Peter Espeut | Swapping one slave master for the next … – Jamaica Gleaner

This week is sandwiched between two celebrations of freedom: freedom of individual Jamaicans from chattel slavery (August 1) and freedom of the Jamaican State from colonial domination (August 6). If we want to take an optimistic view, we can say that both remain a work in progress, for we have not really achieved either.

If we want to be pessimistic (and maybe more realistic), we can say that all that has happened over the last two centuries is that we have swapped one master for another.

Jamaican slave owners gave up their valuable property under duress. Only children under six years old (who could not work) were emancipated immediately in 1834. The slave owners demanded six years more of free work from field slaves and four more years from house slaves (eventually reduced to four years for both) before they were to become fully free; and after decades of stolen forced labour, they also demanded to be financially compensated for the loss of their human property, as well as future labour.

The former slave owners still controlled the Jamaican colonial state through the Jamaica House of Assembly, and they did all they could to force their former slaves to work for low wages, ensuring they never became more than second-class citizens. Without the right to vote or to stand for election, and without reparations in terms of land and education, Jamaica became the land of their oppression under wage slavery.

The 1865 Morant Bay Rebellion and the 1938 riots and labour unrest had a lot in common with Sam Sharpe's 1831-1832 slave revolt, because Emancipation did not bring the freedom that had been expected. Even today - 183 years after Emancipation and 179 years after full freedom - and 73 years after being allowed to vote - the majority of the descendants of the enslaved still suffer high levels of illiteracy, educational underachievement, unemployment and underemployment. Somehow, the celebration of Emancipation by descendants of Jamaica's former slaves seems a little hollow.

I would have expected Jamaicans to celebrate our personal freedom, and to eschew anything resembling what Bob Marley (following Sidney Moxsy and Marcus Garvey) called "mental slavery". So many of us, though, misuse our freedom by choosing slavery to fad and fashion: like skin bleaching, tattooing, and body piercing, to name a few. Is using one's freedom to follow the crowd really freedom? Or is it a new kind of slavery?

We have misused our freedom - hard won by Sam Sharpe, Wilberforce and Knibb. Instead of choosing education and ethnic pride as the road to self-respect, many have chosen to ape their white oppressors, and to mutilate their bodies. Emancipation is very much a work in progress.

Jamaica could not prosper under colonialism. British policy demanded that nothing should be manufactured in Jamaica that could provide employment for British labour at home; if they could have shipped freshly cut sugar cane to Britain for processing by British labour, it would have been illegal to locally manufacture brown sugar and rum. Even today, we do not refine white sugar locally. Some countries that cannot grow cocoa are famous for their chocolate confections; and we, with some of the best cocoa in the world, can't make a success of manufacturing chocolates.

The spirit of colonialism is still with us! And this is because at Independence in 1962, all we did was change white colonial masters for brown local ones.

In 1962, the bad, bad British bequeathed us a national debt of zero pounds sterling, and in 50 years of independence, a series of PNP and JLP governments borrowed billions to bequeath to this generation of Jamaicans one of the highest debt-to-GDP ratios in the world.

Political Independence promised liberation from colonial oppression. It has led to garrison communities, political corruption, and the deepening of Jamaica's oppressive colour-class divisions through an apartheid education system.

'We're out to build a New Jamaica' might have been the slogan, but those who jockeyed to put themselves in charge of the Jamaica Independence Project have not delivered. We have ended up much the same, under a different rubric. The political freedoms gained through political Independence have been misused to enrich the political class and their cronies. Independence is very much still a work in progress.

We may celebrate freedom this week and next, but there are many of us who will mute our celebrations until we are a little farther along.

-Peter Espeut is a sociologist and rural development scientist. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

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Peter Espeut | Swapping one slave master for the next ... - Jamaica Gleaner

The Left is Democratic Otherwise it isn’t the Left – Havana Times

By Pedro Campos

A better world is possible, if it is Socialist. Foto: dakarparada.blogspot.com

HAVANA TIMES Recent events in Venezuela have served to expose this State-Stalinist Left which, entrenched in anti-US imperialism and its alleged attack on the revolutionary process in Venezuela, have turned their back on the struggle of the masses to uphold the democracy that was built under Chavezs government.

At the head of this movement, we find the Castro dictatorship, its followers and this whole group of communists and socialists who continue to, essentially, believe that socialism was built from the State in Latin America and Europe. A state led by an erudite elite who knows what needs to be done, starting off with nationalizing large, medium and small-sized companies, controlling the market, creating a new man and destroying the bourgeois state to build a new socialist one.

There have been two more significant features of these Communists ideas:

1- The concentration of property and State control of the economy, at the expense of free, private and associated modes of production and capitalist models.

2- The substitution of a democracy which they call bourgeois by another so-called dictatorship which is apparently proletarian, the only class within capitalism who has never held power and then has been kept under the chains of wage slavery, but for the State, in its name. Making a perfect base for the authoritarian system.

What does this have to do with collectivization, freedom and emanicipation, Socialisms great catchphrases?

This Left who sit in meeting rooms and drink capuccino coffees have never understood a single word of Marxism. They have never understood that for Socialism to exist, first you need a social-economic base where free, private or associates modes of production need to dominate, like Classic theorists have pointed at time and time again, which can be never replaced by paid work, nor can it ever be built from the top nor from outside the nation.

This Left has never read Marxs Capital, where it explains how in the previous capitalist system which was defined by wage labor as its mode of production, other forms of production are born, grow and develop, on the back of free work, especially associated work, which can be seen in cooperatives. How societies make up the first form of breaking down capitalism with their actions is exposed within this book.

These communists dont understand the fact that it is only via the greater democratization and freedoms which are possible within capitalism that a new post-capitalist, socialist, or whatever you want to call it society, can be born. And thats because full democracy and freedoms, especially the free market, are what allow the unobstructed progress of free and associated work, a phenomenon which has seen progress in high and medium developed capitalist countries.

In previous writings, I showed that the concept of the Left was intimately linked to the birth of democracy, of power being given to the people and their representatives, in the struggle against the King, during the French Revolution and then with what has always been linked to power and the wellbeing of the masses. Therefore, it is wrong to think that there can be Left-wing dictatorships. As a matter of principle, etymologically-speaking, all dictatorships are Right-wing.

Its simple: a government like Maduros can neither be considered Left-wing nor democratic, which is trying to ignore a large popular election in favor of a National Assembly, because its controlled by the opposition, which manipulates the election of a Supreme Court; which strangles the private economy financially-speaking; which puts power in the hands of a few bureaucrats; which violates the democratic Constitution voted in during Chavezs government; which is refusing to call for a referendum which is recognized by this Constitution and to hold elections for mayors and governors and, on top of this, wants to revoke this democratic constitution and impose another constitution in true Castro-Stalin style by fire and blood, violently repressing those who defend it.

Today, Venezuela is the showcase which defines who is and isnt the Left. Go there, put your credentials under it and you will be able to identify yourself. Good Luck.

The Left is always democratic or it isnt the Left.

Notes.

1-1- Capital, Volume 3 (Chapter XXVII The Role of Credit in Capitalist Production)

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The Left is Democratic Otherwise it isn't the Left - Havana Times

This War on Cars Video Will Defend America From Transit-Riding Infidels – Streetsblog Denver (blog)

Hey, whatever you've gotta tell yourself to get through the day. Via PragerU/YouTube

If youve ever wondered what the anti-Streetfilm would look like, wonder no more.

Prager University ([we are] not a university and we do not offer degrees)is a non-profit founded by conservative talk show host Dennis Prager, whose mission is to spread Americanism.

PragerU, as its known, releases five-minute videos on a range of topics, featuring titles like, If There Is No God, Murder Isnt Wrong, There Is No Gender Wage Gap, Income Inequality Is Good, Just Say Merry Christmas, Was the Civil War About Slavery?, Build the Wall, and Where Are the Moderate Muslims?

Its latest video, released this week, is about another fundamental American value:driving big, gas-guzzling cars and not using other modes of transportation, becausefreedom.

The video is presented by Lauren Fix, a New York-based car coach who also hosts an automotive segment on Newsmax, the right-wing outlet.

In case youre not aware that cars are private vehicles used for point-to-point transportation, Fix lays it out for you. They allow us to go wherever we want, whenever we want, with whomever we want, she says. When you get behind the wheel, you are in control. You are free.

Got that, car drivers? You have now been informed that you are free. Yes, free to get stuck in traffic, or circle endlessly for a parking space, or make large monthly payments until youre on the verge of bankruptcy. This is pure American freedom.

Fix also has a message for everyone who cant afford a car, or is physically unable to drive, or just prefers to live life without being tethered to a big, expensive metal box whose value rapidly depreciates. The message is: Wake up! Dont you realize youve been brainwashed by regulators?

The very reason people love cars personal freedom is also why regulators cant stand them. Government at all levels craves control. And when it comes to your car, they want you off the road. So do the environmentalists, with whom theyve made common cause, she says.Urban planners are adding bike lanes, reducing parking spots, and pouring billions into more public transportation. And theyre putting up subliminal ads everywhere that say Obey.

Fix says nothing about the ubiquitous government mandates that force developers to spend billions on parking, orthe massive public subsidies that sustain auto sprawl, or the pervasive regulatory apparatus thats supposed to protect us from the danger of cars, but still cant prevent 40,000 traffic deaths in the U.S. each year.

Apparently, only a government bureaucrat would harp on this government excess, or something. Theres been a concerted push by government bureaucrats and environmentalists to transform car ownership from a source a pride to a source of guilt, she says.Americas car culture isnt dead yet. So as long as Americans want to live in the land of the free, Americas car culture will never die.

God bless you, Veronica Moss I mean, Lauren Fix and PragerU. And God bless Americanism.

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This War on Cars Video Will Defend America From Transit-Riding Infidels - Streetsblog Denver (blog)

Q&A: Molly Harriss Olson on the importance of a Modern Slavery Act – Devex

Molly Harriss Olson, Fairtrade Australia and New Zealands chief executive officer. Photo by: Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand

MELBOURNE, Australia A total of 196 submissions have been received for an Australiangovernment inquiry for the implementation of a Modern Slavery Act, including from corporations, nonprofits, government staffers, researchers and others with an interest in ensuring Australian businesses act ethically to ensure there is no slavery in their supply chains.

