for everyone.

We support the establishment of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) to alleviate poverty and homelessness.

We call for a 30-hour work week for 40 hours’ pay and abolition of forced overtime.

We demand a legally mandated annual paid vacation of at least 4 weeks.

We demand expansion and enforcement of job health and safety laws.

We call for the restoration of all labor rights previously won by women and their extension to men as well.

We demand paid parental leaves and time off work for childcare.

No prison labor for private profit. Living wage and full union rights for any prison labor.

Defend workers’ rights to organize, form union caucuses, strike, and boycott.

No replacement of striking workers.

Federally-funded public works programs to rebuild the nation’s infrastructure and restore the environment.

International solidarity of workers against international capitalist schemes such as NAFTA and WTO in defense of jobs, wages, working conditions and environmental laws.

International trade agreements must guarantee the protection of workers and democratic rights in all participating countries.

A rank and file socialist-oriented labor movement to mobilize working-class people to assume ownership and control of the economy.

Peace and International Justice 

The drive for greater profits by multi-national corporations which direct U.S. foreign policy is a major cause of war. We stand for peace between nations and the right of all peoples to self-determination. We support an ongoing socialist transformation everywhere. We therefore call for:

The U.S. to renounce nuclear first strike, and take the initiative toward global disarmament by eliminating all of its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.

No U.S. intervention anywhere. End all support and aid to repressive regimes and all military and police training aid everywhere. End efforts to destabilize foreign governments. End U.S.-directed economic warfare against other countries. Abolish the CIA, NSA, AID and other agencies for interference inother countries’ internal affairs. Withdraw all U.S. troops and weapons from all other countries.

Stop all U.S. arms exports and trade.

Dissolve all military pacts.

Convert from military to peaceful production; reallocate the resulting “peace dividend” for social benefit.

Abolish the Selective Service System.

No weapons in space.

Equal Rights and Liberties 

The capitalists use every difference in society, including sex, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation, age, and physical abilities to divide workers in order to depress wages, maintain a surplus labor pool, and prevent working-class unity. We demand equal treatment of all people by employers, businesses and government. We stand for a world free from all forms of oppression… 

I see this + the public attention as a magnificent development in the US, one that I hope is a step in the process that leads to full revolution, including the formation of a revolutionary party that is international in focus and uncompromisingly oriented toward the complete abolition of capitalism.

I do not know much about Barr, but I greatly admire the tireless activism and work of Cindy Sheehan (I think she has a relentlessness that radicals must aspire to in the struggle to see ourselves become active revolutionaries). They have all of my love and support.

I conclude with this:

…only mass, militant struggle is capable of winning reforms. Indeed, the most far-reaching reforms come precisely when the ruling class feels that its control over society and its institutions are most threatened. Second, it is in the collective fight for reforms that ordinary people are radicalized and are infused with class consciousness and a sense of their own power. Thirdly, a mass struggle can, under the right circumstances, pass over into an insurrectionary struggle that challenges for power.

Socialists however, make a distinction between reforms, which they support, and reformism, which they oppose.

Reformism is a political stance that sees the limits of social change as the limits set by the capitalist system itself. Reforms for reformists are ends in themselves.

Historical experience shows that whenever the fight for reforms threatens to “get out of hand,” reformists try to douse it in cold water in order that it remains properly contained within “acceptable” limits—that is, limits acceptable to capitalism. Socialists therefore always wage a struggle against reformism—and to win the working class, in the process of fighting for reforms, to a revolutionary perspective.

cf. here and here & here

A vote for Obama is a vote for the world&#8217;s -most- menacing terrorist. 
Fight the system. Revolution NOW

A vote for Obama is a vote for the world’s -most- menacing terrorist

Fight the system. Revolution NOW

political-linguaphile:

El Zócalo July 8th, 2012. Millions of Mexican students marched from Ángel de la independencia to el Zócalo, protesting the impositions of televisa, PRI, and the fraudulent presidential victory of Enrique Peña Nieto this past July, 1st, 2012.

political-linguaphile:

El Zócalo July 8th, 2012. Millions of Mexican students marched from Ángel de la independencia to el Zócalo, protesting the impositions of televisa, PRI, and the fraudulent presidential victory of Enrique Peña Nieto this past July, 1st, 2012.

thepeoplesrecord:

Thousands of protesters marched through the Mexican capital on Saturday, July 7 against President-elect Enrique Peña Nieto, accusing him of buying votes and paying off TV networks for support.

solidaridad!

thepeoplesrecord:

Thousands of protesters marched through the Mexican capital on Saturday, July 7 against President-elect Enrique Peña Nieto, accusing him of buying votes and paying off TV networks for support.

solidaridad!