Occupy Wall Street
Posted: October 15, 2011 Filed under: Anti-capitalism, International Solidarity, Occupy Wall Street, People United, USA Leave a comment »People of the World Rise UP!
Foreign political responses for Occupy Wall Street movement
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty expressed sympathy with the protests, citing high unemployment amongst the youth.
The Chinese state news agency Xinhua said the protests had exposed “fundamental problems” with the US economic and political systems, and that it showed “a clear need for Washington, which habitually rushes to demand other governments to change when there are popular protests in their countries, to put its own house in order.”
Prime Minister George Papandreou supported the U.S. protests saying, “We fight for changing the global economic system, like many anti-Wall Street citizens who rightly protest against the inequalities and injustices of the system.”
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei commented that the protests are because a “corrupt foundation has been exposed to the American people.”
The Korean Central News Agency of DPRK commented that the Occupy Wall Street movement were “in protest against exploitation and oppression by capital, shaking all fabrics of society.”
Lech Wałęsa, former president of Poland and cofounder of the Polish Solidarity Movement has expressed his support for Occupy Wall Street and is considering a visit to the site.
Former Premier Mikhail Gorbachev compared it the perestroika period and collapse of a superpower, calling the protests justified. He said Americans should put their own house in order before attempting to do such with other countries.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez condemned the “horrible repression” of the Occupy Wall Street activists and expressed solidarity with the movement.
Dockers storm US port
Posted: September 11, 2011 Filed under: Workers News Leave a comment »Hundreds of unionised dockers stormed a port in Washington state before dawn on Thursday after owners EGT replaced them with a subcontracted workforce willing to do their jobs for less pay.
Around 500 members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) overpowered security guards at the Port of Longview before allegedly damaging rail carriages and dumping grain at a new grain export terminal.
No-one was hurt and nobody was arrested, according to police, who said that most of the protesters had returned to their union HQ after cutting brake lines and spilling grain from carriages at the new terminal.
One sergeant reportedly withdrew when he was allegedly threatened with baseball bats.
A police spokesman said: “One officer with hundreds of longshoremen? He used the better part of discretion.”
The action appears to have been triggered by the detention of ILWU president Bob McEllrath, who was seized by police on Wednesday as he participated in a peaceful protest in Vancouver, Washington.
He joined hundreds of dockers blocking rail tracks in a bid to prevent the delivery of the first grain shipment to the new Longview terminal.
It finally arrived on Wednesday night after police rounded up 19 protesters, including a defiant Mr McEllrath, who promised that they would return.
After the dockers kicked off in Longview hundreds of fellow ILWU members launched unofficial strike action at the ports of Seattle and Tacoma on Thursday, forcing them to close down for the day.
Mr McEllrath was subsequently released – but only after authorities allegedly told him: “The army will be called in next time.”
The International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) condemned the detention of Mr McEllrath, noting that he and other ILWU members had been “defending the job rights of workers at a new grain export terminal whose owners appear to be trying to ignore the 80-year history of ILWU membership at the port by recruiting non-ILWU members – in defiance, the ILWU believes, of its contract with the port.”
ITF president Paddy Crumlin said: “EGT are playing with fire and they know it.
“The 350,000-plus dockers in the ITF will be watching how the company treats their American colleagues and, if the company makes it necessary, will be ready to take lawful solidarity action.”
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/index.php/news/content/view/full/109303
EL condemns the terrorist attacks in Norway and expresses its solidarity with the victims
Posted: August 1, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a comment »The Party of the European Left condemns the terrorist attacks in Norway and shows its solidarity with the victims. The European Left :
1. Condemns the criminal attacks that took place in Norway, which have
resulted in nearly a hundred dead and many injured. The author of this
slaughter Anders B. Breivik is definitely linked to the insane act of
murder, with or without the cooperation of others, and with obvious
political motivations of pseudo-ideology of the extreme right in Norway.