On Tuesday in Melbourne, the inquiry began its public hearing component, withFairtrade Australia and New ZealandandOxfamamong the organizations requested to speak to the committee members and provide additional information on their submission.

Among those in attendance was Molly Harriss Olson, chief executive officer of Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand, who shared with Devex her predictions for what Australian businesses and the community should expect from the inquiry recommendations to be released later this year.

Here is the interview, edited for length and clarity.

What was the line of questioning you received from the committee?

We were asked a broad set of questions about why the Modern Slavery Act is important, what is the situation today, what is international best practice and the essential things that we can improve upon from the recently released United Kingdom act.

There were also a lot of questions asked about its impact on business.

We emphasized that the act needs to be strong to support the business leaders already out there, already doing great work, and pulling the leg of laggards to help them to comply with a higher standard and make sure human rights and dignity are provided to all people.

Slavery is a continuum of abuses, and starts with the weakest and most vulnerable. For businesses, slavery is always going to be cheaper than paying a modern, living wage and the prevailing approach has been dont ask, dont tell to maintain plausible deniability.

Australian businesses readying for action to combat modern slavery

For Australian businesses, addressing modern slavery within supply chains is no longer a question of why it should be done, but how. The message, however, is not filtering through to the top level of governments. A new Australian government inquiry into establishing a Modern Slavery Act in Australia is seeking business comment and it is an opportunity business groups are urging their members to be vocal on.

But there are a lot of leading companies that deeply understand the problems and challenges that exist in supply chains, and believe that because of the pressure and the way global commerce systems work, there is enormous competition and pressure.

Fairtade has a unique perspective to offer on the value of this kind of transparency in eliminating things like modern slavery.

For more than 30 years we have worked with businesses to make their supply chain transparent and understand it from farmer through to the company and the marketplace. We have visibility across supply chains that I dont believe many other global certification systems would have. And this is important knowledge to share in creating a Modern Slavery Act.

When you discuss the importance of Australia taking a strong leadership approach to slavery through a strong act, what are your key points to focus on?

I think it is important to point out that, in Australia, we are in a region where 56 per cent of the global 21 million people in slave labor conditions are based. Asia is the biggest place and problem for slave labor, which has been identified by the International Labour Organization.

Australian leadership, and Australian business leadership, is absolutely pivotal.

And we also have a situation where leadership companies are doing the right thing and they are forced to play against non-leadership and poorly run companies who are benefitting from poor practices that are ultimately causing the issues of slavery we are seeing in the world.

What we hope this will do, is in a straightforward and simple way, provide clarity and requirements for a level playing field.

Its really important the system have clear reporting to monitor companies and create a public register for community organizations to access and know which companies are doing the right thing, reporting in a transparent manner, and which are getting on top of these issues.

And it is extremely important to have an ombudsman or commissioner who is well resourced to respond to problems or issues, raise awareness and conduct monitoring and evaluation for the act to make a powerful impact.

We have more slavery in the world than we had hundreds of years ago when we were trying to abolish it.

From the business perspective, it is just good business practice to know what is going on in your supply chain. In the 50s, there was concern about safety being too costly for business. The same happened with quality and environmental protection. It turns out that companies which adhere to these kinds of standards are more profitable in the end because they understand their businesses better.

Were in an interesting place in Australia, and I hope this will build on the experience of the U.K. From them, we are already seeing what is working well and what Australia can improve on.

Do you or Fairtrade have concerns of political barriers, or politicians, that could create problems in implementing a Modern Slavery Act?

I think it would be extremely hard to stand up publicly and say Im for slavery. So far, we havent seen anyone coming out overtly in that way.

The concern is that it is very easy to water down something like this, and to make it ineffectual. There would be enormous pressure on anyone trying to reduce impact and effectiveness. Making it voluntary, making it unenforceable, not being clear on reporting requirements, not monitoring reporting are all ways the act could be watered down.

But we have more slavery in the world than we had hundreds of years ago when we were trying to abolish it and the short-term challenge of developing the frameworks for monitoring, evaluation and reporting will be a long-term be cost saving to companies there is nothing more costly than for your reputation to be absolutely destroyed.

The problem we have seen in the U.K. is that only about 30 percent of companies who are required to report have reported. For the ones that have reported, there is no clear, publicly-available site where organizations can look up reports.

We can learn from this, and do better in Australia.

Based on the lines of questioning and political statements so far on a Modern Slavery Act, what do you think we will see with recommendations from this inquiry?

There is a high expectation that there will be mandatory reporting and enforcement of that reporting. We expect there will be a very well-resourced commissioner, and the CEO and the board of businesses will be identified as responsible for their companys business practices.

We expect it to be strong. I think there are a lot of organizations across Australia supporting strong legislation, and we are hopeful it will be an effective piece of improvement for the world.

With Australia expected to get a seat on the U.N. Human Rights Council, how important is it to have strong and leading legislation such as the Modern Slavery Act to Australias international reputation?

It is extremely important.

In the eyes of the international community, Australia has a number of issues that it has not dealt with well in regard to human rights. But this is not a trade-off I see it as something where Australian leadership can be pivotal in providing regional integrity but for Australia to have a seat, our consistency and integrity across the board needs to be present.

Even if we pass the best Modern Slavery Act in the world, we still have to address these other human rights issues.

Read more international development newsonline, and subscribe to The Development Newswireto receive the latest from the worlds leading donors and decision-makers emailed to you free every business day.

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Q&A: Molly Harriss Olson on the importance of a Modern Slavery Act - Devex

Work gives trafficking victims dignity – NEWS.com.au

Stacking shelves or working on a factory production line may seem like ordinary jobs to some, but for trafficking victims newly hired at British supermarket Co-op, just being paid a decent wage to work has been a life-changing experience.

"I have a new life now, a better one. I've got good managers, good colleagues, a very good working environment," said Victor, who was trafficked from Romania.

In the first employment program of its kind, Co-op and anti-trafficking charity CityHearts launched 'Bright Future' in March, and have plans to offer work to 30 trafficking victims this year. So far, nine men and women have accepted jobs at the supermarket's stores or warehouses.

Victor, who declined to give his full name or say how he had been trafficked and exploited, has worked at a factory with Co-op for five months.

"I love the UK, I would like to live and work here. I want to keep this job," he said in a telephone interview through an interpreter.

In Britain, there are an estimated 13,000 victims of forced labour, sexual exploitation and domestic servitude, most of them from Albania, Nigeria, Poland and Vietnam.

Nearly 46 million people are enslaved globally, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index.

In 2015, Britain passed tough anti-slavery legislation introducing life sentences for traffickers and forcing companies to disclose what they are doing to ensure their supply chains are free from slavery.

Britain's Anti-Slavery Commissioner Kevin Hyland said more businesses should follow the supermarket's lead and offer "the dignity of work" to trafficking victims across the country.

"Good work opportunities give them dignity and allow them to be part of the community again. It prevents them from being re-trafficked, it prevents them from being homeless," said Hyland.

"If we don't improve the victims' support, it will hinder the whole fight against modern slavery."

Paul Gerrard, Co-op's policy and campaigns director, said British companies had a moral obligation to help victims and should go beyond what's legally required under the Modern Slavery Act.

"If we could offer these people work, it will allow them to reclaim their lives and that's the important thing," he added.

"... this should be about UK businesses stepping up and doing more to help victims of modern slavery."

CityHeart support worker Kirsty Hart said ordinary, paid work was transformative for many of the people she helped.

"It's just amazing to see the transformation of clients, before and after, and for them to take control of their lives. It's very powerful," she said.

This rings true for Janusz, who was trafficked from Poland but was given a job with the supermarket a month ago.

"My life has changed 100 per cent because the job gives me the prospect of a normal life in the UK," said Janusz, who did not want to give his full name or details of how he was trafficked.

"The job allows me to be independent. (It) offers me hope for the future."

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Work gives trafficking victims dignity - NEWS.com.au

Hotels line up to tap youth slaves – MacroBusiness (blog)

By Leith van Onselen

Over recent months, several labour market experts have raised concerns about the proliferation of unpaid internships, which risked becoming a black market for slave labour.

Last month, the Turnbull Government controversially announced that it would expand its $750 million Youth-Jobs PaTH program to prepare, trial and ultimately hire young Australians into the retail sector, which garnered a strong push-back from the union movement, Labor and The Greens:

Up to 10,000 internships will be offered to unemployed youths over the next four years in a deal struck between the federal government and retail sector

They will get a start at a job and, you know what, they could go on to great heights, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said on Monday

The PaTH scheme (Prepare, Trial, Hire) offers young jobseekers $200 a fortnight on top of their income support payments to undertake internships, and gives employers a $1000 upfront payment for taking them on

But Australian Council of Trade Unions president Ged Kearney said the program offered no path to qualification, employment or workforce protection.

This is a government-sanctioned program that actually borders on slavery, she told reporters in Melbourne.

If this does create new jobs, then pay the kids for the jobs. Pay them a wage. Theyre going to be productive. Theyre going to be contributing to the bottom line of these businesses

Labor and the Greens are opposed to the program, insisting it will allow young people to be exploited by employers.

If the PaTH program becomes simply a supply of cheap labour for employers who would otherwise be paying people full time wages to do that work, then thats a bad thing, deputy opposition leader Tanya Plibersek said.

Yesterday, it was revealed that the Australian Hotels Association has lined up to tap 10,000 internships over the next four years amid reports that only 200 young people have gotten jobs in the first four months of the Youth-Jobs PaTH program. And this has drawn another strong rebuke from the ACTU. From The Australian:

Since April 1, 7000 young people have commenced employability training, 1,015 internships have started, and 200 young people have gained employment.

Employment Minister Michaelia Cash was forced today to defend the outcomes given the Government had promised up to 120,000 internships 30,000 a year over the life of the four year program.

Well, it was always up to 30,000, she told ABC radio.

She said the government had been absolutely delighted by the take-up since April.

We now have 200 of our young people who were, quite frankly, looking down the barrel of long-term welfare (who) have now gone through the program and are in employment, she said.

