home / subscribe / donate / tower / books / archives / search / links / feedback / events / faq

 

What You're Missing in Our Subscriber-only CounterPunch Newsletter

Special Investigation: Why Did the World Trade Towers Fall?

A scientific explanation at last, from a physicist and mechanical engineer. P. Sainath recalls Gandhi's 9/11, one hundred years ago; Chris Sands reports from Afghanistan on the rise of the Taliban. What you just missed, but can still get, in our last newsletter: Paul Craig Roberts on the Collapse of America. CounterPunch Online is read by millions of viewers each month! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation towards the cost of this online edition. Remember contributions are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

Get CounterPunch By Email for Only $35 a Year

ST. CLAIR IN PORTLAND; COCKBURN & P. SAINATH IN OLYMPIA AND BERKELEY

Today's Stories

September 26, 2006

Uri Avnery
Mohammed's Sword


September 25, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
The Most Dangerous Place in the World: a Journey to Iraq's "Taliban Republic"

Jonathan Cook
Human Rights Watch: Still Missing the Point on Lebanon

Joshua Frank
Did Maria Cantwell's Campaign Try to Buy Off Aaron Dixon?

Paul Craig Roberts
Is the Bush Administration Itching to Nuke Iran?

Robert Jensen
Defending Chavez on FoxNews

Dave Lindorff
Horowitz on Campus: This Mouth for Hire

Norman Solomon
Media Tall Tales for Next War

Dr. Charles Jonkel
Save a Grizzly, Visit a Library: "People like the Croc Hunter are Worse Than the Most Bloodthirsty Slob Hunter

Michael Dickinson
"The King's New Clothes:" a Play Written in a Turkish Jail

Alexander Cockburn
Flying Saucers and the Decline of the Left

Website of the Day
Great Bear Foundation

 

September 23 / 24, 2006
Weekend Edition

Jonathan Cook
How Israel is Engineering the "Clash of Civilizations"

Jeffrey St. Clair
Star Wars Goes Online ... Crashes

Dr. Anon
A Doctor's Life in Baghdad

Tom Barry
Oil and Political Opportunism

Carl G. Estabrook
The Darfur Smokescreen

Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Two Presidents

Todd Chretien
The Axis of Lesser Evilism

Dr. Charles Jonkel
From Grizzly Man to the Croc Hunter: the Global Media and the Death of Bears

Debbie Nathan
I Was Disappeared By Salon

Fred Gardner
Dustin Costa Struggles Against Invisibility

Fred Wilhelms
The Money Belongs to the Artists Who Created the Music

Seth Sandronsky
The Cruel Economics of Health Care in America

Ralph Nader
Mavericks at Work

Rev. William Alberts
"Specks" and "Logs" and 9/11

Jon Van Camp
Who is Hezbollah?

Heather Gray
Conservatives and Technology

David Vest
Jerry Lightfoot, RIP

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listenting to This Week

Poets' Basement
Landau / Davies

Website of the Weekend
Meet Me In The Morning: C. Wonderland & J. Lightfoot

Video of the Weekend
Is It a Bird? A Missile? Or, Just Perhaps, a Friggin' Plane?

 

September 22, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Republic of Fear: Torture in Bush's Iraq, Worse Than Under Saddam

Michael Donnelly
It's the Manipulated Economy, Stupid!

Ramzy Baroud
The Next Palestinian Struggle

Evo Morales
"We Need Partners, Not Bosses": Address to the United Nations

Stanley Howard
Torture and Justice in Chicago

Sarah Leah Whitson
Hezbollah's Rockets and Civilian Casualties: a Reply to Jonathan Cook

JoAnn Wypijewski
Conservations at Ground Zero

Website of the Day
Cockburn in Atlanta: the Video Interview


September 21, 2006

Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad
"No Nation Should Have Superiority Over Others:" UN Address

Justin E. H. Smith
Ending the Death Penalty: Outline of an Abolitionist Program

Rick Kuhn
Australian Government Steps Up Attacks on Muslims: "I Certainly Don't Want That Type of People in Australia"

Mike Roselle
Ed Wiley's Long March: the Elementary School vs. the Strip Mine

Amira Hass
In the Name of Security: What Israeli Police Files Reveal About the Occupation of Palestine

Deborah Rich
From the Kitchen of Dr. Frankenstein: the Consumption of Gene-Engineeered Foods

Mickey Z.
10 Reasons Cars Suck

Saul Landau
Terrorism at Sheridan Circle

Website of the Day
Stop the Decapitation of Mountains!


September 20, 2006

Sharon Smith
Elections, Detentions and Deportations

Christopher Reed
Goodbye Koizumi, Hello Abe

John Ross
Mexico: Does AMLO Have a Future?

Joshua Frank
A Wasted Campaign: How Jonathan Tasini Helped Hillary Clinton and Distracted the Antiwar Movement

Arthur Neslen
The Clenched Fist of the Phoenix: What Made Israel Burn Lebanon, Again?

Norman Solomon
The Hollow Promise of Digital Technology

Michael Carmichael
The Vatican's Tyrant

Evelyn Pringle
The Merck Vioxx Litigation: a Scorecard

Hugo Chavez
Rise Up Against the Empire: Address to the United Nations

Website of the Day
Before You Enlist: Watch This Video!


September 19, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Deadly Harvest: Lebanese Fields Sown with Israeli Cluster Bombs

Jeff Leys
Economic Warfare: Iraq and the IMF

Brian M. Downing
War, Taxes and Democracy

Col. Dan Smith
Dispelling Brutality

Liaquat Ali Khan
Presidential Incitements: Did Bush's Speech Violate Geneva Conventions on Genocide?

Ron Jacobs
Just Sign on the Dotted Line: Iraqi Oil and Production Sharing Agreements

Nik Barry-Shaw / Yves Engler
Canada in Haiti: Torture, Murder and Complicity

Lucinda Marshall
Air Paranoia: the Great Toothpaste and Hair Gel Scare

Saul Landau
The Pinochet Syndicate

Photo of the Day
Hold That Bridge!

Website of the Day
Scenarios for an Iranian War


September 18, 2006

Carl Boggs
Crimes of Empire

Uri Avnery
Peace Panic

Mike Stark / Jim Bullington
Ann Richards, the Original Texacutioner

Joshua Frank
Corporate E. Coli

John Murphy
The Price of Free Speech

Ramzy Baroud
Murdoch Almighty

Dave Lindorff
On Constitution Day

Bill Quigley
Showing Conviction at Echo 9

Website of the Day
Tutorial: How to Hack a Diebold Voting Machine

 


September 16 / 17, 2006
Weekend Edition

Tariq Ali
A Bavarian Provocation

Eliza Ernshire
Death and Tears in Nablus

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part 7): To Tilted Park

Mairead Corrigan Maguire
A Nobel Laureate Visits with Israeli Nuclear Whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu

Brian Cloughley
"Let Them Drink Coke!": Losing Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan

Ben Tripp
November Prognostication: Republicans Sweep!

Laura Carlsen
Bush and Latin America: War on Terrorism or Fight for Social Justice

Ralph Nader
Terror on the Road

Ron Jacobs
Shooting Sgrena

John Chuckman
Imperial Entropy

Robert Fisk
The American Military's Cult of Cruelty

Gary Leupp
The Pope's New Crusade: Defender of the West, Scourge of Islam

Lawrence R. Velvel
The Pretexter in Chief: Learning About Bush from Hewlett-Packard

Missy Comley Beattie
The Insecurity of Immorality

Adrienne Johnstone
Deporting Widows: the Nightmare of a Kenyan Immigrant

Mickey Z.
Why I Hate America

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Kearney, Orloski, Engel, Louise and Davies

Website of the Weekend
Still Life with Killpecker



September 15, 2006

Diana Johnstone
In Defense of Conspiracy: 9/11, in Theory and in Fact

Diane Christian
On Retaliation

William S. Lind
General Puffery: When the Military Brass Deceives

Lee Sustar
Bosses Take Aim at Undocument Workers

Dave Lindorff
Retroactive Immunity for Bush?

Ramzy Baroud
Presidential PR: Lost in the Bush Spin Cycle

Mokhiber / Weissman
The Cesspool

Jeffrey St. Clair
Glow, River, Glow: Radioactive Leaks and Plumbers at Hanford

Website of the Day
F-22: The Most Expensive Piece of Junk Ever Built?


September 14, 2006

Franklin Lamb
Israel's Use of American Cluster Bombs: a Walk Through the Rubble

Tim Wilkinson
Alan Dershowitz's Sinister Scheme

Dick J. Reavis
Mexico's Time of Troubles: Who Benefits?

Sam Husseini
9/11 Five Years Later: a Conspiracy to Silence

Doug Giebel
Democracies of Death: Why John Adams Wouldn't Recognize His Own Country

Bill Berkowitz
The Messaging Strategy of the Iraq War

Diane Farsetta
What Media Democracy Looks Like

Mary Turck
Targeting Refugees and Human Rights Workers in Colombia

Patrick Cockburn
Amnesty Intl Accuses Hizbollah of War Crimes, But Katyusha Damage "Much Less" Than Israel Claimed

J.L. Chestnut, Jr.
Ah, Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?

Website of the Day
The Shocking Truth About Inequality


September 13, 2006

Jack Bratich
Eyes Put a Spell on You: Signs of Surveillance in the Public Secret Sphere

John Ross
Welcome to the Nightmare: Al Qaeda de Mexico?

Christopher Brauchli
"You Had to Have Been There": Teaching Iraq and Iran

Dave Lindorff
Mourning in America: Bush Weeps? Who are They Kidding?

Antony Loewenstein
My Israel Question

Al Krebs
The Gates Foundation and African Agriculture

Leonard Peltier
Crazy Horse in Chains

Jim Bensman
My Adventures with the FBI: How I Was Targeted as a Terrorist

Website of the Day
FreedomWalk: Take a Moment for Leonard Peltier


September 12, 2006

Norman Finkelstein
Kill Arabs, Cry Anti-Semitism

Seth Sandronsky
The War on Nurses

John Walsh
Khatami Comes to Harvard

Alan Maass
"Islamic Fascism": the New Hysteria

David Krieger
Troubling Questions About Missile Defense

Nate Mezmer
September 12th, America

Kathleen Christison
The Coming Collapse of Zionism


September 11, 2006

Uri Avnery
State of Chutzpah

Patrick Cockburn
Palestinians Forced to Scavenge Rubbish Dumps for Food

Col Dan Smith
The Centrality of War in the Presidency of George W. Bush

Dr. Susan Block
Beyond Terror

Anthony Alessandrini
Forgetting 9/11

Dave Lindorff
Bush After 9/11: Five Years of High Crimes and Misdemeanors

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
What Happened?

Joshua Frank
Proving Nothing: How the 9/11 "Truth" Movement Helps Bush & Cheney

Jean Bricmont
The End of the "End of History"

Sprague / Emesberger
"You Are a Dog. You Should Die": Death Threats Against Lancet's Haiti Investigator

Website of the Day
Web Piracy

 

September 9/10, 2006
Weekend Edition

Alexander Cockburn
The 9/11 Conspiracy Nuts: How They Let the Guilty Parties of 9/11 Off the Hook

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: In the Footsteps of Vladimir Putin (Part Six)

Greg Grandin
Good Christ, Bad Christ: Testament of the Death Squads

Peter Stone Brown
Bob Dylan's Swing Time Waltz in the Face of the Apocalypse

Ralph Nader
X-Raying Greed

Brian Cloughley
Rumsfeld at the American Legion: Dead Babies and Nazi Propaganda

Col. Chet Richards
Crossroads at the Litani

David Model
Tailoring the Case Against Iran: Cut from the Same Old Pattern

Dave Himmelstein
From Bil'in to Birmingham

Ron Jacobs
War and the Power of Words

Fred Gardner
Is Medical Pot Image a Turn-Off to Teens?

