I N T E R N E T ' S M A O I S T M O N T H L Y = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = XX XX XXX XX XX X X XXX XXX XXX XXX X X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X V X X X V X X X X X X X XX XXX X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X XXX X X X V XXX X XXX XXX = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = THE MAOIST INTERNATIONALIST MOVEMENT MIM Notes No. 45 October 1, 1990 MIM Notes speaks to and from the viewpoint of the world's oppressed majority, and against the imperialist-patriarchy. Pick it up and wield it in the service of the people. support it, struggle with it and write for it. IN THIS ISSUE: 1. A REVOLUTIONARY ANALYSIS 2. ANTIGAY VIOLENCE SWEEPS NATION 3. BUILDING A NEW POWER BLOCK: U.S. CASHES IN ON GULF WAR 4. LETTERS 5. MOHAWKS UNDER SEIGE AFTER INVASION 6. SOUTH AFRICA: MURDER ON THE PEACEFUL ROAD 7. BYE-BYE BRAZIL: AUSTERITY MEASURES HURT POOR 8. EGYPT MISTAKEN, PLO MISCOUNTED 9. QUISLINGS BATTLE IN LIBERIA 10. SINGAPORE: FASCISM FOREVER? 11. JAZZ, GENDER AND JEWS: SPIKE LEE MOVES MONOGAMY 12. BASHING MAO'S GHOST--AN EXPOSE OF CAPITALIST CHINA 13. MONGOLIA ADOPTS LIBERAL CAPITALISM 14. IRAQ: U.S.-SOVIET COLLUSION 15. ALBANIA AND SOVIET UNION NORMALIZE RELATIONS 16. SOUTHEAST ASIAN SUCKER CARTEL ABOUT TO GO BELLY-UP 17. MOVIE REVIEWS 18. BOOK REVIEWS 19. KLAN MARCHES IN D.C. 20. UNDER LOCK & KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND PRISONERS. The Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM) is a revolutionary communist party that upholds Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, comprising the collection of existing or emerging Maoist internationalist parties in the English-speaking imperialist countries and their English-speaking internal semi-colonies, as well as the existing or emerging Spanish-speaking Maoist internationalist parties of Aztlan, Puerto Rico and other territories of the U.S. Empire. MIM Notes is the newspaper of MIM. Notas Rojas is the newspaper of the Spanish- speaking parties or emerging parties of MIM. MIM is an internationalist organization that works from the vantage point of the Third World proletariat; thus, its members are not Amerikans, but world citizens. MIM struggles to end the oppression of all groups over other groups: classes, genders, nations. MIM knows this is only possible by building public opinion to seize power through armed struggle. Revolution is a reality for North America as the military becomes over-extended in the government's attempts to maintain world hegemony. MIM differs from other communist parties on three main questions: (1) MIM holds that after the proletariat seizes power in socialist revolution, the potential exists for capitalist restoration under the leadership of a new bourgeoisie within the communist party itself. In the case of the USSR, the bourgeoisie seized power after the death of Stalin in 1953; in China, it was after Mao's death and the overthrow of the "Gang of Four" in 1976. (2) MIM upholds the Chinese Cultural Revolution as the farthest advance of communism in human history. (3) MIM believes the North American white-working-class is primarily a non- revolutionary worker-elite at this time; thus, it is not the principal vehicle to advance Maoism in this country. MIM accepts people as members who agree on these basic principles and accept democratic centralism, the system of majority rule, on other questions of party line. "The theory of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin is universally applicable. We should regard it not as dogma, but as a guide to action. Studying it is not merely a matter of learning terms and phrases, but of learning Marxism-Leninism as the science of revolution." -- Mao Zedong, Selected Works, Vol. II, p. 208 * * * A REVOLUTIONARY ANALYSIS by MC12 In 1926, Mao Zedong asked: "Who are our enemies? Who are our friends?.... To distinguish real friends from real enemies, we must make a general analysis of the economic status of the various classes in Chinese society and of their respective attitudes toward the revolution."(1) To avoid leading anyone down a dead-end road, communists always need to answer these questions. MIM holds that, at the present, the majority of white workers in this country--skilled workers, trade unionists, paper-pushers, etc.--do not represent a revolutionary class. They do not create surplus value as much as reapportion the surplus which results from superexploitation of the Third World and oppressed internal nations. They are not prepared to abandon bourgeois aspirations and mainly high-paying jobs to drop everything for the good of the international proletariat. This is not the result of a lack of correct leadership, or from a simple failure to develop class consciousness. For the ideology which leads white workers to seek more VCRs instead of less capitalists has a material basis which is itself a barrier. Some people accuse MIM of being "anti-Marxist" for "ignoring the working class." But is this a new idea in Marxism? In 1858 (132 years ago), Engels wrote to Marx: "The English proletariat is actually becoming more and more bourgeois, so that the most bourgeois of all nations is apparently aiming ultimately at the possession of a bourgeois aristocracy and a bourgeois proletariat alongside the bourgeoisie. For a nation which exploits the whole world this of course to a certain extent justifiable."(Emphasis added)(2) In his analysis of imperialism, Lenin further analyzed the role of this "labor aristocracy." And he wrote: "In the civil war between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, they [the labor aristocracy] inevitably, and in no small numbers, take the side of the bourgeoisie..."(emphasis added).(2, p. 175) MIM's class analysis relies heavily on the piercing historical work of J. Sakai in Settlers: the Mythology of the White Proletariat, (Morningstar Press, 1983). The international proletariat has nothing to lose but its chains, and is therefore fully prepared--with the correct leadership--to lead proletarian revolution and end class oppression altogether in the long run. Notes: 1. Mao, "Analysis of the Classes in Chinese Society," in Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Tsetung, Peking: Foreign Language Press, 1971 2. Engels quoted in Lenin, Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism, in Selected Works, Vol. 1, New York: International Publishers, 1971. p. 247. * * * ANTIGAY VIOLENCE SWEEPS NATION by MC11 Adrian, MI Sep-tember 22--The cops wore camouflage and carried special video equipment able to record in the darkness of the secluded woods in this small midwestern town. They dug trenches a short distance away from the sycamore tree, they took cover in them and they waited. It was the evening of June 12, the end of a two and one-half month surveillance operation involving three police departments and the Lenawee County sheriff's department. It was not a drug seizure. It was not an organized crime bust. The goal of the operation, of all of the elaborate preparations, of all the time and money spent on the stakeout, was to arrest some gay men for having sex. The operation was successful. Close to 300 demonstrators marched here today to protest the arrests of the 17 gay men arrested and charged that night with gross indecency between males. Though the majority of the defendants are still awaiting trial, one of them was sentenced to 40-60 months in prison by a judge who openly condemns homosexuality. Organized by the Adrian 17 Defense Committee and endorsed by 13 local and national organizations, the demonstration's demands included dropping all charges against the 17 men and repealing the state's sodomy and gross indecency laws. Members of the Adrian Christian Complex shouting "Get out of our town. We don't want your kind here!" met the demonstrators at the courthouse. The trials of several of the defendants are expected to proceed over the next month. The Adrian arrests are but one example of typical police behavior toward gay men and lesbians. A similar incident took place in San Francisco in June, when police arrested 70 gays during a raid of a well-known gay meeting place.(1) On July 25, ten gay abortion rights activists were standing outside a police-precinct station in Manhattan when a plastic shopping bag filled with water was dropped on them. The NYC police department has said it is investigating the incident.(1) At an April anti-ROTC demonstration at the University of Wisconsin, police wore rubber gloves as they arrested students who were occupying a university building (the implication being that people demonstrating against ROTC's discriminatory practices against lesbians and gays must have AIDS). Two Wisconsin police officers are currently being prosecuted for beating up a man while they were off duty because they thought he was gay.(2) The U.S. government has unleashed other weapons besides its police force on gays and lesbians. In a July 24 memo not intended for public disclosure the U.S. Navy announced a campaign to "root out" lesbians from its ranks.(3) The memo warned the recipients that it might be hard, since some lesbians were "top professionals" who are "willing to put in long hours." And in yet another forum of government repression, David H. Souter, nominated by President Bush to the U.S. Supreme Court, may very well become one of the most dangerous weapons against gay and lesbian rights. Though Republicans and Democrats alike are trying to pass Souter off as a "blank slate," a "loose cannon," Souter has a record of upholding discrimination against gays and lesbians. In May 1987 Souter voted to uphold the constitutionality of a bill before the State Legislature prohibiting anyone who had ever engaged in a homosexual act from adopting a child or serving as a foster parent, on the basis that a gay parent would be a bad role model.(4) Agents of the state are not the only group openly persecuting gays and lesbians. Violent crimes against gay men and lesbians are on the rise nationwide.(5) In the first five months of 1989 bias crime against lesbians and gays had risen 122 percent. At the end of the year there were a total of 7,000 documented incidents of violence and harassment against gays and lesbians in the United States.(6) All over the country, chapters of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT-UP), Queer Nation, and other gay rights groups are staging protests against this sort of violence, while trying to challenge discriminatory laws and demand more government attention to the AIDS crisis. On June 16, an anti-bias march in New York City organized by Queer Nation drew over 1,000 demonstrators.(6) Anti-ROTC demonstrations are on the rise, spurred by the Department of Defense's recent refusal to change its policy of discrimination against homosexuals. And lesbian and gay rights activists continue to lobby in several cities--Minneapolis/St. Paul and San Francisco recently--for cohabitation ordinances which would allow gay and lesbian couples to be given the same rights as married couples such as health insurance coverage.(2) MIM supports the reforms gay activists are demanding, but is skeptical of the apparent integrationist ideology behind some of the struggles. Gays and lesbians are oppressed in large part because capitalist society depends on the rigid definitions of sex, gender and family to maintain its current structure. Sexual freedom is not possible in the current sexist and heterosexist Amerikan culture. Although gay and lesbian rights may ultimately be able to be reformed into the system, getting ordinances passed and sympathetic politicians elected takes much time and work, and often fails. (Only eight cities have domestic partner ordinances, and only 70 places in the U.S., including cities, states and counties, have explicit gay rights measures). Gay liberation, with the liberation of all oppressed people, is a necessary goal of socialist revolution. Having experienced the high degree of state repression and the lack of effectiveness of reformist efforts, MIM encourages gays and lesbians to take up the cause of the international proletariat with their own struggle. Notes: 1. The Advocate 9/11/90. 2. Heartland 10/90. 3. New York Times 9/2/90. 4. New York Times 9/11/90. 5. New York Times 9/3/90. 