Senator Cash will join Malcolm Turnbull in Perth today to announce that the Australian Hotels Association will commit to establishing 10,000 internships over the next four years

Business taking on an intern will receive an upfront $1000 payment. The internship is between 15 and 25 hours a week across a period ranging from four to 12 weeks. Interns will receive $200 a fortnight from the government on top of their regular income support.

If the intern gets a job, the employer will receive a further payment of $6500 or $10,000

ACTU secretary Sally McManus said no business would employ someone on the minimum wage if they could get a worker for free.

This program is gifting young people to businesses, destroying jobs and not giving a single young person a useful skill or recognised qualification, she said.

Prime Minister Turnbull and Minister Cash are selling young peoples futures out from under them to shore up the votes of the business community.

Huge numbers of young people are already priced out of education and skills training because they cant find steady work and wages arent keeping pace with inflation. This program, which will tear the bottom of the labour market, is only going to make this dire situation worse.

MB noted similar concerns to the ACTU when PaTH was initially announced. That is, while the PaTH program may help at the margins, it wont do much to increase the overall supply of youth jobs and could also lead to employers substituting a regular employee for an intern, saving themselves money in the process.

Consider PaTH from an employers perspective. They will get a free kick as the Government is not only the one paying the intern, but the employer also receives $1,000 up front for employing the intern without the need to worry about sick days, annual leave or penalty rates. Then if the intern is offered a job, the employer receives another payment of $6500 or $10,000 from taxpayers!

Why would an employer hire a young worker on a casual basis when they can effectively get paid to take on an intern?

Indeed, the evidence on these types of programs shows that employers will generally substitute a worker receiving a wage subsidy for another worker who would otherwise have been hired.

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Hotels line up to tap youth slaves - MacroBusiness (blog)

Restaurant Union Member: ‘Tipping is a Horrific Legacy from the Days of Slavery’ – PJ Media

WASHINGTON House Education and Workforce Committee Ranking Member Bobby Scott (D-Va.) called on Republican congressional leaders to support a gradual federal minimum wage increase to $15 per hour by 2024.

That would give nearly 30 percent of Americans a raise and this has the support of 191 members of the House and Senate, Scott said at a news conference Tuesday on Capitol Hill to mark the eighth straight year without a minimum wage hike. Its $7.25 now. Were going all the way to $15.

Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) said its wrong that eight years have gone by since the last time Congress voted to raise the minimum wage.

That doesnt make sense. Other people are getting raises. Other people are getting raises but people who are working hard, young people, older people, people with disabilities, this bill cuts across all of America, she said. Now is the time to raise the wage.

Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) said he is proud of the raise the wage and fight for $15 activists fighting to push Congress to support a $15 starting wage for themselves and future workers.

We dont want to just be sticking with a minimum, right? We are just talking about starting people at $15 and then up from there, right? Up from there because do you want a minimum car? Do you want a minimum boat to float across the river? Do you want a minimum marriage? That means you all aint getting along too good, he said.

What Im saying is we want to start people there and then move up from there and go on to paid vacation, paid sick leave, paid family leave and have a real solid life for people who work hard every day, he added. You guys are making the movement. I cant wait to be there with you again. We are going to fight until we win.

Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) applauded the warrior activists for advocating in favor of a $15 living wage for every American.

CEOs are benefiting from the American Dream; why not workers who are working each and every day to make this country great? she asked. We need to be a nation of good-paying jobs with benefits and a living wage for each and every one of you.

While the struggle continues, Lee predicted that a $15 minimum wage would ultimately pass out of Congress.

We want a living wage. Workers deserve a living wage in America. Right now, it is unconscionable that in the wealthiest nation men and women are working full-time jobs and dont even earn a livable wage. That is a shame and a disgrace, she said.

Joseph Geevarghese, the director of Good Jobs Nation, said the Fight for 15 movement has always been about a $15 minimum wage and giving every American the right to form a union.

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Restaurant Union Member: 'Tipping is a Horrific Legacy from the Days of Slavery' - PJ Media

The Latest Planet of the Apes: The Exodus Story without God Is Bleak – National Review

Conservatives may neglect Hollywood, but it retains the power to shock. Example: War for the Planet of the Apes depends on the moral rhetoric used by the Puritans and then Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. This is all about Exodus: God liberates the chosen people from bondage, and they attain the Promised Land. Appealing to Millennials while recalling the Boomers Sixties heyday, the rhetoric of civil rights is nowadays both on sale and on trial at the movies. And America emerges from them tarnished at best.

The Planet of the Apes story was originally a Sixties sci-fi allegory. It questioned our human nature, to humble our pride. It warned, Science will doom us. Proud American men, looking to discover the universe and the future in their spaceships, the very spearhead of the enterprise of modern science, discover a future worse than any past: a nature impervious to artificial powers. Apes enslaving humans, who are bereft of mind or speech: This allegory was part of the New Lefts politics and liberalisms holier-than-thou attitude. The question was slavery itself, and how would you like to be on the receiving end, white America!

Well, its dej vuall over again two generations later, with far more polish and more hysteria about science dooming us. This matters because Americans hold, or once held, their rights to come from Nature and their Creator. The goodness both of science and of man had divine sanction. From their nature, men could scientifically deduce their equal freedom and then strive to live well in light of that knowledge. They had natural rights, as we used to say. Science, natural and political, was supposed to help us secure them.

People changed their mind when they thought natural science proved that there was no human nature, or that it was nothing good or special. That is why the cinema of violence now dominating young Americans imagination forever rehearses the question Is life providential? Or cannibalistic? Does God defend us from the worst in ourselves and in our world? Or are we evil incessantly, from youth? Human nature looks so depressive at the movies because the meaning of science has changed.

For the Boomers, science meant both spaceships and atom bombs. Kennedy was sending Americans to the moon at the beginning of the Sixties! Confidence and power still pointed to something good and noble for mankind. But there were doubts: What if mans cosmic destiny was really the consequence of his self-destruction by the atom bomb? America had already used nuclear weaponry pressed by necessity, but in Kennedys time, America herself was threatened with Soviet missiles from Cuba. What would America do in case of a nuclear attack? America would launch rockets not to reach the moon but to render the earth uninhabitable. Gradually, the ambiguity of the rocket was resolved in favor of despair and fear: Think not Mars, but MAD.

Cold War hysteria about nuclear energy had the same origin. The atom bomb was a symbol. It spelled the end of the age when men would wage war in person, risking their own lives without risking the survival of all of mankind. The atom bomb rendered heroism or honorable war obsolete. But this would not lead to peace except, as the moral rhetoric of unconditional pacifism suggested, in death, and well deserved! With no more future for human beings, the movies went for a post-human future, in a desperate attempt to save some kind of life or morality from this scientific predicament.

Thats how we got to, among other things, the new Planet of the Apes movies, in which mankind is wiped out by a medical mistake a disease created by science. Scientific confidence becomes hubris, and mankind in his endeavor to conquer viruses defeats himself instead. The effort to build the most sophisticated power, immortality, out of the simplest life form, endlessly mutating viruses, turns out to ruin mans own complexity. Our fear of death, which drives medical advances, also turns to paranoia. At the movies, proud American men are not going back to the stars. Science for Millennials means biology, not physics, and it creates monsters as much as men. Scientific power no longer carries moral conviction for us, so we get the fantasies of self-destruction we deserve. At least we find them plausible: We would not keep showing up for such dark stories if we did not secretly fear that we were our own undoing.

But couldnt all this darkness be limited by the luminous part of the story civil rights and its Biblical rhetoric? The writer-director team say theyre looking to dignify their apes by giving them a founder: a Moses. Their movie really is Exodus redux, and its worth learning what has come of that once-proud feature of American political rhetoric. Only the movies make use of it anymore. Certainly no politician dares quote the old Biblical stories once considered part of Americas political imagination.

Blacks embraced Christianity in America and organized as Christians. They found the Old Testament an important source of hope and wisdom in the civil-rights struggle, which was a happy reprise of the theme of the chosen people, liberated from Egyptian slavery. As much as the adventure of scientific innovation is about individualism, the rhetoric of the chosen people is about community. So this should be a great occasion to tell both the particular story of liberation from Jim Crow and the broader story of Americas destiny. How come it all ends up tarnished? Something in this rewriting of civil-rights rhetoric is strange: God is absent.

Without God, mankind in this movie is left to plague itself. America is now Egypt. Man, not God, brought on the virus-plague that wiped out mankind. The only human ruler in this story plays a kind of Pharaoh, starting with the shaved-head, anti-natural aesthetic of Egypt and ending with his killing his son: the plague of the death of the firstborn. The hardening of hearts is here the loss of the power of speech. The afflicted can no longer communicate.

Meanwhile, the moral actors, the apes, are passively caught between warring human factions, witnesses to our species suicide. They only want to escape to the Promised Land, led by a Moses who has to learn to kill and to refrain from killing his utmost enemy, to save the lives of his kind and to die without entering the Promised Land. Even the swallowing of the armies of Pharaoh is reenacted, though without much cohesion to the plot.

But this Moses is without Commandments. In Exodus, he led the Israelites out of Egyptian slavery by the long way, to avoid the land of the Philistines. That was his judgment on their character. But, Hollywood tells us, Were all Philistines now, and we pay the price: Not even our hero-apes can evolve from slavery to freedom. They just have a real-estate problem: The war could have been avoided had they been a few dozen miles from their arbitrarily determined current location. The apes have no new revelation; they confront no ancient threat. Their story lacks moral seriousness and the potential for high drama.

This leader should evoke MLK or Mandela, whose moral rhetoric was stentorian, all about delivering freedom to an oppressed people. Yet, in a show of breathtaking blindness to the very civil-rights rhetoric he evokes, the Moses figure in War of the Apes never gives one good speech. Apparently his peoples epic migration does not require intellectual effort to comprehend and express. These writers who play with Americas most dignified rhetoric about liberating slaves have nothing worth saying, having never reflected on American history in light of the very principles and precedents that Lincoln and MLK referred to. Having chosen to go down another path, they reveal to us, at the end of a long trilogy, a dead end. We have learned nothing new about human dignity, whatever we may have forgotten meanwhile.

