Download the PDF. Bessemer workers fight for justice Workers on the move: North Carolina schools; Washington state Amazon; Oregon coffee shops; Which side are you on, Marty Walsh? More: Berta Cáceres lives on; Women’s sports: inequality, solidarity; The Commune vs. the state; No to anti-Asian violence! Editorial: Voting rights resistance. . . .
Continue reading PDF of April 1 issue at Workers.org
Seattle Amazon warehouse workers protest, Nov. 27, 2020 Seattle The rally to “Support the Alabama Amazon Workers” was held here March 26 to boost the homestretch drive for a union by Bessemer, Ala., warehouse workers. There was a national surge of 53 support demonstrations March 20, along with worker strikes . . .
Continue reading Seattle Amazon workers rally for Bessemer, Ala. at Workers.org
A demonstration was held in New York City’s Chinatown March 25 to protest the mass firings of 180 restaurant workers when the Jin Fong restaurant closed. The workers are members of the 318 Restaurant Workers Union. The owners of the restaurant are the Chu family, bankers and landlords in Chinatown . . .
Continue reading New York City: ‘Keep Jin Fong restaurant open!’ at Workers.org
Cleveland, March 28. Hundreds of Clevelanders from the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities, along with multinational allies, rallied in the Asia Town neighborhood March 28. Sponsors of the “Stop Asian hate” rally were the Cleveland chapter of the Organization of Chinese Americans, Ohio Progressive Asian Women’s Leadership, Asian Services . . .
Continue reading Hundreds rally, march against racist violence at Workers.org
Food Not Bombs Solidarity launches campaign against prison profiteers outside Aramark in Philadelphia, March 15. By Cindy Lou Miller “If you want to understand any problem in America, you need to focus on who profits from that problem, not who suffers from that problem.” — Dr. Amos Wilson. (tinyurl.com/utdbphu6) One . . .
Continue reading COVID crisis exposes prison profiteers at Workers.org
De los dos partidos políticos del gran capital en Estados Unidos, los demócratas han sido considerados durante más de medio siglo como los más “liberales”, y los republicanos como los más reaccionarios. Pero cuando se trata de su actitud hacia la China Popular, ambos irradian hostilidad. El gobierno de Biden . . .
Continue reading El juego de la culpa at Workers.org
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