6. The Village Voice 8/8/90 * * * BUILDING A NEW POWER BLOCK: U.S. CASHES IN ON GULF WAR by MC12 The United States will stop at nothing to control the crisis in the Middle East which, by now, is almost entirely of its own creation. The war is reshaping the economic and strategic make-up of the region, giving the United States a chance to shore up the regimes it wants in power, destroy those it can do without, and open up a major outlet for economic expansion in the face of economic recession. U.S. President George Bush will do this at the potential cost of any number of Iraqi civilians and soldiers, the entire country of Kuwait, and hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops. All power flows from the barrel of a gun. And the United States is going for broke. Bush, in his televised speech on Sept. 11, put it this way: "The world is still dangerous. Stability is not secure. American interests are far-reaching. Interdependence has increased. The consequences of regional instability are global."(1) To secure that "stability," protect those Amerikan "interests," enforce that "interdependence," and cement that "stability," Bush- -with the backing of all congressional leaders and overwhelming public opinion--went to war. World War Three The U.S. military machine has dropped more than 140,000 troops into Saudi Arabia--the staging ground for the war against Iraq-- and peppered the region with a massive naval force.(19) At the "request" of State Department hit-man James Baker--who's been making the rounds among the international U.S. puppet-state community--Amerikan allies have also chipped in, agreeing to cough up a total of $20 billion to pay for the war, and activating their own troops, air forces and navies.(3) Imperialism has now gained new inroads into the other Gulf oil nations as a result of the crisis, with U.S. war planes finding new homes in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman.(4) All this is supposedly the result of Iraq's invasion of the tiny corporate-state of Kuwait, with which Iraq had several long standing disputes, including outstanding debts, territorial conflict, and violations of trade agreements. (See MN44 for a more on the causes of the invasion and war.) As all-out war grows nearer, the U.S. Navy has fired on and boarded ships that it accuses of breaking an international blockade imposed on Iraq, and an air blockade is being implemented as well.(19) The international buildup But the massive military buildup goes well beyond the deployment of U.S. forces. The U.S. war machine is almost daily making new deals to sell weapons abroad. The biggest score was a historic deal with Saudi Arabia itself. After first announcing $8 billion in weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, the Pentagon has now said it will sell $20 billion in weapons, technical support and training, over the next several years--starting now. The package includes advanced tanks, planes, helicopters, trucks and jeeps, missiles and missile launchers, and the construction of bases and airports. Saudi Arabia will pay cash.(5) In the past, weapons sales to Arab countries have been hampered by people whining about threats to Israel (as with the sale of AWACs radar planes in 1981). But not this time. There is token opposition in Congress, and Israel is complaining, but negotiations are under way to sell them more weapons too, on credit.(5) At least $1 billion more worth of planes, missiles and tanks has already been promised.(6) The military industrial complex is having an international clearance sale, looking at the new war as the saviour of the industry after the Cold War. A drooling Stanley Pace, Chairman of General Dynamics--which makes the M-1 tank and many other weapons systems--said, "[T]he Middle East crisis will dampen some of the rhetoric with regard to severe defense cuts in the immediate future."(7) Hussein hangs on Iraq has ignored demands to pull its troops from Kuwait, and has taken steps to fortify its positions there.(20) Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has tried to work a split between U.S. allies and Third World and Arab nations by linking his withdrawal from Kuwait with an Israeli withdrawal from its own Occupied Territories in Palestine. He also offered free oil to any Third World country that could successfully run the blockade to get it out--an unlikely proposition.(8) A token attempt at mediation by the United Nations fell through when Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar failed to convince Iraq to leave Kuwait, and then gave up.(9) Iraq has ordered all foreign embassies in Kuwait closed--declaring Kuwait a province of Iraq. And some foreign diplomatic missions have been raided, including one belonging to France, which used to be one of Iraq's closest allies. France complained, expelled some Iraqi diplomats, and committed more troops and money to the U.S. effort to kill Hussein.(3) With a great flair for timing and a sick sense of humor, the Iraqi ambassador to France said he didn't know what all the hoopla was about. "There are no diplomatic missions in a country that doesn't exist," he said.(5) U.S./Kuwaiti rebels A rebel resistance has "sprung up" in Kuwait, backed and funded by the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. The guerillas are said to be "yearning for a large scale attack by the United States." Some reports say U.S. Army Special Forces teams are working in Kuwait.(1) The resistance may be just what the U.S. military needs to justify an all-out invasion of Iraq--if they bother with any justification at all. The resistance, through the coordination of a group of Kuwaiti- Americans, has hired a Washington public relations firm to do its publicity. They claim to have several hundred guerillas and inflict 70 casualties a day on Iraqi soldiers through car bombings and other guerilla tactics.(4) Some press reports say Green Berets and the CIA are training and equipping the rebel force, which is so far too small to be more than a thorn in the side of Iraq's military force in Kuwait.(6) The Soviets and public opinion When Bush went on TV to whip up the masses for war, promising bloodshed if Iraq doesn't leave Kuwait now. He quoted a U.S.- Soviet joint statement saying, "No peaceful international order is possible if larger states can devour their smaller neighbors."(1) The statement, written at a summit meeting with Soviet President Gorbachev, marked the new mood of collusion between the two imperialist powers in their attempts to keep the Third World down. (See story, page 7) Those who oppose the invasion are a distinct minority in this country, reflecting the class breakdown of its society. The New York Times reports the group with the lowest approval rating for the invasion is African Americans--of whom the Times says still 56% support the invasion. The poll, as inaccurate as it may be depending on many factors, does show the predictable breakdown: the more white, male, "educated" and rich a group is, the more it supports the invasion. Income was the biggest determining factor according to the poll, as 88% of people with yearly incomes greater than $50,000 support the war.(10) Organized labor seems to be right behind the President as well. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters ran a national ad campaign on labor day--with the slogan: "Dedicate a labor day of support for Americans in the Persian Gulf."(11) By contrast, a poll published in the Arab country of Tunisia showed 90% support for Iraq over the United States.(12) And Egypt is facing internal discontent as a result of its government's role in the war on an Arab neighbor. To cover up those conflicts, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has barred some leaders from leaving the country. "The average man on the street thinks that the U.S. is here to destroy Iraq for Israel's benefit," said one Egyptian opposition leader. Dissent is also rising in Jordan.(2) Arab League collapse First, the Secretary General of the Arab League, a Tunisian, resigned. Then the League's U.N. observer quit, as the same 12 nations who voted to approve the U.S. invasion of Saudi Arabia voted to move Arab League headquarters from Tunisia to Egypt.(1) The pro-U.S. faction has broadened to include former enemies such as Syria. The opposing nations did not even send their representatives to the meeting on September 10, including: Tunisia, Algeria, Mauritania, Jordan, the PLO, the Sudan, Libya and Yemen--and Iraq.(13) So the United States has already succeeded in the destruction of the lone forum for a united Arab voice--as weak as it had already been--and is daily offering major cash rewards to any government willing to sell out its people to the interests of imperialism. The "Arab solution" And the rewards to Arab traitors are great. Bush has announced a plan to forgive Egypt's $7 billion military debt.(14) This fits in with the U.S. strategy of getting its allies to contribute to the war in the form of economic "aid" to nearby allies who are hurting from the ban on Iraqi trade. So when West Germany said it would offer planes and ships to the effort, after being criticized for not chipping in enough, it included aid to Egypt, Turkey, Jordan and Syria--which is helping them all "decide" to contribute.(5) Total German aid is said to be $2 billion.(3) Also after being criticized, Japan said it would kick in a total of $4 billion--half for the military effort, half to Jordan, Turkey and Egypt.(5) After a meeting between Syrian President Hafez al-Assad and Secretary of State Baker, Syria agreed to send more money and troops. They have already sent 4,000 troops to Saudi Arabia.(5) Baker uses the appearance of a joint effort to influence public opinion, saying: "[T]his is indeed a largely Arab solution we are trying to implement."(5) But at the same time the deluge of economic investment by U.S. allies is being used to shore up a regional strategic alliance and economic power bloc for years to come--with the United States at its head. With less economic clout in a shifting international power structure, the United States is playing the military trump card--and so far it's working. Recession looms The United States and the world capitalist system are looking down the barrel of an international recession which was on its way long before the invasion of Kuwait. And so Bush is walking a fine line between military over-extension and economic power-grabbing. As nice as paper money is, military control of resources is what counts in a world war, and everyone knows it. Most mainstream economists are almost ready to admit that a recession is already here. The official unemployment figures put civilian unemployment for August at the highest in two years-- 5.6%, up from 5.5% in July.(10) Retail sales fell 0.6% in August--and will fall more--and energy costs increased almost 10% overall.(5) Wholesale prices increased 1.3% in August. Also in August prices rose: 16.9% for gasoline, 62.5% for crude petroleum, and 38.8% for fuel oil.(15) Economic decline in the capitalist core is also playing into an extremely jittery international oil market. For example, the price of oil jumped 6% in 10 minutes on September 10.(16) Oil prices are up almost 50% on the world market since the day before the invasion of Kuwait.(5) Meanwhile, in the short term, higher prices and reduced supply are driving up oil profits for exporting countries, especially Saudi Arabia, which was expected to rake in an extra $2.5 billion in September alone--for a total increase over expected income of $3.78 billion--nearly doubling the expected rate of income for August and September. So the Saudis are throwing a little money around: spending at least $20 billion in 1990-91 on weapons, as well as funding the foreign military operations and giving economic aid to other countries hurt by the crisis.(5) The Soviet Union is the number one producer of oil, the United States is second, but Saudi Arabia exports the most.(12) Kuwait--the company--isn't doing so badly. The National Bank of Kuwait is back in the business of generating paper profits from paper assets at a new office in London.(1) Kuwait's monarchy-in- exile is coughing up at least $2.5 billion to help with U.S. military expenses for this year, and $2.5 billion to those hurt by the embargo.(10) The vast majority of the Kuwaiti labor force, meanwhile--migrant workers from other countries--are stranded, starving, or refugees. The foreign refugees attempting to leave Iraq and Kuwait may be the hardest hit by the trade embargo so far. Hundreds of thousands of Asians are trying to get out of Iraq before they starve or are killed in a war--especially from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Thailand and the Philippines.