Mike Whitney
America's Economic Meltdown

Josh Gryniewicz
In the Belly of the Bentonville Beast: Working for Wal-Mart

Daniel Gross /
Joe Tessone
An IWW Story at Starbucks

Joe Bageant
Inside the Iron Theater

Nicole Colson
The Colbert Factor: Some Truthiness, At Last

Alexander Billet
Thirty Years of "White Riot": Long Live The Clash!

Poets' Basement
Engel, Louise, Buknatski, Davies, & Orloski

 

September 8, 2006

Uri Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...": the Liberals' War on Lebanon

Paul Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation

Bill Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"

Robert Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom in Iran and the US

Norman Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It

Keith Bolin

 

September 8, 2006

Uri Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...": the Liberals' War on Lebanon

Paul Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation

Bill Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"

Robert Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom in Iran and the US

Norman Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It

Keith Bolin
The Future of the Family Farm

Kristin S. Schafer
The Global Trade in Deadly Pesticides

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Five)

Patrick Cockburn
Gaza is Dying

Website of the Day
Help the Bismark 3!


September 7, 206

Marjorie Cohn
Why Bush Really Came Clean About the CIA's Secret Torture Prisons

Sharon Smith
Downward Mobility: No Recovery for Workers

René Drucker Colín
The Fraud in Mexico

Michael Donnelly
Bush Family Values: About Those Nazi Appeasers

John Borowski
Scholastic Peddles a Fictitious Path to 9/11 to Kids

Lucinda Marshall
Bombing Indiana

Charles Sullivan
Katrina and the New Jim Crow: Ethnic Cleansing in New Orleans

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part Four

Jonathan Cook
How Human Rights Watch Lost Its Way in Lebanon

Website of the Day
Rasta! Reggae's Joe Hill

 

September 6, 2006

Stephen Soldz
Protecting the Torturers: Bad Faith and Distortions frm the American Psychological Assocation

Dave Zirin
Cops vs. Jocks: the Shooting of Steve Foley

Ramzy Baroud
The Gaza Maze: Who Gained Most from the Fox Reporters' Kidnapping

Noel Ignatiev
Democrats, Pwogs and the Lesser Evil Folly

Dave Lindorff
Bombing Without Regrets: The US and Cluster Bombs

Norman Solomon
Spinning Troop Levels in Iraq

Binoy Kampmark
The Death of Steve Irwin and the Politics of the Zoo

Jeffrey St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Three)

John Ross
The Death of Mexican Presidency

Website of the Day
Flaming Arrows

 

September 5, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Will Robert Fisk tell us the whole story? Time For A Champion of Truth to Speak Up

Patrick Cockburn
Better Not Meet at the Casbah

Mike Whitney
The Worst Secretary of Defense in U.S. History? You Be the Judge

Roland Sheppard
The Civil Rights Movement is Dead and So is the Democratic Party

James Petras
As Bush Regime Faces Twilight Slide, How Much Havoc Can Paulson Wreak?

Alexander Cockburn
Will Bush Bomb Teheran?

 

September 4, 2006

Clancy Sigal
The Women Who Gave Us Labor Day

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part 2

Anthony Alessandrini
The Great Debate about Aroma Coffee: Why I Boycott

Dennis Perrin
The Great Debate in Tarrytown: Straight Zion, No Chaser

Daniel Cassidy
'S lom to Slum

Paul Craig Roberts
The War Is Lost

 

September 2 / 3, 2006

Uri Avnery
When Napoleon Won at Waterloo

Jeffrey St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon

Ralph Nader
The No-Fault White House

Noam Chomsky
Viewing the World from a Bombsight

Allan Lichtman
Arrested Democracy: Letter from the Baltimore County Jail

Stanley Heller
When Criticism of Cluster Bombs is "Anti-Semitic"

Rana el-Khatib
Invasion's Child: the Making of Issa

Peter Montague
Taking on the Pentagon: Chemical Weapons to Burn

Laura Carlsen
Mexico on a Collision Course

Dr. Susan Block
Bush Hate Rising

Joe Bageant
Roy's People: Why Progressives Need to Listen to Orbison, Not Policy Wonks

Scott Stedjan / Matt Schaaf
A New Generation of Landmines?

Gary Leupp
The Emperor Has Been Exposed

Stephen Fleischman
The Great American Oligarchy

Paul Balles
Has Ahmadinejad Already Checkmated Bush?

Ingmar Lee
Canada's $450 Million Gift to Bush: the Softwood Lumber Slush Fund

Jane Stillwater
Burning Man: the Good, the Bad and the Evil Twin

Ron Jacobs
Dylan Faces the Apocalypse, Again

St. Clair / Bossert
Playlist: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Grima, Engel, Orloski and Davies

Website of the Weekend
To New Orleans: a Photo Journal

 

September 1, 2006

Uri Avnery
Olmert Agonistes

Paul Craig Roberts
Of Wolves and Men (and Impotent Democrats)

Bill Ayers
Exclusionary Signs of the Times

Kevin Zeese
The Best War Ever

Xochitl Bervera
The Forgotten Children of New Orleans

Norman Solomon
Bush vs. Ahmadinejad: a TV Debate We'll Never See

Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah Denounces Nasrallah Interview as a Fake

Richard Neville
Rupert Murdoch's Victims

Website of the Day
The Uranium Flood

 

August 31, 2006

David MacMichael
Can the Iran Nuke Crisis be Defused?

John Ross
Diary of the Mexican Earthquake

Edward Said
Mahfouz, 9/11 and the Cruelty of Memory

Amira Hass
The Burden of Collaboration

Missy Comley Beattie
Circle in a Spiral: Families at War

Lee Sustar
The Case of Elvira Arellano: Racism, Divided Families and Deportation

Jonathan Cook
Israeli Myths: Deception as a Way of Life

Website of the Day
The Case for Impeachment: CSPAN

 

August 30, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
The Five Morons Revisited

George Salzman
The Revolutionary Surge in Oaxaca

Dave Lindorff
I Am a Curious Yellowcake: the Armitage Confession and the Niger Question

Leigh Davis
Privatizing New Orleans' Schools

Alan Maass
The Crimes Katrina Exposed: an Interview with Larry Bradshaw and Lorrie Slonsky

Mike Whitney
Pop Goes the Bubble!: the Great Housing Crash of '07

Eliza Ernshire
Murder on Rucarb Street

Website of the Day
CNN = iPoop2?


August 29, 2006

Saul Landau
Misreading Cuba, for 47 and a Half Years

Jeffrey Buchanan
Human Rights and the Realities of Returning to New Orleans: Lip Service and Profiteering

Dave Lindorff
War? What War?

James Brooks
The US Peace Movement and Hezbollah

John F. Burnett
Katrina and the Media: "I Know Y'All Want Our Story, But We Need Help"

Walter A. Davis
J'Accuse: the Media and Jonbenet Ramsey

Rich Gibson
Detroit Teachers Strike Again

Amira Hass
The Accidental Immigrant

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush Turns His Terror War on the Homeland

 

August 28, 2006

John Walsh
With Lieberman's Loss, the Lobby Takes a Second Hit

Sibel Edmonds / William Weaver
Hillary Clinton: a Fool's Vessel

Ramzy Kysia
For Israel's Security? A Visit to Houla, Lebanon

Ron Jacobs
An Interview with Nativo Lopez

Gideon Levy
The Reservists' Protest

Missy Beattie
Yes, Virginia, There is a Rumsfeld

Virginia Tilley
Putting Words in Ahmadinejad's Mouth


August 26 / 27, 2006
Weekend Edition

Uri Avnery
America's Rottweiler

Alexander Cockburn
Israel on the Slide

Jordan Green
Profiting from Disaster: Greed Has Stallled Gulf Coast Recovery, But Made Some Very, Very Rich

Azmi Bishara
Israel at a Loss

Ray Close
Why Bush Will Choose War Against Iran: Reflections of a Former CIA Analyst

Gary Leupp
The Lebanon Ceasefire and the Coming Assault on Iran

Ralph Nader
AIDS in Black America

Joe Allen
Free Gary Tyler: Thirty Years of Injustice

Fred Gardner
The Miraculous Resurrection of Dr. John Lee

Dave Lindorff
The Crime of Frag Weapons

David Krieger
Why are There Still Nuclear Weapons?

Stephen Fleischman
Jurassic White House: the Reptilian Brain of George W. Bush

Mary Turck
Elections and Lessons from Mexico

Walter Brasch
Sports Afoul: Canned Hunts

Jim Scharplaz
Oil and the American Farmer

Israel Shamir
The Grapes of Wrath

Alexander Cockburn
About That Nasrallah Interview

Charles Henderson
Scientology: a Typically American Religion?

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Grima, Ford and Mickey Z.

 

August 25, 2006

Elena Everett
The Women of New Orleans After Katrina

Juan Cole
Iran's Nuclear "Threat"

Chris Moore
Religious Motives Behind Iraq War Deception?: Revelations from the Watada Court Martial

James Marc Leas
How Lebanese Civilians Thwarted Israel's War Plans

Salah Obeid
The Price of Ignoring the Elephant

Claudio Albertani
Mexico Piquetero

Tom Barry
Gangster Diplomacy: Elliot Abrams in Jerusalem

Website of the Day
Congress, the Defense Budget and Pork: a Snout to Tail Charcuterie


August 24, 2006

CounterPunch News Service
Penis Pump or Bomb? Bum Rap at O'Hare

Uri Avnery
Stop the Cancer, End the Occupation

Nermeen al-Mufti
"The Strong Do as They Can": an Interview with Noam Chomsky

Norman Solomon
The Mythical End to the Politics of Fear

Megan Wiles
American Responsibility and Palestine

Laura Santina
Busting Loose of the War Engine: a Female Perspective

Mike Whitney
Restarting the 34 Day War

Seth Sandronsky
Millionaires Make a Killing as Killings Continue

Christopher Brauchli
Consider the Uighurs: Freedom in a Cage

 

August 23, 2006

Dr. Trudy Bond
Calling Dr. Mengele: APA Whitewashes Torture By Shrinks

Ramzy Baroud
The Real Terrorism Plot

Ron Jacobs
The Liberal Warmongers are at It Again

Heather Gray
Palestinian Sense of Place: You Can't Bomb It Away

Amira Hass
The Occupier Defines Justice

Mavis Anderson
Castro's Health and US Meddling

Ingmar Lee
The Great Game Goes On: India's Occupation of Ladakh

Francis Boyle
Statement on Behalf of Lt. Watada

John Ross
Mexico Approaches the Combustion Point


August 22, 2006

Gilad Atzmon
Israel Must Win

Jack Heyman
The Iron Heel Revisited: Cops as Provocateurs on the Docks

Eamon McCann
Bereft Belfast Mother Charges Security Firms with Wanton Murder in Iraq

Sharon Smith
Bush's Failing War on Terror: When in Doubt, Go Racist

Edward S. Herman
Faith-Based Analysis

Ramzi Kysia
My Journey to South Lebanon

Bill Quigley
Trying to Make It Home: New Orleans One Year After Katrina

August 21, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Caught in a Net of Delusion

Paul Craig Roberts
Artificial Recovery; Real Job Losses

Kathy Kelly
Israel's "Proportionate Response": Measured Amid the Wreckage

Mike Roselle
Irony Runs Through It: Making a Ruckus

Lenni Brenner
Mayor Bloomberg: the Flying Faker

Maher Osseiran
Osama's Confession; Osama's Reprieve

 

August 19 / 20, 2006
Weekend Edition

Uri Avnery
The 155th Victim

Eliza Ernshire
Terror and Freedom on the West Bank

Virginia Tilley
Inside 1701: What the UN Ceasefire Resolution Actually Says

Kathy Kelly
Funerals at Qana: a Journey to Southern Lebanon

Marc Levy
You are What You Dream: "Before you talk of heroes you must feel, taste, touch, smell the horror."