2. Stands together with all the innocent victims of brutal attacks. With all
the Norwegian people and especially their families as well as with the
government and the Labour Party of which many of the young people killed in the camp on the island of Utoya were members.
3. Denounces an atmosphere of extreme right, xenophobia, racism and violence that is spreading throughout Europe in a highly dangerous and regrettable manner, with an approach towards fascist politics in the guise of institutional choices in many countries.Tolerance and the passive
penetration in our societies of ideas underlying ultra-nationalist,
xenophobic, fascist and racist factors essential for the eruption of
subsequent serious situations, result in the regretable madness we see
today.
4. Calls to unite civil society, the workers, those connected with the
diffusion of culture, public institutions, officials, social organizations
and political parties, media and organizations, who are by nature
democratic, peaceful, and who fully respect social, civil and human rights.
The necessary convergence of millions of people throughout Europe should
permit us to attain positions and actions so as to prevent, combat and make the repetition of tragic events such as those that affect us today in Norway totally impossible.
5. Sends this message to the sister parties of the European Left, also those
within the GUE / NGL, democratic institutions in Norway, the victims’
families and all the people of Norway. In these terrible circumstances, we
are all Norwegians. All may count on us.
Victory Day (9th of May)
Posted: May 9, 2011 Filed under: War | Tags: ВОВ, Великая Отечественная Война, День Победы, С Днём Победы, Great patriotic war, Victory Day, war, WW2 Leave a comment »You might be a Marxist if …
Posted: April 18, 2011 Filed under: Ideology | Tags: Communism, CPA, ICP, International Communist Party, Karl Marx, Marxism Leave a comment »You believe: From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs
David S Pena
Most people, even capitalists, believe in a fair distribution of wealth, but you have probably noticed that capitalists and workers understand fairness in different and often contradictory ways. This is not surprising to Marxists because they use class analysis as their basic method for understanding society. On the basis of that method Marxists recognise that what people mean by fairness has a lot to do with their class position in society and the degree to which they are influenced by the class-based theories, intellectual fashions, and prejudices that dominate the societies in which they live.
Karl Heinrich Marx (5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883).
For example, slave owners in societies with slavery-based economies often try to justify the status quo by claiming that slave labourers are incapable of personal autonomy and self-government and therefore slavery is fair and beneficial both to slaves and society as a whole. Likewise, capitalists promote ideas about the absolute necessity of private property, the profit motive, and wage labour for building a modern civilisation, ideas which in their minds justify the existence of the capitalist class, capitalist domination of the working class, and a lopsided distribution of wealth that creates a fabulously rich minority and an impoverished working-class majority.
What do Marxists mean by a fair distribution of wealth? In a letter written by Karl Marx in 1875, a letter that is known today as the Critique of the Gotha Program, he formulated a famous principle about how wealth would be produced and distributed in the highest phase of communist society. That principle is:
From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.
The first part of the principle – from each according to their ability – means that all members of society will have the right and the actual opportunity to develop their talents and abilities to the utmost and to use their talents to produce goods and services for the benefit of society.
In other words, everyone will have an education that allows them to realise their highest potential and a job in which they will have the opportunity to give their best efforts back to society. There will be no uneducated or poorly educated people, no unemployment, and no one will be forced by economic necessity to work in fields unsuited to their abilities. The second part of the principle – to each according to their needs – explains what citizens will receive from society in return for their labour, and that will be nothing less than complete satisfaction of their material and cultural needs.
Marx also said something very interesting about the implications of a fair distribution of wealth in a communist society. He said that the principle “to each according to their needs” actually entails that under communism any given individual will have the right to receive a quantity of goods and services that is unequal rather than equal to the quantity received by others. This will sound counter-intuitive, or even wrong, to many readers, because most of us have been taught to believe that equal rights are the highest form of fairness, but Marx shows that this is not the case with regard to the distribution of wealth.
