workersworldparty
workersworldparty
Workers World Party
102 posts
☭ Marxist-Leninist Party ☭Since 1959https://linktr.ee/workersworld1959
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workersworldparty · 6 days ago
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workersworldparty · 9 days ago
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Revered Mexican revolutionary Communist activist and artist. Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón; Born 6 July 1907 Coyoacán, Mexico City, United Mexican States; Died 13 July 1954, Coyoacán, Mexico City
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workersworldparty · 13 days ago
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Make Israel Palestine again!
Since the heroic Al-Aqsa Flood took place 21 months ago on Oct. 7, 2023, the Zionist state of Israel — with the military backing of the U.S. — has carried out an unprecedented racist genocidal campaign against the people of Gaza, played out daily in real time on social media. No one — including children — has been spared in this catastrophic war of horrific ethnic cleansing, which has included the mass destruction of all infrastructure — housing, hospitals, schools, electricity, places of worship, water, sewage and much more. 
And then there is the slow, excruciating death by forced starvation of the Gazan population. 
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How Palestine became Israel
No real humanitarian aid, including food, has been allowed into Gaza for months. And when a trickling amount of aid is allowed in, hungry people are used as machine gun targets by the Israeli occupying forces, killing dozens every day under the aegis of the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Some members of the occupying force revealed that they have been ordered to shoot to kill as many hungry Gazans, including children, as possible, according to the Israeli-based July 3 Haaretz publication.
This ongoing phase of genocide since Oct. 7 is enough of a reason to declare that Israel is a terrorist, criminal state. Even the International Criminal Court stated that Israel is guilty of war crimes and that its leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, should be arrested as war criminals wherever they may travel. 
According to the latest figures released by the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza, over 57,000 Gazans have been martyred and over 136,000 injured since Oct. 7. (Resistance News Network, July 6)
Read the full article at workers.org
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workersworldparty · 13 days ago
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Budget bill is murderous ‘Robin Hood’ in reverse.
Workers and other critics of the plan called it the “big ugly” bill, because they consider it the largest legislative theft of wealth from the working class and transfer to the richest top 1% in U.S. history. Trump infamously dubbed it the “Big, Beautiful Bill,” and the commander-in-thief signed his administration’s 900+ page tax and budget policy document into law on July 4.
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Originally called the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,” the first draft passed in the U.S. House on May 22. The Senate made amendments and passed it by Vice President JD Vance’s tiebreaking vote. It went back to the House floor for a second vote, where the finalized version passed in the early hours of July 3 by 218 to 214.
Trump had given Congress a July 4 deadline, so he could sign it at the White House as Republican Congress members stood behind him with U.S. flags and fireworks in the background making it a jingoistic spectacle.
Read the full article at workers.org
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workersworldparty · 13 days ago
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Budget bill exposes both capitalist parties
It was a rare occasion. The headlines of the corporate media provided a succinct analysis of the U.S. mammoth budget bill that became law July 4.
First, you had to hate Trump and all Republicans for pushing the bill through. The Qatar-owned Al Jazeera summed it up: “Donald Trump’s bill will raise top-tier wealth, erode health care for poor people and raise the deficit by $3 trillion.”
We at Workers World could hardly have put it better. The bill will cut taxes mainly for those with incomes more than $460,000 a year, diminish Medicaid and SNAP Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly food stamps), close hospitals, increase the climate catastrophe, hike funding for ICE repression of migrants and increase weapons purchased for policing the world.
But if the MAGA criminals inspired anger, the Democrats competed by inspiring contempt. True, all Democrats in the House and Senate voted against the bill. But a page 1, New York Times headline on July 4 summed up how the Democratic leaders reacted: “Democrats See a Chance to Win Voters Back.” The continuation headline was even more deadly: “Expecting Backlash to Bill, Democrats See an Avenue Back to Power in Congress.” 
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SEIU members protest budget at U.S. Capitol on June 23, 2025.
The article was true to the headline. The Democratic Party leaders’ main reaction — and they spoke about it without shame — was to express something close to joy at the opportunity to blame the Trump administration for the horrors the poorest people will be experiencing as the budget bill’s provisions become law. 
To make it clear what is planned, Republicans voted almost unanimously for the greatest transfer of wealth in history from the many poorest to the few richest U.S. residents. 