Stephen Bradberry /
Jeffrey Buchanan
Hopes and Homes: Subject to Seizure on the Katrina's Anniversary

Barbara Rose Johnston
Banking on Violence: Guatemalan Genocide and US Security

William Blum
Perpetual Fear: Saved Again, Praise the Lord!

Stephen Fleischman
Self-Fulfilling Prophecies: Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon

Ralph Nader
The Legacy of John Kenneth Galbraith

Dave Lindorff
Busted, Again: Bush is Two Times a Criminal

Fred Gardner
When Cannabis Failed to Sell

David Krieger
Nuclear Insecurity

Dan La Botz
The Minutemen: Mad at the Wrong Guys

Poets' Basement
Davies / Engel

 

August 18, 2006

Brian M. Downing
American Generals and Iraq: Time to Call for a Rapid Withdrawal

John Blair
Divine Strike in the Bible Belt: Will They Bomb Bedford?

Alan Hart
The Lebanon War, a Post Mortem

Craig Murray
Hitting a Nerve: the Hair Gel Terror Hype

Chris Dols
Confronting Madison's NaziFest

Emily Kirksey
The Cuban Mirage: Self-Deception in Miami and Washington

Joaquín Bustelo
Forging a New Strategy for Immigrant Rights: Report from Chicago

William S. Lind
Beaten: Why the IDF Lost in Lebanon

Podcast of the Day
The F-22 PodCast

Website of the Day
Burn a Brick for Jesus

 

August 17, 2006

CounterPunch News Service
"Goodbye to the Unipolar World": an Interview with Hasan Nasrallah

Barucha Peller
This Pain Has No Ceasefire

Ramzy Baroud
Lebanon: a Critical Battlefield for the New Middle East

Rothem Shtarkman
Gen. Dan Halutz: Inside Trader

Craig Murray
The UK Terror Plot: What's Really Going On?

Samar Assad
Gaza: One Year After Disengagement

Mike Ferner
Lt. Watada's Challenge

Arnold Kohen
A Second Rebirth for East Timor?

Kevin Zeese
Does the Invasion of Lebanon Foretell a Regional War?

Missy Comley Beattie
Open Wounds

Uri Avnery
From Mania to Depression

Video of the Day
Neil Young: After the Garden

Website of the Day
Art for Peace

 

August 16, 2006

Merav Yudilovitch
Apocalypse Near: an Interview with Noam Chomsky on Lebanon

Robert Fisk
Behind the Lies of Bush and Blair: It Falls to Assad to Tell the Truth

Mark Williams
The Missiles of August: The Lebanon War and the Democratization of Missile Technology

John Ross
End Game Engulfs Mexico

Christopher Brauchli
The Poor Are Such a Nuisance

John Walsh
AIPAC Congratulates Itself for Slaughter in Lebanon

Ron Jacobs
Gee, Your Hair Smells Terror-ific!: Shampoo, Fear and Elections

Rachard Itani
It Ain't Over: What Did and Didn't Happen in Lebanon

Felice Pace
Forest Fires in the Klamath Mountains: The Real Threat is Not What You Expected

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Lieberman the Enabler

Frank, Sharma and Peterson
Venezuela's Revolution of Hope: "In Two Years, Everything Has Changed!"

Jonathan Cook
Real Photo Fakers; Real War Crimes

Website of the Day
You Too Can Paint Like Jackson Pollock!

 

August 15, 2006

Andrew Ford Lyons
Why Hezbollywood Was Born: Digitally Erasing a Massacre

Binoy Kampmark
Terrorism and the Art of Flying

Robert Fisk
Israel Wasn't Hoping for This

Ralph Nader
Bush to Israel: Take Your Time Destroying Lebanon

Todd Chretien
The US Antiwar Movement: Weak, Passive, Distracted

Chris Floyd
It's Bigger Than the Neo-Cons

Mark Engler
WTO: Best Left for Dead?

George Galloway
"You Don't Give a Damn:" the SkyNews Debate

Laray Polk
What's More Obscene: War or Sex?

Trish Schuh
Operation Change of Location?: Where Were the IDF Soldiers Captured?

Website of the Day
Jesus Never Existed


August 14, 2006

Uri Avnery
What the Hell Happened to the Israeli Army?

Karim Makdisi
The Flaws in the UN Resolution

Kathy Kelly
Approaching a Ceasefire

Robert Fisk
The Truce That Won't Last

Norman Solomon
Who's Afraid of Hillary Clinton? MoveOn, for One

Sunsara Taylor
Ned Lamont and the Antiwar Movement: False Hopes, Bad Terms and Ticking Clocks

Robert Jensen
Outside the Frame: The Limits of George Lakoff's Politics

Mike Whitney
The Litani Gambit: Ceasefire or Trojan Horse?

P. Sainath
An Indian Farmer About to Commit Suicide Writes a Note of Clarification

Goretti Horgan
The Raytheon Nine: Irish Antiwar Protesters Face "Terrorism" Charges

Christopher Reed
London Fog: Doubts Hang Over Terror Plot

 

August 12 / 13, 2006
Weekend Edition

Jean Bricmont
The De-Zionization of the American Mind

Norman Finkelstein
Should Alan Dershowitz Target Himself for Assassination?

Robert Fisk
How the London Terror Scare Looks from Beirut

Adrian Grima
Forget the 50 Civilians: Watching Lebanon from Malta

Barucha Peller
Letter from Lebanon: the Proximity of Death

Omar Barghouti
The UN, Lebanon and Palestine

Adam Engel
Tearing Down the Master's House: an Interview with Derrick Jensen

Conn Hallinan
How the Irish Could Save the Middle East

John Stauber
Meet the GOP's Latest Smear Machine: Vets for Freedom

Rev. William Alberts
Bush's Primetime Lies Still Go Unchallenged by the Press

Fred Gardner
Hollywood Does Cannabis: "Weeds," the First Season

Lucinda Marshall
Penis Politics: Does Dick Cheney Want Us All to Fly Nude?

Ron Jacobs
Kill the Precedent: an Interview with Rapper Nate Mezmer

CounterPunch News Service
Kerala Throws Out Coke and Pepsi

Poets' Basement
Katz, Davies and Orloski


August 11, 2006

Col. Dan Smith
Crimes Against Peace: Beyond Nuremberg

John Ross
Class War in Mexico City's Gridlock

Michael Donnelly
Sore Loserman, Redux

William S. Lind
Collapse of the Flanks

Linda Milazzo
Chertoff's New Math: Hair Gel Plot Might Have "Killed 100s of Thousands"

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
Something is Happening Around the World

Azmi Bishara
When the Skies Rain Death

Henri Picciotto
Jewish Dissidents Must Challenge Israel

CounterPunch News Wire
The Warrior Lawyer: Tom Crumpacker, 1934-2006

Dave Lindorff
War Crimes in Lebanon

Jonathan Cook
From High Wycombe to Nazrareth: How I Found Myself with the Islamic Fascists

 


August 10, 2006

Uri Avnery
The Buck Stops Where?

Dave Marsh
Who Are Mr and Mrs Lamont?

Gabriel Kolko
Reflections on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Arthur Versluis
How Neocons' Nazi Hero Schmitt Spawned Bush's Totalitarian Lunge

Jennifer Loewenstein
Awakening the Resistance


August 9, 2006

Linda Schade
Incumbents Beware: Peace Voters Mean Business

Jackie Mason
Defends Mel Gibson; Ridicules Abe Foxman

Jonathan Cook
Hypocrisy and the Clamor Against Hizbullah

Gilad Atzmon
Operation Security Roof

Charles Hirschkind
Doing the Lebanese a Favor

Tom Barry
Right-wingers Ramp Up War on Migrants

Cockburn & St. Clair
The Sweetness of Lieberman's Defeat

 

August 8, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Requiem for Baghdad

Paul Larudee
The Lebanese Nakba and Israeli Ambitions

Joan Roelofs
The Malleable US Constitution: a Deterrent to Democracy?

Dimi Reider
An Interview with IDF Refusenik Sgt. Zohar Milchgrub

John A. Murphy
The Democrats: a Party on the Run ... from Its Own Members!

Eliot Katz
The View from the Big Woods: In Which a NYC Antiwar Poet Takes a Summer Vacation in Canada's Boreal Forest

Tim Llewellyn
Into the Valley of Death

Website of the Day
Galloway Speaks!

 

August 7, 2006

Uri Avnery
The Junkies of War

Karim Makdisi
The Draft UN Resolutions: the View from Beirut

Nadia Hijab
What Israel and the US Wanted May Not Be At All What They Get

Sharon Smith
Birth Pangs and Dead Babies

Magan Wiles
Encounter at an Israeli Checkpoint

George Beres
A New Kind of Bigotry: Lebanon War Exposes Strange Religious Bedfellows

Rachard Itani
Nice Try, Mr. Bolton

Norman Solomon
Some Nukes Are A-Okay with the US Media

Stan Cox
Presidential Doping Scandal Erupts!

Mickey Z.
Go Ahead, Please Stare at Her Chest

Jonathan Cook
The Deadly US-Israeli Shell Game at the UN

Website of the Day
Sam Husseini Interrogates Newt Gingrich on Lebanon

 

August 5 / 6, 2006

Virginia Tilley
Boycott Now!: the Case for Boycotting Israel

Uri Avnery
The Black Flag

Patrick Cockburn
Yes, It is a Crusade!: Blair's Mad Speech on Iraq

Sgt. Martin Smith
Military Training and Atrocities: Bad Apples from a Rotten Tree

Gary Leupp
America's Heroes on Trial

Neve Gordon
The New McCarthyism: Academic Freedom After 9/11

Ralph Nader
Hey Joe!: the Ghosts of Lieberman's Past

Peter Bouckaert
For Israel, Innocent Civilians Are Fair Game

Peter Montague
Nukes Rising: Bush Oversees a Global Nuclear Expansion

David Krieger
Global Hiroshima: the Stakes Have Been Raised

Michael Donnelly
"Sir! No Sir!": the Story of the GI Anti-War Movement

Fred Gardner
Dr. Denney Sues the DEA

Catherine Norris
Seeking Justice Abroad: Spanish Courts Issue Arrest Warrants for the Butchers of Guatemala

Imraan Siddiqi
The Smokescreens of War: Moral Superiority, 9/11 and Islamic-Fascism

Missy Comley Beattie
One Year After the Death of Chase Comley

Ira Kay
Where is Geography? Getting Beyond the Place Name Game

Dave Lindorff
Let's Build a Wall

Pratyush Chandra
Nuclear Fascism in India

Ron Jacobs
Keeping It Radical

St. Clair / Donnelly
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Katz and Davies

Website of the Day
Defend Bear Butte

Video of the Weekend
Rainbows Bust Pig Blockade

 

August 4, 2006

Ralph Nader
Joe Lieberman and the Secret Chamber

Brian Cloughley
Osama Has Won

Eliza Ernshire
No Lights in Gaza: "We Have a Death Warrant for Your Home"

Roger Assaf
Letter from Lebanon: Adjusting the Heroic Commando Raid Story

George Bisharat
When I Last Saw Lebanon

Remi Kanazi
Out to Lunch: The US Media's "Special Relationship"

Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Critical Moment: The Boardrooms vs. the Street

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Fig (Leaflet) of Warning

Derrick O'Keefe
Ripe Fruit and Rotten Imperial Ambitions: US Reaction to Castro's Illness

Mickey Z.
Some Context on Castro and Cuba

Col. Dan Smith
The New Gonzales Standard for Torture: No Standards, No Accountability

Website of the Day
Israel's TV War


August 3, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Civilian Casualties and the War of Media Deception

Uri Avnery
Knife in the Dark

Saree Makdisi
Time to Call It Quits: Israel's Raid on Baalbeck's Hospital

Robert Fisk
The Family That Stays Together Dies Together

Farrah Hassen
Bush's Nutty Syria Policy: a Report from Damascus

Nicola Nasser
The De-Arabization of the Arab League

Ron Jacobs
The Hollow Body: When Exactly Did the UN Lose Its Street Cred?

