Getting the Picture: Corporate Crime Scene in West, Texas

Late update: In a new series of articles, the Austin Statesman is revealing how federal and Texas state officials are attempting to hide and cover up what happened in West and who is responsible. The first and second articles in this series have been published so far.

This article by Anne Lewis was published on The Rag Blog.Photo from Getty Images via The Bay Area's News Station: http://www.flickr.com/photos/smi23le/

This is about the fertilizer explosion in West, Texas, on the night of April 17, 2013. It’s also about Patrick Bresnan who found himself in West on the night of the explosion and his photographs in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Governor Perry called it a crime scene; the progressive community says, yes, corporate crime. Neither the paranoid fantasy of Governor Perry who is stuck in an ideology that says that companies can do no wrong, nor the abstract politics of progressives blaming the state’s lack of regulation — “We shouldn’t produce fertilizer anyway because it’s not good for the planet,” I overheard in a coffee shop — seem to get at any real truth.

I ask myself the question: how one can be kind and dignified in the face of such sorrow and loss? I try to collect myself and cannot help but think about the Central Appalachian coalfields.

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Arundhati Roy: Jungles of Resistance

Arundhati Roy (Photo by jeanbaptisteparis)

Renowned Indian author Arundhati Roy says her country’s government has declared war on its own people. Her outspokenness earned her an invitation to spend time with Maoist rebels. In a conversation with Making Contact, Arundhati Roy takes us into the jungles of India, as she reads excerpts from her new book Walking with the Comrades.

Listen to the interview here…

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May Day 2013: Solidarity and struggle around the world

Here are a few photos from the rallies, marches and celebrations of the workers, immigrants, and oppressed people around the world who took to the streets on May Day.

Women march in Dhaka, Bangladesh. A garment factory collapse near Dhaka last month killed more than 400 workers, mostly young women.

Protesters in New York marched for immigrant rights and against deportations. The Obama administration has deported more than 1.5 million people.

In Sri Lanka, workers march with posters of Marx, Engels and Lenin.

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May 1: Still a world to win!

May 1 was first observed as the original Labor Day more than 125 years ago. Since then it has always been tied to the struggles of the multinational working class in the United States and to internationalist solidarity between all the working people of the world.

The rallies and actions for labor and for immigrant rights on May 1 this year continue that tradition. Let this day be another step towards unity and organization for the wretched of the earth!

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“History had me glued to my seat…”

This article was originally posted at Fire on the Mountain.

Ms. Claudette Colvin speaks at Newark’s Abyssinian Baptist Church.

Ms. Claudette Colvin had more than 200 assembled activists stuck totheir seats as she shared the story of her 1955 arrest for refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama city bus. As a fifteen-year-old youngster who’d heard Black History Week presentations in her high school, she felt the spirit of Harriet Tubman “like a hand on my shoulder forcing me to remain seated,” when the driver instructed her and three other students to move so a young white woman could have a seat alone on two benches.

After her arrest, Miss Colvin became active in the Montgomery NAACP Youth Council organized by Mrs. Rosa Parks, so she had multiple sources of inspiration, though she was taken off the bus and busted some nine months before Mrs. Parks herself was arrested. Continue reading

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Creating a Viable Black Left: Sixteen Lessons Learned in Building the Black Radical Congress

This important and long-awaited summation was originally published on BlackCommentator.com.

“No one said it would be easy.”

Preface: “…Where is the BRC when we need it?” We have heard this question over the years from Black activists from one side of the USA to another, but it was during the April 26-29, 2012 conference to commemorate the life and work of the late Dr. Manning Marable that it really hit home. Manning had been one of the “original five”, that is, the five individuals who started working in late 1995/early 1996 to gather the forces that would eventually form the Black Radical Congress. Along with Marable were Dr. Leith Mullings, Dr. Barbara Ransby, Dr. Abdul Alkalimat, and Bill Fletcher, Jr.

What was striking during the April 2012 conference were the number of people who spoke favorably about the BRC and about the importance of drawing out the lessons—positive and negative—from the experience of building that organization. People also wanted to better understand the reasons for its decline and ultimate end.