The Democrats — except for a symbolic filibuster speech in the Senate by Cory Booker and a similar eight-and-a-half-hour delay in the House by Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries — did hardly anything to stop the bill from being passed. 
Don’t think there was nothing they could have done. Remember all the Republicans did to sabotage the Affordable Care Act, both while it was being passed and to undermine its effectiveness. The Democrats could have mounted a real Senate filibuster with more than one participant. They could have mobilized the entire collection of House Democrats to ask questions of Jeffries and keep him going beyond the weekend.
Having delayed the passage of the bill and depriving #47 of his big 4th of July victory speech, the Democrats could have started mobilizing those millions of people hurt by the bill to protest. 
Instead, the Democrats were saying: The people will suffer, and then they’ll vote for us. This is the stance of a party that, although it knew five million people took the streets for the June 14 No Kings protests, cannot even put up a decent show of opposition in Congress. When polls show that 70% of the people opposed the bill, the Democrats wouldn’t go all out to stop it.
The lesson of all this is that while it’s a good idea to hate the Republicans and Trump, it’s a bad idea to look to the Democratic Party for the solution.
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workersworldparty · 18 days ago
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workersworldparty · 26 days ago
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June 28th - Stonewall still means fight back
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1969 Stonewall uprising against police repression: ‘All hell broke loose!’
Originally published June 26, 2006, this column was part of Leslie Feinberg’s series on the connections between LGBTQ2S and socialist history. The 120-part “Lavender & Red,” which appeared in Workers World from 2004 to 2008, is available for free download at workers.org/book/lavender-red.
No recording device captured the roar or ferocity of the crowd outside the Stonewall bar, enraged by the police raid and the physical brutality and sexual and gender humiliation that was interwoven into the state repression.
However, the militancy and determination of those who fought back that night — June 28, 1969 — is recalled in the words of the top cop who led the raid, Deputy Inspector Seymour Pine: “I had been in combat situations, [but] there was never any time that I felt more scared than then.”
Pine had written the U.S. Army’s manual for hand-to-hand combat in World War II and was in a mine explosion at the Battle of the Bulge.
By many accounts, the Black, Latinx and white youth, many of them homeless and/or gender-defiant — including Sylvia Rivera, Marsha P. Johnson, Zazu Nova and Jackie Hormona — fought fiercely that night.
And small wonder. These were the bodies and lives most often scarred by police terror and torture. While everyone fought bravely, historian David Carter wrote that “the preponderance of witnesses, who are both the most credible and who witnessed significant amounts of the action, agree that the most marginal groups of the gay community fought the hardest — and therefore risked the most — on this and the following nights.” (“Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution”)
Many in the [multigender,] multinational, multigenerational crowd of hundreds amassed outside the bar began to hurl their pocket change, shouting, “Here’s your payoff!” — referring to the common practice of payoffs between bar owners, many times tied to organized crime, and the police.
The police showed signs of panic as they were hit with a hail of flying projectiles. They retreated toward the Stonewall Inn, the club they had just emptied out in the raid. One cop near the doorway was reportedly hit in the eye with a thrown object and was visibly bloodied. The police, wrote Village Voice journalist Howard Smith, who was at the scene, “are all suddenly furious.” Three of the cops rushed the crowd to try to back them away.
But the crowd would not be pushed back. The streets outside the club belonged to the people, and they could feel it. They could see the cops were scared, too. One participant, Tom, observed, “A few plainclothesmen were surveying the crowd, obviously panicked.” Ronnie Di Brienza stressed in an article in the East Village Other: “During the height of the action, you could see the fear and disbelief on the faces of the pigs.”
A beer can struck Deputy Inspector Charles Smythe in the head. Smythe, who had also been in World War II combat, later said, “I was still shaking an hour later. Believe me, I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Pine reached out from the doorway of the bar and reportedly grabbed the first person he could lay his hands on, folk singer Dave Van Ronk, and pulled him inside the bar. Van Ronk later explained that the cops accused him of throwing the beer can. They held him down, punched him hard and kicked him. They left him handcuffed on the floor of the bar.
Pine came outside to evaluate the relationship of forces. He told the other cops: “Let’s get inside. Lock ourselves inside; it’s safer.” Voice reporter Howard Smith went inside the Stonewall with the 10 members of the police raiding squad. They barricaded the doors with overturned tables.
And then, Pine remembered, “All hell broke loose.”
