UniversalMonk

joined 2 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 1 points 2 months ago

Working class ready to resist
“Capitalism thrives on divisions among workers that hinder our ability to stand together and fight for higher wages and safer working conditions,” Mailhot said. “That’s why the Socialist Workers Party calls for amnesty for all immigrants living and working in the United States. That’s the only way to unite the working class to better be able to fight.”

“As the crisis of capitalism bears down harder on millions today, the working class shows it is ready to resist,” Mailhot said. He pointed to the Air Canada flight attendants, who defied a government order to return to work. Their powerful strike action convinced the union leadership to not give in, saying they’d go to jail if they had to. Now workers have a better understanding of their power, Mailhot said.

The contract the union leadership agreed to is far short of what workers were fighting for and felt their struggle was capable of achieving, Mailhot said. That was made clear by workers’ 99% rejection of the wage raise, the only part of the contract the workers got to vote on. Many Air Canada flight attendants say they have a new found appreciation of themselves and their ability to fight, and millions of other workers took notice. “That is the victory of this important struggle,” Mailhot said.

Mailhot pointed to many Labor Day activities this year that reflected the importance of the fight to unify the working class through support for the rights of immigrant workers. The SWP participated in these events across the country, raising a working-class road forward. The party explains why workers need to break from the parties of the bosses — Democrats, Republicans and any others — and fight for the working class to take political power.

Many workers welcomed this discussion, as they talked about their own battles over wages and working conditions at the companies where they work.

One participant asked what the SWP hopes to accomplish through its election campaigns.

“The Socialist Workers Party uses the increased interest of workers in politics during the elections to point to the examples already set by the working class throughout its history,” Mailhot explained. “We especially point to the two great revolutions of our epoch, in Russia in 1917 and in Cuba in 1959, when the working class took power, and used the power of the state not to defend an exploiting class, but to defend the toilers who have absolutely no material interest in exploiting and oppressing others.

We ask workers to join the SWP, he said, and to help fight for workers power, unleashing the tremendous capacities of working people to solve every question, to put an end to discrimination and national oppression, to eliminate the source of war, and eliminate the massive buildup of the means of destruction underway today.

The SWP is the party of today’s working-class struggles and the future of humanity.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 1 points 2 months ago

HOOPESTON, Ill. — “We stuck together and stood strong and now we’re more united than we were before,” Beatrice Marmolejo told the Militant. She’s a forklift driver at Teasdale Latin Foods here, where 65 members of Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Local 1 struck the company for three months. They won a new union contract Aug. 29.

Workers at the Hoopeston plant can, pack, and distribute a variety of beans that are sold under the Teasdale brand, as well as under store brands at Walmart, Giant, Aldi, Jewel and other chains.

The union won an immediate 5% wage increase and a 17% overall increase over the four-year contract. They also won 40 additional hours of paid time off a year. “We also stopped the company from using ‘management rights’ to hire nonunion contractors in the plant,” Marmolejo said.

The bosses hoped to demoralize the strikers by using scabs to keep production going, but the union kept the picket lines up around the clock seven days a week. “At one point the wind even blew away our tent,” she said, “but that didn’t stop us.”

Solidarity came in from all across the country, Donna Strawser, a worker with nine years in the plant, said. “We had people from the BCTGM in Kentucky, Iowa, California, Michigan, Ohio and more come to back us up.”

Juan “Chico” Lugo, a picket captain with 26 years in the plant, said, “Whenever we started to feel a bit down, another local would show up and give us a pep talk. That really helped.”

“The Teamsters were awesome in supporting us,” said Strawser. The Teamsters organize the company’s distribution workers, who work in a building next to the cannery. “As long as we had our pickets at the warehouse they would sign in with their union rep and refuse to cross the line, and they got strike benefits from their union.”

The Teamsters union also covered the cost of BCTGM strikers’ health insurance. “We couldn’t have won a contract without their solidarity,” Strawser said.