Mitchel Cohen
Mexico Rising

Seth Sandronsky
Migrant Labor and Uncle Sam

Bruce K. Gagnon
Convert the Military Industrial Complex

Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah's Top Ally in Israel


August 2, 2006

John Ross
Mexican Civil Resistance in Five Acts

Chip Mitchell
Kudos to Hitchens!

Saul Landau
Want Peace in the Middle East? End the Occupation

Naseer Aruri
The UN at the Dustbin of History: Does It Have the Capacity to Intervene?

Winslow T. Wheeler
Congress and the Pentagon: Co-Abusers of the War Budget

Matthias Gebauer
News on a Platter: the Middle East PR War

Joshua Frank
How the Kyoto Protocol Was (Al) Gored

Bill Quigley
Hiroshima, Nagasaki and North Dakota

Manuel Yang
A View of Gaza and Lebanon from the Interior

Shamai Leibowitz
Whitewashing Atrocities: the Tortured Language of War

David Himmelstein
Pulling the Plug on Israel

Lara Marlowe
The Total Destruction of Srifa

Website of the Day
As a Nuke Plant Falls

 

August 1, 2006

Michael Neumann
What is to be Said?: War on the Blathersphere

Robert Fisk
Into the Meat Grinder: NATO and Lebanon

Omar Barghouti
The Massacre at Qana: Were Racism and Fundamentalism Factors?

Marc Levy
Whatever You Did in the War will Always be With You

Diana Barahona / Jeb Sprague
Reporters Without Borders and Washington's Coups

Claud Cockburn
Scenes from the Spanish Civil War

Ross Eisenbrey
When is a Raise Not a Raise? House Bill Actually Cuts Wages for Some Workers by $5.50 an Hour!

Dave Lindorff
Making the World Safe ... for Dictatorship

John Chuckman
Canada's Harper Blames the UN Dead

Francis Boyle
Prosecuting Israel: a War Crimes Tribunal May be the Only Deterrent to a Global War

Phil Doe
Bleak House Revisited: My Vacation in Water Court

Stephen Soldz
Psychologists, Guantanamo and Torture

Website of the Day
An Unfair War

 

 

 

 

Subscribe Online

September 26, 2006

Lessons from the Class Struggle

The Detroit Teachers' Strike, 2006

By RICH GIBSON

School workers, strikes appear to be the new canary in the mine of society, measuring levels of exploitation, oppression, and freedom. Teachers in two of the most devastated cities in the U.S., Detroit and Gary, Indiana, joined teachers in Oaxaca, Mexico, and Palestine, in job actions in 2006. In Palestine and Oaxaca, the strikes quickly spun well beyond mere battles about wages, hours and working conditions, and became social uprisings, demonstrating the thesis that educators are centripetally positioned in many societies to initiate, if not complete, fights for equality and democracy. In addition, the strikes clearly show how the imperial, perpetual-war, policies of the US reverberate within, and without, the US.

The Gary strike was brief and, flatly, inconsequential but it happened because education in a once proud industrial city was near collapse and the school workers, who typically carry signs saying, "I Don,t Want To Strike But I Will! took action because they had to take action not only to survive, but to preserve their dignity.

On September 13, Detroit teachers voted by a slim majority to halt a 16 day illegal strike and return to work, voting on a "Tentative Agreement (TA) later. The strike in Detroit represented a collision of complex social forces, and their representatives. Each had to fight because each was cornered. The local ruling classes, sometimes divided against each other, but united against the working classes, are irrevocably tied to US battles for empire through the auto-industry,s almost desperate search for cheaper labor, markets, financial control, social domination, and raw materials, and through the war industry,s ties to what was once known as, "Detroit, the Arsenal of Democracy. The lessons from this true class struggle are key to understanding the central role of school in a society which has nothing to offer youth but temporary jobs and endless war.

Largely because of repetitious failures of its rulers, Detroit, a true ghetto whose citizens are now 85% black, has been in a shocking nose-dive for decades. Detroit had nearly 2 million people in the fifties. It,s powerful, radical, and active working class had income sufficient that one person working could take care of a family relatively well. Detroit had more single family homes than any other US city. Free health care and dental care was available to adults and kids through the Children,s Fund of Michigan. The libraries, Institute of Arts, and Historical Museum were world class. Detroit,s public schools were widely recognized as the best public school system in the world.

Detroit has a remarkably prescient slogan, coined after the city burned in 1805 by the priest, Gabriel Richard, "We hope for better things; we will rise from the ashes. An imperial colonizer himself, Richard didn,t know the depth of ash to come. The eradication of hope is attendant to the disintegration of empire.

Racism combined with opportunism and profiteering to demolish much of what was once a proud Detroit heritage. For example, the construction of expressways (for military ingress in case of uprisings) wrecked working class black neighborhoods, and made it possible for white people to flee to suburbs where they could obtain low-cost home loans, while black people were red-lined out. While the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) were recognized for excellence, they were also harshly segregated, by race, class, and sometimes even religion.

By 2006, the official census said about 850,000 people remained in Detroit. But no figures coming from Detroit officialdom can be trusted. Many people have a stake in faking population figures. Detroit lost money when the count dropped below one million. The real population probably slipped below 800,000 in 2004, a loss of nearly 1.2 million people. Those who could afford to leave usually did, leaving behind tiny walled pockets of wealth, dedicated anti-racists, and some well-kept working class neighborhoods holding on block by block, surrounded by blight so horrific that mayoral races usually include competitions about who can bulldoze more empty homes faster, more than 10,000 in 2004. The vacant areas left behind, where a sophisticated public transportation system once ran, witness streets so covered with dirt that they have disappeared into huge open fields. It,s not unusual to kick up a pheasant less than 20 blocks from the downtown Renaissance Center.

The destruction of a major industrial city can happen fast. The city was in decline in the early 1960's, as people with capital moved out. As poverty grew, so did police oppression and, in 1967, the people of Detroit rose up in rebellion against the daily humiliations of police harassment and, more, the insults of daily life under the stick of racism. It took the 82 Airbourne to return from Vietnam to defeat the citizens who raided police stations and could hold property hostage.

Detroiters have never been easily put down. In this instance, the rebellion was a victory. Thousands of jobs opened up for black people. Welfare regulations eased. Free transportation was offered to jobs in the suburbs. School integration was seriously interrogated. The police backed off, a bit (in 2004 the notoriously corrupt Detroit Police Department was cited for its crooked practices once again"a previous Chief of Police cried, "Where did that come from? when $1 million in cash fell out of his ceiling onto the heads of investigators).

The battle-field victories of the Vietnamese coupled with the 1970's manufactured oil crisis to cripple both the US social safety net and the auto industry. Auto bosses stopped investing in new plants, shifted jobs to Mexico, then China. Detroiters, long accustomed to the promise of hard, but lifetime, jobs in auto, became unemployed. Last hired, first fired, applied, as if a course of nature. Families began to collapse. New drugs, like crack cocaine, invaded.

Again, people fought back. The militant State Workers Organizing Committee (SWOCthe core of what is now the largest local in the United Auto Workers, state employees without collective bargaining rights) fought welfare cuts and dumped live snakes on state officials who promoted the cutbacks, turning the state into "a snake pit. Teachers struck. Mary Ellen Riordon, DFT boss for twenty years, rejected a SWOC offer to shut down state offices in support of a city-wide demonstration during a seventies strike, saying, "No! There would be a riot! Riordon was one of a long line of racist AFT leaders, beginning with Al Shanker,s twisted leadership in the Ocean-Hill Brownsville strike in New York City, 1968.

Young black auto-workers in the Dodge Revolutionary Union movement, inspired by local Marxists like Marty Glaberman, seized plants and fought not only the employers, but the UAW bosses as well. In 1973 UAW goons entered the Chrysler Mack Avenue Plant which had been taken over by a rank and file sit-down protesting on-the-job injuries, beat the workers inside, dragged them out, and turned them over to the police, "in order to defend the UAW contract. For some in Detroit, it was the last time they believed the UAW.

The UAW announced a policy of "Partners in Production, that is, the unity of the UAW leadership, the owners of what was then the Big Three (now Crumbling Two), and government, in the "national interest. What,s good for GM, was going to be good for the UAW leadership and the nation. The UAW and Chrysler, in particular, howled "Buy American! Even today, Gulf War Marine vets who drive "foreign cars cannot park in the UAW lot. The Big Three, of course, began to build cars and invest everywhere but the US. Soon, most of Ford profits came from Europe. The UAW lost one million members since 1975, and did nothing but muster surrender.

People continued to move out of Detroit. The tax base eroded. White people, like the racist Catholic author Paul Clemens, blamed Coleman Young, the black Mayor. But Young never took action the auto-bosses didn,t approve, despite his tough street rhetoric. Indeed, in 1980, Young seized an entire section of the city, Poletown, used police violence to drive out 4000 people, tore down 1400 homes, and gave it to General Motors, in return for a promise to build a plant, with generous tax abatements attached. Corporate tax breaks syphoned the city treasury.

While incompetence and corruption plague every aspect of public life in Detroit today, that reality is commonly seen by white suburbanites as proof that black people cannot govern. In fact, Detroit was always a corrupt city and it did not invent incompetence. Politicians in white San Diego could keep pace with a Detroit crook any day (in 2006, the entire San Diego city council will be charged, rightly, for corruption in regard to a $1 billion pension scam; two councilmen were convicted in "Strippergate, and a corrupt Judge-Mayor already resigned).

It is more to the point that local black politicians and public officials are every bit as on the make as the rest of their class, every bit as willing to serve a suburbanite of any color when the opportunities are offered, at a price. True, youthful Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, son of Carolyn Cheeks who has an undistinguished record as a congresswoman, did spend $200,000 dollars of city money refurbishing his own swimming pool, Also true, some politicos just remain stubbornly honest, and subsequently isolated, and too often quiet.

In 1999, in a maneuver widely seen by Detroiters as an effort to strip them of the vote, white politicians in Lansing abolished the elected DPS board, replaced it with an appointed board composed of bosses from failed corporations like Chrysler (by then owned by Daimler-Benz which did Buy American), figurehead educators like the president of a Catholic College who knew nothing of Detroit, and a coke-head suburban Mom, owner of a Detroit maquiladora, who was afraid to enter the city to attend meetings. She was allowed to attend via cellphone, and her orders to her maid, Lucita, were broadcast in the background.

The violent fist behind the velvet glove of schooling was exposed when, at the first Takeover Board meeting, SWAT teams with fully automatic rifles surrounded the location. Snipers were openly posted on roofs. Armed guards escorted the Takeover leaders into the auditorium, passing an armed personnel carrier.

In this first meeting, a small group of middle school girls carrying signs protesting the takeover approached a microphone, before the meeting began. The Takeover chair, Freeman Hendrix, who later ran for mayor with so much suburban support he poisoned his own well with white wealth and was defeated, screamed at the Detroit Police riot squad, "Get them! Get them now! Get them out!, They did. The girls were bodily thrown out the door. That set the stage for future meetings, but Detroiters, never ones to quail, routinely disrupted future meetings, shouting down speakers.

The police, good at attacking middle school kids, don,t do well with solving murders in Murder City. Since 1960, 10,000 murders went unsolved. However, in one instance, a molester jumped an elementary school child on the way to her school on one of Detroit,s burned out streets. A grandmother in a wheel chair watched from her window as two men in a passing auto exited their car, shot and killed the man, and drove off. The police never initiated much of a search. Detroiters tend to solve their own problems when they can.

The Takeover Board failed in every promise they made. Test scores plummeted. The number of failing schools doubled. Safety in school remained an issue for kids and school workers as well. As white people left the city, the student population became 91% black.