Smith reported, “The exit left no cops on the street, and almost by signal the crowd erupted into cobblestone and bottle heaving.”
Voice journalist Lucian Truscott said he had climbed atop a garbage can to watch the action, and he almost toppled when two men yanked it out from under him and heaved it at the bar’s west window.
Participant Morty Manford emphasized: “And it escalated. A few more rocks went, and then somebody from inside the bar opened the door and stuck a gun out. Their arm was reaching out with a gun, telling people to stay back, and then withdrew the gun, closed the door and went back inside.”
Yet even the threat of being shot did not stop the crowd. Historian David Carter summed up descriptions by participants of what happened next: “A general assault now began on the Stonewall Inn using anything and everything the crowd inside could get its hands on: garbage, garbage cans, pieces of glass, fire, bricks, cobblestones and an improvised battering ram were all used to attack the police holed-up inside the Stonewall Inn.”
Someone, or more than one person, reportedly cut the electric and phone lines, so the police were inside without the ability to call for backup.
According to accounts compiled by historian Martin Duberman: “The cops then found a fire hose, wedged it into a crack in the door and directed the spray out at the crowd, thinking that would certainly scatter it. But the stream was weak, and the crowd howled derisively, while inside the cops starting slipping on the wet floor.”
In his later Voice coverage, stinking of bigotry, Smith wrote that from the inside of the Stonewall, “The sound filtering in [didn’t] suggest dancing f—s any more; it sound[ed] like a powerful rage bent on vendetta.”
Smith said he heard “the shattering of windows, followed by what we imagine to be bricks pounding on the door, voices yelling. The floor shudders at each blow.”
The crowd outside roared “Gay power!” and “We want freedom!”
Pine described: “Now they really in earnest started to come after us. We covered everything, [but] whatever we could find to put up against the windows and the doors didn’t last very long. They began to batter this down and made some holes.” The window — which the owners had reinforced with plywood and two-by-fours — was smashed, and the barricaded door was swung open.
Smith peeked out a hole in the splintered plywood, and he thought it seemed that those massed outside were thousands-strong.
In anticipation of the angry crowd rushing in, the cops drew their weapons; one cop picked up a nearby baseball bat. One cop reportedly vowed, “We’ll shoot the first m—f—r that comes through the door.”
But it was an arm that came through the shards of the plywood covering the window. Then the scent of lighter fluid, the fiery tip of a lit match, and flames ignited inside the bar.
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workersworldparty · 28 days ago
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Status of women in Iran
This post by Susan Abulhawa is for everyone trying to use the mantra of saving Muslim women, the tired bullshit the west has used to actually destroy the lives of Muslim women for decades. Below are some statistics specific to Iran.
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Literacy among women 
Prior to the Islamic Revolution in 1979, the literacy rate for women under the western-backed Shah of Iran was 42%. In less than a decade of the revolution, that number climbed to 98%.
STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) graduates
In Iran, 70% of STEM graduates are women — far exceeding the U.S. level, which stands at 53%.
Professional doctorate programs
About 58% of students in Iranian professional doctorate programs are women. In contrast, that number in the U.S. is 56%.
Femicide (homicide of females)
In Iran, the rate of intentional murder of women is 0.59 per 100,000. In the U.S., that number is nearly four times higher, at 2.1 per 100,000 women (with stark racial disparities: Black and Native American women combined: 4.3 to 4.8 per 100,000 vs white women: 1.5 per 100,000.)
Participation in government
In Iran, women hold 27% of ministerial-level posts with 1,121 female judges and 25% of managerial roles in government. (These numbers are from the early 2000s and are surely much higher now.)
Maternity leave and benefits
In Iran, the Law on Family and Youth Support mandates nine months PAID maternity leave for public and private sectors — plus an optional four months remote work during pregnancy — job security protections for extended unpaid leave and two weeks paternity leave. In the U.S., the only federal guarantee is 12 weeks of unpaid maternity leave. 
Furthermore, the following benefits are available to Iranian women, but not U.S. women:
Free maternity care and subsidized infertility treatments
Nationwide free maternal and delivery services, including for uninsured women. Infertility treatments are heavily subsidized at 90%.
Labor protections
Pregnant women are reassigned from hazardous jobs without pay loss; nursing breaks are offered until a child is two years old; workplace childcare provisions are required.
