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Saturday, December 22, 2012
A Red Salute to Kim Jong Il!
Andy Brooks talking about Juche |
By New Worker correspondent
FRIENDS of Democratic Korea
returned to the Marchmont Centre in central London last weekend to mark the 1st
anniversary of the passing of dear leader Kim Jong Il called by the Juché
societies in Britain,
electrified by the news that the DPRK had successfully put a satellite into
Earth orbit.
The achievement of Democratic Korea’s
independent space programme was a fitting tribute to the memory of Kim Jong Il
and the new leadership around his successor, Kim Jong Un. And that was a point
stressed by all four speakers at the meeting on Saturday organised by the Juché
Idea Study Group and the Association for the Study of Songun Politics.
But first of all everyone stood to observe two
minutes’ silence in memory of Kim Jong Il. A screening of Korea Changing Sorrow into Strength and Courage was followed by
thoughtful contributions from Dermot Hudson and Shaun Pickford from the Juché
society on the life of Kim Jong Il.
Dr Hugh Goodacre, a lecturer at the University of London, opened discussion on the meaning
of Juché that was taken up by New Communist Party leader Andy Brooks in his own
contribution to the discussion. He stressed the importance of independence
and self-reliance in the philosophy of Kimilsungism and the Juché Idea.
The general secretary of the NCP said that the
DPRK and the Workers Party of Korea were under attack by right-wing and bogus
“left-wing” revisionists as well as the bourgeois pundits who never even
bothered to read what Kim Jong Il actually said. If they had they would see
that Kim Jong Il had made an immense contribution to Marxist-Leninist theory
and ideology.
“In his 1982 work On the Juche Idea, Kim Jong Il brought together and systematised
the Juché theory while his 1994 thesis Socialism
is a Science affirmed that socialism would eventually become the economic
system of the entire world because it is the only form of society in which
people can be truly free,” Andy Brooks declared.
All these points were triggers for a lively
discussion amongst the activists and supporters of Korean-style socialism which
could have continued well into the evening. But sadly time ran out leaving just enough
to end with the enthusiastic
adoption by acclaim of a solidarity message to Kim Jong Un, the new leader of
the Party and People of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
The horror of Christmas
By Anton Johnson
WALKING through central London last Saturday
following a union meeting I was struck by the crowds of people rushing about
eager to consume, spend money they did not have on things they did not need,
stepping over rough sleepers who were asking for money simply to have food.
The crowds seemed oblivious and spellbound by
the bright Christmas lights in the shops and street. Capitalism has adopted
quasi-religious festivals in order to get working people to consume and get
into greater debt on belief that they will be happy if they have the next item.
This has manifested itself into addictive behaviour an automatic response to a
carefully orchestrated campaign by business, which starts in October when shops
put up Christmas decorations and announcements.
Christmas of late though does not come to many
who are poor, the elderly who cannot afford to stay warm because of the high
prices and the growing number of homeless people due to the economic crisis.
Even with the rising number of closed shops and empty shop units, whether in Oxford Street or
another shopping centre in another town, people appear oblivious to what is
happening to them and around them.
The scene of today’s Christmas is another sign
that this current system not only fails people but destroys people – the
pressure the system places on people and families sees so called pictures of
tranquillity translated into ones of domestic violence, alcohol abuse, despair,
loneliness, misery, poverty and suicide. It’s a day that puts emphasis on the
model family that many do not relate to and excludes many such as Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual,Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) people.
It is worth noting and congratulating the
London Queer Social Centre organisers who this year are organising an event
that LGBTQ people who are “orphans” from their families because of their
sexuality, to come together in a communal setting.
There is an alternative to this institutional
misery – and Communists have the answer.
In the USSR of the 1920s the
Bolsheviks, as part of the process to transform society on revolutionary lines,
saw that organised religion was a shackle on the minds of the working class
punctuated with festivals that they were obliged to participate in to keep them
from thinking – just like today.
The Soviet government launched an
Anti-Religion campaign that included the abolition of Christmas. Children would
protest to their parents not to dupe them and not have Christmas in their
house, churches were systematically demolished or converted to more useful
purposes for the people.
By freeing the people from the organised
religion and festivals such as Christmas their minds were free to engage in the
process of creating a new world – one that made remarkable achievements, while
the rest of the world was in squalor caused by the crash of 1929. The people of
the Soviet Union enjoyed full employment, were free from the spectre of
homelessness and starvation and had a first class health service that was free
and accessible – unknown anywhere else in the world at that time – a achieved
through science and planning not superstition.
That world is an age ago and by the scenes in London and other cities
it looks as though capitalism has seduced people with tinsel and flashing
lights, messages to spend to be happy and superstition. We as communists need
to keep on showing the examples that people can and did achieve an alternative
to the current horror. The examples are in recent history.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Mass protests hit Starbucks
THE
UK UNCUT campaign, supported by the GMB and PCS among others last weekend
targeted outlets of the coffee shop chain Starbucks over its failure to pay
proper taxes and its recent outrageous cuts to its workers’ terms and
conditions of employment.
The chain is among several giant multinational
companies that have used loopholes in the law to avoid paying any corporation
tax in Britain for several years.
Last week the public campaign against it saw
it starting to lose customers and money and Starbucks was shamed into agreeing
to pay £20 million in back tax over two years.
But the campaigners say it is not nearly
enough and that companies like this should not be left to chose for themselves
if and how much tax they will pay. Starbucks, until a few days ago had paid
just £8.6 million in tax in Britain over the past 13 years on sales of £3.1
billion.
