• Cuba today

    Reports, analysis, and stories from the struggle of the Cuban people to defend and build their socialist revolution.

  • The Quebec Student Strike

    The story of the biggest student mobilization in Canadian history as it unfolds.

  • The Class Struggle in Greece

    Reporting the viewpoint of the Communist Youth and the Communist Party of Greece for a People's Greece.

  • The youth movement

    Statements and analysis about the way forward for the youth and student movement in Canada today by the YCL-LJC.

  • Socialist theory

    Reflections on how to build a better world from a Leninist point of view.

The Harper Attack

Monday, March 24, 2008 0 comments

Lead Editorial, Winter 2008

 

There is good reason for youth across Canada to have real sense of urgency today – just what is going on in the fights for peace, jobs and education. Almost everything we are fighting for comes back to the main obstacle, the Harper Conservative agenda, in some form.

 

Harper's Throne Speech in mid-October noted that Canada's military spending will rise yet again.  Canadian military spending is now higher than in the imperialist Korean war. Harper also clearly stated his intentions to lock Canada into Afghanistan until a minimum of 2011.

 

Anti-war and peace forces are up against an aggressive "Support Our Troops" yellow-ribbon campaign coming from the Department of Defense, working with the media. These latest developments make "Troops Out Now," as well as counter-recruitment, all the more pressing.

 

Harper is also again lowering taxes, the main way we pay for social programmes. For the first time in recent Canadian history, the top one percent of Canadian families pay a lower total tax rate than the bottom 10 percent of families! It is tuition fees, not corporate taxes, that must be reduced. 

 

Up ahead are also more agreements like TILMA, the free trade agreement between BC and Alberta that allows corporations to sue municipalities and even school boards to overturn democratic local rules about environmental, labour and other regulations.

 

The only comments about youth in the Throne Speech were in connection to crime, which with the practice of police racial profiling largely means criminalization of youth of colour and aboriginal youth. Social policies for youth, including raising minimum wages, job creation and funding for equality, sports and cultural programmes are not on the table – in fact the cost of 2007 summer training for five cadets equalled federal governments entire annual subsidy to the Canadian Girl Guides, not to mention federal subsidies for progressive youth organizations!

 

Clearly, the need for building political alternatives is pressing. We must keep the objective of booting out Harper front and center in every discussion. While the realization of that victory will be electoral, the conditions for that change will not come from within Parliament. Its time to deepen and broaden the fight-back, and sharpen up the critique of the Tories, so that all the opposition parties are emboldened and/or pressured to pull the plug, and fight to bring down the Harper Tories.

 

This means is that the fight will have to be in our schools, in workplaces, on campus, at community centers, at the mall, online, and in the streets and directed at the Harper government's weak points. Massive public pressure can be decisive – and Harpers weak points are clearly issues youth can directly connect to, like the continued stealing of student's money and even lives to support the dirty war in Afghanistan, or growing poverty and minimum wages, or the crushing student debt burden which has reached crisis levels.

 

What we are talking about here is not "anybody but the Tories."  We are talking about a dialectical relationship between the corporate assault on the one-hand, and on the other hand, the struggle to advance alternative policies for the people. People's agenda policies would have to include asserting the popular, democratic sovereignty of Canada – by getting out of NAFTA, stopping the SPP deals, and pursuing an independent foreign policy of peace and disarmament. Funding education. Raising minimum wage above the poverty line. Reversing the assault on democratic and labour rights.

 

A powerful movement of labour and working people, women, youth, and all the people can defeat the Harper government and its policies, turning the country in a new direction – a direction that puts the issues of people and the environment first, and breaks the monopoly of the big corporations in favour of peace and against imperialism.

 

That is the key point.  It is not just the man we're after – we're out to defeat the political, economic, and military agenda of what lies behind Harper.  The stakes are high. Youth activists have choices. Join the growing opposition... or else... You can be the hammer or the anvil.

“An injury to one is an injury to all”

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Lead Editorial, Rebel Youth, Summer 2007

This Summer issue of Rebel Youth picks up the theme of solidarity and takes to the international level, with the call "Globalize the struggle!"

That's not because there aren't important and active struggles to write about back here. In fact, the opposite!

This winter, student protests about soaring tuition fees swept the country. In Nova Scotia, we won a tuition freeze. Vocal and visible demonstrations by thousands of people also kept the government in the hot seat over the dirty imperialist war in Afghanistan.

There is a huge debate about Kyoto and global warming in the media. More people are coming to the view that capitalism is in opposition to environmental solutions. So far, Harper hasn't budged as the "Dirty Oil Act" shows – but massive public pressure by women's activists won the restoration of funding to status of women's programmes in the last federal budget.

And in Ontario and BC, the Canadian Labour Congress has joined with the Canadian Federation of Students and launched major campaigns to raise the minimum wage – the biggest in years.

Che Guevara once said the best way to support the Cuban revolution was to build the revolution in your own country. That starts with real concrete struggles. A powerful and broad People's Coalition of the working class and its allies could begin to achieve real gains and move Canada in a new direction, taking power out of the hands of the transnational corporations.

Where's the proof? Look at Latin America.

Across Latin America, People's Coalition governments are wining major gains for sovereignty and social advance. Uruguay, Brazil, Nicaragua, and Bolivia – not just Venezuela – have all elected movements that are pushing against Uncle Sam and US imperialism. And young people are at the forefront of this resistance, together with the workers.

The FARC-EP are also putting up heroic resistance against the neo-fascist regime in Colombia, showing that US-imperialist backed-puppet governments are not invincible.

And the most inspirational anti-imperialist story in Latin America is clearly socialist Cuba. The recent declaration by the World Wildlife Fund, announcing that Cuba is the only sustainable economy in the world, is just another award that this third world country has won while under blockade by the United States.

The fight for Cuban sovereignty is connected with our struggles for Canadian sovereignty and against "Deep Integration," harmonizing Canadian and US military and trading policies. It is the same fight.

We must also stand with the anti-imperialist struggles of the Arab and South-Asian peoples against Zionism and US imperialism. This is especially important since our tax dollars are currently funding a war in Afghanistan. The cry "Bring the Troops Home," is also a movement in solidarity with the Afghani, and Iraqi, people.

Another such expression of solidarity is thorough the growing movement, lead by student activists and the Canadian Union of Public Employees, to divest from Israel, demand the right of return for Palestinian refugees, and call for an end to the Apartheid wall.

Why is international solidarity is a principle of the communists world-wide? Because no struggle of the working class can succeed without unity. The ultra-right Harper Conservatives and trans-national corporations fear international solidarity of the working people, because they know its power.

As Marx and Engles declared over a hundred years ago: Workers of the World Unite, you have nothing to loose but your chains!

 
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