In the last few weeks, the union launched a campaign called “Who’s Cooking the Beans?” leafleting at Walmart and other stores to let workers and customers know about the strike and the company’s use of scabs.

The union also succeeded in beating back the company’s demand to institute a two-tier wage scale, Lugo said. “But the new contract does change the work schedules from four 10- to 12-hour days to five eight-hour days with three shifts, something the union opposed,” he said. Workers are concerned the company will find ways to use the new schedule to impose forced overtime.

“We got most of what we wanted, not everything,” Strawser said. “But we’re going back stronger and united.”

“These hard-working members put it all on the line in their fight for a fair contract,” BCTGM International President Anthony Shelton said in the BCTGM blog post issued on Labor Day. “This settlement is the result of their dedication and the solidarity of the labor movement and the community.”

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 1 points 2 months ago

I won't be editing it, because I'm still of the same personal opinion that I offered. I can have my own personal opinion, without receipts, even if you don't agree with my opinions.

I didn't start the thread, I'm not a subject of OP's complaint, and again, the mere fact that OP had to come here in the first place, backs up my personal opinion.

You don't agree. Ok, cool. I haven't changed my mind. Let's move on.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 6 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Everyone complains that Lemmy doesn't have enough content. So you're mad when people post content?

IMHO, the more posts, the better as long as it's not advertising.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 1 points 2 months ago

Follow the rules of the community. YDI

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

I'm glad the ban got reverted. But it wasn't reversed until it was posted here. I don't have to give receipts on my personal opinions since I didn't start the thread.

Let's move on to other things since the ban was reversed.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

This worked, I found a local club. :)

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

thank you! This is SUPER helpful!

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 3 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Yep, I'm US-based, so I'll do that. I live in a mid-sized city, so we should have some radio clubs.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 2 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Good points. I should do that first rather than way. I'll look on amazon today for a smaller one so I just get on air right now!

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 2 points 2 months ago

Probably because he isas the latest big figure media person to talk about third party.

[–] UniversalMonk@anarchist.nexus 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (10 children)

Thanks. There is so much stuff to know. Just jumping into this today, I've been down so many rabbit holes!

And as for my radio shack, actually I do want it to be stand alone structure in my backyard. So it'll be my mancave since my gf already hates how much stuff I have around everywhere.

I just wish it wasn't so expensive to get in. Hopefully I can find everything decently priced as I find my way.

 

Earlier this month, Elon Musk said he wanted to form a new political party. He’d been teasing the idea ever since clashing with President Donald Trump over his “big, beautiful bill,” which Musk accused of exploding the deficit. In June, Musk ran a poll on X asking users whether it was “time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?” More than 5 million people responded, and 80 percent voted yes. Then, on July 5, Musk announced he was forming the American Party in hopes of giving voters their “back [their] freedom.”

Those who follow Musk closely, like Bloomberg Businessweek national correspondent Joshua Green, have said Musk’s latest project is in line with his pursuit of political power and attention.

“I think he thought he’d essentially bought that by backing Donald Trump to the tune of $300 million in the last election,” Green said previously on Today, Explained. “And Trump turned on him, ousted him, took away his EV tax credits, didn’t cut the deficit, trashed him on social media. And now I think Elon is humiliated and looking for a way to respond and hit back.”

Trump has called Musk’s third-party proposal “ridiculous.” And the billionaire appeared to have moved from his third obsession by mid-July — at least on X — posting instead about Europe’s fertility rate and running damage control for the antisemitic rants of his AI platform Grok.

But regardless of whether he follows through on the “America Party,” Musk appears to have hit a chord with an American electorate disillusioned by the two-party system.

On Today, Explained, co-host Noel King dove into voters’ desires, the history of third parties, and possible solutions to the two-party stranglehold with Lee Drutman, senior fellow at the New America think tank and author of Breaking the Two Party Doom Loop: The Case for Multiparty Democracy in America.