Here’s why: Imagine two women living in a communist society. One woman is a bus driver with five children and the other is a bus driver with one child. Let’s ask ourselves a question: According to the principle “to each according to their needs” which woman should have the right to receive more goods and services (food, housing, clothing, medical and childcare services, etc.) in compensation for her labour?
You might be tempted to answer that both women should receive the same quantity because both are bus drivers, and it’s only fair that everyone be treated equally. That would be the correct answer if this society was being run on the principle “to each according to their work”, which would mean that all bus drivers would receive the same pay. But that is not what Marx had in mind for the highest stage of communism.
The problem is that if each woman were treated equally, the driver with one child would receive more relative to her needs than the driver with five children – the former would be objectively richer and the latter poorer. This shows that an equal distribution of wealth can actually result in a highly undesirable kind of inequality – a division between rich and poor. This happens because principles such as “to each according to their work” or “equal pay for equal work” fail to take individual needs into account.
The communist principle “to each according to their needs” overcomes this defect by treating individuals differently, but in a positive way that considers and meets their differing needs, rather than a negative way that ignores individual needs. Under communism the unique needs of every individual would be respected. Thus the correct answer is that the woman with five children should receive more because her needs are greater.
This should put to rest the common misconception that communism means everyone will be treated exactly the same, as in the oppressive uniformity of the anthill or the barracks. Communism actually means the opposite: out of respect for the individual, everyone will be treated differently, but in a way that satisfies the individual’s needs. This does not mean that communism has no place for equality. Communism has the deepest respect for equality, but it must be equality of the right kind. The right to an unequal share in the consumption of goods and services actually results in a higher form of equality – all people will be equal in the sense that the needs of all will be met.
The communist principle holds true even if we compare our bus driver with her five children to a neurosurgeon with two children. Shouldn’t a neurosurgeon be entitled to more than a mere bus driver? Not at all, since the prejudice against “lower” forms of labour is one that communist society will have overcome. Under communism it won’t matter what kind of work you do. What will matter is that you contribute to the best of your ability.
In return, society will meet your needs. If the needs of an individual who happens to be a bus driver are greater than those of a neurosurgeon, then the bus driver will receive more. But the needs of both will be completely and ungrudgingly fulfilled. Who would have a problem with that except for people who want more than they need? And there’s a name for that condition; it’s called greed.
There’s something else we must keep in mind in order to understand the Critique of the Gotha Program correctly. Marx did not believe that society could advance directly from the overthrow of capitalism to the highest stage of communism. In the following quotation, he outlines the conditions that must be met before that stage can be achieved.
“In a higher phase of communist society, after the enslaving subordination of the individual to the division of labour … has vanished … after the productive forces have also increased with the all-round development of the individual, and all the springs of cooperative wealth flow more abundantly – only then can the narrow horizon of bourgeois right be crossed in its entirety and society inscribe on its banner: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs!”
Marx held that between capitalism and the higher phase of communism, there was a transitional or lower phase of communism “which is still stamped with the birth marks of the old [capitalist] society from which it emerges.” In this phase, society has to work hard to develop the economic, intellectual, and cultural forces necessary to make the transition to the higher phase of communism. Society in this lower phase will be classless in the sense that there will be no private property in the means of production, no class division between capitalists and workers, and no capitalists to steal surplus value from workers.
But due to the relatively underdeveloped state of the productive forces and the corresponding limits on productive capacity, distribution will be made according to work performed rather than according to need. There will also be a division of labour in which more highly skilled workers like neurosurgeons receive more than lower skilled workers such as bus drivers. And there will be deductions from workers’ individual right to consume in order to cover depreciation on existing means of production, maintain funds for developing new means of production, and to provide various forms of social insurance.
Despite all its advances over capitalism, compensation according to work rather than need will foster divisions between those who receive more than they need and those who receive less. This limitation cannot be overcome until society has ripened to such an advanced stage of material prosperity as well as moral and intellectual enlightenment that it is ready to bloom into full communism.