In any historical experience those who have participated, not to mention those who subsequently observed, will draw various conclusions. This is just as true with the experience of the BRC. The purpose of this essay is to advance a discussion rather than to answer all of the questions that emerge from a study of the BRC. It is certainly our hope that someone will ultimately write a book about the BRC, but for now, and particularly in light of the many struggles in which so many younger Black activists (and other progressive activists) are engaged, it is important to identify lessons learned to help us all think through what steps need to be taken to build a cohesive, viable Black Left.

The following are sixteen lessons. They are not necessarily the most important and this list is not aimed at being all-inclusive. These are, however, lessons that have stuck with us and which we are interested in sharing, hopefully in order to encourage deeper examination and reflection. We wish to quickly add that these lessons are not all, necessarily, lessons that we alone drew. Many activists who were associated with the BRC reflected on the experience over the years and there were many informal exchanges about the lessons learned. There have also been a number of articles written on the experience of the BRC. We have identified several lessons, some from various discussions and others that were simply our own, that we believe are worth considering. We realize that those who were involved in the organization had varying roles and interpretations of this experience. We all have different pieces of the elephant even if was the same elephant.

We look forward to your feedback.

- Bill Fletcher, Jr. and Jamala Rogers

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Ecosocialist Conference NYC April 20

Friends and comrades are encouraged to participate in this exciting day-long conference on April 20. You can find more information, including a full schedule, on their website at http://ecologicalsocialists.com/

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Building the Justice for Alan Blueford campaign: An interview with Jack Bryson

To bring more light to the Justice for Alan Blueford campaign, Tim Thomas interviewed one of the key organizers of the campaign, Jack Bryson.

Jack Bryson

Tim: Alright Jack, we’ll start with a couple of questions man. Tell us how you got involved in the whole police violence issue.

Jack: I got involved cause on January 1, 2009 there was a young man named Oscar Grant who was murdered by the BART police in Oakland, California at the Fruitvale BART station. Amongst the young men who were with Oscar Grant, two of them were my sons Nigel and Jackie, and the rest of those young men are like family to me — all the young men that were on the platform. There’s something dear to me. They’re like my sons.

Tim: What is the Alan Blueford case all about and how did you get involved in that?

Jack: One day I got a phone call saying there was a young man murdered on May 6 by the police in Oakland. I was kinda worn out from the Oscar Grant situation, from all the organizing. I was just driving around and something told me to go out there. So when I got there, as I was walking down the street, John Burris came up to me – the great civil rights attorney in the Bay Area – and he said that he was trying to call me all day, he said I want you to see this family. I want you to start organizing for this family.

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Justice for Alan Blueford! Hundreds Protest Police Murder in Oakland

Two hundred activists recently gathered outside the office of Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley to show their support for the Justice for Alan Blueford Coalition (JAB), and condemn O’Malley’s failure to bring charges against Officer Miguel Masso, who shot and killed the unarmed teenager. Alan, who was waiting with two friends  to get picked by some lady friends, started running when Masso and his partner rolled up in an unmarked police vehicle. DA O’Malley has refused to charge Masso with any violation of Oakland Police Department (OPD) policy, even though Masso had turned off his lapel camera, which was automatically a violation of OPD procedure. Alan Blueford’s murder was nothing but another tragic result of racial profiling in Oakland.

Officer Masso first said that Alan had a gun and had shot him (Masso) in the foot, but later Masso admitted that he had shot himself. No alcohol or other illegal substance was found in Alan’s system. Later,  But O’Malley still refused to bring any charges against Masso.  So in addition to challenging her, protesters also demanded that the California Attorney General, Kamala Harris, come in and charge Masso with the murder of Alan Blueford.

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Remembering Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Thatcher with Augusto Pinochet

When revolutionaries, comrades, or heroes of the people die, we often remember them with a cry of ¡Presente! — a heartfelt promise that their spirit is still present with us and that we will carry on their work.

This week we learned of the death of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. In her time in office she broke the great British miner’s strike, supported the Chilean butcher Pinochet and South African apartheid, provoked a needless war with Argentina, tried to crush the Irish national liberation struggle at all costs, and generally devastated lives and communities across Britain, Ireland, Argentina and elsewhere. So we started to wonder: is there such a thing as an anti-Presente?

Some thought that poetry would be the most fitting way to commemorate this event:

A Haiku for Margaret Thatcher (she’s doesn’t deserve more)

Thatcher’s passed, amen
Steel and stone in a helmet
Alternatives abound

But some thought we should go more festive:

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