The Takeover board did succeed in refurbishing a few buildings, and built a few new schools. For the most part, however, they looted the bond money that was earmarked for school construction, rewarding allies with no-bid contracts on jobs that were frequently paid, but never even started. More than a million dollars was given to a suburban auto-advertising firm, on another no-bid deal, to convince Detroiters that the schools are swell.

Students continued to pour out of DPS, at a rate of about 11,000 a year (at $7,000 per student in state funds). By 2004, the system claimed less than 125,000 students, about its largest size, down from 180,000 in 2000. Books, supplies, heat, windows, libraries, running water, toilet paper, things taken for granted in most schools, never appeared in Detroit, unless the school workers supplied them. The Takeover Board, which had an estimated budget surplus of nearly $169 million in 2001, left behind a deficit of about $31 million in 2005. Many educators believe that is a debt the state owes DPS.

In 1999, the rank and file of the Detroit Federation of Teachers (a part of the American Federation of Teachers, DFT-AFT), went on a wildcat strike, opposed by the union leadership, by the Mayor, by a draconian Michigan anti-strike law, by the Governor, and the DPS Takeover Board as well. The wildcat was only made possible when one courageous teacher stormed the podium of a DFT mass meeting and yelled, "Everyone who wants to go on strike, walk to the left. Everyone who wants to oppose the strike, walk right.

Nearly the entire room, seeing a chance not only to act, but to defeat a routine of DFT leadership vote fraud, moved left. The strike was on. The school workers made their union bosses irrelevant, won community support by striking for "Books! Supplies! Lower Class Size! It lasted six days and indeed won in many ways. The biggest victory was to prove that the rank and file, in solidarity, through direct action, could violate an unjust law, had the power to go utterly unpunished, and could persevere in a strike surrounded by powerful enemies"and make gains. It may be that the union leadership learned more from this wildcat than the members.

Over time, it became clear that the DFT leadership lied to the rank and file about the 1999 contract, and contracts to follow. DFT claims to the contrary, the 1999 contract said nothing, for example, about books, supplies, and class size. It contained a series of gross wage and benefit concessions, including extension of work days for all educators. It offered administrators a chance to reconstitute schools, that is, close schools with low test scores, lay off teachers, perhaps to never hire them again. The contract allowed even greater use of permanent substitutes, tempting for their low pay. Like their counterparts in the UAW, the DFT promised that concessions save jobs. No. Like giving blood to sharks, concessions only make bosses want more. Thirty years of concessions prove that out.

And more the DPS administrators wanted and got. They demanded that the contract be reopened, several times, shredded the deal just as the hallowed UAW contracts were voided by the Big Three. Between the 1999 wildcat and 2006, DFT surrendered again and again, giving up a week,s pay once, loaning the DPS another weeks, pay, giving up step increases. DFT had already split the unity of the bargaining unit, in 1994, when they agreed to set up a two tier system for health benefits, newer teachers paying far more for far less. As always, this chicken came home to roost. An injury to a few became an injury to all.

By 2006, the DPS had replaced the failed Takeover Board with an elected board of people, most entirely new to the job. But the city and the schools continued to decay, fast.

Forty-seven percent of the city is functionally illiterate. Three of four kids are born to single mothers; but teachers often do not see moms. They see grand-moms, great- grams, and guardians. Fifteen percent unemployment is the official figure, youth unemployment at least double that. Casinos pump at least 1 billion into the local economy though nearly no one goes to Detroit for a casino vacation, instead the poor lose social security checks. The first casino fatality was a Detroit cop who killed himself with his service pistol in a casino after an unlucky night.

DPS closed 30 schools in the last five years and plans to kill off at least 100 more. It is hard to tell how bankrupt DPS is, as the administration, led by "CEO William Coleman III, a leftover appointee from the Takeover board, refuses to release the budget. He came to DPS promising administrative transparency, an end to a system stupefied by corruption (a 2006 Department of Education audit revealed yet another $930,000 missing from DPS in unaccounted for federal grants, which must be repaid), incompetence, and nepotism. Then he hired his wife to a six-figure job"and demanded the DFT members make $90 million more in wage and benefit concessions, after he gave administrators 10% raises. 

In the 1999 wildcat, there were about 12,000 school workers in the DFT bargaining unit. Now it is around 9000, though DFT claims more. About 2000 of those members are non-teaching staff.

If ever one wanted a showcase of capitalism in decay; Detroit is it. There are hints of revival, of sorts, in a world-class medical center near Wayne State University, still a respected institution. New casinos and sports stadiums are said to help the city from the ashes, but they create nothing of value, indeed require a spectator culture of subservience that contradicts Detroit,s tough, engaged, history. And, for Comerica Park baseball, there sits old Tiger Stadium, rotting at Michigan and Trumbull, too tough to just disappear, too expensive to demolish. You can still bribe a guard and run the bases. But most of the memorabilia has been stripped, like the city. Sleepy Windsor, Canada, across the Detroit river, became a small neon brothel with the installation of casinos, competitors for Detroit gambling money.

Detroit, all told, is a stark example of the choice at hand: equality and democracy, or, barbarism.

 

The Players: Elites of the City and Nation: DFT-AFT Versus The School Workers, Kids, Parents, the Citizenry, and Reason Itself

Elites inside Detroit usually draw their real power from outside the city lines. There is a black comprador political class, and some wealthy new entrepreneurs. But, as we have seen, the strings of power are pulled outside the city, by auto bosses, and the industries that attend to them, like big advertising agencies. Developers, like Max Fisher, once played a major role, but his focus shifted outside the city. Casino interest lines run outside Detroit, as do the owners of the big sports stadiums and the Tigers, Red Wings, and the awful Lions"two owners both enriched by selling pizzas, lots of pizzas.

That does not mean, however, that elites have no interest in Detroit schools, really the last remaining hope for most citizens. When hope is erased, people rebel, and Detroiters take some pride in their (costly) rebellions. What is different, today, is that little remains in Detroit to hold hostage, and the levels of repression that are now routine were once abhorrent.

Elites have contradictory interests in the schools. The more powerful sectors of dominance still see that schools serve an important, and publicly-funded, function: social control won via false hope, teaching lies to kids using methods so obscure that kids learn to not like to learn, but snaring kids and keeping them off the streets; free baby sitting for corporations.

The Takeover board represented this struggle of elites, outsiders seeking to impose their own views of domination on an inside crowd; the elected board. The shift back to an elected board measures a continuing battle, the illusion of an elected board outweighed the politically unacceptable intrusion. Choosing the elites who will oppress you least is a bad choice.

Within this struggle, privatizers do play an important role. In 2002, nearly 20,000 Detroit kids attended charters, often run by for-profit companies, with each child representing a $7000 dollar loss to DPS. There are no truly progressive charters in Detroit, as in Oakland,s "Growing Children charter run by the whole language specialist, Susan Harman; a real critique of the failure of radical educators to see an opportunity.

Tom Monahan, owner of Domino,s, and once-owner of the Tigers, is devoted to opening Catholic schools, and opposing abortiona powerful privatizer with a cause.

In addition, the dollars attached to Detroit kids are attractive to nearby districts, like Oak Park, where administrators cashed out nearly $100,000 in advertising to Detroit kids, promising small classes, great facilities, and terrific teachers. In September, hundreds of Detroit kids crossed famous 8 Mile Road to Oak Park, to find classes of 35-40, leaking ceilings, and subs. Still, the raiding continues, and youth leave the city schools"for good reason.

 

Why Have Schools? Educators as Workers

Schools in the US are, above all, capitalist schools. The teaching force is about 90% white, and white students are the most segregated of all racial groupings in schools. There is no single public education system, but, perhaps, six or seven systems segregated by class and race, each system more or less producing the kinds of knowledge and practices projected for the parental income groupings the school workers face.

There are, for example, pre-law or pre-managerial public schools, as in wealthy Birmingham, Michigan, or LaJolla, California. There are pre-prison schools, and pre-Walmart schools as in most of Detroit. In between, there are pre-teacher, pre-technologist, pre-medical schools as well. Each of these systems uses differing teaching methods, promotes varying ways of coming to know things, as well as different sets of facts. Ruling class families rarely send their kids to public schools, preferring lovely private Cranbrook in Bloomfield Hills, for example.
Educators are, mostly, workers, although when they are called upon to spend an average of $1200 of their own money for school supplies each year, they are reminded of their professionalism . There are 49 million children in public schools in the US, more than 3.4 million teachers and school workers. The overwhelming majority of students are future workers, or soldiers.

Youth, not school workers, are the prime target of schooling, though the actions of school workers can be very influential, can send youth up better paths than to become targets. Even so, school workers are the most unionized people in the US, four million of them in the National Education Association or the American Federation of Teachers-AFL-CIO.

Capital's schools are huge markets which involve not only students and educators, but tens of thousands of others. Consider the school busses, textbooks, lunches, grounds_keeping, architects, guard companies, test manufacturers, advertisers, and clothing. School is a multi_billion dollar business, not a think_tank distinct from the crude workings of the world. Follow the money. It,s an $800 billion treasure chest. Add up the dues to the National Education Association: 3.2 million member paying more than $500 per month. Bear in mind that the top leaders of NEA make more than $400,000 per year"and remember the old labor saw: Which side are you on?

Note that the Michigan tourism industry, itself reeling from the collapse of the state,s job market, demanded that K-12 schools in the state shift their opening date back past Labor Day, to prop up their businessesflying in the face of years of state Education Department demands to lengthen the school year, to start early. When tourism-profit reports came in from Labor Day 2006, the local press crowed, "It worked!

The rule of business, profits, grinds on while, simultaneously, the problems of business arise: cheating, chicanery, and sexual exploitation of those who hold less power. Developers cheat on contracts, suppliers bait and switch supplies; while most of school work is done by women, and most of education's top bosses are men.

Since schools are home to developing sexuality, yet are tasked with repressing sexuality through demands for splitting pleasure and reproduction, abstinence education; it follows that schools are also sensual places, where desire can overwhelm a geometry lesson. Repressed desire, the line from advertiser to purchaser, can underpin an obsequious personality, or an authoritarian one. The lure of freedom, contradicted by habitually repressed yearning, shapes subjects who can dream of freedom, but will not fight for it.

School workers produce value in capital's markets. When educators and kids arrive in school, they confront a billion dollar business, more powerful than unorganized kids and teachers. This is part of the answer to the critical question that is rarely asked: Why have school? Educators shape the next generation of workers and military volunteers, labor power, and they generate hope, real or false; a lynchpin of social order, control. People in pacified areas become instruments of their own oppression.

George Bush, in a White House education speech on September 18, 2006 made it clear: "To be a productive worker, you have to read the manual.

Hope, accumulated over generations of teachers' hard work, is the reason parents send their kids to school_-to strangers. In addition to skill training, some restricted intellectual activity, promoting nationalism, warehousing kids (a huge free day care system supplementing corporations which insist the main tax burden should be on the working class), etc., commercializing sports, schools' promise of hope is now more myth than reality. What hope exists comes from those rarities who swim against the tide. While government funds come primarily from the exploitation of other workers, the valuable labor of school workers is exploited, i.e., they are not paid for the full value of their labor, which is both ideological and practical, and they do not control the processes nor the products of their work.

Teachers do not set their own hours, wages, or working conditions. They do not control the curriculum, nor the pedagogical methods to be employed. Powerful corporate interests control textbook publishing, for example, and seek to replace the critical and human relationships of a particular teacher meeting a unique child in a classroom with the standardized curricula and techniques (policed by high_stakes examinations that measure little but race and class) which serve those who hold power. The less educators, workers, resist this subservient alienating relationship, the more they enrich both those who own, and capitalism itself. The more teachers do this, the less they are. So, while teachers may think of themselves as more professionals than workers, they are more workers than professionals. The more they uncritically pursue surplus value, the less free and creative they are, and the more oppressed the kids are.