Titus Techera is a Publius Fellow at the Claremont Institute, a contributor to Ricochet, and a writer at the Federalist.He is affiliated with the American Cinema Foundation.

Continued here:

The Latest Planet of the Apes: The Exodus Story without God Is Bleak - National Review

Government’s crackdown on illegal low wages for apprentices – FE Week

Rogue employers who illegally underpay apprentices have been threatened with severe jail sentences, under a new government crackdown on abuses of workers rights.

Sir David Metcalf (pictured above), the governments new director of labour-market enforcement,today warned that the worst offenders could face prison sentences as long as two years.

The crackdown comes just days after FE Week reported that it was more than likely that no employer had ever been prosecuted or even fined for paying apprentices less the national minimum wage.

A much-delayed Department for Education survey released last week showed that 18 per cent of apprentices were paid illegal wages in 2016, up from 15 per cent in 2014.

Government inaction allowed employers to leave UK apprentices half a million pounds out of pocket in 2015-16 alone.

Tackling labour market abuses is an important priority for the government and I am encouraged it has committed record funds to cracking down on exploitation, said Sir David, who was appointed to the new position in January, in order to oversee a crackdown on workplace exploitation.

Over the coming months I will be working with government enforcement agencies and industry bodies to better identify and punish the most serious and repeat offenders taking advantage of vulnerable workers and honest businesses.

A Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy spokesperson confirmed to FE Week that this crackdown commitment would apply to employers who fail to pay apprentices at least the minimum wage of 3.50 per hour for anyone aged 24 or under.

The wider national minimum and living wage enforcement statistics show that in 2016-17, government teams managed to recoup a record 10.9 million in back pay for 98,150 of the UKs lowest-paid workers a 69 per cent increase on the previous year.

BEIS said businesses that failed to pay workers at least the legal minimum wage were also fined 3.9 million, with employers in hospitality and retail sectors among the most prolific offenders.

However, there have been just 13 prosecutions since 2007 for minimum wage violations, four of which came in 2016-17.

A BEIS press officer claimed to not have information on whether any of these related to underpaid apprentices.

Jon Richards, head of education at Unison, said his union has raised concerns about weak regulation of apprentices pay with government on a number of occasions.

He said that if this new crackdown is true and not further government spin, then it might make employers sit up and take notice.

Apprentices are already paid a pittance, so any employer trying to exploit them further deserves what they get, he added.

BEIS explained in February that from October 2013, the government revised the naming and shaming scheme to make it simpler to name and shame employers which break NMW law.

It identified a record 359 breaches that month alone, but continues to refuse to say whether any concerned apprentices.

Five months ago, BEIS announced that employers paying their workers less than the minimum wage could face prosecution, and not only have to pay back arrears of wages to the worker at current minimum wage rates, but also face financial penalties of up to 200 per cent of arrears, capped at 20,000 per worker.

Business minister Margot James claimed the government is firmly on the side of hard-working people and is determined to stamp out any workplace exploitation, from minimum wage abuses to modern slavery.

Sir David will start consulting with stakeholders from today, ahead of his first full strategy, due later this year. To contribute, you can email directorsoffice@lme.gsi.gov.uk

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Government's crackdown on illegal low wages for apprentices - FE Week

Thinking through the Spiritual life – The-review

By PASTOR JAMES MCCURDY Published: July 29, 2017 3:00 AM

I have written about the spiritual life for 26 years. In that time I have like others struggled with my own spiritual journey. It takes everything that I have to stay on the path. The spiritual journey just can't be taken for granted. Just when I think I have it down something comes up and I discover I must change my ways.

Last week I wrote about the need for endurance. That God moves in God's own time. That the spiritual life needs patience. But, endurance and patience do not mean that we are to put up with evil. We must never confuse patience with compliance in the evil that is all around us. Too often patience can become just being apathetic to the pain. People can say "Now is not the time for a change," when really we are saying "I don't want to be bothered with that today, let someone else take care of that."

I get it. No one wants to get involved in a problem that seems impossible to change. No one wants to tackle something that will face opposition. But Jesus, who cured, fed, taught and received everyone in bringing God's love would also say, "I have not come to bring peace but a sword."

To endure does not mean accepting what is wrong. Injustice and inequality are always wrong and must be defeated. It may be years before enough people stand up against an evil that is around us but it is always opposed by God. And since Evil will always seek to get a hold in us we must again give ourselves with endurance and patience to the task at hand even if we may not win the struggle in our day.

In the 1930s the Labor movement won the day for working people to have fair wages and benefits. As a living wage slips away for many we may need to ask God to give us the strength to win it again. As slavery and the states that supported enslaving people we defeated in the 1800s so too we may need to defeat the forces run modern day sex slavery of our children.

With God's help, we will endure and not accept meekly or quietly ignore what we all know is about us. So do spiritual people endure, or do they stand for the right? The answer is yes. We endure and we will stand for the right against the wrong all around us. It will take a long time but with our God, we will not be denied.

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Thinking through the Spiritual life - The-review

Letters: Arrest those profiting from the opioid crisis – Palm Beach Post

Regarding the opioid crisis, it seems to me that one main factor is the price gouging by the pharmaceutical firms. According to the article in The Post, Governments cost in opioid crisis raises unthinkable: Let victims die? (Friday), some of the antidotes have increased 800 percent and others doubled or tripled.

Sounds like someone is making a large profit off of this human disaster. These profiteers should be arrested along with the sober home owners.

RICHARD NICHOLS, BOYNTON BEACH

I was astounded and disgusted by a recent letter that The Post published opining that erasing Confederacy is a form of prejudice. Actually, erasing the true history of slavery in the South is a form of ignorance. Imagine Germany defending the Nazi atrocities as a way of life.

We must not pretend that the Civil War was fought over states rights. It was fought because the moral compass of the country righted itself and we realized that we could not continue to allow the horror of slavery to continue to stain our country.

The fact that the writer of the letter does not see this is a reminder of how far we still must travel.

SYLVIA WINDMUELLER, WEST PALM BEACH

Lately, The Post has been running all these teary-eyed stories of undocumented immigrants facing deportation and The Post seems to support a very liberal view of enforcement of existing immigration laws. So I ask, why even have immigration laws if you wish to ignore and not enforce them?

Maybe this same procedure could apply to other laws, such as paying federal, state and local taxes. Lets also allow our borders to go unmonitored and just open our nation to all refugees who wish to come here to live.

Guess all this makes me a hard-liner on the issue of immigration, or maybe Im just a little old-fashioned and believe that if you have laws, they should be enforced and not just ignored because its politically popular in certain regions of the nation.

RICHARD BRIANT, ROYAL PALM BEACH

As a senior citizen of Florida, I am appalled at President Donald Trump getting temporary visas for foreign workers to work for him personally, at his golf courses or business interests. (Trump hopes to hire 76 foreign workers at Mar-a-Lago, Trump National, Friday)

If the president is not going to give these jobs to Americans like he promised, then at the very least he should pay these foreign individuals well above minimum wage, like they deserve.

What about the immigrants who are fully employed and have married Americans, and are raising American children in our country? The president is looking to deport these people who are contributing important work to our society. If his whole purpose in deporting these people is to favor American jobs, then why is he giving away 15,000 visas? Seventy-six of these visas were specifically for employees at his favorite local golf course.

He boasts that hell pay these individuals low wages even below minimum wage. Does he not realize that these are people who need to make a living?

What happened to his Buy American, Hire American? It looks terrible that our people have to go out and apply for unemployment and he is employing foreigners for his own golf courses. So the president is acting in his personal interests, at the expense of what he claims is best for this country.

GLORINE SCHWEITZER, BOYNTON BEACH

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Letters: Arrest those profiting from the opioid crisis - Palm Beach Post

Here’s the History Between Varys and Daenerys on Game of Thrones – POPSUGAR

As Daenerys prepares to wage war for the Iron Throne on Game of Thrones, she is shoring up support from several different areas her armies, Tyrion Lannister, Houses Tyrell and Martell, and of course, Varys, the Master of Whispers, who has advised several recent rulers of the Seven Kingdoms. But can she trust Varys? Daenerys isn't so sure, as evidenced by her questioning of him in Sunday's episode, "Stormborn."

Daenerys wants to know why she should trust a person who not only helped Robert Baratheon take the throne from her father, Aerys II (aka the Mad King), but who also sold her into slavery, sent Jorah Mormont to spy on her, and helped Robert's bid to have her assassinated in season one.

If you'll recall, in season one, Varys and Illyrio Mopatis seemingly "sell" Daenerys to the Dothraki, but they're actually trying to protect the Targaryen heirs from King Robert. The idea is that in exchange for Daenerys marrying Khal Drogo, the Dothraki will give Dany's brother Viserys an army with which to reclaim the Iron Throne. However, Varys goes along with King Robert's plan to assassinate Daenerys in order to protect himself.

In the episode "The Wolf and the Lion," Robert hears of Daenerys's alliance with the Dothraki via her marriage to Khal Drogo (and also that she is now carrying Khal Drogo's son), so he orders Dany to be killed to stop her from invading Westeros with her Dothraki horde. Varys helps carry out the assassination attempt after Eddard Stark refuses to play a part in killing an innocent pregnant woman (and then resigns as Hand of the King).

Then, in the episode "You Win or You Die," a wine seller attempts to poison Daenerys in the markets of Vaes Dothrak. His attempt is thwarted by Jorah Mormont, who realizes what is about to happen just in time to save Daenerys from drinking the poison. In doing so, Jorah sacrifices his pardon which would have allowed him to return to Westeros after being exiled for selling poachers into slavery to save Daenerys's life.

It's a tricky line Varys walks, since he does support whichever ruler he sees as best for the people but he also must act in his own self-interest at times. Still, Daenerys decides to trust him, promising Varys that if he betrays her, she'll burn him alive.

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Here's the History Between Varys and Daenerys on Game of Thrones - POPSUGAR

Government’s new crackdown on illegally low wages for apprentices – FE Week

Rogue employers who illegally underpay apprentices have been threatened with severe jail sentences, under a new government crackdown on abuses of workers rights.

Sir David Metcalf (pictured above), the governments new director of labour-market enforcement,today warned that the worst offenders could face prison sentences as long as two years.