(17) But it's only a matter of time before hunger and shortages are more serious threats for all poor Iraqis. The U.N. Security Council (with opposition from Yemen and Cuba) said food aid to Iraq could only go in with its permission, and then only supervised by international relief agencies, which Iraq says it won't allow. So far the worst food shortages are said to be in Kuwait, where the Iraqi troops have seized supplies, depriving many of food--especially Asian migrant workers. This may be to help force Third World countries to oppose the boycott. India, Sri Lanka and the Philippines have reportedly been told they have to supply their own people with food.(2) On Sept. 1, Iraq announced rationing for basic food supplies, and then reduced rations even more on September 14, but the U.S. rulers--always worried about the health of the Third World poor-- say Iraq still has big stockpiles of food.(5) Iran is reportedly exchanging food and medical supplies for oil, though not nearly enough to replace the amount Iraq used to sell.(2) Also, the State Department says Cuba and Rumania are conspiring to break the blockade.(18) Iraq has made peace with Iran--officially ending the 10-year Iran- Iraq war--and Iran has publicly denounced the U.S. invasion. Peace with Iran frees up hundreds of thousands of Iraqi troops for fighting elsewhere. World wars and other fronts The war is spreading U.S. military and economic forces thin, raising the possibility of opening up other fronts. Organized resistance to the war has been incredibly weak at home, and so far there is little reported in the way of other Third World movements taking advantage of the situation. But both of these types of movements will grow as the war intensifies. World War One made possible the Russian revolution. World War Two saw the success of the Chinese Revolution. World War Three is here--so what will we give the imperialist bourgeoisie this time? Notes: 1. NYT 9/12/90. 2. NYT 9/14/90. 3. AP and Reuter in Detroit News, 9/19/90. 4. NYT 9/4/90. 5. NYT 9/15/90. 6. NYT 9/1/90. 7. NYT 9/10/90. 8. Detroit Free Press 9/11/90. 9. AP in Ann Arbor News 9/3/90. 10. NYT 9/8/90. 11. NYT 9/3/90. 12. NYT 9/6/90. 13. NYT 9/11/90. 14. NYT 9/5/90. 15. Detroit Free Press, 9/15/90. 16. NYT 9/11/90. 17. NYT 9/13/90. 18. AP in Ann Arbor News 9/12/90. 19. NYT 9/18/90, p. A8. 20. NYT 9/19/90, P. A1. * * * LETTERS WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE TOO BUSY FOR MAOISM? Dear MIM: Many greetings from the gulag. At this time, I'm not interested in joining MIM as I would not be able to fully participate in party activities. My own political efforts now are in supporting the international anti-imperialist prisoner movements and organizing the struggle here locally. I've added you to the mailing list of [a prisoner publication] which POW X and I edit and publish. We are both Marxist-Leninists and push this line taking into account much of our readers are still politically uneducated, but this will come with struggle. The pigs are trying to involuntarily move me to another state. I don't know how successful I'll be in halting this repression. In any case, our propaganda should continue. I translate and distribute communiques from various parts of the resistance, mainly GRAPO, ETA etc. Would you be interested in receiving these in the future? --In struggle, a prisoner August 1990 Dear MIM: Even though I fully uphold MIM positions on nearly everything, I am currently engaged in a tense battle against the fascist courts and I cannot at this time involve myself too deeply in the people's struggle other than superficially through my case. I greatly have appreciated receiving your paper MIM Notes as it is a light that cuts through the extreme propaganda of the ruling class. It has inspired me to "just say no" to this police state and fight my case with passion as it involves the neglect and contempt this system has for people in my situation. I enjoy your reviews of other publications and I feel that MIM Theory is a vital part of your paper. Thank you very much. Keep up the struggle. --East coast prisoner August 1990 MC¯ replies: A frequent response MIM hears when it asks people who are doing work that generally supports the party line to join is, "I am too busy." This may be because our allies are engaged in other practices, legal cases, in prison, have jobs which take long hours or many children. And MIM Cadres (MCs) sympathize, as we suffer from all these forces as well. In the long run of history, however, MIM argues that Maoism and a political party operating under democratic centralism are the only way forward on all of the various issues. The point here is that those who agree with MIM and oppose Soviet social imperialism, uphold the Great Proletarian Chinese Cultural Revolution and are willing to abide by democratic centralism on all other issues should join the party. "Too busy" is just not an excuse. Prisoners, for example, while being forced to attend to their own concrete legal needs as a way of securing some of their freedoms, can still work within MIM. They can study, hold discussions, write for the paper, help network and distribute literature and generally uphold the Maoist line to whatever degree their conditions allow. Working people can do even more as they have relatively more freedom. Being "too busy" for Maoism, but still doing other political work amounts to supporting other historically less successful political trends. So while work against, say, U.S. involvement in Nicaragua is valuable, it is not the most effective way to create public opinion and seize power for communism. Rather, it builds an isolated point in the Third World without addressing all political issues the way a party can. Those who work on university concerns and community projects are no doubt well-intentioned, but unless such projects are directed with the aim of building the party and organizing for revolution, they generally do not build a movement to smash the state in the name of the Third World proletariat. Our aim here is not to present all the evidence why Maoism is the single most successful ideology in the advance of communism, but to inform those who already understand this that they should join MIM, no excuses. PRISONER, SICK OF UNITED LEFT, ASKS FOR PERU PACK Dear MIM: Greetings from the American gulag! A friend of mine on the East Coast sent me a copy of your magazine. It's good to see that the Maoist tendency still lives in this country. About myself: I'm a 35-year-old white male academic (Latin Americanist) doing time in X for marijuana crime. What a waste! My girlfriend is a Peruvian resident alien, so I have some familiarity with the Peruvian Communist Party (PCP), aka Sendero Luminoso. It was very good to be able to read your analysis of the Peruvian situation, and especially the interview with Comrade Gonzalo in #43 (although it seemed the translation was somewhat garbled.) While I do not necessarily agree with all your positions (what I know of them), I applaud your efforts to keep the struggle alive and to learn from real leaders and not just mere theorists. Keep up the good work. I would like to be added to your subscription list. I am also keenly interested in the PCP and ask that you send me the MIM Peru Study Pack free of charge -- if you can afford it. As I'm sure you are well aware, it is exceedingly difficult to procure good information on the PCP in this country, and especially in my situation. My girlfriend's mother is a United Left sympathizer, so I get more than my share of that perspective, and of course, the trash that passes for analysis in the mainstream and left media, but I am very eager to read Comrade Gonzalo's own words. --Midwest prisoner August 1990 HUNGRY FOR KNOWLEDGE Dear MIM: Peace! (Revolutionary young greetings) I'm committed to overthrow the government!! I'm very young, but I'm determine to fight, die if need be to bring justice, freedom, and independence to our people who's being oppressed and assassinated in all four corners of the Earth. My reason for writing is to request some reading material on the Black Panthers and/or Mao Zedong. How can I go about contributing to your newspaper? Do you accept revolutionary poems? Or any kind of Black poems that deal with Black people and their conditions, even the assassination of us Black people? Personally, I'd like to become a part of any active group that deals with action against the common enemy. So if you can be any help to me please feed me knowledge for I am hungry!!! --POW August 1990 * * * MOHAWKS UNDER SEIGE AFTER INVASION by MC44 As MIM Notes goes to press, the imperialist Canadian war against the people of the Mohawk Nation continues in full force. More than 400 Canadian troops invaded the Kanesatake territory at Oka, Quebec on September 1. Twenty Mohawk Warrior men and about 30 women and children are currently under siege in one building in Kanesatake territory.(1) The telephone lines to this building were severed on September 13 by the Canadian armed forces.(2) During the summer, the Mohawks, who are defending their land against the City of Oka's plan to turn parts of it into a golf course, launched a two point defense. First, they erected barricades to protect Kanesatake, especially a sacred burial ground which Oka had slated to become the back nine. On July 11, 500 members of the Quebec Provincial Police (QPP) attacked the barricades and were repelled; one police officer was killed by his cohorts' fire. Second, another group of Mohawks, from the nearby Kahnewake territory, blockaded the Mercier Bridge in Montreal to support the besieged Indians in Kanesatake. Mercier Bridge is a central traffic artery for Montreal and the blockade added an hour or more to many commutes. In order to fabricate its position as defensive, the government of Canada has attempted to convince the public that they purchased the disputed land and have offered to turn it over to the Mohawks. There are no land acquisition documents to substantiate this lie.(2) During the first week of September, Mohawk Indians from the Kahnewake territory, who had held the seven week solidarity blockade of Mercier bridge, withdrew and "agreed" to abandon their positions.(3) Mohawk Warriors had been locked in a standoff outside the Kanesatake territory since the July 11 gun battle. The bridge blockade had been in effect almost as long. The army, acting under the orders of the Quebec Provincial authorities, finally ended the standoff by invading Kanesatake territory ostensibly in response to "factional fighting" behind the barricade. Two Mohawk men, identified as Chief Francis Jacob and his son Corey, were supposedly wounded in this infighting.(4) American Indian supporters of the Mohawk Nation crossed the Detroit-Windsor Ambassador Bridge on September 14 on their way to deliver food and clothing to the still-besieged Mohawks. The convoy was organized by a group called North American Indian Rights.(1) Indian responses This latest incident in a long history of Indian oppression has sparked gestures of solidarity from Indians across North America. They have mainly taken the form of road and railway blockades, but there have also been attempts to sabotage the expansion of Hydro Quebec's $62 billion dam. One blockade of a British Columbia Rail line lasted only five days before the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) received a court injunction to break it up and arrest the blockaders. Meanwhile, it cost the company between $500,000 and $750,000 (Canadian dollars) per day in lost revenues.(5) Canadian citizens hostile to the Mohawk struggle have been demonstrating against the Mercier Bridge blockade ever since it was erected. The hateful violence of those demonstrations escalated to alarming degrees, with the crowd once stopping an outgoing ambulance carrying a Mohawk woman who had suffered complications in childbirth. The ambulance was detained for 15 minutes while it was searched by two of the protesters for weapons.(5) On September 4, the Quebec Provincial Police (QPP) called a press conference to display the weapons they claim to have confiscated from the Kahnewake reserve. A powerful arsenal, including assault rifles with firing ranges of 1,500 feet, were supposedly seized from the Mohawk Longhouse on the reserve. The authorities have no photographs or witnesses to corroborate their claims. Mohawks deny ever having had these weapons. The phony raid was clearly an act of revenge on the part of the QPP. "Mohawks are aware of a vendetta the [QPP] have for them as the Mohawks now have kept this Provincial Police Force at bay for 56 days," stated a press release from the Mohawk Nation Office on September 4. Police had to break past the resistance of Mohawk women in order to gain access to the Longhouse, which is in unauthorized territory. Some women were hospitalized for their injuries. In anticipation of the invasion promised by the Canadian Government, elderly men, women and children attempted to leave the Kahnewake reserve on August 28. They were met with the brutality of an angry mob of "protesters" who have been inconvenienced by the blockade of the Mercier Bridge. Not surprisingly, neither the police or the military did anything to aid the Mohawks during the attack. "This illegal and immoral conduct on the part of the Canadian government is intended to break the spirit of the Mohawks and force them into compliance," said a Mohawk Nation press release. At press time, the fate of Mohawks surrounded by Canadian troops on the Kanesatake reserve is still up in the air. Daily vigils are being held in Paul Suave Park in Oka in the hope of preventing the imminent massacre.