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ckaihatsu
3rd April 2016, 17:17
Chicago Teachers Union strike slams cuts

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/Main%20ctu%20strike%20photo%20%282%29.jpg

By Richard Blake and Fernando Figueroa

Chicago, IL – In an historic showing of force and bravery, the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) carried out a one-day strike on April 1. Over 25,000 people, some from as far away as Canada and Florida, participated by walking picket lines, speaking out on campuses and marching in the streets to demand justice for the workers and students of the Chicago school system.

Facing unjust budget cuts that are designed to harm teachers and students for the benefit of the 1%, the CTU held strong in the face of adversity and held a series of actions across the city of Chicago to fight back. Teachers and their supporters began with picket lines at 6:30 a.m. at schools across Chicago. Every school in the city was enveloped by chants of “Hey hey, ho ho, Rahm Emanuel's got to go.”

Teachers across the city then used a variety of tactics to connect the union's demands with the city's misallocation of funds and priorities. Hundreds of strikers from Saucedo Scholastic Academy met with teachers and students from nearby schools to march on the Cook County Jail to demand “education not incarceration” and an end to the school-to-prison pipeline. Several universities in Chicago hosted rallies throughout the day to protest massive budget cuts and layoffs they have been subjected to, including 500 at the University of Illinois Chicago.

Speaking at Northeastern Illinois State University, the executive director of AFSCME Council 31, Roberta Lynch, declared: “We're standing in solidarity with CTU. Governor Rauner is holding the state hostage in an attempt to destroy all unions in this state. He's cutting state universities by 30%. Public education is what gives ordinary people an opportunity to rise higher. Rauner wants to destroy labor unions and public education, the institutions that lift people up.”

Organizations from the community, teachers, students, parents and many other supporters came out at 4:00 p.m. for the final event of the day to protest the outrageous financial cuts planned for the Chicago school system. Speakers consistently connected the CTU strike to attacks on other unions, the university system, and the black community. 25,000 people then began a march through downtown Chicago. The massive crowd chanted “Get up, get down, Chicago is a union town”, “Starving schools is a crime, time for bankers to do their time,” and many others. “Dump Trump” was heard across the march as the protesters passed Trump Tower. Police roughed up and arrested several protesters as the march neared Lake Shore Drive.

The labor movement looks to the CTU as an example of resistance to massive cuts and austerity as they continue to build a broad front opposed to attacks on unions and public education.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ManBeaR
4th April 2016, 20:23
Why does revelutionary activity in the US only happen in Chicago?

Jimmie Higgins
5th April 2016, 06:35
Well this is exciting, but it's obviously not revolutionary and only relatively militant because US Labor has been in such a terrible state for 40 years or so. Chicago and the whole so-called rust-belt region was the industrial heart of the US in the early 20th century (and the birthplace of May-Day) but for a lot of the last few decades it's been as hard hit by the effects of neoliberalism as anywhere else.

But what's exciting about this mere one-day action is that it's a union that's taking up social demands and connecting race and class issues. It's a potential demonstration of some of the social power of the working class (if not necessarily the economic power since Teachers are not as obviously central to profits) at a time when views of Capitalism in the US are weaker than they probably have been anytime this side of the 1970s.

Why is there a "Bernie Sanders" phenomena in the US, but no socialist movements? Why does the anti-police racism sentiment in the US tend to focus on "checking" petty privileges of individuals rather than combating a whole system of oppression. Why do oppressed people separate black from immigrant from arab scapegoats rather than unite in more powerful formations? Why are young people identifying with socialism minus any conception of even reformist distortions of Marxism? Why are the few Marxist groups isolated and narrow-focused or simply do propaganda... and why do many people who call themselves Anarchists in the US have no communist or working-class orientation? The main reason for the whole flavor and shape of the US left has to do with the demoralization of the working class and the weakness of the labor movement, both mainstream and more oppositional.

Our fates as revolutionary Marxists and Anarchists are tied to things like this becoming an inspiration and becoming deeper (so that maybe the rank and file of other unions will try and organize in their unions to take on social issues and more militancy), things like low-wage worker organizing becoming like a widespread (and more independent) movement. And since people in the US feel so powerless and pessimistic, things like this can begin to show us where our power in society really exists in the big picture; not in consumerism, not in overturning a dumpster at a protest, not in moral lifestyles (either Christian or lifestyle-anarchist), and not in voting.

SpaceGhost
6th April 2016, 10:35
Big strike for all California State universities are going to be happening from April 6th to the 8th I believe.

(Can't post links because I'm too new I guess, but it's on the CALFAC website)

Fighting for general wage increase, seems that California state University faculty union has been receiving the lowest amount of money for the amount of work that they do.

Puzzled Left
7th April 2016, 03:57
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8dlQfieGSTs

I recommend people gives this a quick look. I knew the strike is distinct from others for its political demand, but I was very surprised by the diverse demographics (teachers, students, parents, and other workers) and issues (aside from school funding, there is also the big banks, minimum wage, racism, police brutality, etc.) featured. It is amazing to see an American union mobilizing various sections of the working class in a political demonstration.