The crackdown comes just days after FE Week reported that it was more than likely that no employer had ever been prosecuted or even fined for paying apprentices less the national minimum wage.

A much-delayed Department for Education survey released last week showed that 18 per cent of apprentices were paid illegal wages in 2016, up from 15 per cent in 2014.

Government inaction allowed employers to leave UK apprentices half a million pounds out of pocket in 2015-16 alone.

Tackling labour market abuses is an important priority for the government and I am encouraged it has committed record funds to cracking down on exploitation, said Sir David, who was appointed to the new position in January, in order to oversee a crackdown on workplace exploitation.

Over the coming months I will be working with government enforcement agencies and industry bodies to better identify and punish the most serious and repeat offenders taking advantage of vulnerable workers and honest businesses.

A Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy spokesperson confirmed to FE Week that this crackdown commitment would apply to employers who fail to pay apprentices at least the minimum wage of 3.50 per hour for anyone aged 24 or under.

The wider national minimum and living wage enforcement statistics show that in 2016-17, government teams managed to recoup a record 10.9 million in back pay for 98,150 of the UKs lowest-paid workers a 69 per cent increase on the previous year.

BEIS said businesses that failed to pay workers at least the legal minimum wage were also fined 3.9 million, with employers in hospitality and retail sectors among the most prolific offenders.

However, there have been just 13 prosecutions since 2007 for minimum wage violations, four of which came in 2016-17.

A BEIS press officer claimed to not have information on whether any of these related to underpaid apprentices.

Jon Richards, head of education at Unison, said his union has raised concerns about weak regulation of apprentices pay with government on a number of occasions.

He said that if this new crackdown is true and not further government spin, then it might make employers sit up and take notice.

Apprentices are already paid a pittance, so any employer trying to exploit them further deserves what they get, he added.

BEIS explained in February that from October 2013, the government revised the naming and shaming scheme to make it simpler to name and shame employers which break NMW law.

It identified a record 359 breaches that month alone, but continues to refuse to say whether any concerned apprentices.

Five months ago, BEIS announced that employers paying their workers less than the minimum wage could face prosecution, and not only have to pay back arrears of wages to the worker at current minimum wage rates, but also face financial penalties of up to 200 per cent of arrears, capped at 20,000 per worker.

Business minister Margot James claimed the government is firmly on the side of hard-working people and is determined to stamp out any workplace exploitation, from minimum wage abuses to modern slavery.

Sir David will start consulting with stakeholders from today, ahead of his first full strategy, due later this year. To contribute, you can email directorsoffice@lme.gsi.gov.uk

The rest is here:

Government's new crackdown on illegally low wages for apprentices - FE Week

HBO Show ‘Insecure’ Pushes Race-Based Tax Fraud as ‘Reparations’ – NewsBusters (press release) (blog)


NewsBusters (press release) (blog)
HBO Show 'Insecure' Pushes Race-Based Tax Fraud as 'Reparations'
NewsBusters (press release) (blog)
In the season two premiere of HBO's Insecure, we have two big liberal themes: the wage gap myth and slavery reparations. The season opener on Sunday night, "Hella Great," has the characters getting together for a party so that the main character Issa ...

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HBO Show 'Insecure' Pushes Race-Based Tax Fraud as 'Reparations' - NewsBusters (press release) (blog)

Pick N Pay workers interrupt operations – ZNBC

Operations at Pick N Pay Kafubu mall in Kitwe were today briefly interrupted.

This was after over fifty unionized workers downed tools demanding improved salaries and other working conditions.

The workers employed by the South African retail outlet are demanding for a marginal pay rise adding that the current collective agreement they signed with management expired last year.

The workers have accused their employer of paying them slavery wages.

They assert that their salaries are far below the minimum wage.

Management at the Kitwe outlet has refused to give their side of the story to Znbc News and have instead elected to remain mute over the matter.

And Kitwe District Commissioner Binwell Mpundu has told Znbc News that his office has received the complaint raised by Pick and Pay employees.

Mr. Mpundu said he will soon meet management of Pick N Pay in Kitwe to discuss grievances raised by unionized workers.

He said Government appreciates all foreign direct investment coming into Zambia but that such investment should fully benefit the locals.

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Today’s illegal immigration issue is a modern-day version of the Atlantic slave trade – Paris Post Intelligencer

If asked what freedom is, most people would say freedom is doing what you want, when you want to do it. Consulting a dictionary on this subject, we find freedom expressed as self determination for an individual, and self governing for a community.

Among other words used to define freedom are liberty, immunity, privilege, along with exemptions from things like taxes, slavery, bondage, despotism, tyranny and the like. There is something shrouded between these words something that is very important for us to understand if we are concerned with keeping our rights and freedoms.

The founders shared this concern. They wrote it into the Declaration of Independence when they said, We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

We were created by the Almighty God. He gave us our rights. Our rights come from God, not from government! Governments are instituted among men to secure our God-given rights.

Governments must protect the people, and be guided by the principles of justice, given to us in the pages of the Bible by the same one who gave us life.

Any government exceeding this becomes the tyrant the enemy of the people and must be altered or abolished. The founders understood this as absolute truth.

The reason for government is obvious to most. If individuals, in our sinful state, were to act out on our own desires, without any restraint of law, we would be much worse off than a culture war. It would be complete anarchy. And Americas founders understood this; rejecting democracy, as it would be too similar to mob rule; and preferring a republic a government based on laws and not run on the whims of men.

There are many things written and available on the subject of the discussions of our founders as they endeavored to establish this republic. I urge you to study our history. Hopefully, you can see that the founders understood that self-determination had to be held in check by respect for others and laws to that effect. And the same would also be true of the pursuit of happiness.

Even though most people would give self-determination as the first (and most prominent) definition of freedom or liberty, the founders were more concerned with the other aspects: Self-governing, no taxation without representation, and tyranny for example. These are the reasons they stated for entering into the Revolutionary War.

Lets engage in a practical example to effect their Safety and Happiness. For your community, you would say that you have a safe and happy community if there were no muggers or bandits in it; that you are safe from harm from muggers while you walk along your streets; and your home is safe from harm from bandits while you are out.

Sounds simple enough, except the muggers and bandits are also exercising their self-determination; their freedom to act out on their own desires; their desire to take what they want just because they want it. They act upon their own whims without respect for others. This brings us back into conflicting ideas of who should be free to act upon his whim.

When we remember that our rights come from God, then we should also remember that He gave us His moral laws to govern our actions because He knows that fallen man cannot find peace, safety, or happiness outside of His moral law. But in our fallen state we dont like to hear that. We want to think that what we want, what we think, what we feel, is the relevant measure of what is right. And that is what the mugger thinks, wants, and feels.

In this is nothing but anarchy, where might makes right. Meaning, that whoever has the most power to force his will upon others, becomes the dictator, tyrant, or gang lord. This is why our founders did not want to be governed by the whims of a king, nor the mob rule of a democracy. They established a constitutional republic and hoped that the people would live in the moral law of the God of the Bible.

A few of many examples of this belief include:

The general principles on which the fathers achieved independence were the general principles of Christianity. I will avow that I then believed, and now believe, that those general principles of Christianity are as eternal and immutable as the existence and attributes of God. (John Adams letter to Thomas Jefferson, June 28, 1813).

I am persuaded that no civil government of a republican form can exist and be durable in which the principles of Christianity have not a controlling influence. (Noah Webster letter to James Madison, October 16, 1829).

[T]he religion which has introduced civil liberty is the religion of Christ and His apostles This is genuine Christianity and to this we owe our free constitutions of government. (Noah Websters 1832 History of the United States).

The Declaration of Independence laid the cornerstone of human government upon the first precepts of Christianity. (John Quincy Adams, July 4, 1837 speech).

If we wont live by the moral principles that God teaches us, then we are subject to whims of sinful humans, whether of self or of tyrants. For only God can define what is right, what is moral. Any other definition is subjective, based upon the whims of fallible humans. And ultimately this leads to slavery the loss of freedom.

It is an irony and shows the fallibility of our human founders that while they were fighting for their own freedom from British tyranny, they allowed the slavery of other humans here.

Since slavery is the ultimate loss of freedom, lets consider slavery in opposition to freedom. The slave cannot go where he wants; cannot do what he wants. He cant decide for himself how to live, nor pursue his own dreams. The slave is always subject to the whims of his master. The work of his hands is not his own, it belongs to his master. In short, the slave works and the master eats the fruits of his labors.

So, the opposite, we should understand, is freedom. The work of my hands is mine; and I eat the fruits of my labors; I enjoy the product of my efforts; and no other has claim upon what is mine. This is the shrouded part of freedom that we dont usually consider, but it really is the most important part.

The Mayflower Compact established a communist government for their colony. The colony as a whole owned the land. And the fruit of their labors the crop harvest was also the property of the colony as a whole and was to be shared equally. So, no one had claim to the fruits of his own labor; the colony owned it. Everyone was a slave to the colony and no one was free.

This system failed! The colony nearly starved to death that first winter because those who were able to do more work did not see any reason to work harder than the man doing the least work. As both would share equally in the eating, why not put in the same effort in the working?

The colony leaders saw that the system of communism was the problem and ended it. The second year each man had his own plot of land, it was his to do with as he pleased. And the produce of his labor was his own to eat, trade, or give as he saw fit. This is where they gained the abundance that we now remember as the first Thanksgiving.

Freedom gave them the prosperity for which they had hoped as each man could see that the more he worked, the more he would have for himself. This simple system of encouragement pushed each to endeavor to excel, to do more, to accomplish more, to gain more. And the colony prospered because of freedom with each man owning the fruits of his own labors!

So, why do tyrants, kings, communist, and dictators want to enslave others? Simple. They want freedom for themselves while living off of the fruits of the labor of others. The only difference between these and the bandit is that as a king, they make their whims the law of the land while the bandit has no masquerade of law supporting his whims.

One missing component, before we can bring this to our present circumstances. Lets look at the plantation slave. Even though he had no money, he was paid for his labor. Granted, his condition of life was far from equitable. Still, he had to have food, clothing, and shelter to keep living and working.