Family support policies under demographic law 
This includes housing assistance, loans for married couples, job prioritization for parents, childcare subsidies and retirement benefits for mothers with multiple children.
Gender affirming treatment
Iran legalized gender-affirming surgery (SRS) in the 1980s! The government subsidizes surgeries and hormone therapy for trans individuals who are at least 18 years old and have completed an approval system that requires psychological counseling and hormone therapy for one to three years, and professional filtering panels that evaluate gender dysphoria vs homosexuality, including family interviews, DNA tests and potential coercion. In the U.S., SRS is a for-profit industry with no subsidies.
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workersworldparty · 28 days ago
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A declining empire
This summer has exploded — not with fireworks, but with a fury fueled by decades of exploitation, settler violence and systemic oppression. Across the U.S., tens of thousands have taken to the streets in what can only be described as a mass, growing rebellion. From Latine, Black and immigrant communities to students, workers and longtime movement veterans, the people are making one thing clear: we’ve had enough.
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At the heart of this uprising? SOLIDARITY. With the Palestinian people, facing a genocidal assault. With the Lebanese people under constant siege. With Iranian comrades, targeted by U.S. and Israeli aggression. And with each other — from Black neighborhoods to immigrant communities under occupation by ICE and police.
June 14 alone saw coast-to-coast demonstrations — from Los Angeles to Atlanta, Chicago to the Bronx — where protesters carried not just slogans but history. This kind of history lives in the blood of oppressed people, in the memory of every family torn apart by a fascist state’s boot.
Protesters declared an end to the gestapo tactics of ICE and the violent kidnappings of our immigrant comrades — people snatched from homes, churches, jobs, even graduation ceremonies. Their only “crime?” Existing in a white supremacist, capitalist empire built on colonization and enforced through fear.
This system — the same capitalist order that props up genocide abroad — is now turning inward, panicking as its own foundation rots. The detainment centers are modern-day concentration camps. Conditions are brutal. Sexual violence is rampant. Women sit in their own excrement. Palestinian children are starved. And these atrocities are not accidental — they are engineered, normalized and brushed aside by liberal politicians who feign outrage, then quietly fund ICE behind closed doors.
Let’s be real: the media has chosen its side. Major outlets run breathless coverage about “violent protesters” while ignoring the violence of settler colonialism, imperial war and daily state repression. They ask why demonstrators carry the flags of their homelands — Palestine, Mexico, Cuba, Puerto Rico and more — but never ask why this country demands erasure to begin with.
Democrats — the so-called opposition — continue to urge “civility,” telling organizers to wave U.S. flags so as not to provoke the right. Meanwhile, many of these same politicians sign off on ICE raids, military budgets and police expansion. They speak the language of compromise, while our communities are being crushed under the boot of bipartisan fascism.
None of this is new. The Black Panther Party warned us back in 1968. BPP co-founder Bobby Seale made it plain: “Concentration camps in Tule Lake, in Arizona and Oklahoma are now being rejuvenated … for us.” (Bobby Seale speech, YouTube) The state prepared for this. They knew resistance would come. They thought they could stop it before it started.
But this time, they were wrong.
Read the whole article at workers.org
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workersworldparty · 28 days ago
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Some elements to understand the conflict in West Asia
A Venezuelan international relations expert, Rodríguez Gelfenstein was previously Director of the International Relations of the Presidency of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, his country’s ambassador to Nicaragua and an advisor for international politics for TeleSUR. He sent us this article June 18, a few days before the U.S. bombed Iran. Translation: John Catalinotto. 
Once again, circumstances compel us to take a broad view of international conflicts. I find it reductionist to limit recent events in Western Asia to the idea of a bilateral conflict between Israel and Iran. What is happening has implications that go far beyond a simple confrontation between two countries, however brutal the military conflict may be. 
In reality, what is happening is the expression of a new chapter in the conflict caused by the antagonistic contradictions of an international system marked by a declining pole of power and another pole emerging as an alternative.
The current international system emerged from the pain of World War II and the deception perpetrated by some of the victors about the causes and consequences that led to the war. The triad of world control — consisting of the financial instruments (IMF and World Bank) created at Bretton Woods in 1944, the politicians emanating from the creation of the United Nations and its agencies in 1945 and the military structured around NATO in 1949 — have been the tools that the West has used for the last 80 years to maintain its dominance and hegemony over the planet.
