[Reader Comments: Student Debt Forgiveness; Jan. 06, Racism and
Fascism; New York Primary; Union Wave Hits Chipotle; On the Departed
GDR; Chile Votes on Sunday; Cartoons; more....]
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TIDBITS – SEPT. 01, 2022 – READER COMMENTS: STUDENT DEBT
FORGIVENESS; JAN. 06, RACISM AND FASCISM; NEW YORK PRIMARY; UNION WAVE
HITS CHIPOTLE; ON THE DEPARTED GDR; CHILE VOTES ON SUNDAY; CARTOONS;
MORE…
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September 1, 2022
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_ Reader Comments: Student Debt Forgiveness; Jan. 06, Racism and
Fascism; New York Primary; Union Wave Hits Chipotle; On the Departed
GDR; Chile Votes on Sunday; Cartoons; more.... _
Sept. 01, 2022 - Reader Comments and Cartoons, xxxxxx
Some Forgiveness -- cartoon by Joe Heller
Student Debt -- Claytoonz cartoon
Re: Not the Win We Wanted, But a Win Nonetheless (Robert Supansic)
Student Loans Explained -- meme
Re: The March Towards Us Fascism Began With the Corporate Hijacking of
Democracy (John Woodford)
Re: At the Jan. 6 Hearings, Race Isn’t Discussed Much. Still, It’s
a Central Issue (George Fish)
Re: New York Progressives Splinter, and Dan Goldman Is Headed to
Congress (Sonia Cobbins)
Re: A Chipotle Restaurant in Michigan Becomes the First in the Chain
To Unionize (Edward A. Sadlowski; Lazaro Jose Castillo Sr.; Joe
Sanders)
Tuition is too damn high. -- cartoon by Drew Sheneman
Re: Inside the Drive To Bring ‘Cultural Workers’ Into the Labor
Movement (Marilyn Albert)
Re: My Seventy Years and the Departed GDR (Claire O'Connor; Paul
Leavin; Dan Morgan)
Re: Russia-Ukraine: Five Lessons From the 19th-Century Crimean War
(Sam Friedman)
Re: An Archaeology of Personhood and Abortion (Arlene Halfon)
Chile looks to the Future (Dan Morgan)
SOME FORGIVENESS -- CARTOON BY JOE HELLER
Joe Heller
August 25, 2022
STUDENT DEBT -- CLAYTOONZ CARTOON
Clay Jones / Claytoonz
August 25, 2022
Sarasota News Leader
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RE: NOT THE WIN WE WANTED, BUT A WIN NONETHELESS
Political cynics often say, “People have short memories.” This
is not generally true. More often, people simply lose their
perspective. To restore perspective on the accomplishments of the
Biden Administration, one must go back to 1980 and Reagan’s claim
that, “Government is the problem.” For the next 40 years,
Republicans and conservative Democrats worked hard to prove him right.
Nothing got fixed and peoples’ expectations of government fell
progressively lower. Now comes Biden with his whole range of
achievements, each carefully watered-down to meet low expectations:
infrastructure, tax reform, gun control, climate change, student debt.
This is, we are told, the greatest advance in governmental action
since Franklin Roosevelt. Perspective: when they claim to have
lifted half of all children out of poverty, we must ask them, “And
what about the other half?”
Robert Supansic
STUDENT LOANS EXPLAINED -- MEME
The Other 98%
Facebook post [[link removed]]
RE: THE MARCH TOWARDS US FASCISM BEGAN WITH THE CORPORATE HIJACKING OF
DEMOCRACY
Fascism takes root from and grows by the military accumulation of
capital.
As our country's big money elements increasingly rely on this mode of
profiteering, all of the ideological and cultural attributes of
fascism take root and seek to flourish and adapt to our country's
particular socioeconomic environment.
The main fact to realize and get across to people is that fascism does
not arise from airy ideas floating around in people's minds. It arises
from the interests of the most reactionary elements of monopoly
capitalists and financiers and spreads from there.