The condition of living requires the basics for life to continue. Hence, some of the product of the slaves labor was given to him. The pay he received was far from what his labor was worth. Between free men, we consider a fair days pay for a fair days labor while the slave master wants to keep the bulk of that fair days pay for himself.

Now lets put this into our time. Instead of plantations, substitute corporations. Not slaves under chains and whips, but exploited, underpaid workers living in very difficult conditions.

During the Atlantic slave trade, the rich people were the ones supporting the slave trade. Subsistence farmers and most family farms did not have slaves they simply could not afford them. Most people did not have house slaves the rich folks wanted and could afford it. Most people could not, did not and did not want to enslave others.

Now the rich corporation owners and million-dollar estate owners are often the ones who want an open southern border and lax immigration laws. They are the ones hiring the illegals and importing lower-wage legal immigrants (e.g., H-1B and H-2B visas) to work in their factories, businesses and homes in conditions no one else would or at lower pay rates than anyone else can. So, they can gain the labors of others without paying a fair wage.

How many times have you heard of construction companies and lawn maintenance companies hiring illegals? And doing those jobs for less money than anyone else? Or how about companies like Disney laying off American computer programmers and engineers after forcing them to train their foreign replacements?

Not all of the illegals are coming here for welfare. Many are still coming for jobs. And since they cannot complain, nor ask for aid from the police for fear of extradition, they are paid far less than what is fair so some rich guy can live off of other peoples labors. How is this different than the slave trade that was ended more than a century ago?

Lets end the modern-day slave trade by putting up a border wall!

PAUL FROWNFELTER of Henry County is a member of the local Volunteers for Freedom Tea Party. His email address is paul4of6@aol.com.

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Today's illegal immigration issue is a modern-day version of the Atlantic slave trade - Paris Post Intelligencer

Nicaragua a Mirror of Orwell’s Animal Farm? – Havana Times

The lesson from Animal Farm, by George Orwell, is spot-on for neoliberal Nicaragua of recent years.

By Oscar Rene Vargas (Confidencial)

From Animal Farm by George Orwell

HAVANA TIMES In 1943, the British writer George Orwell (1903-1950) wrote his famous novel Animal Farm. This satirical allegory synthesized the transformation process of the initially inspiring Russian Revolution led by Lenin and Trotsky into Soviet totalitarianism embodied in Stalin.

A man of the Left, George Orwell fought in the Spanish Civil War with the Republicans to be more exact, on the side of the Workers Party of Marxist Unification, which was opposed to Stalinist communists, as their idea was to liberate people. According to him, this was inseparable from a basic demand: the peoples real democratic freedom and socialism.

From this perspective, the events that unfolded during the Spanish civil war and, particularly, the killings in Barcelona, filled him with absolute horror of those in favor of authoritarian methods. Returning to England, he published his testimony in some newspapers and also enshrined his conclusions in his two most famous books, Animal farm and a few years later 1984.

Orwell invents a prophetic fiction in his books, which he uses to develop a great description, inspired greatly by Stalinist or authoritarian regimes, about what could happen to the human race in a dictatorship. 1984 is the book where terms such as Big Brother, Thought Police (Thinkpol) and Newspeak appear for the first time.

Orwell tells us that an authoritarian regime creates a power machine which is the Ministry of Truth or the only official spokesperson, which is essential to consolidate that regime (it simply records events or criticizes journalism for trying to explain events). Then, the Thought Police is organized (making critical thinking dangerous) and Newspeak is created to impose a universal truth on everyone. In order to do this, its necessary to pare language down to a few words which are enough to establish past, present and future events.

If real historic events arent in line with the only official Truths dogma that they want to disseminate, all they have to do is deny this reality and invent new alternative facts and fake news, so as to impose the authoritarian or dictatorial States institutional lie as real and true events. The Ministry of Truths aim is to make citizens degrade their trust for real events and to accept these alternative facts and fake news.

Cover of the 1st edition of Animal Farm.

Many people get angry because they feel they are being mocked, undervalued for their intelligence; others laugh and jokingly celebrate the Ministry of Truths vulgar remarks. But, there are some people who see beyond the farce and discover the threads of political manipulation, the hidden intention to distract people, diverting people as much as they can from their valid and daily worries.

It has to be made clear that the Ministry of Truths goal is to maintain control over the electorate so that they dont hear about news that is counterproductive for the government; thats why they manipulate the reality of what is really happening and censor critical voices.

Going beyond the historical particularism which inspired the book, Animal farm has become a metaphor for the universal perversions that the practice of authoritarian, corrupt and anti-democratic power creates, when rulers from a minority promote themselves as the saviors of the governed when in reality theyre their executioners.

The so-called second phase of the Nicaraguan revolution is made up of a political bloc founded on secret negotiations, individual interests among the old oligarchy and the newer ruling classes, where the people are called upon to rule a country which has been co-opted by a political elite which is smaller in number, more exclusive and more selective every day.

Parochial mindsets have monumental breakthroughs from time to time and cover themselves in a veil of rural messianism which, the victims of wishful thinking, confuse greatness with mere spectacle. Parochial discourse succumbs to the eagerness for greatness and blinded by the temporary shimmer of hope, it combines tragedy with comedy.

Unrestrained capitalism inevitably brings about the widening of gaps between the wealthy and the poor. This isnt a distortion or an economic fault in this system, but is rather one of the inevitable trends of capital accumulation in its historical path.

The lesson of this story for neoliberal Nicaragua in recent years is spot-on. During this time, we have experienced the most scandalous robberies in our history, inexplicable and uncontrollable enrichment of a few, the most perverse cons and the greatest generational disappointment with the moral defeat of the Sandinista revolution and the failure of the so-called democratic transition process.

Oscar Rene Vargas

As wealth continues to accumulate and productive working forces develop, two extreme poles are being established. At one pole, that of the owners of capital, wealth is accumulated; while at the working class pole which produces this wealth with their work, there is increasing poverty, poor working conditions, wage slavery, despotism, ignorance and deterioration.

In order to achieve the perfect and joyous state of civic submission, Stalin (or the dictator of the hour) and his clique of stalwarts took advantage of five powerful tools: betrayal, repression, corruption, propaganda and the short-term memory of those below. Authoritarian power doesnt have a steadfast nucleus of advisers; they are always walking on a tightrope.

We have also seen the rise of an elite regime founded on corruption and immunity deals which have thrown out the window the distinction between organized crime by members of the hegemonic sector, and members of the public sector of different governments. This has thereby reduced societys ability to react as it becomes accustomed to humiliation and it continues to accept, bit by bit, the system of a never-ending government.

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Nicaragua a Mirror of Orwell's Animal Farm? - Havana Times

How bosses are (literally) like dictators – Vox

Outside contributors' opinions and analysis of the most important issues in politics, science, and culture.

Consider some facts about how American employers control their workers. Amazon prohibits employees from exchanging casual remarks while on duty, calling this time theft. Apple inspects the personal belongings of its retail workers, some of whom lose up to a half-hour of unpaid time every day as they wait in line to be searched. Tyson prevents its poultry workers from using the bathroom. Some have been forced to urinate on themselves while their supervisors mock them.

About half of US employees have been subject to suspicionless drug screening by their employers. Millions are pressured by their employers to support particular political causes or candidates. Soon employers will be empowered to withhold contraception coverage from their employees health insurance. They already have the right to penalize workers for failure to exercise and diet, by charging them higher health insurance premiums.

How should we understand these sweeping powers that employers have to regulate their employees lives, both on and off duty? Most people dont use the term in this context, but wherever some have the authority to issue orders to others, backed by sanctions, in some domain of life, that authority is a government.

We usually assume that government refers to state authorities. Yet the state is only one kind of government. Every organization needs some way to govern itself to designate who has authority to make decisions concerning its affairs, what their powers are, and what consequences they may mete out to those beneath them in the organizational chart who fail to do their part in carrying out the organizations decisions.

Managers in private firms can impose, for almost any reason, sanctions including job loss, demotion, pay cuts, worse hours, worse conditions, and harassment. The top managers of firms are therefore the heads of little governments, who rule their workers while they are at work and often even when they are off duty.

Every government has a constitution, which determines whether it is a democracy, a dictatorship, or something else. In a democracy like the United States, the government is public. This means it is properly the business of the governed: transparent to them and servant to their interests. They have a voice and the power to hold rulers accountable.

Not every government is public in this way. When King Louis XIV of France said, L'etat, c'est moi, he meant that his government was his business alone, something he kept private from those he governed. They werent entitled to know how he operated it, had no standing to insist he take their interests into account in his decisions, and no right to hold him accountable for his actions.

Like Louis XIVs government, the typical American workplace is kept private from those it governs. Managers often conceal decisions of vital interest to their workers. Often, they dont even give advance notice of firm closures and layoffs. They are free to sacrifice workers dignity in dominating and humiliating their subordinates. Most employer harassment of workers is perfectly legal, as long as bosses mete it out on an equal-opportunity basis. (Walmart and Amazon managers are notorious for berating and belittling their workers.) And workers have virtually no power to hold their bosses accountable for such abuses: They cant fire their bosses, and cant sue them for mistreatment except in a very narrow range of cases, mostly having to do with discrimination.

Why are workers subject to private government? The state has set the default terms of the constitution of workplace government through its employment laws. The most important source of employers power is the default rule of employment at will. Unless the parties have otherwise agreed, employers are free to fire workers for almost any or no reason. This amounts to an effective grant of power to employers to rule the lives of their employees in almost any respect not just on the job but off duty as well. And they have exercised that power.

Scotts, the lawn care company, fired an employee for smoking off duty. After Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NJ) notified Lakeland Bank that an employee had complained he wasnt holding town hall meetings, the bank intimidated her into resigning. San Diego Christian College fired a teacher for having premarital sex and hired her fianc to fill her post. Bosses are dictators, and workers are their subjects.

If efficiency means that workers are forced to pee in their pants, why shouldnt they have a say in whether such efficiency is worthwhile?

American public discourse doesnt give us helpful ways to talk about the dictatorial rule of employers. Instead, we talk as if workers arent ruled by their bosses. We are told that unregulated markets make us free, and that the only threat to our liberties is the state. We are told that in the market, all transactions are voluntary. We are told that since workers freely enter and exit the labor contract, they are perfectly free under it. We prize our skepticism about government, without extending our critique to workplace dictatorship.