(2) Notes: 1. AP in Ann Arbor News 9/14/90. 2. Mohawk Nation Press Release 9/13/90 3. NYT 9/5/90. 4. AP in Ann Arbor News 9/2/90. 5. Maclean's 9/3/90 * * * SOUTH AFRICA: MURDER ON THE PEACEFUL ROAD by MC12 The scene described by witnesses is horrific. With faces covered to hide their race, white men drive 200 members of the Inkatha movement into an area heavily populated by supporters of the African National Congress (ANC) in the township of Sebokeng, and there launch a raid on local residents. Forty people are killed, and then the police show up, killing 11 more in the name of law and order.(1) Then, a group of young Black men board a Black commuter train near Johannesburg, and begin killing passengers. More than 100 are injured, at least 26 die, and many people leap from the train in panic.(5) What is going on here? South Africa is at war. White death squads with as-yet unconfirmed connections to the white government are organizing and executing mass violence in South Africa. Their actions take advantage of the vacuum left by the ANC's abandonment of armed struggle and reliance on negotiations with the foot-dragging government. Perhaps this death squad activity is an attempt to bring down the government, destroy coordinated Black organizations, or both. In one incident the ANC reported that military vehicles were used to transport Inkatha members to their killing grounds.(5) The ANC officially suspended its armed struggle against the government on Aug. 6, but now leader Nelson Mandela says it may have to be resumed, as he charges the white government with complicity in the violence. "If the government wants war, we will give it war," Mandela said.(2) The Zulu Inkatha movement, under the leadership of chief collaborator Mangosuthu Buthelezei, was essentially created by the white government to wage "black-on-black" war on the ANC. The Zulu-led fighting has killed 4,000 people in the Natal province in the last three years.(2) Usually passed off as "tribal warfare," the violence has also been a continuous excuse for the government to intervene with violence on its own, impose a state of emergency, and ensure chaos in the Black townships. Police and army forces have openly sided with Inkatha in the fighting, according to ANC supporters. The ruling National Party--which created the apartheid system--has been trying to dilute ongoing negotiations by bringing in other parties, while trying to resolve supposed differences between more and less extreme right wing factions of the government. Buthelezei has been nagging to be let in to the negotiations, while the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC)--a more rural-based liberation movement--has denounced them and refused to participate.(3) President F. W. de Klerk has promised that if white voters reject a proposal for a new constitution, he will renegotiate and resubmit it.(3) In other words, he will drag out the process until a constitution can be agreed upon by white voters--about whether Blacks can vote. This goes perfectly with his decision in August to open up the National party to Black members: but Blacks still can't vote even in party primaries, because of national laws. The negotiated road to power is coming apart at the seams. ANC supporters are demanding a military response. One ANC supporter is reported to have said, "If the ANC doesn't take a stand, they are going to lose support. They must stop the negotiations. Talking doesn't help. They must support us with arms." And the ANC military's chief of staff has said that, "Our duty now is to mobilize the masses and reconsider our strategies."(5) "If the people continue to demand to be armed, we will find it difficult to oppose that demand," Mandela said.(4) That may be the best alternative for the ANC--whether the South Africa's pacifist "supporters" like it or not. And if they don't do it, someone else probably will. Notes: 1. New York Times, 9/11/90 p.A5 2. Detroit Free Press, 9/11/90 p.A1 3. NYT, 9/6/90 p.A10 4. NYT, 9/12/90 p.A3 5. Detroit Free Press, 9/14/90 p.A1 * * * BYE-BYE BRAZIL: AUSTERITY MEASURES HURT POOR by MC89 When strapped for a buck, the U.S. government mugs someone, usually a Third World nation. In fact, as the world's biggest debtor, Amerika has made itself the biggest bully, having pounded everyone into a stupor to rob them of money they don't have. By all rights, Brazil, also a capitalist country, should be able to find someone to extort money from in order to pay its International Monetary Fund (IMF) debts. But the country is so immobilized by imperialism--the crime of battery and theft committed by Amerika--that it cannot lift a hand even to steal. That's why capitalist economists who predict Brazil's "emergence" to the top of the world order, joining Amerika, Japan, and Western Europe, are wrong. So, like someone selling blood to have enough to live on, the Brazilian government attempts to extract capital from itself. In order to rein in the 5,000% annual inflation, new President Fernando Collor has announced possibly the most austere austerity plan the world has ever seen. Even the capitalist class has been hit, with Collor freezing some 90% of bank deposits. The working class suffers a little more--hundreds of thousands have been laid off in private companies, and one-fourth of Brazil's 1.6 million civil servants will lose their jobs by the end of the year, Collor has announced.(1) And if the rich lose money, and the middle class lose jobs, the poorest see little change in their lives, except that more of them lose them. Following a pattern of public behavior which increasingly smacks of fascism, Collor asked citizens on Sept. 10 to join "a grand alliance" against inflation. He blames inflation (the government has stopped keeping figures, but private estimates put the rate at 45% per month) on virtually all extra-governmental bodies which effect the economy--unions, clubs, businesses.(2) In rising tones, he spoke of what his plan had to offer: "Reform of the state, privatization, deregulation, free wage bargaining, a floating exchange rate... have created a new mentality. The war against inflation is already a conquest." Amnesty International reports that the inflation-war's foot soldiers have mobilized. On the same day as Collor's speech, they issued an emergency report accusing the government of abetting the execution of small children by parents too poor to care for them.(2) Despite the still-runaway inflation, and a recession that deepens with every lay-off, an IMF team visiting Brazil in June was cheered by the progress they saw, issuing a brand-new $2 billion loan the country badly needs, can never hope to repay, and will have to kill to service. Many mainstream economists also allege that Brazil has secretly bought back a large part of its outstanding debt--taking out new loans to pay off the old ones which were too big to ever be paid.(3) Say a bank lends someone $100. Years later, as the borrower struggles just to make interest payments, the banker realizes it will never see that $100, so it sells the loan to another bank at a discount of 50%. Now the lucky borrower only owes $50, still too much to pay back, but the interest payments might be more manageable. That's a win-win deal for capitalists, and it's the mechanism behind the U.S. government's "Brady plan," versions of which have been hammered out for Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, the Philippines, and Venezuela; the fad is sweeping the southern hemisphere of the globe. And by renegotiating secretly, Brazil may be showing how the game will be played in the next decade--pretending to be as strapped as ever. If this practice becomes commonplace--and why shouldn't it?-- imperialist creditors may decide to go back to the old method of extorting payments, or icing the debtor (example: Mexico in the mid-1980s, buried six feet under by wrathful Amerikan capitalists). For Brazil, the worst may well be yet to come. Notes: 1. Left Business Observer 38, June 1990. 2. Financial Times 9/11/90. 3. Economist 9/8/90. * * * EGYPT MISTAKEN, PLO MISCOUNTED by MC44 Thanks to a U.S. puppet country, Egypt, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) received some bad press following the Arab League's vote to send a Pan-Arab force to Saudi Arabia--a decision backed by the United States. Egyptian officials had notified the press that the PLO voted against the resolution, thereby exposing "its true radical stripes."(1) But the PLO, in fact, abstained. Part of the damage done by that lie is the unsurprising reinforcement of Israel's refusal to negotiate with the PLO. Of course, it doesn't matter to Israel how the PLO voted. The PLO's gall in absaining from a vote which invited Amerikan imperialist intervention was enough for the U.S. to reverse its public criticism of Israel's consistently stubborn position against negotiations. U.S. officials have been candid in revealing their expectations with regard to their client state in the Middle East, wanting a "guarantee against any unilateral Israeli action and... insurance that they can count on Israel's support in the crunch."(2) Soviet Immigration Soviet immigration is as strong as ever in spite of the Gulf situation. Israel's biggest worry is a possible threat to its fundraising, which is necessary to absorb, house and employ the thousands of Soviets who arrive each month. The immigrants are creating a huge demand for new settlements, further displacing Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israel has been relying primarily on Amerikan Jewish support for the absorption effort, and are now worried that the Gulf crisis will affect the Amerikan economy badly enough to halt that cash flow.(3) Proposals in the Israeli parliament (Knesset) that a special tax be levied so that Israelis will pay for the absorption themselves have not received any support.(3) When the U.S. and Israel got together, supposedly to discuss moving forward with a peace plan, Secretary of State Baker disappointed Israeli officials by not offering to forgive Israel's military debt. Bush did extend such an offer to Egypt however, relieving it of its $7 billion debt in exchange for supporting the U.S. invasion of Saudi Arabia. Egypt is the second largest recipient of U.S. aid after Israel.(4) Notes: 1. NYT 9/4/90. 2. NYT 9/6/90. 3. NYT 9/3/90. 4. NYT 9/6/90. * * * QUISLINGS BATTLE IN LIBERIA by MC89 On Monday, September 10, rebel leader Prince Johnson captured Liberian President Samuel Doe at his headquarters in Monrovia. Recent issues of MIM Notes have covered the power struggle between Johnson, Doe, and another rebel, Charles Taylor, in this country that was established by Amerikans as a haven for freed slaves. None of the three has shown signs of seeking anything but authority, leading even neo-conservative (and former Trotskyist) columnist Irving Kristol to comment drily, "A Mr. Doe is being replaced by a Mr. Johnson or a Mr. Taylor." An estimated 400,000 Liberians are now refugees. Following Kristol's throw-up-your-hands-at-the-problem-you-created approach, Amerika sent in 220 Marines, apparently only to evacuate U.S. nationals. Johnson continues to keep whatever plans he may have secret. As president, he appears to be seeking help from neighboring Nigeria in return for the release of Nigerian nationals. Nigeria has gone ahead and made plans for intervening under its own mandate, working through a regional trade organization, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which it wants somehow to install as a government. Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, has been under military rule since 1984. To stop a Johnson-Nigeria accord, Taylor has reportedly begun systematically executing as many of the 7,000 Nigerians awaiting evacuation from Liberia as he can. Despite Nigeria's and Liberia's long-standing participation, the United Nations and the Organization of African Unity have refused to take any initiative to settle things. It is expected that Nigerian President Babangida will soon become Liberia's de facto head-of-state. Notes: Financial Times 9/10/90 Financial Times 9/11/90 * * * SINGAPORE: FASCISM FOREVER? by MC89 After serving for 25 years, Singapore top-dog Lee Kwan Yew may be getting ready to step down. Lee has named a successor, Goh Chok Tong, and is working on forcing a bill through the legislature to give him wide-ranging powers for curbing subversion, religious extremism, and corruption, and presumably leaving him to determine just what those are. The kicker in the new presidency package is the statement of qualifications for office. Any candidate must have held a cabinet- level office for at least three years, or--the best part--must run a company with paid assets of Singapore $100 million (about U.S. $200 million).(1) Singapore is a South East Asian city-state that does half of its trade with the United States.(2) Notes: 1. Economist 9/8/90. 2. 1988 Statesman's Year-Book. * * * JAZZ, GENDER AND JEWS: SPIKE LEE MOVES MONOGAMY CULTURAL CRITICISM AND THE POLITICS OF THE PERSONAL by MC44 and MC12 African American filmmaker Spike Lee has produced another controversial movie which few (if any) critics have correctly analyzed. Like his others, it's been called sexist. And now anti- semitism has been added to his crimes, according to the critics. Cultural criticism is a useful vehicle for discussion and analysis of social practices and how they are influenced by political- economic factors. Here we examine Mo' Better Blues in the context of a monogamy versus free love debate, given the overall oppression of women by men, and the economic realities of women and power under the capitalist patriarchy. What the critics are calling sexist in this movie is the assertion that, as a result of white Amerikan oppression and domination, Black men are in such a state of moral crisis that they essentially don't deserve Black women, who are held in a higher moral esteem. There is a differentiation here between the state of Black men and women in Amerika today, and this makes a lot people uncomfortable. This whole idea of crisis is not to be confused with the "state of crisis in the Black family" which Daniel Patrick Moynihan believes to be the cause of suffering of African Amerika, instead of the symptom it is. Expose the patriarchy People who are so eager to ascribe the label sexist to Lee's protective and paternal attitude implicitly maintain that under the current circumstances women can and will attain genuine power, if individual men clean up their personal practices. MIM counters: Is it inherently sexist to create a female character who is upfront and honest about the way she gets what she wants, (a singing career) by sleeping with a man who promises her just that? Spike Lee is exposing an ugly reality, which is that although women (in this case, the character Clarke) have the talent to succeed in powerful positions, the system is not set up for them to attain that power based on those merits. That is what patriarchy is. Just because movies like Mo' Better Blues portray that doesn't necessarily mean they uphold it. Of course, just showing oppressed women is not in itself a progressive thing; if it were, pornography would rule. But in Mo' Better Blues the women recognize and challenge that oppression, and the man with the misogynous practice meets a fable-like, poetic justice--to a point. This shows a much more conscious realization of the systematic oppression on the part of the movie. Likewise, showing women succeeding in impossible, fantastical ways--what some mainstream feminists might clamor for--suggests that women could make it if they try hard enough, within the patriarchal status quo. No apologies, please. Bleek Gilliam, the trumpet-playing hero played by Denzel Washington, leads a self-centered life as a fiercely dedicated musician, subordinating all other aspects of his life to that. In one scene Indigo, one of Bleek's two womanfriend/sex objects, tells him that her mother warned her that getting involved with a musician would surely mean a broken heart. This is a particularly soft scene which begins with Bleek's morning prayer toward Mecca. He assures her that he's not the guy her mother was talking about. As both she and the other woman (Clarke) reach the end of their tolerance for Bleek and dump him, the movie becomes the story of Bleek's decline and fall. Bleek, in retribution for his selfish, sexist lifestyle, gets dumped (by both women) and then has his mouth broken in a fight. His precious career is ruined. But the movie, and especially the ending, is ambiguous. He is rewarded in the end when Indigo agrees to "save his life" by marrying him and having his son. Why is Indigo still waiting for him a full year later, and why should she save his life when he seemed set on ruining hers? One could infer from the rather vague and hurried last few scenes (did Lee just run out of time?) that Mo' Better Blues is encouraging a life of monogamy/marriage. MIM doesn't want to put words in Lee's mouth that he didn't intend. But if this is indeed the message then MIM supports it as the most progressive one for women next to advocating asexuality. Time with the kids Although MIM recognizes child rearing as an important tenet of Black nationalism--part of the effort to rebuild strong community bonds--the party maintains that women will not be revolutionaries, nor be in a position to seize state power, while their time is almost fully consumed by children. Because MIM insists that Black women are an important revolutionary force, this line extends to them as well. In an unexpected and disappointing clichŽ of an ending, a scene from Bleek's childhood is re-enacted with his son as the same impatient kid that he was, who would rather play outside with his friends than practice the trumpet all day. Although Indigo and Bleek are more lenient parents with Miles (cute name for a future jazz trumpeter), it remains unclear exactly what legacy the child is supposed to carry on. Just how much has Bleek reformed, and how should he have? Granted this ambiguity is partially attributable to the hurried nature of the end, with minimal time left to develop the point; the course of action is dramatically sped up in the last few minutes of the film. As far as the charges of anti-semitism are concerned, MIM agrees with Spike Lee's own response as articulated in his Aug. 23 letter to the New York Times. How does 10 minutes of screen time devoted to a real phenomenon compare with the long history of Hollywood's racist depiction of African Americans? There have in fact been some Jewish capitalists who have made money off the direct exploitation of Black entertainers. Having two such Jewish characters does not imply that this is the way all Jews are. Again, another ugly reality is exposed and hammered home in the name of the night club: "Beneath the Underdog." Jews as a group, including owners Mo and Josh Flatbush, may be an underdog overall in Amerika, but Blacks are beneath them--clearly worse off as a group in this country than Jews. Would the critics who are hurling the label of anti-semite at Lee really insist that the characters of Mo and Josh represent the top of the power structure in this society? Why monogamy? As stated, Mo' Better Blues comes closest to MIM's proposed theory that monogamy is the best interim alternative to asexuality--a personal practice of no sexual relationships--under capitalism and the patriarchy. The capitalist mode of production pits groups against each other in the form of classes--these divisions are inseparable from the class system. Under the capitalist patriarchy, men as a group oppress women as a group. Because women, with few exceptions, are economically dependent on men, this oppression is inseparable from class struggle. A a communist party MIM seeks the abolition of all group power and oppression. Men as a group have more money than women do, and it is mens' interest not to share money with women, thus not to have forever- commitment relationships in which this would be required. It is upper class women who have defined the feminist position as anti-monogamy because they do have other economic resources, and indeed other choices. They just don't want the emotional and psychological domination of one man. The freedom they are advocating is a privilege few can afford, and it is a dubious freedom anyway. In other words, the overall sexual paradigm under capitalism is still one of eroticization of power and subordination even if in some individual couples both partners are economically independent. MIM refers readers to Catharine MacKinnon's Feminism Unmodified for a more in depth explanation of the eroticization of power theory. Audre Lorde, Black Feminist Lesbian "Warrior," puts it this way: "Poor and third world women know there is a difference between the daily manifestations and dehumanizations of marital slavery and prostitution, because it is our daughters who line 42nd Street."(1) Economic security More revealing evidence is found in infant mortality rates, which are higher for single mothers than for married women in Amerika. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) statistics, this is true for both whites and Blacks. The CDC proposes that "...the principle benefits of marriage to infant survival are economic and social support."(2) Right now--and conditions are getting worse, not better--women as a group are more economically secure in monogamous relationships than in either serial monogamy (one relationship at a time, but without forever commitment) or free love situations. MIM is not telling single women to go out and get married. Nor is MIM encouraging battered women of any class to stay with their assailants. The theory on monogamy is rooted in wanting to secure the immediate material interests of women, and challenging the notion that in non-monogamous relationships women have any kind of freedom from sexual exploitation. What is the freedom in sexual exploitation from a series of men who make no commitments, and provide no financial support? Those who insist, "We don't want men's f---ing financial support!" are, most likely, able to support themselves under the patriarchy. Under communism, when power of groups over other groups is abolished, conditions will be correct for sex and romance to mean something other than dominance and subordination--and then maybe we can have really free love. Right now, the best choice is still to be a love-slave of the international proletariat. Notes: 1. "The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle The Master's House," Comments at "The Personal and the Political" Panel (Second Sex Conference, October 29,1979). 2. AP in Ann Arbor News 8/3/90. * * * BASHING MAO'S GHOST--AN EXPOSE OF CAPITALIST CHINA by MC¯, MC5 & MC89 Mainstream media, bourgeois China scholars and the rest of Amerika's anti-communists blame everything that has happened in China since 1979 on Mao Zedong and communism. MIM maintains that 1979 was the year China took the capitalist road. It was in 1979 that Deng Xiaoping took power at the head of a military coup against Mao's successors, the Gang of Four. Since then he has been lauded by the West for his implementation of capitalist market reforms and the so-called "liberalization" of the Chinese economy. A good example of the willingness to bash Mao's ghost is a feature in the June 4, 1990 Newsweek entitled "The Death of Democracy." This article mainly consists of five color pictures which, frame by frame, show the public execution of two men who were said to have participated in the Democracy Movement demonstrations at Tiananmen Square during the summer of 1989. The text says: "Out on the killing fields, an application of Chairman Mao's axiom that power comes from the barrel of a gun." This is a gross distortion. It does not point out that Mao opposed the people currently in power and that his successors were purged by force. Moreover, Mao himself argued against using force when it was unnecessary. As testament to this commitment, one of his greatest adversaries and the current ruler of China, Deng, lives today--even though the Maoists in the 1970s sent him to reeducation camp. Mao also said that only the far right feared the student movement. "Who is it who suppressed the student movement?" asks Mao. "Only the Pei-yang Warlords. [In reference to the reactionary warlord dominated government of Peking, which in 1919 attacked the student movement.--MC¯] It is anti-Marxist for communists to fear the student movement. Some people talk daily about the mass line serving the people, but instead they follow the bourgeois line and serve the bourgeoisie. The Central Committee of the Youth League should stand on the side of the student movement."