John Woodford
RE: AT THE JAN. 6 HEARINGS, RACE ISN’T DISCUSSED MUCH. STILL, IT’S
A CENTRAL ISSUE
No, it has nothing to do w/ social class, or lack of education, or a
panicky petty-bourgeoisie (remember, most of the insurrectionists on
Jan. 6 were small business owners or white-collar professionals,
decidedly NOT blue-collar workers!), or paranoid fears of loss of
'white dominance,' when it doesn't exist in the first place! As was
said in the first George Bush Presidential campaign, "It's the
economy, stupid." Well, it's CLASS, not RACE, stupid! & don't
overlook, more & more "marginalized" women & POCs are joining the
upper realms of corporate control, management, those whose who's
alleged "white dominance" gives them the power to lord it
over--workers!)
As a blue-collar worker in a grocery store, despite having a college
degree (which turned out to be essentially useless in the Indiana job
market, where I live), I essentially have ZERO "white power," "white
privilege." And yes, I've had, and have, black and female managers,
and there's essentially NO difference between a "marginalized"
manager, and a manager with "white privilege." I feel clearly the
CLASS distinction, but feel zero "privileged' racial status!
George Fish
RE: NEW YORK PROGRESSIVES SPLINTER, AND DAN GOLDMAN IS HEADED TO
CONGRESS
The NY Times will always pick finance and real estate. They will
almost always pick a rich white man over a young progressive woman of
color.They are still stuck in the days described in the witty and
telling book "The Girls in the Balcony". That said, why can't
progressives be a bit more strategic? If only one had thrown support
to Niou, then it would have been a win.
The Girls in the Balcony: Women, Men, and the New York Times
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by Nan Robertson
Sonia Cobbins
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
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RE: A CHIPOTLE RESTAURANT IN MICHIGAN BECOMES THE FIRST IN THE CHAIN
TO UNIONIZE
(posting on xxxxxx Labor
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Buy Union, Shop Union, Use Union Services!
Edward A. Sadlowski
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
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What’s happening in this country with unions is great
Lazaro Jose Castillo Sr.
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Unions are poised to do great things. So far, it looks real good.
Young people are not going to take it anymore.
Joe Sanders
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
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TUITION IS TOO DAMN HIGH. -- CARTOON BY DREW SHENEMAN
Drew Sheneman
August 25, 2022
New Jersey Star-Ledger
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RE: INSIDE THE DRIVE TO BRING ‘CULTURAL WORKERS’ INTO THE LABOR
MOVEMENT
(posting on xxxxxx Labor
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It is good to know that AFSCME is tackling the organization of
cultural workers in a big way. However, AFSCME is not the only union
which has organized these workers. UAW Local 2110 in New York
represents museum workers, continuing an effort started in the early
1970s when my mother, Margie Albert, organized the workers at New
York's Museum of Modern Art into District 65, which later affiliated
with the United Auto Workers, which represents those workers today.
Marilyn Albert
RE: MY SEVENTY YEARS AND THE DEPARTED GDR
Brilliant! Extremely well written. As is evident from his skill at
presenting controversial and complex issues. Thanks. A must read for
everyone.
Claire O'Connor
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I read this article with anticipation, and ended in disappointment. I
appreciate the difficulties under which the GDR was founded, and the
forces arrayed against its success. But Mr. Grossman writes that
“new generations” should learn from the “successes” of the GDR
(which he explains in detail) and not only from its “blunders, nasty
habits and limitations.” But unless I missed them, he neither
lists nor explains any “blunders or nasty habits” that those
making policy in the GDR committed or suffered from; either in the
Government or the Party.
I don’t know what “new generations” can learn from Mr.
Grossman’s history.
Paul Leavin
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In the summer of 1966, I had the chance to work on a state farm near
Dresden in East Germany, the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The
country was still quite poor, recovering from the second world war.
The East of Germany had much less industry than the West, and the
destruction in the war had been much greater. For example, the whole
centre of Dresden had been flattened in an horrific fire-storm caused
by British and US bombers, when the Red Army was close to liberating
it. The bombing did not help the Soviets but meant they inherited a
destroyed city.