Why do we talk like this? The answer takes us back to free market ideas developed before the Industrial Revolution. In 17th- and 18th-century Britain, big merchants got the state to grant them monopolies over trade in particular goods, forcing small craftsmen to submit to their regulations. A handful of aristocratic families enjoyed a monopoly on land, due to primogeniture and entail, which barred the breakup and sale of any part of large estates. Farmers could rent their land only on short-term leases, which forced them to bow and scrape before their landlords, in a condition of subordination not much different from servants, who lived in their masters households and had to obey their rules.

The problem was that the state had rigged the rules of the market in favor of the rich. Confronted with this economic situation, many people argued that free markets would promote equality and workers interests by enabling them to go into business for themselves and thereby escape subordination to the owners of capital.

No wonder some of the early advocates of free markets in 17th-century England were called Levellers. These radicals, who emerged during the English civil war, wanted to abolish the monopolies held by the big merchants and aristocrats. They saw the prospects of greater equality that might come from opening up to ordinary workers opportunities for manufacture, trade, and farming ones own land.

In the 18th century, Adam Smith was the greatest advocate for the view that replacing monopolies, primogeniture, entail, and involuntary servitude with free markets would enable laborers to work on their own behalf. His key assumption was that incentives were more powerful than economies of scale. When workers get to keep all of the fruits of their labor, as they do when self-employed, they will work much harder and more efficiently than if they are employed by a master, who takes a cut of what they produce. Indolent aristocratic landowners cant compete with yeoman farmers without laws preventing land sales. Free markets in land, labor, and commerce will therefore lead to the triumph of the most efficient producer, the self-employed worker, and the demise of the idle, stupid, rent-seeking rentier.

Smith and his contemporaries looked across the Atlantic and saw that America appeared to be realizing these hopes although only for white men. The great majority of the free population in the Revolutionary period was self-employed, as either a yeoman farmer or an independent artisan or merchant.

In the United States, Thomas Paine was the great promoter of this vision. Indeed, his views on political economy sound as if they could have been ripped out of the GOP Freedom Caucus playbook. Paine argued that individuals can solve nearly all of their problems on their own, without state meddling. A good government does nothing more than secure individuals in peace and safety in the free pursuit of their occupations, with the lowest possible tax burden. Taxation is theft. People living off government pay are social parasites. Government is the chief cause of poverty. Paine was a lifelong advocate of commerce, free trade, and free markets. He called for hard money and fiscal responsibility.

Paine was the hero of labor radicals for decades after his death in 1809, because they shared his hope that free markets would yield an economy almost entirely composed of small proprietors. An economy of small proprietors offers a plausible model of a free society of equals: each individual personally independent, none taking orders from anyone else, everyone middle class.

Abraham Lincoln built on the vision of Smith and Paine, which helped to shape the two key planks of the Republican Party platform: opposition to the extension of slavery in the territories, and the Homestead Act. Slavery, after all, enabled masters to accumulate vast tracts of land, squeezing out small farmers and forcing them into wage labor. Prohibiting the extension of slavery into the territories and giving away small plots of land to anyone who would work it would realize a society of equals in which no one is ever consigned to wage labor for life. Lincoln, who helped create the political party that now defends the interests of business, never wavered from the proposition that true free labor meant freedom from wage labor.

The Industrial Revolution, however well underway by Lincolns time ultimately dashed the hopes of joining free markets with independent labor in a society of equals. Smiths prediction that economies of scale would be less important than the incentive effects of enabling workers to reap all the fruits of their labor was defeated by industrial technologies that required massive accumulations of capital. The US, with its access to territories seized from Native Americans, was able to stave off the bankruptcy of self-employed farmers and other small proprietors for far longer than Europe. But industrialization, population growth, the closure of the frontier, and railroad monopolies doomed the sole proprietorship to the margins of the economy, even in North America.

The Smith-Paine-Lincoln libertarian vision was rendered largely irrelevant by industrialization, which created a new model of wage labor, with large companies taking the place of large landowners. Yet strangely, many people persist in using Smiths and Paines rhetoric to describe the world we live in today. We are told that our choice is between free markets and state control but most adults live their working lives under a third thing entirely: private government. A vision of what egalitarians hoped market society would deliver before the Industrial Revolution a world without private workplace government, with producers interacting only through markets and the state has been blindly carried over to the modern economy by libertarians and their pro-business fellow travelers.

There is a condition called hemiagnosia, whose sufferers cannot perceive one half of their bodies. A large class of libertarian-leaning thinkers and politicians, with considerable public following, resemble patients with this condition: They cannot perceive half of the economy the half that takes place beyond the market, after the employment contract is accepted, where workers are subject to private, arbitrary, unaccountable government.

What can we do about this? Americans are used to complaining about how government regulation restricts our freedom. So we should recognize that such complaints apply, with at least as much force, to private governments of the workplace. For while the punishments employers can impose for disobedience arent as severe as those available to the state, the scope of employers authority over workers is more sweeping and exacting, its power more arbitrary and unaccountable. Therefore, it is high time we considered remedies for reining in the private government of the workplace similar to those we have long insisted should apply to the state.

Three types of remedy are of special importance. First, recall a key demand the United States made of communist dictatorships during the Cold War: Let dissenters leave. Although workers are formally free to leave their workplace dictatorships, they often pay a steep price. Nearly one-fifth of American workers labor under noncompete clauses. This means they cant work in the same industry if they quit or are fired.

And its not just engineers and other knowledge economy workers who are restricted in this way: Even some minimum wage workers are forced to sign noncompetes. Workers who must leave their human capital behind are not truly free to quit. Every state should follow Californias example and ban noncompete clauses from work contracts.

Second, consider that if the state imposed surveillance and regulations on us in anything like the way that private employers do, we would rightly protest that our constitutional rights were being violated. American workers have few such rights against their bosses, and the rights they have are very weakly enforced. We should strengthen the constitutional rights that workers have against their employers, and rigorously enforce the ones the law already purports to recognize.

Among the most important of these rights are to freedom of speech and association. This means employers shouldnt be able to regulate workers off-duty speech and association, or informal non-harassing talk during breaks or on duty, if it does not unduly interfere with job performance. Nor should they be able to prevent workers from supporting the candidate of their choice.

Third, we should make the government of the workplace more public (in the sense that political scientists use the term). Workers need a real voice in how they are governed not just the right to complain without getting fired, but an organized way to insist that their interests have weight in decisions about how work is organized.

One way to do this would be to strengthen the rights of labor unions to organize. Labor unions are a vital tool for checking abusive and exploitative employers. However, due to lax enforcement of laws protecting the right to organize and discuss workplace complaints, many workers are fired for these activities. And many workers shy away from unionization, because they prefer a collaborative to an adversarial relationship to their employer.

Yet even when employers are decent, workers could still use a voice. In many of the rich states of Europe, they already have one, even if they dont belong to a union. Its called co-determination a system of joint workplace governance by workers and managers, which automatically applies to firms with more than a few dozen employees. Under co-determination, workers elect representatives to a works council, which participates in decision-making concerning hours, layoffs, plant closures, workplace conditions, and processes. Workers in publicly traded firms also elect some members of the board of directors of the firm.

Against these proposals, libertarian and neoliberal economists theorize that workers somehow suffer from provisions that would secure their dignity, autonomy, and voice at work. Thats because the efficiency of firms would, in theory, drop along with profits, and therefore wages if managers did not have maximum control of their workforce. These thinkers insist that employers already compensate workers for any oppressive conditions that may exist by offering higher wages. Workers are therefore free to make the trade-off between wages and workplace freedom when they seek a job.

This theory supposes, unrealistically, that entry-level workers already know how well they will be treated when they apply for jobs at different workplaces, and that low-paid workers have ready access to decent working conditions in the first place. Its telling that the same workers who suffer the worst working conditions also suffer from massive wage theft. One study estimates that employers failed to pay $50 billion in legally mandated wages in one year. Two-thirds of workers in low-wage industries suffered wage theft, costing them nearly 15 percent of their total earnings. This is three times the amount of all other thefts in the United States.

If employers have such contempt for their employees that they steal their wages, how likely is it that they are making it up to them with better working conditions?

Its also easy to theorize that workers are better off under employer dictatorship, because managers supposedly know best to govern the workplace efficiently. But if efficiency means that workers are forced to pee in their pants, why shouldnt they have a say in whether such efficiency is worthwhile? The long history of American workers struggles to get the right to use the bathroom at work something long enjoyed by our European counterparts says enough about economists stunted notion of efficiency.

Meanwhile, our false rhetoric of workers choice continues to obscure the ways the state is handing ever more power to workplace dictators. The Trump administrations Labor Department is working to roll back the Obama administrations expansion of overtime pay. It is giving a free pass to federal contractors who have violated workplace safety and federal wage and hours laws. It has canceled the paycheck transparency rule, making it harder for women to know when they are being paid less for the same work as men.

Private government is arbitrary, unaccountable government. Thats what most Americans are subject to at work. The history of democracy is the history of turning governance from a private matter into a public one. It has been about making government public answerable to the interests of citizens and not just the interests of their rulers. Its time to apply the lessons we have learned from this history to the private government of the workplace. Workers deserve a voice not just on Capitol Hill but in Amazon warehouses, Silicon Valley technology companies, and meat-processing plants as well.

Elizabeth Anderson is the Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and John Dewey Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy and Women's studies at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Dont Talk About It (Princeton University Press, 2017).

The Big Idea is Voxs home for smart discussion of the most important issues and ideas in politics, science, and culture typically by outside contributors. If you have an idea for a piece, pitch us at thebigidea@vox.com.

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How bosses are (literally) like dictators - Vox

Can Mayor Chokwe A. Lumumba succeed in Jackson, Miss.? – People’s World

Chokwe A. Lumumba, left, takes the oath of office, on July 3. | Justin Sellers / The Clarion-Ledger via AP

When I predicted that a young Black Illinois Democrat named Barack Obama would never be nominated or elected president, I based this on what is narrowly defined as politics in this nation founded by so-called pilgrims and pioneers from Europe.The civilizing missionthey adopted continues to explain the Catch-22 of todays Democratic Party: appealing to its pro-capitalist backers even while it tries to retain the respect of its historic base of working people, women, and racial minorities.