Below is an excerpt of their conversation, edited for length and clarity. There’s much more in the full episode, so listen to Today, Explained wherever you get podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Pandora, and Spotify.

You are not a big fan of the two-party system.

You know, I think it’s outlived its usefulness. I think America is a pretty big, diverse country these days, you may have noticed. And to fit everybody into just two parties seems like kind of insanity, and it’s clearly not working. Also, it has divided this country into two teams — the red and the blue team — that have learned to absolutely hate each other. It’s created these artificial divisions around this zero-sum, winner-take-all electoral politics that is just really breaking down the foundations of democracy in this country. So, I think there was a time when it worked reasonably well for certain reasons, but that time is in the past.

You will know that Elon Musk agrees with you. He says he wants to start a third party. He ran one of his polls [on X], and the question was: “Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?” I’m looking at that poll now. Eighty percent of people said yes, 20 percent said no. How does that match up with reality in the US?

Well, there are two parts to that question. One is: How many people want a third party? And then two is: How many people want that party to be somewhere in the middle?

Now, the first part: How many people want a third party? That 80 percent is a little bit high. There might be some selection bias there, but it is close to polls that I’ve seen. Generally, about 60 to 70 percent of Americans say there ought to be more than two parties when polled. So, overwhelmingly, Americans say they want more than two parties.

Now, is the party that they want a party in the center? That’s less clear. I think people’s perception of the political center depends on themselves. [Most] people think that they’re more reasonable and they’re more moderate. But in reality, when you look at the viewpoints of the American electorate, as I’ve done repeatedly, you see that the support for a genuine center party is limited to maybe 10 to 15 percent. But there is a lot of interest in parties that are maybe not as traditional.

Third-party candidates do run for office all the time in the United States, they very rarely win. If so many voters want more options, why don’t we have more people in elected office from third parties?

Here you’re hitting on the core problem, which is that we have a single-winner system of elections. So in a single-winner election, third parties become spoilers and wasted votes, because one of the two major parties is going to win every election. So, voting for a third party is just basically a protest vote, or maybe it could spoil the election. And as a result, most people don’t want to do that because they think, well, I want to vote for somebody who at least has a chance of winning. And, more importantly, people who have ambition in politics say, well, I’m not going to waste my time with one of these fringe parties. I want to actually win. So you get minor parties that are mostly cranks and weirdos and people say, well, I’d like to vote for another party, but not that third party.

What’s the recent history of third-party candidates? Serious third-party candidates at a national level? I have a vague memory of Ross Perot, but I couldn’t give you many details. It was the nineties. How serious have third-party candidates been over time?

Well, Ross Perot is the most recent third-party candidate to actually get a pretty decent share of the electorate. He got almost 20 percent of the electorate, although he didn’t win a single state. A lot of people remember Ralph Nader in 2000, who only got about 3 percent of the vote, but it was a very well placed 3 percent because his votes were more than the difference between Bush and Gore in Florida and a few other states.

Before that, you had George Wallace running in 1968 on the American Independent Party as sort of a “preserve segregation” platform. And then 1912, you have Teddy Roosevelt running as a Bull Moose third-party candidate. [He] was the most successful third-party candidate. Of course, he had already been president. So you’ve periodically had third-party challenges at a presidential level. At a House and Senate level, you have a few people who run as independents. But people tend to go right for the presidency because that creates a level of visibility if you’re trying to build a party.

If one thinks that the two-party system is a problem, let’s talk about solutions. You advocate for something called proportional representation. Explain what that is and why you think it might be a solution here.

Well, proportional representation is the most common system of voting, and it basically, at its simplest level, it means that parties get shares of seats in proportion to what percent of the vote they get. So if a party gets 30 percent of the vote, it gets 30 percent of the seats in the legislature. If it gets 10 percent, it gets 10 percent. Now, there are varieties of proportional representation that we could spend an hour going in the weeds.

Tell me the one you like the best. What would work in the US?