Then the USSR justly took a good deal of the factory machinery that
did survive as reparations. Plus, of course, after years of Nazi
anti-communism many of the skilled professionals and technicians
preferred to ‘go west’ rather than stay in the ‘Soviet zone’.
A huge re-training programme was needed in the GDR, including
replacing 87% of the teachers. The West also received the capital
investment of the Marshall Plan, to develop capitalism and prevent any
move to socialism.
The economy really took off in the 1970s, but in 1966 there were still
many horses on farms, and not many modern tractors. The cows were
still milked by hand in makeshift stalls out in the pastures in summer
– that was the biggest difference from what I had known in England.
This was possible because a technical secondary school was attached to
the farm, so there were plenty of students available – they worked
on the farm one week in three, if my memory is correct.
Work went on much as on any farm, producing wheat, rye and milk as
part of a national plan – but there was one event which was an
eye-opener for me.
Green maize was to be harvested for silage, which is like making
sauerkraut. The green material has to be cut, chopped, blown into
trailers and stacked in a heap. Because of the lack of infrastructure,
the heap was just made in a field. The maize had to be compacted, to
exclude the air. Therefore it was important to finish the harvest as
quickly as possible, which meant working round the clock for a couple
of days. So, a meeting was necessary.
One evening the whole team assembled: the farm manager and brigade
leaders, the union rep, all the tractor drivers and representatives of
the students. For work in ‘unsocial hours’, and for a special
harvest, there were bonuses on offer. Work teams for 12-hour shifts
were organised. I did not understand all the details but the
discussion went smoothly, until one young tractor driver said
‘No’. He would not work a night shift. As far as I could
understand, he was newly married and would not work even one night.
The brigade leader tried to persuade him. His colleagues tried to
persuade him. Everyone tried to persuade him, using arguments about
joint effort, collective work and so no. To no avail. At length, and
the discussion lasted some time, he still refused. There it ended.
Were any threats made? Did he risk getting the sack? Nothing like that
at all (there was no unemployment in the GDR but losing his job on
that farm would have meant an upheaval for his family of course).
This was eye-opening to me. In this ‘totalitarian’ state a farm
worker could refuse to work unsocial hours above his normal work
hours, even for a couple of nights, and keep his job. Even though his
fellow workers were annoyed with him, it was accepted. The contrast
with the situation in ‘free’ England was total. A farm worker who
tried to exert his rights in anything like the same way would not last
a week. The boss’s word is law and you are ‘down the road’ if
you don’t like it. (2) When I returned to the same farm in 1971
there were no working horses and much better machinery, including
several good Zetor tractors from the Czech Republic. 5,000 of those
were sold to Chile under very favourable terms to help Salvador
Allende’s agrarian reform, as part of the 15,00 from other socialist
countries, but that’s another story.
Good silage is produced by anaerobic fermentation, where sugars are
converted to lactic acid and the silage has an attractive smell. If
air gets in, butyric acid can be produced, you get an unpleasant smell
and the cows do not like it.
Dan Morgan
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
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RE: RUSSIA-UKRAINE: FIVE LESSONS FROM THE 19TH-CENTURY CRIMEAN WAR
reply to Tidbits content - August 25
SB Loveless seems to think that the Nazi invasion of the USSR during
World War II was only fought by Russians. This is clearly untrue.
People from all over the USSR fought back, and I believe that
Ukrainian deaths surpassed those of Russians, and were in the
millions.
Phetrus Xavhad is correct about US imperialism's slaughters, but seems
not to understand that there are many neonazis in Russia, supported by
Putin, and that the neonazis in Ukraine are a minor force. I have
worked with both Ukrainian and Russian public health workers and
researchers for many years and have talked with friends in both places
about these issues.
Sam Friedman
RE: AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF PERSONHOOD AND ABORTION
Regardless of any social, cultural, religious, or other supernatural
beliefs regarding "who is a person", no other human being in our
society is forced to provide their body for the benefit of any living
being.
No-one is forced to provide organs after they die or their blood while
alive. Nobody, not even a parent is forced to donate bone marrow,
kidneys or livers.