Educators live contradictory lives. Typically conservative, they nevertheless sit in a nodal point in North America where the struggle for reason, against irrationalism, meets the demands of the market. Librarians, sometimes school librarians, led battles against FBI demands for lists of readers and texts. Biology teachers fight for rational knowledge against creationism. History teachers seek to demonstrate that the construction of history is not merely an analysis of the past, from a standpoint in the present, but also inherently a call to action. Reading teachers struggle to show that literacy is not only sounding out syllables, but a struggle for meaning in which the whole is related to the parts. Art and music teachers fight for their subject,s existence. Math teachers try to link numbers with the question: Why?

Teachers are unlike industrial workers in some important ways. Educators do not make Pintos, they work collectively, interacting with kids, and ideas. So, for many, the inhuman processes of daily work life, as on an assembly line, are doubly offensive. That means employers have a weakness to exploit: teachers tend to care about kids, and employers do not.

All of this takes place as good teachers swim against a tide of power that seeks to regulate what children learn, and how they come to learn it, in the interests of the powerful. Too often school workers, unwittingly or knowingly, become mere missionaries for capitalism, and schools become the missions themselves. The metaphor is nearly perfect. The number of witless missionaries is far too high. And the great teachers who can persevere in a culture that promotes racism, cowardice, ignorance, and opportunism, far too few.

In sum, while there is struggle on every job and that is surely so in school, the public school system in the US is not public, not contested terrain as a few "critical pedagogues maintain, but capitalist schools; their schools, not ours.

The Detroit Federation of Teachers-American Federation of Teachers-AFL-CIO

To know the DFT, one must first understand how it fits inside the AFT-AFL-CIO, and to do that: meet Al Shanker; corrupt, racist, cold-warrior extra-ordinaire, and founder of what AFT is today. Shanker died in 1997, prompting labor-academic Paul Buhle to write, "No Flowers, and researcher Kim Scipes to describe him as a "maggot. They are on target.

Shanker came to power in the AFT in 1968, on the heels of being jailed for leading a racist strike against the New York community of Ocean-Hill Brownsville. The AFT was, behind Shanker, an active opponent of affirmative action. His false martyrdom catapulted him into national leadership, to which he clung for nearly thirty years, not uncommon in the AFL-CIO. He lorded over a culture of cronyism, internal tyranny, nationalism, anti-communism, and corruption that may be unmatched in the history of labor"quite an achievement considering Jimmy Hoffa, George Meany, et al. After nearly thirty years of power, and puffed by the corporate media to be the greatest of school reformers, all of the urban schools Shanker represented only reformed backwards.

Shanker had powerful allies. Schools are important to elites, and the AFT represents, by far, most of the urban educators in the US (AFT with a million members is one-third the size of the largest union in the US, the NEA, with 3.2 million, mostly suburban, members). Shanker and his close personal friend and constant dining companion, finance capitalist Felix Rohatyn, engineered the infamous New York city bailout in 1975 (the teachers loaned their pension funds) setting the stage for the massive series of concessions from labor thereon.

Shanker enunciated an AFT-AFL-CIO policy of the unity of labor, government, and business, in the "national interest, that should ring out as a pillar of the corporate state: fascism. He tied himself to the bosses, and the school workers mostly followed. His "Progressive caucus controlled every important move within the AFT, and shot down dissent by eliminating secret ballot votes. His Social Democrats USA controlled a union in a pivotal point in US de-industrializing society.

Behind Shanker, the AFT became profoundly corrupt; leaders held jobs for life. The boss of the local representing Washington DC is jailed now for looting the treasury of a local representing one of the most impoverished areas in the US for hundreds of thousands of dollars (typically arriving at meetings in a chauffeured limo). Shanker favorite, Pat Tornillo, who stole hundreds of thousands from his Miami local, sits in prison, as does the boss of the Broward County, Florida, local, imprisoned for molesting kids.

Shanker,s AFT, the only powerful organized group which had a clear stake in defending urban education in the US, chose to organize its break-down, supporting every step back and declaring it a victory, or "the best we can do. If a finger is to be pointed at those responsible for the ruin of urban schools, it points at AFT.

The AFL-CIO, of which AFT is a preeminent part, spends nearly one-half of its dues income outside the US. It does so following AFL,s historic doctrine: If workers outside the US do worse, workers inside the US will do better"much like the AFL craft union view that segregated unions by skill, locking out black workers in particular. The AFL side of this work began as early as WWI, when the AFL attacked the radical Industrial Workers of the World ("The working class and the employing class have nothing in common...). which opposed the war as an imperialist adventure in which workers were fighting the enemies of their enemies.

Connections between the AFL-CIO and US intelligence agencies tightened during the Cold War. The unions drove communists, who had been key organizers, out of their ranks, and began to work internationally, often through the National Endowment for Democracy, the American Institute for Free Labor Development, and fronts for the Central Intelligence Agency. Shanker and his cronies were, and are, in the forefront of this effort which, among other things, assisted in the overthrow of the elected Allende government of Chile (and the death of thousands), an effort to crush unionism in apartheid South Africa, worked with Philippine death squads to kill off indigenous unions and left-social movements, assisted in the destruction of the Sandanista government in Nicaragua, and on and on.

Elites, and Shanker, recognized the significance of social control through schooling as the war in Vietnam ended. Schools and universities had gone over the top and elites began to plan to stuff the genie back in the bottle. One of many maneuvers elites used was the drive to regiment the curricula in the public, capitalist, schools, through scripted programs, rewriting textbooks to heroize the US failed aggression in Vietnam for example, and via high-stakes standardized tests.
The initial benchmark was called "Nation at Risk. The project culminated with the No Child Left Behind Act, supported by both Republicans and Democrats, the US Chambers of Commerce, the Business Roundtable, and the leaders of NEA and AFT.

Indeed, NEA and AFT joined the corporate sponsors noted above, and Achieve, Inc., and others, to take out full page ads in the New York Times demanding high-stakes testing and regimented curricula. When they succeeded, NEA and AFT, still boosting the unity of labor, business, and government, complained that NCLB was not well funded, and not well implemented, but had no criticism of the essence of the project and, more importantly, they did nothing about it; choosing, instead, to urge people into the electoral arena, where both parties gleefully support NCLB.

NCLB is promoted, especially in minority communities, as an avenue to equality in schooling. However, as educationist writer Jean Anyon says, "Doing school reform without doing social and economic reform in communities is like washing the air on one side of a screen door. It won,t work. It hasn,t, and isn,t meant to. NCLB is a noose, strangling knowledge, deepening segregation, and using "scientific test scores to prove inequality (rooted in exploitation) is inevitable.

After Shanker,s death, a new leader came to the AFL-CIO presidencyJohn Sweeney from the Service Employees International Union, started by the Chicago Capone mob. Sweeney promised to cut labor ties to the CIA, to reinvigorate organizing and solidarity, and to be transparent about the budget. Sweeney did nearly nothing about labor ties to the CIA. He immediately backed the AFL-CIO betrayal of the Detroit Newspaper Strike, crushed after months, but crushed by UAW and AFL organizers who used violence on picket lines against militant strikers, and who turned them over to the police. And Sweeney continued the AFL-CIO habit of double-dipping his salary, collecting nearly $450,000 from an old local, while he collected his President,s salary as well. There were no new tricks for the old dog.

So, the AFT, through its connections with the AFL-CIO, worked to bolster US imperialism abroad, and to feed the war machine from within the US, by offering the bogus science of high-stakes testing, at the expense of members of the AFT who were deluged with demands for concessions, and convinced to make them by their quisling leaders"and at the expense of kids who would, too often, pay with their lives for schooling that did not tell them that Vietnam was all lies.

Let us be abundantly clear. Labor imperialism, the AFL-CIO,s backing of CIA-corporate adventures all over the world, may have served a relatively tiny number of US workers for a short time, but at the end of the day, it inevitably failed. The lack of international solidarity of working class people is destroying the lives of workers all over the world, and the members of the AFL-CIO as well. That the class war is also a classroom war is, due to de-industrialization, is a significant particular, developing world-wide. 

 

The Detroit Federation of Teachers

Members of the DFT and the kids of Detroit paid an equally heavy price for the AFT,s kind of unionism which, on the face of it does more to divide people than unite them as, for example, school workers from their most vital allies, parents and kids, while at the same time DFT-AFT urges educators and others into the hands of Democrats.

That process of division and diversion may be hard to see, as the habit of unionism and voting is powerful, but note that parents and kids do not come to DFT meetings, do not partake in discussions, do not vote"of course because they do not pay dues; capital,s false bottom line which serves elites, and divides players with common interests.

The Democratic Party has ruled Detroit for time immemorial, oversaw its shipwreck. Yet the DFT, the UAW, and all the city unions still pour money and organizational skill down the bottomless well. It,s a dishonest diversion, of course. The labor mis-leaders know they feed at the trough of imperialism, that their six figure salaries are based on their Judas-goat role in the workers, ranks. Electoral action creates at least an appearance of action, while it merely deepens oppression, convincing people that the main thing to do is to rely on someone else to solve problems. Clearly, no one will save us but us.

The last thing a labor leader in the US wants is a mass of truly class conscious workers who are ready to take direct action in order to control their work places on a daily basis. On one hand, if that was the case, the labor leaders would have nothing to sell the bosses, i.e., labor peace would not be theirs to peddle, but democratically controlled by the members and, on the other hand, such a conscious mass of people would never tolerate labor leaders who make four and five times the wages of average rank and filers, live completely different lives, more in common with employers.

In the past twenty years, the once militant DFT, which led some of the nation,s first teacher strikes, made concession upon concession, until the Detroit educators fell into the bottom quartile of pay for Michigan teachers. DFT bureaucrats organized the disintegration of the school system, took hostile positions against parents and kids (supporting unjust taxation and the Michigan lottery scamyou can,t lose if you don,t play--which was promised for schools, but never went there). DFT mis-leaders like bumbling President John Elliot and, later, DFT President Janna Garrison, supported the NCLB and served on national AFT governance boards rubbing elbows with the easily spotted corruption of Miami,s Tornillo and others.

Detroit teachers have made concessions after concessions, not only to save jobs, but on the promise that their sacrifices would save the school system, help kids. Between 2003 and now, Detroit teachers gave up $63 million in concessions and "loaned the district a week,s pay. The school system turned about and gave administrators raises at 10%, often $10,000. The DFT leadership, which had witnessed the concessions spiral of the last 30 years, feigned shock.


On Strike! Shut it Down!

It was easy to see the 2006 strike coming and on Sunday, August 27, 2006, the assembled DFT member voted in Cobo Hall (the same venue where the 1999 wildcat was triggered) to shut down the schools against management demands for $90 million in concessions, about $10,000 per school worker. DPS threatened to lay off 2000 employees if the demands were not met.

The strike, however, initially targeted a dead week of schooling, a week without kids. I wrote in Counterpunch at the time, "after a week, it might be easy for the union leadership, in collusion with the board, to cut back on falsely monstrous concession demands (say $60 million rather than $90 million), split the work force by making entry_ level school workers take most of the burden, and declare a victory.

"Or, the strike could spin out of control. It may be that the school worker force really does have the DFT leadership cornered between impossible concession demands, and the fear of their well_paid staff jobs. However, that kind of resistance would require serious organizing, a rank and file opposition well_prepared with a sensible plan for resistance, and none of that is on the horizon as yet.

Sadly, I was not far off base in the opening sentences. DFT bureaucrats, after a 16 day strike in which heroic educators defied state laws, countered an incessant drumbeat of bad press attacking them for being responsible for the destruction of schooling, organized their own pickets, and began to set up their own lines of communications, agreed to a package with, on their statements, is about $68 million in concessions. But DFT lied about even that, calling it a "non-wage concessions package.

It was easy to see the strike coming, even in the spring. DFT could have done many things:

*Prepared for Freedom Schooling for kids, demonstrating why things are as they are within an economic system that requires inequality, exploitation, racism, nationalism and irrationalismand countering the real need many parents have for baby-sitting.