John Nada
7th April 2016, 21:06
It's a economic and political strike. More sophisticated than purely economic strikes.
In a political strike, the working class comes forward as the advanced class of the whole people. In such cases, the proletariat plays not merely the role of one of the classes of bourgeois society, but the role of guide, vanguard, leader. The political ideas manifested in the movement involve the whole people, i.e., they concern the basic, most profound conditions of the political life of the whole country. This character of the political strike, as has been noted by all scientific investigators of the period 1905–07, brought into the movement all the classes, and particularly, of course, the widest, most numerous and most democratic sections of the population, the peasantry, and so forthSource: Economic and Political Strikes (https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1912/may/31.htm) If only we Americans could get the numbers Tsarist Russia had:(

Solarstone
6th May 2016, 16:07
They have just made a calculated decision that they will have more leverage at beginning of next school year! They will not stop till they bring the City to its knees!

ckaihatsu
5th July 2016, 17:31
VIDEO - School Cuts No Thanks Take the Money from the Banks


View Online (https://cts.vrmailer1.com/click?sk=aIo8B2JgQjBIREnhVAO8F5N2Zb6ytzglxJBlXLn1A Tps=/aHR0cHM6Ly92cjIudmVydGljYWxyZXNwb25zZS5jb20vZW1haW xzLzE3NTkyMTg2MDk0NjUwP2NvbnRhY3RfaWQ9MTc1OTIxOTAx MzY5MjQ=/4jhjC7r0nBUmi6eKCXKv-g==&merge_field_type=%7BVR_HOSTED_LINK%7D)

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Watch Video (https://cts.vrmailer1.com/click?sk=aIo8B2JgQjBIREnhVAO8F5N2Zb6ytzglxJBlXLn1A Tps=/aHR0cHM6Ly95b3V0dS5iZS84RzMyRFpoa2MtOA==/hpqb4sEYFNGGaPFPm5_LsA==&merge_field_type=(?x-mi:(?%3C=href=)[%5Cs]*[%27%22](?%3Curl%3E[%5E%7B%27%22].+?)[%27%22]))

School Cuts. No Thanks. Take the Money from the Banks.

On June 22, 2016 the Chicago Teachers Union headed up a series of demonstrations in the Loop that focused on concrete revenue solutions for the public schools funding crisis and the racism it's packaged with. These actions converged on City Hall, occupying all the floors of the building in a powerful show of a potentially independent political force in search of a permanent structure. The protests identified three sources for funding, sources repeatedly ignored by Mayor Emanuel: to legally challenge millions of dollars sucked up by fishy toxic swap loans between Chicago Public Schools and banks; to demand that people like Ken Griffin, Illinois' richest billionaire, pay fair, progressive taxes; to stop using TIF (Tax Increment Financing) funds to finance the Mayor's property development pals and redirect those funds to public education. (The stopgap 6-month funding agreement worked out in the State's legislature later in the month was not a real budget, and created no new sources of revenue.)​

Length 15:05. Video url: https://youtu.be/8G32DZhkc-8

8G32DZhkc-8


Produced by Labor Beat. Labor Beat is a CAN TV Community Partner. Labor Beat (Committee for Labor Access) is a non-profit 501(c)(3) member of IBEW 1220. Views are those of the producer Labor Beat. ​For info: [email protected], www.laborbeat.org. 312-226-3330. For other Labor Beat videos, visit YouTube and search "Labor Beat". Labor Beat is on as a cable-tv series in six U.S. cities; check our website for more info. Chicago schedule: CAN TV 19, Thurs. 9:30 pm, Fri. 4:30 pm.

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ckaihatsu
18th July 2016, 19:26
To SEC: investigate bad swaps


View Online (https://cts.vrmailer1.com/click?sk=aIo8B2JgQjBJH72JVAO8F5Gk44GQeLQKrRirWcvdz FLQ=/aHR0cHM6Ly92cjIudmVydGljYWxyZXNwb25zZS5jb20vZW1haW xzLzE3NTkyMTg2MDk1NDM0P2NvbnRhY3RfaWQ9MTc1OTIxOTAx MzY5MjQ=/W1TWUKc3yCmHNLIwj92tpA==&merge_field_type=%7BVR_HOSTED_LINK%7D)


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Watch Video (https://cts.vrmailer1.com/click?sk=aIo8B2JgQjBJH72JVAO8F5Gk44GQeLQKrRirWcvdz FLQ=/aHR0cHM6Ly95b3V0dS5iZS9LRlNnTVFjRDFSNA==/4LScmMDsLTuNROMzcS7Zyg==&merge_field_type=(?x-mi:(?%3C=href=)[%5Cs]*[%27%22](?%3Curl%3E[%5E%7B%27%22].+?)[%27%22]))

Will The S.E.C. Stop Shady Swaps?

The fight for public schools revenue in Illinois has moved to some out-of-the-way political settings. First (on 4/17/16) funding activists testified at the Illinois House Revenue and Finance Committee hearings on Wall Street banks toxic (shady) swap deals with Chicago Public Schools. These swaps have devoured hundreds of millions of dollars that should have gone to public education. Then (on 7/7/16) financial experts, Illinois state representatives and activists delivered to the Chicago office of the Security and Exchange Commission (S.E.C.) many thousands of petitions calling for investigations into these swaps.

What is at stake here is more than money for the public sector, however. Things are at a political tipping point: Will the government, now through these state and federal departments, turn back on the funding spigot for necessary public services which can quench the great, smoldering fire within the working class? If not, what then?

Length 15:55. Video url: https://youtu.be/KFSgMQcD1R4

KFSgMQcD1R4

Produced by Labor Beat. Labor Beat is a CAN TV Community Partner. Labor Beat (Committee for Labor Access) is a non-profit 501(c)(3) member of IBEW 1220. Views are those of the producer Labor Beat. ​For info: [email protected], www.laborbeat.org. 312-226-3330. For other Labor Beat videos, visit YouTube and search "Labor Beat". Labor Beat is on as a cable-tv series in six U.S. cities; check our website for more info. Chicago schedule: CAN TV 19, Thurs. 9:30 pm, Fri. 4:30 pm.


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Preview YouTube video Labor Beat: Will The S.E.C. Stop Shady Swaps?

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