However, by the 1960s, this system was already being eroded by the U.S.’s external deficit. The U.S. imported more than it exported, leading it to finance the difference through the creation of inorganic money [not backed by material reserves, such as gold]. This “forced” Washington to suspend the convertibility of the dollar into gold (which emanated from the 1944 Bretton Woods agreement) in order to establish the dollar as the international currency. 
Paradoxically, it was at this point that a crisis began to emerge in the prevailing capitalist system, which even today, 65 years later, has not been overcome. This laid the foundations for the construction of a new global political and economic order.
This had no immediate chance of developing fully, because the alternative that should have emerged from the Soviet Union and socialism faced its own economic problems, beyond the apparent political stability it displayed. But the approval of the reform and opening-up policy in China in 1978 began to change everything. It was at this moment that Beijing took off towards its transformation into a great world power that could counterbalance the United States, the West and capitalism.
In 1970, more than 90% of world trade was conducted in dollars; today that figure is less than 47%. The most incredible thing is that the United States itself is promoting this change by imposing sanctions on around 3 billion people (around 40% of the world’s population) and preventing them from using the dollar to carry out trade. 
Although the West emerged triumphant from the Cold War and the Soviet Union disappeared, the West did not know how to “manage” its victory. The institutions they created (first and foremost the U.N.) are being torpedoed, violated and rejected by themselves, with the United States withdrawing from many of them. All of this is leading to a process of political and social self-punishment that will result in the destruction of the United States and the West as the center of world power.
Read the full article at workers.org
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workersworldparty · 30 days ago
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The US and Israel are the aggressors here. They told Iran that they wanted to negotiate, so Iran entered negotiations... then Israel bombed Iran anyway. Now the US is joining in. That is disgraceful behavior.
U.S. launches wider war on Iran! U.S., Israel hands off!
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Workers World Party denounces the despicable U.S. bombing of Iran which took place earlier today. Three nuclear sites were struck by the U.S. following attacks by Israel, which are in their second week. However, The Cradle stated that: “Iranian state media reports that all enriched uranium had been removed from nuclear facilities, including Fordow, in advance, and there is no risk of radiation leakage due to U.S./Israeli attacks.”
We remain in unequivocal solidarity with the people of Iran, as well as the people of Palestine, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and all of West Asia who have been facing aggression from the U.S. and Israel. We call on all forces across the country and world to mobilize against this disastrous war, which can only end in devastation. 
Prior to the U.S. attack a call was issued for global “No to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran” actions.
List your local action here.
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workersworldparty · 30 days ago
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U.S. launches wider war on Iran! U.S., Israel hands off!
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Workers World Party denounces the despicable U.S. bombing of Iran which took place earlier today. Three nuclear sites were struck by the U.S. following attacks by Israel, which are in their second week. However, The Cradle stated that: “Iranian state media reports that all enriched uranium had been removed from nuclear facilities, including Fordow, in advance, and there is no risk of radiation leakage due to U.S./Israeli attacks.”
We remain in unequivocal solidarity with the people of Iran, as well as the people of Palestine, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and all of West Asia who have been facing aggression from the U.S. and Israel. We call on all forces across the country and world to mobilize against this disastrous war, which can only end in devastation. 
Prior to the U.S. attack a call was issued for global “No to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran” actions.
List your local action here.
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workersworldparty · 1 month ago
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Webinar registration: https://bit.ly/needchina
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workersworldparty · 1 month ago
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Zoom link:  https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81551916867?pwd=9BxzLXWK2aiAtpUlIxGb1SML2EK6mI.1
Legacy of Shaka Sankofa lives: https://www.workers.org/2020/06/49747/
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workersworldparty · 1 month ago
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View listed actions or add your own actions here!
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workersworldparty · 1 month ago
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The legacy of Juneteenth
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The following article, by Monica Moorehead was originally posted at workers.org on June 20, 2022.
Juneteenth was implemented as a federal holiday for public sector workers in 2021.  Juneteenth is now a holiday for some workers in the private sector. For instance, the United Auto Workers won Juneteenth as a paid holiday in its contracts with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis after striking the auto companies in 2023.
This year marks the second anniversary of Juneteenth as an official federal holiday since it was signed into law June 17, 2021, by President Joe Biden.