*Demanded, in real terms, Books! Supplies! True Caps for Lower Class Size!

*Demanded academic freedom and the right to teach each child well, not teach to a test, and the freedom to opt out of the racist testing which programs Detroit kids to lose,

*Supported a just tax system, tax the rich, the corporate, the sports spectacles, the casinos, and remove the unjust taxes from poor and working people,

*No wage or benefit cuts, but increases to make up for past losses, and against projected inflation.

*Planned to unleash the creativity of 9000 school workers, urging them to design their own banners, create their own songs, hold coffee klatches in neighborhoods, do plays and guerrila theater for kids, make the picket lines a joyful celebration of rebels,

*Repeatedly demonstrated the direct connections between capitalism, imperialism, war, curricula regimentation, high-stakes tests, racism, and the destruction of civil life in the city.

Margaret Haley, a founder of the AFT and the NEA in the early 1900s , fought for similar actions nearly a century ago, but her militant history has been largely eradicated. And, DFT could hardly fight for academic freedom. The AFT opposes that, via its support for high-stakes testing. DFT couldn,t fight for a just tax system. AFT opposes that. And DFT couldn,t fight for real caps on class size as the union has traditionally traded that for money, making one professor ask: How much does it take to bribe a teacher to demolish her own teaching?

In fact, the daily processes of school life are rarely bargained in teacher contracts, just as the industrial unions ceased to bargain about the processes of production, and thus gave up the struggle for control over the key moments of work life to the employers"and hence weakened the unions.

This means that a culture of disrespect and contempt for educators, parents, and kids can run free in DPS, and the union contractually prohibits itself from action. One common cause of any strike, human dignity, is off the bargaining table before bargaining begins. 

To prepare for the strike, it would have been important to carry a door-to-door, person to person, campaign, a plan to establish freedom schools for people who not only are desperate for the free baby-sitting service provide to corporations which refuse to offer it to employees, but people who truly want their kids to learn something of significant, something that will help them learn how to understand and change the world----something that is offered in nearly no schools now.

The DFT could have easily set up an online bulletin board, for educators and perhaps others to discuss events of the strike, to make suggestions, to see the commonality of their problems and to plan action. But no union runs such a bulletin board. Members talking to each other can be critical, and thus dangerous.

The DFT could have prepared for solidarity actions but as in other recent labor battles in Detroit and around the US, the call for "Solidarity Forever! with the school workers,s struggle rings hollow. The Michigan Education Association (NEA) has historically had only distant relations with Detroit teachers, choosing instead to represent the suburbs and leave the problems of the inner city to the DFT. Recently, however, the NEA has been organizing Detroit charter schools (which threaten the per-student income of DPS), in effect raiding the DFT, contradicting a loud declaration of mutual support by the NEA and AFL-CIO just months ago. The overwhelmingly white members of the MEA have not learned that an injury to one only goes before an injury to all; if Detroit salaries are collapsed, and schools closed for bogus test scores, suburban school workers are not far behind.

Local 6000, the largest local of the UAW representing, not auto workers, but state employees, thousands of them in and near Detroit, born from the militant snake-throwing SWOC, said nothing about the strike.

John Sweeney, AFL-CIO boss, marched in the Detroit Labor Day parade. Rather than walk, rode in one of the autos donated by Ford and General Motors, behind banners declaring "Partners in Production! reflecting the line of the AFL-CIO: the unity of labor, management, and government, in the national interest: a corporate state vision. Ford, GM, and the union leaders are partners"partners in exploiting the work of the union members. He took little notice of the DFT marchers, then on strike, and made a "Vote Democratic! stump speech.

So, for the first week of the strike, DFT members picketed empty buildings, rather than walking door to door in communities with, say, flyers they themselves prepared from their knowledge of the particular blocks (though for some educators, that,s arguably slim, about 60% of them live outside Detroit, or send their own kids out) and with a plan for day care for people with special needs. There was, really, little for the rank and file to do, as leaders prefer it, choosing to win the members to the notion that the union is a vending machine: give us your money and we protect you. There,s a name for that.

Only about 500 of the DFT members turned out for the Labor Day celebration. A mass city-wide demonstration to specifically support the strike could have been called, but the DFT didn,t call it.

On the first day of school that was scheduled for kids to attend, William Coleman III opened the schools, as a probe to test the strength of the educators. He had to know that few would scab, that at most 500 adults would be attempting to supervise what could be 100,000 kids. As it turned out, only about 40,000 kids showed up, but the cynical maneuver was a dangerous disaster. One small child wandered off, unsupervised, from school, to be found by a picket captain, blocks away. That did not play well for Coleman III.

On September 2, the DFT announced that, on their request, three Detroit preachers had been invited to the negotiation sessions (which are closed to DFT members a gag order has been issued to bargainers) and the talks moved from the usual site, the Michigan Employment Relations Commission offices, to the Fellowship Chapel of one of the ministers who is also president of the Detroit NAACP"and a man who spoke out openly against the strike before it began. He,s also a consultant with Holt-Rinehart Winston, the textbook company which is deeply invested in high-stakes testing. Each of the preachers serves with Michigan Governor Granholm on a state commission for faith-based initiatives, presumably with an interest in opening faith-based schools.

What Should the Rank and File Have Known?

The strike dragged on. The DFT rank and file had been through a lot. They initiated their own strike, the wildcat of 1999, and ran it themselves. Then, they quickly moved to win community support, parents were invited to pickets lines. This bargaining unit once knew its stuff. But it appears they forgot.

What should have the rank and file of the DFT known before they went on this strike?

They should have known that this would be a bitter fight. Their employers would pull out all the stops. The social forces colliding each had a lot at stake. It would require significant commitment from every striker, as an active player in the action.

They should have known their leaders would likely betray them, as had the labor leaders of every major struggle of the last 30 years, from Hormel to the Detroit Newspaper strike and all in between. They should have known their labor mis-leaders shared one key thing in common with the DPS administration and local elites: neither party wanted a mass, class conscious group of workers on their hands.

This history of betrayal would mean that the workers should have know that they would need their own organizational structure, an inclusive and democratic structure, drawing in as voting members people from the community, other jobs, students; and a cadre of dedicated leaders. The DPS bosses aligned themselves as an organized class. The DPS administration had an eager trumpet, the local press, distributed by the thousands. The DFT rank and file needed their own internal communication system, even an open web site, and a method to talk to the community as well. Again, an online web site could achieve that. The bosses would throw everything they had at them. The workers, response would need to match the play.

The DFT workers needed to know that, despite appearances to the contrary, their struggle would be an international struggle. DFT, and many US unions, has relied on the idea that they only had to organize the US work force. This appeared to be effective for skilled tradespeople, but only briefly. . However, the work force is truly an international, multi-racial group. Teachers in Oaxaca Mexico were engaged in a bitter social uprising during and after the Detroit strike, and even a message of solidarity would have inspired both sets of educators. Indeed, Detroiters would have had a lot to learn from Oaxacans.

Both struggles remain blacked out in the mainstream press. That may be due to a mix of racism and nationalism, but it is assuredly also about the fact that these battles play out on very dangerous grounds for elites; they go to the heart of control of communities and the rule of knowledge itself. In comparison, the little spectacle of a transit strike in New York City in 2006, sold out in one day, got national headlines. Why?

The workers should have known that the law is there to guarantee that they lose; that they would need to break it again and again. Threats of injunctions and court orders cannot teach, nor even warehouse, kids. They should have known that to win the strike would not only require civil strife, but the support of an active, conscious community that understood what they were doing and why they were doing it. All would need to rise with all. They should have understood that pacifism in this strike would probably mean a loss.

The rank and file should have known that there is nearly no one left in the AFL-CIO, or the NEA, who actually knows how to lead a strike, and of that handful, nearly no one who has ever really led one. Fewer still led a strike that won. For the last 25 years and more the AFL-CIO just organized one series of concessions after the next. The labor bosses in power now are habituated to losing, and are unable to make strategic estimates and tactical plans for a fight, even if they wanted to fight--and they do not want to fight as that might interrupt dues income and their coming pensions. Even if the DFT drew on the widely proclaimed vast resources of the AFL-CIO for this strike, the arsenal was empty.

Unfortunately, it is clear that the work force understood little of this, had learned nothing from the period following the 1981 PATCO strike (when newly-elected Ronald Reagan was allowed to smash the air-controllers strike by the inaction of the AFL-CIO). The fact of their heroic struggle does outweigh their lack of prescience, but only by a little.

That the DFT members did not know this is testament to the US educational system which manages to train people to overlook the obvious, to become instruments of their own oppression--even to desire itand to search for someone else to save them, to tell them what to do. The decisive viewpoint that "all of history is the history of class struggle, is obliterated in US schools and the DFT members are, after all, products of school themselves.

The Strike Continues

On September 10, elected County Judge Susan Borman reluctantly issued a back to work order that was read to the members in a meeting of about 3000 in Cobo Hall. As the order was read, members chanted, "No Contract! No Work!

DFT President Janna Garrison probably missed a chance for fame. She could have, with little fear of reprisals, just paraphrased John L. Lewis, famous response to a Taft-Hartley injunction aimed at his striking coal miners, "Taft can mine it, and Hartley can haul it. A tough, open defiant stance from Garrison could have inspired the strikers, and made her career.

It might have, however, threatened the union treasury. DPS would demand fines. And, if the DFT did nothing about deteriorating school conditions, and the loss of thousands of members, and more cuts to come, guaranteed; the DFT bureaucrats did find resources to buy a new $5 million dollar building in 2005.

Garrison read the court order and closed the meeting. The potential of a mass meeting of 3000 educators engaged in one of the sharpest classroom battles of a decade was lost.

On September 11, the Governor ordered fact-finding, a hollow gesture to call in a third party designated to find non-partisan facts. There is no such thing in a strike. Fact finders, however, are commonly paid by states, or arbitration associations, and through their very well to do lives share the outlook of employers, and feel terrific pressure to foist concessions on unionists in order to "reach a mutual settlement for the good of the community.

Despite claims of civility between DFT and DPS bargainers, which were probably true, this was a vicious strike, with all the weapons of domination aimed at the strikers. The law threatened them, the press denounced them, Coleman III said teachers were responsible for destroying school.

On September 12, after negotiators on both sides agreed to halt bargaining, and an assigned mediator consented, Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick directed all sides to his office, where he demanded a settlement. The preachers intervened as well, indicating they would turn the community on the strikers.

Garrison and the DFT negotiators caved, completely, but reported to the membership that they had gained a "non-wage concessionary Tentative Agreement. They lied.

On September 13, DFT members met again in Cobo Hall, but not to vote on the TA, only to vote on whether to return to work and cast ballots from there. DFT had used the period since the 1999 Cobo wildcat to shift the voting procedure into mail ballots, which are more easily controlled, manipulated (would they cheat? Of course they would cheat.). There would be no more Cobo uprisings to prolong the strike. The DFT bureaucracy was going to be sure they could "deliver their membership to DPS, proving, in a twisted way, their strength.

The Sellout

DFT and other unions frequently hide the full text of tentative agreements from their members, even through the life of contracts. It may be that what is at hand is not the real agreement, but we plunge ahead anyway. In the "non-wage concessions package:

DFT bargained wage concession after wage concession. The union bargained away a 10% co-pay for health benefits (as noted above, educators hired before 1994 had no co-pay) for all educators, probably a loss of $50 per pay.

DFT bargained a wage freeze the for year one, a 1% increase for year two, and a 2.5% increase for year three. DFT did not underline the fact that a part of the TA is missing on this topic, that is, just who will get the increase. A clause is inserted in each note of a wage increase indicating that some educators may not get it, and, moreover, DFT has repeatedly torn up wage increase promises mid-contract, and just returned the money to DPS as yet another concession. Even so, if inflation remains unchanged, during the three years of the contract, educators will lose at least 10% of their earning power.