The lower phase of communism sounds backward and uninspiring compared to the higher phase, but we must not forget that the lower phase will have many positive characteristics. There will be a working-class government that labours constantly to develop the productive forces, improve living standards, and defend society’s gains from capitalist restoration. The means of production will be owned in common, and workers will be paid for the real value of the work they do. There will be equal pay for equal work, and no capitalists to steal social wealth from workers. Any deductions from the pool of social wealth will be returned to the workers in the form of social services like health care, education, and recreational and cultural facilities. Although inferior to the principle “to each according to their needs”, the lower stage principle “to each according to their work” is far superior to the capitalist principle of “fairness”, the real content of which is:
From each according to the capitalists’ needs, to each according to the capitalists’ greed.
And if there is any doubt that capitalism has failed miserably at meeting human needs, let’s take a moment to consider to the state of humankind in this capitalist world. Out of a world population of about 6.9 billion, there are currently 2.6 billion people who must try to live on less than $2 per day; the average adult has only about six years of formal schooling; at least 621 million are unemployed; and about 925 million people suffer from hunger. Is this a world that is developing people’s abilities and meeting human needs?
We can do better. You might be a Marxist if you seek a world in which the principle “From each according to the capitalist’s need, to each according to the capitalist’s greed” has been abolished, “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their work” is what we are fighting for, and “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs” is our inspiration and ultimate destination.
http://www.cpa.org.au/guardian/2011/1497/10-you-might-be.html
“European Left calls for an immediate end to war against Libya”
Posted: March 23, 2011 Filed under: War | Tags: Communism, European Left, International Communist Party, Libya, war Leave a comment »Military interventions including bombing campaigns on Tripoli and other
libyan towns will not bring peace to Libya. The Party of the European Left is conviced that the aim of the intervention is not to help the popular uprising and protect civilian but to regain control of the region and the resources of the country.
There is no military solution to the conflict in Libya, instead we need political and diplomatic initiatives. The European Left supports the democratic and progressive movements in Libya. Consequently we call for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire which includes the allied forces as well as Ghaddafis troups and the libyan insurgents.
A concrete step towards peace could be to send an international political and diplomatic mission and civilian observers to Libya. Also, there is a great need for humanitarian aid to refugees inside and outside of Libya which must be granted immediately.
EL Middle East Working group, on behalf of the Presidency of the Party of the European Left
Where is the US tax money…?
Posted: March 23, 2011 Filed under: USA | Tags: capitalism, imperialism, tax money, USA, war Leave a comment »Workers of the world, Unite!
Posted: January 16, 2011 Filed under: Ideology | Tags: Communist, International, Party, Unite, Workers Leave a comment »“Workers of the World Unite!”
- Karl Marx
“Capital is dead labor, which, vampire-like, lives only by sucking living labor, and lives the more, the more labor it sucks.”
- Karl Marx
“Can a nation be free if it oppresses other nations? It cannot. “
- Vladimir Lenin
“When there is state there can be no freedom, but when there is freedom there will be no state.”
- Vladimir Lenin
“Fascism is nothing but capitalist reaction. “
- Leon Trotsky
“Love other human beings as you would love yourself.”
- Ho Chi Minh
“I believe in one thing only, the power of human will.”
- Joseph Stalin
“I don’t care if I fall, as long as someone picks up my rifle and keeps firing”
- Che Guevera
Join the ICP
Posted: January 8, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Communism, Communist, International, International Communist Party Leave a comment »INTERNATIONAL COMMUNIST PARTY
Posted: December 14, 2010 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Communist, ICP, International, International Communist Party Leave a comment »Comrades that wish to join the International Communist Party and fight togather for solidarity in world, are welcomed to join the ICP!
ICP Forum:
http://comintern.forumsmotions.com/
The Party Never Sleeps!