What I think would work in the US is probably the most commonly used version, which is called open list proportional representation with multi-member districts — which is this idea that rather than having a single district with a single representative, you have a single district with five representatives. The district is larger, and then the parties put forward lists of candidates. You choose the candidate from the party that you like, all the votes for each party get tallied up, and then the seats get allocated in proportion. So if a party gets 40 percent of the votes in that five member district, its top two candidates go to represent the district. If a party gets 20 percent, its top candidate [goes]. So, in theory, you could have five parties representing the same district.

We talk a lot about gerrymandering as a huge problem, and it is. But [if] you move to five member proportional districts, gerrymandering becomes irrelevant. It doesn’t matter because votes are going to be allocated proportionally no matter what. So, everybody gets to cast a meaningful vote because every seat matters. Every seat is competitive. Every vote matters. Electoral reform is the most powerful tool we have.

So, at the end of the day, has Elon Musk done something admirable here [by] making this a topic of conversation in a kind of real way?

Yeah. So, I think by raising the issue of the need for a third party, it certainly opens up a conversation about what it would take. I’m not sure Elon’s approach is going to be successful. On the other hand, if he’s strategic and wants to spoil a few races that will determine control of the House and the Senate by running a spoiler candidate, then, historically, that’s actually what has led to a wider conversation about electoral reform. And that’s one of the reasons that a lot of countries moved to electoral reform.

We’ve never had this level of dissatisfaction with the two-party system as far back as we’ve seen polling. So, there is a real understanding that what we’re doing in our electoral system is just not working.

The post What it would take to escape the two-party system appeared first on Vox.

 

The Outsider Media Foundation, a nonpartisan 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to increasing public understanding of and participation in underrepresented political activity, including coverage produced by other media outlets and organizations, has published the latest response to its National Party Chair Questionnaire. This initiative is part of the Foundation’s mission to inform and educate the public about alternative political movements throughout the United States.

The following response was submitted by Jolly Mitch Davilo, Captain of the United States Pirate Party. Questions appear in bold, followed by the responses as submitted, with only minor formatting adjustments for readability. For more information about the Foundation or the questionnaire, including how to participate, please visit our official website.

Reflections on the 2024 Election Cycle:
What key lessons did your party learn from the 2024 election cycle, and how are those insights shaping your strategy for the next cycle?

People respect and respond to on the ground work. I think a lot of folks in this country feel ignored, unseen and overall overlooked in the grand scheme by their elected officials, that once they see an on the ground movement and party going door to door and showing up, asking/answering questions and showing that we’re running their neighbors and not just party insiders, they warm up to the idea of the Pirate Party.

I think 2026 will feature plenty of door knocking and explaining “Yes, we mean that kind of Pirate” when people inquire about us. We’re okay with that! We just hope to see it translate into electoral disruption, if not outright success.

Vision for the Future:
What are your party’s primary goals and priorities for the next two years, and what concrete steps will you take to achieve them?

It would seem the US Pirate and Transhumanist Parties are heading into a coalition with one another, which is exciting because our parties share a lot of platform overlap and values. I think the goal is to see our two parties run as successfully as we can, allowing our parties to grow and ideas to spread.

We both (and I don’t wish to speak on their behalf when I say this) would like to see our parties expand, run candidates and provide a true alternative to the duopoly. We hope to achieve that, and it will be more wholly completed with the Transhumanists beside us in those endeavors.

Competitive Strategy:
How does your party plan to strengthen its electoral competitiveness, and what specific tactics will you prioritize to improve performance in future races?

Boots on the ground. We cannot be afraid to run for offices, no matter how small or seemingly trivial, because we cannot get things done just by talking about it. People who are deeply involved in the party are encouraged to find something to run for and spread our ideals where we can. The world needs a Pirate Sheriff and Pirate Library Trustee as bad as it does a Pirate State Congressman.

Membership Growth:
What initiatives is your party pursuing to attract and retain new members, and how are you working to ensure greater representation across different demographics?