One prep period was taken from every elementary teacher, the vast majority of the educators, meaning the work day is extended, with no pay. That is a wage cut.

The teachers lose pay for three days of the "phony strike (no kids) week, plus lose pay for Labor Day. That is a wage cut.

But a clause in inserted guaranteeing DFT support for a potential state tax increase, again alienating educators from the citizenry. That weakens the union.

DFT claimed they "won a promise from DPS that the district would assume liability for its employees who were not engaged in unlawful or unprofessional conduct. DFT did not note that this is simply the law, nor did they advise members that a DPS refusal to accept liability is not grieveable, but is a decision of DPS alone. This clause is a shabby trick.

DFT agreed that five days of all teacher sick leave would be frozen, not paid out. This is a wage cut. It,s a no interest loan.

DFT agreed to make it much easier for DPS to use subs at low pay, and to keep subs from becoming tenured teachers, just as DFT had agreed, earlier, to let DPS "reconstitute schools, that is, lay off all the teachers in an entire school with, for example, low test scores, and those teachers have no guarantee of another job. As DPS relies heavily on subs, because of deplorable working conditions, this is a significant setback. This will become a wage cut.

The tentative agreement contains nothing about books, supplies, lower class size, academic freedom, or the controversial high-stakes tests. It does nothing about the culture of contempt and disrespect that makes daily life on the job so difficult, and causes students to leave. The union demurred. This is not a wage cut. It is a life cut.

As We Wait, What Can be Learned?

To date, DFT has not announced when the vote will be on the TA. It is unlikely it will be voted down. Once teachers get with their kids, it is hard to pull them out. It is possible, of course, that the rebelliousness among DFT members will rise again, fast, but the union promised them a two week strike beforehand. That was the limit of many members, finances.

Steve Conn, a high school teacher from one of the city,s better schools, and a leader of the past wildcat who is now seen by most teachers as "full of himself, a camera-hog, insisted that the TA would "go down in flames, at the meeting in Cobo Hall. He was remarkably wrong. Wild mis-estimates do not improve the status of radicalism. It,s possible the contract will be voted down in mail balloting, but if it does, DFT members will have a lot to overcome.

Surely we can see how the DPS administration exploited DFT weaknesses:

*Trust in the DFT and community leadership,

*Religion, reliance on the preachers to be neutrals, when they have their own selfish interests, require dues, like union leaders, to interpret god,

*Care for kids, a weakness only the most cynical would exploit, but they do it,

*Splits within the bargaining unit (health care) and between Detroit and suburban teachers (racism),

*Financial strain on all educators and especially younger teachers,

*Fear of the law,

*The false notion that we are all in this together, in one community that we all must share, when in fact this was a bitter class-room war.

*Isolation and inactivity, as in picketing empty buildings, fostered by DFT leaders,

*Fear of criticizing mis-leadership out of racial, national, or religious misplaced loyalty. 

In total, it is clear that it is key to identify real divisions, that is, the unity of DFT/DPS elites against the rank and file, the kids, and the citizens; and false divisions, of race, age, city boundary and so on, divisions which, if we do not demolish them, they will be used to demolish us.

We can learn the same lesson of the 1999 wildcat, proved to all by the heroic actions of educators who made big sacrifices again in the battle of 2006, that the law pales before the solidarity and direct action of masses of workers. Nothing was done, nor will be done, to any striker in either action. It is not possible to replace 9000 school workers. Other educators should not be deterred by district boundaries. It is fairly simple to set up coordinated bargaining communities, with bargaining "minimums, that is, lines beneath which we will not sink, operating with the slogan, "An injury to one is an injury to all"if one suffers"all act.

We can learn that we can fight, and win. But justice demands organization.

Teachers are the most unionized people in the US. Combined, the educator unions have nearly 4 million members. School workers are among the few who have predictable salaries and health benefits, and, in a society dedicated to offering its youth little more than perpetual war and deepening inequality, teachers face a choice: will they be missionaries for capital, seek to teach for equality and democracy? Schools, today, are a vital choke point in societyas is the military, the health care system, the transportation system (many immigrants), the food system, and the prisons.

There have been many pivotal moments for what is left of the labor movement since it entered decline: The Patco strike of air-traffic controllers, crushed when the AFL-CIO abandoned it; the Hormel strike, crushed from inside by its union leadership, the Detroit Newspaper strike, the UPS strike (evaporated after it was won), the failed California Grocery Strike, and now, perhaps, the Detroit Teachers Strike.

What is abundantly clear, in hindsight, is that unions do not unite people; they divide them"by industry, job, race, skill"and the leadership is divided from the rank and file, especially in that the leadership has no interest whatsoever in a class conscious membership: the leaders would have nothing to sell to management, i.e., could not trade off a promise to deliver labor peace, and the workers would not tolerate the privileges of the union bosses.

People simply do not trust unions any longer, for good reason. Remarkably, the Detroit Free Press reported on September 2, 2006, that poll asking Michigan residents if they support, or oppose, the "Optional Union Dues, found overwhelming opposition to the agency shop"in one of the most unionized of all states.

In the balance, today, may not only be the life of a union, or schools, but the life of a city.

Both sides, the DFT and the board, claim a strike could destroy what remains of the once-model Detroit Public Schools, destroyed by, above all, the connection of racism, opportunism, and profits. A fine case could be made that the Detroit Public Schools are already in ruins, and all that is left is to bury them. DPS itself projects another 40% loss of students.
An equally good case can be made that Detroit is now completely ghettoized, that those who remain in the city are fully trapped, and that the extermination of education in the city is only indicative of a society which has nothing to offer black youth but prison or the military, fighting dying for oil profits. Most Detroit schools can be easily described as either pre-prison, or pre-military, though some elite few (Renaissance High, Cass Tech, etc) still get the basic supplies necessary to conduct, say, pre-teacher training.

People who are trapped and without hope tend to rebel, as evidenced in the city,s past uprisings, or, at a distance, the rebellions in France of 1968 and 2005. In societies that are grotesquely inequitable, the myth that schooling will move you up is very powerful. Schooling will not move the overwhelming majority of youth up. The trajectory in the US economic structure is not up, but down. Still, schools are a key source of hope, real and false. The real hope is that kids could get the kind of education that would assist them to, collectively, radically change structural injustice: exploitation.

In the past, Detroit,s rebels were always able to hold something hostage; not people, but property. Buildings could be, and were, put to the torch, looted, as were police stations. Now, there is little of value left in the city, other than sports stadiums and casinos in an easily defended, and largely unpopulated, small downtown area.

Given that segregation carried on to the extremes of Detroit always means, at the end of the day, death (life expectancy alone is a good indicator), a rebellion could trigger repression that might be compared to Hurricane Katrina, where racist neglect allowed more than 1400 people to die, and left the poor of New Orleans devastated, while the rich now see opportunities to exploit.

Detroit was at the epicenter of the banking and manufacturing collapse of the last Great Depression, particularly when the Detroit Guardian Bank on Griswold fell apart. It was a death blow to the US banking system. What can happen to Detroit can happen to the US.

Where is hope in all this? Hope is owed to no one. Hope is created in the persistent and usually wise resistance that the vast majority of the people in the world must engage if they are to survive. Hope is also, however, located in wise leadership, something that Detroit school workers must create, fast, if their struggle is to be won.

For the long haul, justice demands organization in new ways, organization that draws people together in a struggle that recognizes what is now easily seen as an international war of the rich on the poor. Hints of that kind of organizing exist, in Substance, in the Rouge Forum, for example, which brings together people of all ages and races in an educational project that unites people with knowledge and nature. GI resistance is escalating. The immigrant rights movement demonstrated on May Day that a massive general strike is indeed possible. The two million poor people in US prisons are beginning to recognize that it is not so much race, but class, that both divides and unites people, and multi-racial unity is growing in jails. In many cities, workers councils which involve people with two toes inside their unions, and eight toes out, are taking form. Activist youth communes sprout up all over the US, and there is a large one in Detroitthat played no role in the strike.

The school workers of Detroit might, just might, play an exemplary role as well, or, if in retreat, learn from the past, persevere as we all must, and fight again.

On September 20, the Detroit Historical Museum proudly announced it is now fully privatized, operating with 20% of its previous staff, in the name of "cost, modernity, and common sense.

Simultaneously, the Professional Removal Service of Detroit suspended Mike Thomas, an employee of the privatized body pick-up division of the coroner,s office, paid on a piece-work rate of $14 for each dead body delivered, for talking to the press about his trade, the only work he could find in the city.

On the same day, gubernatorial candidate Dick Devos, millionaire godfather of the Grand Rapids based Amway Corporation running dead even with Democrat Granholm, announced that Intelligent Design should be taught in Michigan schools, an alternative to the theory of evolution. Lee Iacocca, famous former Chrysler Chairman, and father of the slogan, "Buy American, signed on to the Devos campaign.

On September 14, the day DFT members returned to class and met kids, Marilyn Daily, a second grade teacher at Howe Elementary on the impoverished east side , was quoted in the Detroit Free Press: The school is just 3 years old and yet the drinking fountain in the main corridor doesn't work, a first_floor ceiling leaks, and it took three years for the heating and cooling systems to work properly.... She said her room was so cold the year it opened that she bought sweatshirts for her students at a secondhand store to keep them warm.

On the same day, Peter and Julie Fisher Cummings, announced a $5 million dollar gift to Cranbrook School in suburban Bloomfield Hills, to build a girls, middle school. The Cummings are a marriage of Fords, and developer-Fishers.

From the Detroit News: "A new kind of giving is emerging," Julie Cummings says. "People aren't just scattering checks around. They are targeting their money to institutions they can connect to."

Cranbrook is a National Historic Landmark, with 315 acres of rolling lawns, its own planetarium, an artist colony, an art museum, swimming pools that spill one into the next, each looking like a small lake, a Greek theater, its own elementary, middle, and high schools. Daniel Ellsberg is a grad.

Combining with other major donors, the $16 million dollar middle school will open on the beautiful Cranbrook campus in 2009, ready to train a new ruling class, and to pick off a few of the children of the poor as well, just as the church has done for a thousand years. About 30% of Cranbrook,s kids are minorities, and one-quarter on scholarships. The mission metaphor works. So does the metaphor of Class War.

The rebellious law-breaking teachers of the Detroit Public Schools strike of 2006 went back to work, conducting the scripted pedagogical programs the NCLB demands, to drill children to pass a test the US has designed for them to fail. It,s easily seen as a form of child abuse, which is the contradictory nature of educational life within the emergence of fascism.

The question of what people need to know, and how they need to come to know it, in order to assume the potential of a world already united through systems of production, communication, and transportation, yet a world that is now easily described as a war of all on all, is a pedagogical problem. The answer may spin out from the thought and action of educators.

At issue is: Where will the next fight be and what will the next rebels know?

Dr Rich Gibson lived in Detroit most of his adult life; most of that at Seven Mile and the Lodge. He taught at Wayne State University until 2000, when he moved to San Diego State as an Associate Professor. He is a co-founder of the Rouge Forum. He can be reached at: rgibson@pipeline.com






 

 

Now Available
from CounterPunch Books!
The Case Against Israel
By Michael Neumann

Click Here to Order Michael Neumann's Devastating Rebuttal of Alan Dershowitz

WHAT'S INSIDE
Grand Theft Pentagon:
Tales of Greed and Profiteering in the War on Terror

by Jeffrey St. Clair

 

CounterPunch Speakers Bureau

Sick of sit-on-the-Fence speakers, tongue-tied and timid? CounterPunch Editors Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St Clair are available to speak forcefully on ALL the burning issues, as are other CounterPunchers seasoned in stump oratory. Call CounterPunch Speakers Bureau, 1-800-840-3683. Or email beckyg@counterpunch.org.

The Book on 9/11 the White House Denounced as "ABSOLUTE GARBAGE"