(1) Moreover, Newsweek does not tell its readers about the general policy of executions enacted in China since Mao's death. In a crackdown on crime, 1,100 people received the death sentence in the last year, according to Amnesty International. China denied the report.(9) This of course is only one example and there are many other places where China is steadily integrating itself into the world capitalist market while, internally, it builds its system of private property. What follows is a round-up of current examples. China checks flow of ideas Seeking readmission to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), China has passed its first copyright law.(2) GATT monitors international trade and finance. Membership is regarded as essential for development of capitalism. Copyright law is often mistaken for a sort of guarantee of privacy--preventing others from stealing your thoughts. In fact, it only protects "thoughts" once their creator has decided that they are commodities. In this way, it is like any other law protecting private property. Class identity is passed from generation to generation in the bourgeoisie through laws of inheritance. Like those of other countries, Chinese copyrights are valid for 50 years beyond the death of the author, during which time his or her heirs oversee their distribution. China experiences recession? Evidence is accumulating that China is experiencing a recession. While previous reports spoke of recessions when growth merely slowed, it appears that China's economy has actually shrunk in parts of 1990. January and February of 1990 saw industrial production 0.9% lower than the same period of the previous year. Since January and February, growth appears to have recovered, but at a low rate. In addition, all of 1989 saw only 6.8% growth in industrial production. The latest figures show industrial production growth slowing down again in July so that annual growth will only be 2.9% if the July rate continues.(5) CCP officials have admitted that unemployment increased by 500,000 in the last year up to 11 million in the cities. Others say the figure is really 20 or 30 million--and 120 million in the countryside. Three million private businesses were supposedly closed in the last 18 months. There may be new pressure to allow individual capitalism in addition to state capitalism now that the CCP papers are saying unemployment is the worst in China's history.(12) The counterrevolutionary regime took power with the promise that its program would bring faster growth than China's Cultural Revolution policies. MIM has admitted that capitalism can bring faster growth in the short-run, but in the long run, capitalist economies give in to cyclical growth, meaning recessions and depressions are inevitable. For this reason among others, socialism is a superior economic system. Tibet massacre precedes Tiananmen The Deng regime had more than 450 Tibetans killed in protests in March, 1989. Police fired from rooftops into crowds on March 6, 1989, shooting 300 in 10 minutes. According to a Chinese journalist the regime also arrested thousands more and tortured others.(6) Reports note the use of boiling water and electric prods in torture, and regular house-to-house searches.(7) There are six million Tibetans in Tibet, but there are more non- Tibetan Chinese in Tibet.(11) The plight of minorities The various nationalities in China itself also suffer from repression. This is one of the many natural results of the uneven growth and race and gender divisions fostered by capitalism. In the province of Xinjiang, where a majority of the people are Moslems, over 2,000 people started a "holy war" to set up a country called Turkestan. 50 civilians and 8 people died. In response the Deng Xiaoping regime arrested 6,490 people in the first six months of 1990. According to the CCP, a majority of China's people below the official poverty line are in ethnic minorities.(10) Moonies invest in China Sun-Myung Moon's Unification Church is setting up a 100-square mile industrial complex in China.(8) Support for Dengist regime While the Tiananmen massacre created an immense amount of bad press for the current government and rumors of Deng's death complicate the response, overall Chinese capitalism is weathering the storm. That is both U.S. President George Bush and Soviet Party Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev continue trade and political relations with China. China recently received the lowest rating of 10 Asian countries evaluated by an investors' analysis group. Investors are still feeling the effects of the rebellion in Tiananmen in 1989. They expect political and economic instability in the near future.(13) China's trade with Japan declined 41% from 1989 to $2.7 billion in the first six months of 1990.(14) Still, just as the United States could not stop the new Soviet- German flirtation in matters of business, so too it did not stop Japan from making a $5 billion loan to the Chinese government at a time when other Western governments were stopping their loans to show displeasure over the Tiananmen massacre. Spain followed (3) and now the Western European and U.S. governments have given up on stopping loans to the Deng Xiaoping regime. Amoco also signed an exploration contract in August, another indication that business is as usual in China.(4) Meanwhile, China is scheduled to hold a mini-Olympics called the Asian Games on September 22. Thirty to seventy thousand troops are prepared for political disorders in Beijing.(15) Capitalist policies In all, China has moved a long way down the capitalist road since Mao's death in 1976. , Even neo-classical (mainstream) economists will admit that the establishment of private property laws and cyclical fluctuations in the economy, such as recessions, are signs of the functioning of capitalism. And why is it that the Dengist government must repress the movements of students and national minorities? Because they are mass movements against the harsh conditions of state-run capitalism, the creation of which Maoism opposed in the Cultural Revolution from 1966-1976. Notes: 1. Stuart Schram, ed. Chairman Mao Talks to the People (New York: Pantheon Books, 1974) p.253. 2. Financial Times 9/11/90 3. UPI 8/10/90. 4. Business Wire 8/9/90. 5. UPI 8/9/90. 6. South China Morning Post 8/13/90. 7. The Globe and Mail 8/21/90. 8. World Press Review, September 1990. 9. UPI 9/13/90. 10. AP 9/11/90. 11. AP 9/12/90. 12. Reuter 9/14/90. 12. Globe and Mail 9/4/90. 14. South China Morning Post 9/12/90. 15. UPI 9/14/90. * * * MONGOLIA ADOPTS LIBERAL CAPITALISM by MC5 Copying events in Eastern Europe, Mongolia's Communist Party gave up any pretense to Leninism in July by holding elections and surrendering party leadership of the society. Prior to elections, however, the so-called communists granted herdspeople the right to private ownership of livestock. Mongolia is a predominantly agricultural society where cattle-breeding is very important. Out of 799 victorious candidates, "18 were workers, 51 cattle breeders and 720 intellectuals."(1) It appears that the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (the revisionists) won the vast majority as the three largest opposition groups combined only won 101 of the 799 seats. Opposition democrats charged that the communists, "have more money, more access to media and a much better developed party apparatus" in the paraphrasing of a bourgeois newspaper.(2) If so, then at least that is to the credit of the revisionists. Meanwhile, 80% of Soviet troops were gone from Mongolia in a reflection of the lessening of a conflict between China and the Soviet Union which made Mongolia a hotspot. Notes: 1. South China Morning Post, 7/25/90. 2. UPI 7/26/90. * * * IRAQ: U.S.-SOVIET COLLUSION by MC12 The United States and the Soviet Union issued a joint statement on the war in the Persian Gulf on Sept. 9. The statement, which followed a meeting between Bush and Gorbachev, was symbolic of a new period of collusion between the two major imperialist powers. Both countries are facing economic problems, but right now the Soviet Union is in the deeper of the two holes, especially with the risk of losing control over internal nations such as Azerbaijan and Georgia, as well as losing economic influence over its sphere in Eastern Europe. These compound the problems caused by the contraction which has followed the economic changes in that country. As the Soviets' ability to confront Third World revolts against its social-imperialism is weakened, the United States moves in. Gorbachev can only try to hang on and ride out the economic storm and hope for scraps from the imperialist feast of world war. Gorbachev's reluctance to cooperate with the United States was occasionally apparent in the joint press conference he gave with Bush. He said, for example: "Whether we want it or not, history dictates that a lot is going to depend on whether the two countries can work together. That's not our ambition, it's just the way that history has gone." In other words, the Soviet Union must temporarily stoop to accepting U.S. leadership in this and other crises. Gorbachev's hope for emerging from the war with some influence in tact remains in part with the Soviet stance on the Palestinian issue--one area in which the Soviets have been able to maintain alliances with Arab nations. But that avenue to influence has been hurt by Syria's willingness to jump in bed with the United States in order to further the destruction of Iraq and get in on a piece of the economic reward. For the United States, any mention of Israel or open involvement by the Israelis brings up the possibility of re-united Arab action--which has thus far been successfully avoided, at great expense. And so we get Bush saying, about the Iraqi versus the Israeli occupations: "The thing that I feel strongly about is that these issues are not linked." Gorbachev still has friends to keep over the issue, and he sees a possible opening. Thus: "[I]t seems to me there is a link here because the failure to find a solution to the Middle East at large also has a bearing on the acuteness of the particular conflict we've been talking about here." But on the Iraqi war and other Third World conflicts, the USA and the USSR are now admitting to share a common interest in "stability," meaning imperialist domination. They both face the same Domino Effect from national liberation struggles. That's where the best line of the two countries' joint statement came from: "No peaceful international order is possible if larger states can devour their smaller neighbors." A joke on any scale, from them, but telling of the fears they share. Source: New York Times 9/10/90. * * * ALBANIA AND SOVIET UNION NORMALIZE RELATIONS by MC5 In July, Albania restored diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union after a 30 year hiatus. The embassies had closed originally because China under Mao Zedong and Albania under Enver Hoxha opposed the Soviet government's switch to capitalism in the late 1950s. Previously Albania had claimed it would have no diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union. Pro-Albania communists in the United States may have some explaining to do soon. Albania is a small country in Eastern Europe that borders Yugoslavia and Greece. It has a population of 3 million people, who are mostly farmers. Politically, Albania is an important country in communist history. Today it claims to have the only communist government in the world. Recently, 6,000 Albanians left the country of 3 million people. The government also announced reforms to take into account the situation in Eastern Europe. The pro-Albania communists believed a Cultural Revolution--a mobilization of the masses against the capitalist-minded leaders in the communist party running the state--was unnecessary to keep Albania on the socialist-road. The time may soon be approaching where it will become obvious that Albania is no longer socialist. A communist history In 1939, Italian fascists occupied Albania and Albanians initiated an armed struggle for independence. In 1941, they formed the Communist Party of Albania. The Albanians organized the defeat of the Italians and then the Germans who invaded in 1943. Out of the countries in Eastern Europe liberated from the Nazis with the help of Stalin's offensive against the Nazis, Albania did the most to gain its own independence.