The day is a recognition that on June 19, 1865, enslaved Black people were liberated in Galveston, Texas — two and a half years following the enactment of the Emancipation Proclamation made by President Abraham Lincoln. Many Black people were either kidnapped to countries like Cuba or Brazil where slavery still existed until the late 1880s, or even murdered by Texas enslavers.
Many Black people view Juneteenth as the “second day of independence” following the U.S. “independence” from Britain in 1776. Even before Juneteenth — also known as “Freedom Day” — was made a legal holiday, Black people celebrated this anniversary of their emancipation all over the U.S. with marches, rallies, along with an array of social and cultural events. But the bourgeois media paid little to no attention to these celebrations.
The federal holiday will no doubt help to raise consciousness of the significance of the day for millions of people who have very limited knowledge of the heinous crimes of slavery and the heroic struggle to overturn it — with rebellions led by enslaved people like Denmark Vesey, Gabriel Prosser and Nat Turner and white allies like John Brown.
It took a bloody Civil War, where the Confederacy was defeated on the battleground in 1865, to eventually end chattel slavery, granting legal freedom but also opening the path to semi-slavery for Black people. These are important historic and political events that in one degree or another are absent from the mainstream history books.
What led to this federal holiday — similar to the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday enacted in 1986 — was the present-day mass struggle against racist police brutality and other forms of white supremacy under the banner of Black Lives Matter. This struggle reached its peak following the public police lynching of George Floyd in May 2020, when millions of people took to the streets that summer with the main demand: “Defund the police!”
Of course, the liberation of Black people did not begin nor will it end with Juneteenth. The suppression of Black Reconstruction in the aftermath of the Civil War meant the goal of granting Black people full bourgeois democratic rights was abruptly cut short.
The white-supremacist counterrevolution laid the basis for today’s reality of Black people in disproportionate numbers being relegated to a second-class status, with some of the worst housing, education, health care and nutrition in the country, along with being subjected to mass incarceration and police terror.
And now with Juneteenth being elevated on a national level, the ruling class and its media mouthpieces will attempt to co-opt this holiday by finding ways to make profits and by putting their own spin on “looking back at the past,” as a diversion from granting full equality.
Instead, Juneteenth should be a clarion call for reparations for the descendants of once-enslaved people, whose unpaid labor was superexploited by white plantation owners. The inspiration of Juneteenth can inject a heavy dose of anti-racist solidarity to help move the classwide struggle forward by workers of all nationalities, ages and genders, uniting to organize for a liveable wage and more humane working conditions.
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workersworldparty · 1 month ago
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June 28 International Day of Action: “No War With Iran”
June 28, International Day Of Action Against War On Palestine, Iran And West Asia
This action is called by Global Resistance  For Peace and Justice.  As one of 30 founding members of the coalition, Workers World Party fully supports this call.
To List your action,  Click Here
To View listed actions:  Click Here
To Endorse, Click Here
We call on all peoples of conscience throughout the world to take to the streets on June 28, 2025 and march against the expansion of the Zionist-US aggression from Palestine through Lebanon, Syria and Yemen to Iran. For 20 months the people of Palestine have been steadfast against the collective west’s genocide of their people and theft of their land. In the face of a firm resistance, the US and the Zionists had no choice but to expand the war into Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and now Iran.
Iran has supported the regional resistance in Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen and Syria for decades and is under attack because of its support for regional liberation from the clutches of US imperialist domination and Zionist colonialism. Last week, the US-sponsored Zionist entity launched a sneak attack on Iran, and to date, over 200 Iranians have been killed. We reject all acts of aggression against the nations in West Asia.
Iran is a sovereign nation and it has a right to defend itself as it is currently doing.  This act of aggression and terrorist attack constitutes a declaration of war against a sovereign nation, in blatant violation of Article 2.4 of the UN Charter, which prohibits the use of force and the threat to use force against the territorial integrity of any state, and triggers Iran’s inherent right to self defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter.
Please join us as we call for collective liberation from the grips of US imperialism and Zionist colonialism.
UNAC will be listing your actions so that people can see where to go in your area,  and what is going on.  You can sign up here to list your action.  This is a great way to show your solidarity.  We welcome “No War with Iran” actions from all interested groups between now and the end of the month. UNAC, Workers World Party, and The Global Resistance for Peace and Justice would like to see a big turnout since this is a very dangerous situation.
To List your action, Click Here.
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