We actually are about to begin a new initiative where interested volunteers can attend meetings during the 1st Friday of the month, twice with one at NoonET and one at 5pmET. The hope is to provide a lane that interested folks from all walks of life can enter into and decide if this is the party for them (which we sure hope it is). In the age of the internet, it’s easy to pop into different communities and internet spaces of ideologies similar or aligned with the pirate party movement, and I have extended my hand there as well.

But otherwise I echo the words found on the banner of our Bluesky and the words found in our platform: “The United States Pirate Party is for everybody.” “We proudly condemn bigotry as irrational and repugnant. We believe this behavior to be fundamentally incompatible with our core values. Pirates stand for everyone, even when others do not.”

If that interests folks and it sounds like a ship they’d like to board, well all aboard who’s coming aboard! We’d love to have you.

Member Engagement:
How do you keep members actively engaged and aligned with your party’s mission, particularly during non-election periods?

We believe in a free and open society, which I believe can be traced back to the adoption of hacker ethics back in 2012. I think this transcends “hacktivists” and becomes a very welcoming environment. I’ve been around the block in political circles and, yes, we are not free from drama and noise, I feel as though our party has a community dedicated to the idea of free and open. I don’t believe there’s anything you can do to be aligned more with the party mission than to live as openly and honestly as possible and let people do the same beside you. We are crew on this ship together, and that expression is as expansive as you’d like it to be, but never exclusionary.

Fundraising Strategy:
What key approaches will your party take to secure funding for operations, outreach, and initiatives, and how do you plan to sustain long-term financial stability?

Fundraising is tricky. None of us like asking for money but it’s an inevitable thing if we want the party to grow. We are not big on spending money so it translates into not being big on raising money, but big money will inevitably use that against us.

In short, right now it’s boots on the ground volunteer work and output as it has been since we started. If the treasure chest needs replenishing and we ask the public for the money, know it’s either (God forbid) dire or we think we just need the push to get us where we need to be.

Collaboration and Alliances:
What is your strategy for building alliances with other political organizations or advocacy groups, and what shared objectives do you hope to achieve through these partnerships?

As I previously answered, our coalition with the US Transhumanist Party (All Hands for a Free Future) is just about finished up and official. We might be the founding member parties of All Hands, but we do believe that other parties shall join us down the line. We hope to explore our shared values and goals and determine what is the best way to help one another once it comes time.

AllHandsFuture is an experiment in the US political landscape that I am frankly excited about and would be excited to see grow with more parties or even organizations in the near future. There’s never been a better time to be a Handie than right now. (Gennady Stolyarov II will not be pleased I keep calling ourselves “the Handies” but if the Wobblies get a cool nickname then I want in on that action).

Public Messaging:
How does your party plan to communicate its message effectively to voters and supporters, and how will you adapt to challenges posed by the evolving media landscape?

Honestly? Honestly. I think people appreciate speaking to a real person. If you have seen the recent Ritchie Torres or Elissa Slotkin interviews, they don’t even come across as real, genuine people. It actually frightens me to see such coldness from our elected officials. I want to show the world that “Hey, we might be holy fools but we’re the only honest ones in the ring. We’re your neighbors. We’re your local pirates.”

Preparing for Challenges:
What obstacles do you anticipate in the coming years, and how is your party proactively preparing to address them?

If we have overcome the biggest obstacle of being taken seriously as a party named “United States Pirate Party”, then I believe we are prepared for anything.

Closing Remarks:
What do you see as your party’s greatest opportunity for growth or influence in the near future, and what message would you like to share with members and supporters moving forward?

I think we have resonated with folks and will continue to resonate because we’re honest. It’s a little rugged, a little goofy, a little provocative, but it’s honest. It’s human. It’s back to public service, not venture politics.

Vote Pirate. Victory is Arrrs.

Outsider Media Foundation Press Release
Press releases published by Outsider Media Foundation, a 501(c)(3) journalistic nonprofit that helps support Independent Political Report.

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