(1) Upon independence in 1944, Enver Hoxha led Albania till his death in 1985. Most notably under Hoxha, Albania was the only communist government to side with China in the Sino-Soviet split in 1960. From 1960 to 1976, Hoxha was the only communist government leader to side completely with Mao. During those years, China's and Albania's communist parties issued joint communiques condemning Soviet phony communism and Albania supported the Cultural Revolution in China. Governments in North Korea, Vietnam and Cambodia, not to mention those in Eastern Europe either took positions between the Soviet and Chinese Communist parties or sided with the Soviets against China and Albania. Since the two communist parties of Albania and China were thought to be alike, it was with great disappointment that communists found Enver Hoxha breaking with Mao after Mao's death. In his book Reflections on China (1979), Hoxha claimed that Mao was only a progressive nationalist figure. Offering no explanation for why he changed his political stance after the death of Mao, Hoxha changed his theory on the dictatorship of the proletariat and claimed to uphold Stalin but not Mao. In 1976 Mao died. In 1978, China cut off all military and civil aid to Albania. Hoxha's criticisms of Mao came after the aid cut- off. Even the anti-Maoists of the U.S. Progressive Labor Party and Kansas City Marxist-Leninist Cell called out Hoxha for this: suddenly Hoxha said that China's revolution was never a socialist one at all, just a bourgeois one. Why did he wait so long to speak up?(2) What has been the concrete situation of the masses within Albania? Is it a capitalist society and if so, when did it start being one? While MIM has some information on this subject, it needs much more. In the meantime, MIM can say that Albania's leadership grossly errs in detracting from the Chinese Revolution (1949) and the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). Notes: 1. "New Albania: A Small Nation, A Great Contribution!" (NY: Albania Report, 1984) 2. "The Race to the Right," PL Magazine (NY: PLP, Spring 1979); "Towards the Development of the International Marxist-Leninist Trend," (Kansas City: KS Marxist-Leninist Cell, 1980) * * * SOUTHEAST ASIAN SUCKER CARTEL ABOUT TO GO BELLY-UP by MC89 When the European Community--Western Europe, including unified Germany--becomes a single market in 1992, the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) will be a quarter-century old. ASEAN is a group of countries--Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand--that works to advance "international trade," particularly Western oriented exports and cheap labor, in South East Asia. With 300 million customers, and economic growth rates higher than Europe's across the board, ASEAN should be leading the world, as Europe is expected to--so what went wrong?(3) ASEAN countries have a simple formula for business: keep the populace cowed with state police and make sure every order to the U.S. or Japan goes out on time. At a rough MIM estimate, ASEAN governments have killed two million of their own since the organization was founded. The two imperialist countries have responded warmly to the resulting stability by moving factories into ASEAN territory. Japan now houses 25% of its productive capacity there.(1) Indonesia, dwarfing the rest of ASEAN with a population of 180 million, receives $6.27 billion in aid annually. Indonesia's "absolute poverty" level is a soaring 40%, among the highest in the world.(2) Notes: 1. Financial Times 9/11/90. 2. Far Eastern Economic Review 4/26/90. 3. Population figures projected from 1988 Statesman's Year-Book. * * * MOVIES LYNCH'S FINE LINE Wild At Heart It is hard to tell what David Lynch is up to. Do the scenes in Wild at Heart that so disturbingly link violence to eroticism make a critical statement about how sex is defined as rape in Amerikan culture? Or are they simply meant to eroticize violence, to get the audience turned on--with a touch of titillating horror at itself--at the sight of women's sexuality being molded and dominated by violence? If it is the former, Lynch is certainly wildly inconsistent in his critical outlook (so long as sex and true love coincide, he infers, it's okay). And the fact that such a fundamental question exists seems evidence for the latter explanation: if he wanted to make a critical statement, he could've made it emphatic enough to expunge such doubts. Nevertheless, Lynch's overt connection of sex to violence is sufficiently more discomforting than the run-of- the-mill misogyny of most commercial movies to warrant some examination. Lula, our 20-year-old heroine, leaves her hometown with her boyfriend Sailor to escape her mother's jealous clutches. She's already been raped once, by her uncle, and had an abortion (we see both events through bad-dream flashbacks). Hot in their pursuit are a gang of hit-men and women, controlled by a man named Reindeer, about whom we know only that he is very rich and likes to surround himself with topless sex-slaves. (Sex is overtly portrayed in the flashback rape scenes and in the Reindeer scenes as a manifestation of and a means to enforce women's subordination. The links between sex and physical violence and economic coersion are hard to miss). While Lula is lying in bed in a hotel room that stinks of vomit (she has just figured out she's pregnant), Bobby Peru, a Vietnam vet in the employ of Reindeer, knocks and asks to use the bathroom. Lula, uncomfortable, gets out of bed and lets him in. He assaults her. She struggles, but he forces her to press against him. He holds her chin up so that his lips almost touch hers. "Say 'f--- me,'" he says, "and I'll leave. Say it. F--- me, f--- me, f- -- me." And he repeats it until Lula, trying to resist, whispers "f--- me," and has an orgasm. Peru laughs and leaves the room. Lula, stricken, stares at herself in the mirror and goes back to bed. Feminist author and lawyer Catherine MacKinnon says women are socialized to enjoy their subordination. What better an example of the twistedness of capitalist society's construction of gender than a woman who, despite her effort at struggling against it, orgasms as she is raped? In an eqaully vivid portrayal of what MacKinnon calls the eroticization of power, a woman who has been commissioned by Reindeer to murder Lula's mother's boyfriend (he too is pursuing Lula and Sailor, and Reindeer's gang wants him out of the way) counts off as her lover and accomplice aims a gun at their victim's head. She gets increasingly agitated as she counts-- "I'm so hot," she says-- and as she utters "one" and the shot rings out, she orgasms. It's fitting here that she does not fire the shot, she does not wield the actual power, but that nevertheless it is violence and power that sexually excite her. Scenes like this paint an ugly and all-too realistic picture of gender relations in Amerikan culture, but no matter how accurately they reflect reality, they deserve criticism for bordering too closely on a glorification of the power dynamic they portray. Any critical edge the movie may have on the subject of sex inequality is also significantly dulled by the steamy and apparently equally earth-shaking sex scenes between Lula and Sailor. And the movie has the usual happy ending disease of most Hollywood films: instead of concluding that organizing for revolution is the only way to change the ugly and alienating world it does such a good job of portraying--or at least showing the characters living unhappily ever after in an unchanged one--Wild At Heart offers love as a refuge. It ends with the reunion of the star-struck lovers, and the literal message "don't turn away from love." So--surprise, surprise--Lynch hasn't made a revolutionary feminist movie. But he has made a thought-provoking one, and MIM would recommend it over most other mindless and oppressive Hollywood goop out there. --MC11 PUMP UP THE ANARCHY Pump up the volume Mark is an alienated high school youth who hates his parents, his school, the suburbs, and the system. Fortunately, he has a creative outlet for his anger. His 60s- children-turned-yuppie parents are considerate enough to supply him with the equipment to set up his own pirate radio show. (And then never notice their son's little secret; Mark engineers sort of a Batcave effect, and manages to hide his set-up from the folks). "Happy Harry Hard-on" goes on every night at 10:00, attracting a rapt and devoted audience of fellow-teens who dig his anti-authority ramblings. Which is about all they are. Happy Harry's healthy rebellious streak fades considerably when it comes to offering explanations for or solutions to the woes of teenage life. The blatant anarchism of his message leaves his listeners with no vision of a better world or a way to get out of the one with which they are unanimously dissatisfied. One comforting thought he offers is that the teenage years are the worst, so if one can get through them, things can only get better. When one of Happy Harry's listeners commits suicide, as though acting on the erstwhile rebel's assertions that life sucks, he almost decides to call the whole thing off. But someone (the love interest) has already figured out the anonymous DJ's identity, and convinces him that he owes it to his audience not to give up or give in. Back on the air, Harry tells his schoolmates not to take the easy way out. Instead, he says, they should "get angry," and express their outrage. Which they do. To a predictable end: nothing changes. The popular girl with good grades whose rich father is sure she's safely on her way to Yale takes her pearls and her Yale banner and blows them up in the microwave. Other similar acts of aimless rebellion spread throughout the school, until the principal teams up with the cops and the Federal Communications Commission to find and arrest the guy who was inciting all the trouble. The movie's portrayal of the state (as embodied by the FCC agents who hunt the DJ down and silence his defiant voice), and its connection to school authority is probably the best part of the movie. Hundreds of teenagers gathered in the field where the reception is the best witness Mark's arrest. And that's it, he gets taken away. Not a bad ending for a Hollywood movie. We are, however, left with the message that Mark's story should serve as an inspiration to teens all over to "seize the air" and create their own pirate radio stations. (Voices pipe up after the screen goes black, little points of sound in the darkness). It is hard not to wonder why, after what happened to our hero, we should feel inspired by similar spontaneous, individualist actions. Pirate radio is a neat idea, but, as the movie itself shows, anarchy isn't going to change the rigid school system of childhood disinformation, and cool music alone isn't going to change the mainstream kulture they are trained to participate in. Teens have good reason to be alienated from Amerikan society, as it becomes more repressive every day. (14 states now require parental consent for abortion for women under 18). MIM celebrates rebellion, and recommends joining a revolutionary party with the correct line (guess which one) to organize for change that will be significant and lasting. --MC11 * * * BOOKS INDONESIA: WHY A CULTURAL REVOLUTION? Indonesia: Law, Propaganda and Terror, by Julie Southwood and Patrick Flanagan. Zed Press 1983. 272pp. The Suharto regime's body-count is staggering: 750,000 communists killed in its first two years in power (1966-68); 660,000 dead from the 1976 invasion of East Timor. There is no competitor for the title of most genocidal single government since the Nazis. And the reason for the deaths is clear. Like South Africa, where the mountains are riven with gold veins and peppered with diamonds, Indonesia has something the imperialist world wants--oil. Familiar terms. Death and oil are the products, imperialism the producer. But that hardly tells a communist where to fight, and the bloodiness could easily convince one that the situation was hopeless. An understanding of the fascist state--the machine that makes the whole system tick--is necessary for a correct analysis. Indonesia has a population of nearly 180 million now--it is the world's fifth largest country--climbing towards 235 million in 15 years. Life expectancy at birth is 58, and other standards of health are similarly lagging, even behind the rest of the Third World.(1) Significantly, 78% of the population are Muslims.