Then the company further outraged campaigners
by seeking to compensate itself by raiding the pockets of its already low-paid
workers.
Last week the 7,000 Starbucks baristas were
told to sign revised employment terms that include the removal of paid
30-minute lunch breaks.
Starbucks is cutting paid lunch breaks, sick
leave and maternity benefits for thousands of British workers, sparking fresh
anger over its business practices.
On the day the House of Commons' public
accounts committee branded the US coffee chain's tax avoidance practices
"immoral", baristas arriving for work were told to sign revised
employment terms, which include the removal of paid 30-minute lunch breaks and
paid sick leave for the first day of illness. Some will also see pay increases
frozen.
Last Saturday UK Uncut protesters targeted
scores of Starbucks coffee shops across Britain, briefly disrupting business on
one of the chain's busiest trading days.
Organisers from UK Uncut claimed to have
targeted more than 40 shops – including Starbucks in Liverpool, Cardiff,
Bristol and Shrewsbury – on the campaign group's biggest day of action to date.
A handful of stores, including two in London's
busy West End shopping district, were briefly closed down around noon
yesterday, and police threatened to arrest sit-in protesters for aggravated
trespass.
At a flagship store just off Regent Street's
busy shopping parades, about 40 activists and six children had joined the
action.
The protest then moved to Vigo Street, another
side road off Regent Street, where about 60 campaigners gathered among
customers sipping lattes and herbal tea, chanting: "If you don't pay your
taxes, we'll shut you down."
Zara Martin, 33, a protester who was handing
out leaflets in the branch, said: "Everyone is being really quite cheerful
and the response from passers-by is great, they are all smiley and interested
in what we are doing. It's very encouraging.
"Even if people don't agree, it's
important that we're having the debate. I think the £20 million over two years
is a bit rubbish. It's like, wow thanks Starbucks, but actually why don't you
just pay your full tax like everyone else has to?"
Customer
Paula McCaully, 42, with her partner Ian, said: "I was hoping for a
coffee, but [the protesters] are right, of course, and we will boycott and get
our coffee somewhere else, I think. Good for them, coming out on a cold day to
stand up for what they believe in."
On 4th December GMB presented a corporate ASBO
to Starbuck over the company’s failure to pay its fair share of taxes and
failure to pay a living wage to its 8,500 employees in 750 stores across
Britain.
GMB has members in Starbuck stores but the
company does not recognise any trade union nor is there any collective
bargaining on pay and conditions. Starbuck unilaterally decide what the rates
of pay and terms and conditions are for their staff and reserve the right to
make changes with no consultation with their staff.
PCS, the union that represents tax workers,
supported the UK Uncut protests. PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said: “We
fully support this weekend’s action which, along with previous campaigns by UK
Uncut and others, will highlight the fact that if large companies like
Starbucks paid their fair share it would change the debate about public
spending overnight.”
Bromley bin workers set to strike
THE GIANT
union Unite last week announced that bin workers in Bromley will stage a series
of strikes in the run up to Christmas and over the New Year.
The union’s repeated calls to bosses at Veolia
Environmental Services to reinstate four unjustly sacked workers for alleged
gross misconduct have fallen on deaf ears, leaving Unite with no option but to
issue strike dates.
Strike action will begin on Friday 14th December 2012
and run as follows:
Friday 14th December 2012 – 24-hour stoppage
beginning at 00:01;
Thursday 27th December 2012 – 48-hour stoppage
beginning at 00:01
Monday 31st December 2012 – 24-hour stoppage
beginning at 00:01
More than 80 per cent of refuse workers working
out of the Churchfields refuse and recycling centre in Bromley, south London voted in favour of
strike action in a recent ballot.
The dispute was sparked by the sacking of four
long-serving Bromley bin workers, with over 100 years of experience between
them, for allegedly accepting a cash payment to remove excess rubbish.
That allegation has since proved to be false
after an internal appeals process uncovered that the workers refused to accept
any money.
Onay Kasab, Unite regional officer, said
“Despite our best efforts to get Veolia to see sense and re-instate the four
workers, it has left us with no option but to take strike action.”
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Remembering Kim Jong Il
By New Worker correspondent
FRIENDS of Korea met in London last weekend to
pay tribute to the memory of dear leader Kim Jong Il, the leader of the
Workers’ Party of Korea who died on 17th December 2011.
Though a solemn occasion it was also a
celebration of the achievements of Kim Jong Il and the people of Democratic
Korea under his leadership. And this was vividly shown in the north Korean film
screened at the meeting at the Marchmont Centre in Bloomsbury
on Saturday.
The film, a documentary covering the funeral
of the Korean leader also showed how the Korean workers have turned their grief
into action to carry on the work under their new leader Kim Jong Un.
During the formal part of the meeting tributes
were paid to Kim Jong Il’s work from Michael Chant of the RCPB (ML), Dermot
Hudson of the Juché Idea Study Group and NCP leader Andy Brooks and a message
was read out from John McLeod of the Socialist Labour Party, who unfortunately
could not come in person.
The
meeting was organised by the Co-ordinating Committee of the Friends of Korea,
which brings together all the major movements active in Korean friendship work
in Britain
today. It is chaired by Andy Brooks and
the secretary is Michael Chant.
The committee consists of the New Communist
Party of Britain, Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (ML), Socialist
Labour Party, European Regional Society for the Study of the Juché Idea and the
UK Korean Friendship Association.
Meetings are open to all friends of the Korean
revolution and the committee organises events throughout the year in London, which are listed
by the supporting movements and on the Friends of Korea blog.
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