Chokwe Antar Lumumba has just assumed the office of mayor of Jackson, Mississippi, surrounded by the hopes and adulation of leftists everywhere. What makes his election as mayor even more spectacular is that he won it in the heart of Dixie, capital city of one of Americas blood-reddest states. Mississippi sits at the center of the whole nations slave economy, which enriched both North and South, an economic system stubbornly held onto through onehorrific war and later recalibrated anew as Jim Crow in peacetime.

Lumumba will ascend to office with radical ideas.

Before he supported same-gender marriage, Obama opposed it. And before that, he supported it! Which is just one of the reasons I predicted his quick demise from the political landscape: too much the finger-in-the-air kind of politician. His ideas were not as radical as Lumumbas, although by some accounts of his early years, maybe they were just glossed over by the publicists at the Democratic National Committee. But they were radical enough in the areas of health care, social policy, and war to be unacceptable to the establishment.

Then he became a candidate for the president of the worlds last colonial empire, which is stubbornly holding on in Puerto Rico, Guam, Saipan, Samoa, and Hawaii, not to mention its neocolonial interests and military bases just about everywhere else.

What I never factored into my prediction about Obama was how fast he would willingly (or be forced to) recant his earlier progressive positionssingle-payer healthcare is but one examplein order to seal the endorsement of the crowd associated with the Democratic Leadership Council, that right-of-left group formed by Bill Clinton and his Wall Street friends.

Lumumba comes into office with a reported 93 percent of the electorate backing him and a platform to make Jackson, in his words, the most radical city on the planet. How loyally he remains with that electorate and true to his radical agenda will determine his real success. Voters are accustomed to candidates campaigning in poetry and governing in prose.

Included in Lumumbas platform is economic democracy. For example, he wants to establish a municipal fund to launch worker cooperatives.

Born of a radical father of the same name, who changed his slave name to one honoring his Africanheritage (Chokwe is an ethnic group of Central Africa and Lumumba was the first independence leader of the former Belgian Congo), the younger Lumumba must know the pitfalls that await him.

The model for how the establishment responds to such a radicalinsurgency continues to be the brief tenure of a 30-year-old boy mayor from Cleveland, Ohio. Dennis Kucinich was elected in 1977 as the youngest mayor of any major city, and he also came with radical ideas about housing for all and womens and Black rights. When he recruited San Francisco Sheriff Richard Hongisto to reform and open up Clevelands corrupt police department, and Hongisto proved quickly to become a creature of that machine, Kucinich fired him.

But Hongisto was the least of the young mayors worries. He had the banks and the city establishment steadfast against him, blocking his every move. A recall was mounted to oust him, and though Kucinich won, only barely, he was voted out at the end of his one term.

Lumumbasays his first order of business upon taking office is crafting a budget. When I heard this, I held my breath. Our democracies are not what the P.R. people tell us. Few mayors have real power, and since the 1970s, as more Blacks have won mayoralties, the establishment has managed to shift local powers to counties, states, and even to unelected bodies.

St. Louis, for example, has this organization called Civic Progress, which is neither civic nor progressive. It is a cabal of the regions corporations making sure the city stays on the right path in favor of business. It has been headed by such luminaries as St. Louis-based Monsanto.

After Harold Washington became the first Black mayor of Chicago, the citys establishment changed the voting rules to ensure that such an election would not easily happen again. Washington won with the most votes in the field of candidates, which had never been an issue before. After his historic victory, the winner must win 51 percent or face a run-off.

The new Jackson, Miss., budget may be the first indication of Lumumbas prospects.

The elder Lumumba, who died prematurely in office, was a leader in the Republic of New Afrika, a radical Black nationalist organization whose leadership also included Betty Shabazz, the widow of Malcolm X. When the elder Lumumba was elected mayor of Jackson in 2013, he wanted to hold quarterly peoples assemblies to open up the democratic process. I hope this desire did not die with him and will be revived under his son.

Setting aside whatever pessimism I may have about our democraticand Democraticsystem,the younger Lumumbas electionis a call to action. Many actions. The Chokwe people fiercely resisted European enslavement. White, Black, First Nation, Asian, and Pacific Island workers and communities must become Chokwe. We must resist the main tenets of capitalism, wage slavery, racism, our sky is the limit profit system, obscene accumulation of private wealth, and an inferior brand of citizenship for so many marginalized groups (including all women, LGBTQ folk, people of color, etc.).

We must resist not only within our respective communities but also together. We must be crystal clear about the nature of this fight. This resistance must be even more mobilized than the establishments is to defeat it. This will make it one of the most radical movements on the planet. And yes, maybe Jackson, Miss., will become its shining city on the hill.

Upon winning the election, Lumumba told a crowd:

By any means necessary. I need you to stand strong as we go forward. There are people who doubt your resolve, doubt that this city can be everything that it will be. And so, you cant give up now. I say, when I become mayor, you become mayor. So that means yall got some work to do.

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Can Mayor Chokwe A. Lumumba succeed in Jackson, Miss.? - People's World

Hornsey area guide: shops, restaurants, pubs, library and schools – Hampstead and Highgate Express

PUBLISHED: 13:30 13 July 2017 | UPDATED: 14:51 13 July 2017

Frankie Crossley

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Welcome to Hornsey!

Situated between Crouch End and Muswell Hill on one side, and Wood Green on the other, locals joke that Hornseys reputation as a poor neighbour really depends which neighbour youre comparing it to.

Hornsey village was first recorded in 1202 and remained a rural area until the late 1880s when seven railway stations opened nearby, leading to mass house building and turning the area into an archetypal Victorian suburb. Today most agree: this is a cosmopolitan area on the up, with a great sense of community and a wealth of independent cafes and shops.

There has been a church on the site of St Marys Hornsey since the 13th century. The original tower is still standing today and stands in the ancient graveyard of the village.

One of the most intriguing tombstones in the graveyard marks the grave of Jacob Walker with the inscription In America the faithful slave, in England the faithful servant. Walker was a native of Virginia, US, and had been the slave of the Longs, an English family. When the family returned to England in 1824, Walker came with them and, since slavery was illegal in the UK, became their wage-earning servant. It is believed that Walker died of a broken heart a month after the death of his employer, Harriet Long, who is buried on the same site.

Shopping and culture

Hornsey Library is a Grade II listed building that is home to the Community and Youth Music Library, one of the countrys leading archives of musical scores. The collection was started almost 100 years ago and they have everything from choral arrangements to concert band music and they are available for schools and amateur music groups.

Shopping in Hornsey is a dream for homeowners, particularly those with renovation projects and a taste for the items of yesteryear. There are also numerous spots to help with home renovations including upholsterer John Lawler Muswell Hill Joinery and Garden Transformations.

Best for vintage... Mishka sells vintage clothing from the Victorian era to the 1980s.

Best for flowers Bloomers Florist on the high street is the go to spot for bouquets, and also includes a cafe.

Food and drink

There is a sense in the air that Hornsey is up-and-coming and the mixture of businesses on and around the High Street refelcts this.

Best for lunchOlive is best for Middle-Eastern inspired caf lunches.

Best for a coffee Italica is a delicatessen and caf popular with local parents for post-school run coffee.

Best for pizza Tomos is a family run pizzeria who promise to only use ingredients that theyd serve their own children.

Best for healthy eating Away from the High Street the Teapot Caf on Tottenham Lane is a cosy spot for healthy juices and coffee and The Harvest is an organic food store.

Best for a pint The Great Northern Railway Tavern is set in a Grade II listed neo-Jacobean building. Its a top local choice for drinks and puts on regular blues, rock n roll, jazz and ska nights.

Best for quiz night Up the road the Three Compasses in a bright, freshly renovated pub serving food. They often have sports matches playing and hold regular quiz nights.

Sports and leisure

Gym membership at the north London YMCA includes access to the Fitness Centre and a range of classes. Classes are also accessible on a drop-in basis and include swiss ball, yoga, pilates, circuit training, spinning with static bikes and aerobics. The YMCA also offers a crche on weekday mornings for parents attending the gym.

Things to do with children

The Haringay Club at the YMCA offers an extensive range of childrens activities, from baby massage and pre-school ballet to Irish dancing and kickboxing for older children. The Club lays on an additional programme during school holidays. Adults will appreciate the New River Caf, a charming refreshment spot attached to the centre.

Primary and secondary education

The North London Rudolf Steiner School provides mixed gender Steiner education for children between the ages of 0 and 7 via a parent and child group, playgroup and kindergarten.

St Marys C.E. Primary School is a very popular local primary school, which is becoming increasingly over-subscribed as the surroundings move up in the world. It is rated Good by Ofsted.

Hornsey School for Girls is a girls secondary school also rated Good by Ofsted and well-regarded by parents.

Greig City Academy is a large mixed gender academy with a specialism in technology rated Good by Ofsted. It is the only state school in Haringey to offer a classics course and an array of extra-curricular activities, including a rocket club.

Transport

The Great Northern rail link is the areas main connection to the train and tube network, with overground services to Finsbury Park, Highbury and Islington and Moorgate in one direction and all the way north to Stevenage and Welwyn Garden City in the other. The nearest tube station is Turnpike Lane in Zone 3 on the Piccadilly Line. There are also some good bus routes including the 91 to Trafalgar Square and the W3 to Finsbury Park and Tottenham.

Property Guide

Postcode

Hornsey is situated in the London Borough of Haringey within the N8 postal district. It is in the Hornsey and Wood Green parliamentary constituency.

Band A properties will pay 1016.19 council tax; properties in the average Band D will receive a bill of 1,524.27; and homes in Band H will pay 3,048.54.

Housing Stock

Homes are predominantly late Victorian and Edwardian terraced properties although there are several modern developments in the area too, including a large housing complex overlooking the New River and luxury apartments at Smithfield Square.

House Prices

Two-bedroom flat 524,390

Terraced House 1,067,671

Semi-detached 1,316,250

Detached 1,228,998

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Hornsey area guide: shops, restaurants, pubs, library and schools - Hampstead and Highgate Express