We kill innocent people in other countries because our leaders don't
like their leaders. We don't provide health care, food, housing or
other necessities to keep people alive even though no-one would be
forced to donate their bodies to keep these people alive.
That whole issue is just plain hypocritical hatred of women.
Arlene Halfon
CHILE LOOKS TO THE FUTURE
On Sunday, 4th September, Chileans go to the polls to ratify the draft
New Constitution. It is a forward-looking progressive text, based on
social equality and a vision of sustainable science-based development.
There is the duty to protect ecosystems and fight climate change. Full
rights for women and sexual ‘dissidents’. It will do away with
constitutional privileges for private property, and other barriers to
equitable progress.
With less than a week to go until the referendum to approve Chile’s
New Constitution (NC), the battle is bitter. Big business and the
Establishment, whose power is threatened by the NC, are using all
their tools. All sorts of lies and distortions are created and pushed
on TV news programs. Lots of money has been spent on YouTube videos,
Facebook, Instagram and Tik Tok.
For four weeks now, we have had two 15-minute slots a day on TV with
half for the ‘Approve’ option and half for ‘Reject’. The vote
to have a new constitution was so massive – 78% - that those against
this proposal pretend they are for a new one – but ‘better’. The
right wing who rejected reform are practically invisible. The only
public faces for ‘reject’ are of the ‘centre-left’ which is
divided. Many Christian Democrat Senators for example, past and
present, are fiercely for ‘reject’ but the party’s delegate
conference voted by 63% to approve the draft.
In this region we see a lot of people on the Internet just saying
"Reject!" with no arguments, just prejudice. But the New Constitution
(NC) is selling like hot cakes, and there are long queues in Santiago
to get the free copies. The lies have been answered and the only real
fears have been dealt with by the political agreement now to clarify
and limit some of the text's articles.
The text promises many basic rights, such as healthcare, education,
housing (not even mentioned in the present constitution). Decent
pensions and social security system are promised.There will be freedom
from social discrimination, and gender parity and rights for nature
and animals. The Senate, which has been a ‘counterbalance’ in
other words a block on radical change, is replaced by a Regional
Assembly with limited powers. Regions and even municipalities will
have autonomy. There will be separate indigenous judicial systems.
Many provisions, like those, will have to be defined by laws after the
constitution has been adopted.
The right wing offensive has been most effective in criticizing some
of those rather vague formulations, but has preferred to use lies and
distortions to instill fear. Their most powerful weapon, not openly
expressed, is racism. The first article defines the future Chilean
state thus:
“Chile is a social and law-based democratic State. It is
plurinational, intercultural, regional and ecological.
“Plurinational” – for the first time, Chile’s national
minorities will be recognised, and this is anathema to the
nationalists here, who have a whole history of denial of their
existence. The genocidal war to dominate the Mapuche people, for
example, from about 1860 to 1880, is called “pacification” and
their very existence was then erased from official history. Where I
live, Chilean and European colonists were installed next to Mapuche
reservations (called ‘reductions’) and inter-marriage plus
religious conversion has greatly diminished indigenous culture. But it
lives and us grows in many places still.
So the message used over and over again is that the draft
“divides” us. A coded message against recognition of the Mapuche
and other minorities (Aymara, Diaguita, Rapa Nui and several others).
The other strength of the ‘reject’ forces is plain social
conservatism, largely based on reactionary religious trends, both
Catholic and Evangelical. Against the right to abortion, any
alternative to traditional marriage and family structure, and rights
for homosexuals. An extreme distortion is to say that protecting
sexual dissidents from discrimination means protecting pedophiles.
Chile has a beautiful national anthem but it was misused by the
civilian-military dictatorship. So on the daily TV spots this week, a
silly statement by one of the authors of the draft, that ‘the
national anthem is divisive’ gave the ‘reject’ editors the
chance to show a very diverse range of musicians playing it. A real
own goal.
Despite this, gatherings to support ‘Approve’ have been massive.
In the small and quite rural municipality here, with 56,000 voters, we
have had two motorcades through the town, with over 40 and over 80
vehicles, causing a big impact. I think we will win, with about 55% to
Approve this promising new constitution.
Dan Morgan
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