(2) It is a simple truth that brute force alone could not keep Indonesia's population down, yet President Suharto has been in power for nearly a quarter-century and shows no signs of being ousted. Indonesia: Law, Propaganda and Power explains his stability. Stability means the ability to postpone revolution. For revolution is inevitable. Its opposite is the steady maintenance of a system of extraction. The Dutch were the original colonizers of Indonesia, lasting until Japanese occupation during World War II and Amerikan efforts to wrest the country from the Dutch between 1946 and 1950. That's when the United States backed a nationalist leader, Sukarno, starting a chain of events which was transparent to one person at least, John K. Fairbank. In 1947 he said: "Our fear of Communism, partly as an expression of our general fear of the future, will continue to inspire us to aggressive anti-Communist policies in Asia and elsewhere, [and] the American people will be led to think and may honestly believe that the support of anti-Communist governments in Asia will somehow defend the American way of life.... Thus, after setting out to fight Communism in Asia, the American people will be obliged in the end to fight the peoples of Asia."(p.21) Sukarno turned out to be pesky for the United States. In 1963, realizing what a neo-colonial shambles his country was in, he told President Kennedy, "To hell with your aid." Two years later, the CIA had convinced some Indonesian generals to attempt a coup. They were promptly put down, not by Sukarno, but by a hero the United States had made, then-general Suharto. Without supplying any evidence, Suharto declared that the mutinous forces were members of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) and began a purge of all communists from the government. Guided expertly, the purge spilled out into the streets and onto the campuses, where vigilante gangs of Muslim nationalists students were quickly organized. The slaughter began. Even a military officer who supervised killings could not reckon their scale. More than half of the murders were committed by people who had no direct with the government, but were merely inspired by it. Southwood and Flanagan show how inspiration travels. Noting that power in Indonesian is not monolithic, but a balance between Suharto and his cronies, an immense security-intelligence apparatus, and financiers who operate in and outside government, they show how a fascist state can arise and function without totalitarian consolidation of power. There is, first of all, an intelligence agency with extraordinary powers--KOPKAMTIB (Operational Command for the Restoration of Security and Order) which has constitutional authority over the defense department and the military's high command, answering only to President Suharto, and it stands in place of local police forces, which exist, but are weak. A general described the situation in an interview: "People in Indonesia tend to be terrified when they hear the name KOPKAMTIB. The general feeling is that KOPKAMTIB can do whatever it likes. And that means, in the first place, they can arbitrarily arrest people."(p. 84) Direction of the military is a trait of the Amerikan CIA, as the Iran-Contra affair revealed. Police power calls to mind the Nazi Gestapo. But in Amerika, the CIA, the FBI and the local police are not coordinated; and the Gestapo competed with the military police, the SS. Indonesia has no such divisions of armed authority. Still, KOPKAMTIB, which operates chiefly through force, or the threat of force, is not the hub of Indonesian stability. An ideology binds Indonesia together and keeps it down. Southwood and Flanagan call it the "fetish of law." Indonesians are not litigious like bourgeois Amerikans, who live in a swirl of malpractice and divorce suits (though the aim of protecting property is a hallmark of both legal systems). An example shows the distinction. Insonesia has a press code, known by its acronym MISS SARA: "M--don't instigate; I--don't insinuate; S--don't speculate; S-- avoid sensation; S--don't exploit ethnic differences; A--don't exploit religious differences; R--don't exploit social differences; A--don't exploit ideological differences."(p. 85) These aims--smothering any spark of struggle or tension among the people--are furthered through volumes upon volumes of civil and criminal code, by a vast network of courts, and by prisons which hold a higher percentage of the population than anywhere else in the world. The quickest way for a citizen to climb in Indonesian society is to inform on another. The "fetish of law" that is produced amounts to a culture--the real enemy of communist revolution in Indonesia. At its height, the pro-Maoist PKI had 10 million members. Though reduced in size by murder and fear, it is an easy match for all the muscle the Indonesian state can muster--but guns are not enough. Turn to Indonesia: Law, Propaganda and Terror to understand how the fascist state operates to perfection. Turn to Mao's China to see how it can be overthrown. --MC89 Notes: 1. Far Eastern Economic Review 5/17/90. 2. Statesman's Year-Book 1987-88. * * * KLAN MARCHES IN D.C. by MA9& MC5 Washington, DC--On September 2nd, 15-30 members of the Ku Klux Klan attempted to march. In response, 1,000 to 5,000 people rallied throughout the afternoon in different places to fight the police protecting the Klan. The Klan never marched where the police had cordoned off the streets. When it became evident that they would never confront the Klan, the anti-Klan militants took to street-fighting with police. To take their case to the capitol grounds, the anti-Klan people broke through several blockades set up by the police of four different departments. Many of the police covered up their badge numbers and names to avoid detection in the fighting. One officer yelled, "come on fucker let's fight" while holding up a club. The anti-Klan people had no weapons, but they fought the police anyway. This break-out against the system was definitely one of the most militant in recent memory. It left various so-called leftist groups tailing after the people. The All-People's Congress (APC) (a reformist front group of pseudo-Trotskyists) had an organized contingent with microphones. Yet, as events proceeded, it was clear that the APC was not a significant organization. Another organization, radio station WPGC had publicized the confrontation for days in advance. No doubt many people had heard about the event this way, but the radio station itself did not show up at the outbreak in any visible or organized fashion. The participants did not march under any one banner. As usual, militant sentiment against the Klan is not the monopoly of any one organization. Rather one can always detect opportunist politics when an organization claims it rallied anti-Klan sentiments. A large portion of the masses does not need an organization to hate the KKK. In the street-fighting, contradictions amongst the people arose quite sharply. Someone at a microphone claimed that Black men were not in the front lines, only white men and Black women. The call went out to "protect your sisters." Others were calling the pigs homosexual names as if it were an insult to be homosexual and not just fighting for the KKK. In addition, the officers themselves were predominantly Black; although the commanding officers were mostly white. The fact that the police were Black did not stop the demonstrators who were themselves largely Black. What this outburst against the system showed is an inkling of the future of the dying system of imperialism. Those who say there is no work to be done because the masses are not ready for revolution need only look at Washington DC. The police spent millions of dollars defending the KKK that day according to a city council person. It was Labor Day weekend overtime for the 300 to 400 police. There was also the expense of a helicopter that buzzed over the crowd every fifteen minutes and the temporary fences made to protect the major buildings in the capitol. These expenses are just an indication of how far the imperialists had to go to try to stop just a few thousand people. MIM played a negligible role in the events. It was a case where the revolutionaries were not ready for the masses, not the other way around. * * * UNDER LOCK & KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND PRISONERS. NEUVIC IS FRENCH FOR FASCISM by MC89 Ordinarily, prisoners rise up against their captors--the guards the state puts on the front line of oppression. At France's newest prison, Neuvic, a September uprising was triggered in part by a lack of guards. Like something out of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, Neuvic is a completely-automated facility. Prisoners are required to carry a "smart-card," which they use to open doors on the way to the yard, the mess hall, or the shower--at every moment, and the location of every prisoner is monitored by a central computer. Surprised by the prisoners' angry action, the jail's designers, with an Orwellian turn of phrase, pleaded that they had intended for the system to give an added sense of responsibility, since the prisoners would not have to ask their keepers for permission every time they wanted to pee. The truth is, any guard who was approached would simply adhere to the computer program. If it said the prisoner was supposed to be in bed, that is what would be enforced--period. Many prisoners went hungry when they missed the five-minute window in which they were supposed to use their card to exit for meals. And the deeper truth is that the new technology represents the latest in de-humanization--the function of prisons--rather than the other way around. Ever since the English utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham devised the panopticon ("all-seeing") architecture of modern prisons, with one constantly-manned watchtower in the center of a courtyard ringed by cells, designers have been working to find new and better ways to deny prisoners all semblance of privacy. There's no privacy, but there's privatization. More and more, prison-operation is being contracted out to the highest bidder (see "Sumptuous rooms--only $30 a night," MIM Notes 43). To pay for the computers, prices are 20% higher at the Neuvic canteen than at other French prisons. Neuvic cost 400,000 francs (U.S.$75,000) per prisoner to build, and costs 120 francs ($22.50) per prisoner per night to maintain. The French government plans to build 30 new Neuvic-style terrordomes in the next three years. Notes: Economist 9/8/90. PRISON DIGEST by MC12 BABYLON, RIKERS STYLE Prison guard officials know better than to predict a decrease in the violence at Rikers Island. Guards went on a rampage in late August, supposedly in response to the beating of a fellow guard, and 300 prisoners were injured in the ensuing assault. Rikers is packed beyond capacity--its prisoner population more than twice what it was 10 years ago--and the guards were making a public show for more money and more freedom to use violence against prisoners.(1) One guard is reported to have said: "We're literally dealing with the scum of the earth in there. They're just not normal human beings like you and me, and it doesn't make sense to treat them that way." Guards at the prison are complaining about "losing control" over the prisoners, who vastly outnumber them. But the prisoners have no emergency button to press, no goon squad to call up when they lose control. MIM asks: who's the real scum? Notes: New York Times 9/1/90 FOCOISTS COP A PLEA Three of the Amerikan kingdom's political prisoners have pleaded guilty to being involved with a bombing at the U.S. Capitol. Not that their guilt or innocence had anything to do with their time in jail, which they served before ever being convicted. Marilyn Buck, Linda Evans and Laura Whitehorn were imprisoned after the bombing in 1983--which did some damage but didn't kill anyone--intended to protest the invasion of Grenada. Political prisoners (what many "criminal" prisoners should be called) face harsh treatment at the hands of the imperialists. But blowing up buildings is unfortunately no way to go about making a revolution right now. Thinking that the masses will rise up in instant revolt after a few isolated terrorist acts is called focoism, and it doesn't work. Real revolutionaries know that without building public opinion, an insurrection won't have popular support, and that armed struggle before its time means suicide and wasted life. Notes: AP in Ann Arbor News 9/8/90 GAY PRISONERS MARKED Prison officials in Texas--at Fort Worth Jail--were embarrassed last month when there was some flap about their policy of forcing gay prisoners to wear bracelets identifying them publicly. In entrance interviews, prisoners can choose to be given "protective custody" if they tell the guards they are gay. That means they get housed with other gay prisoners, but take their meals and recreation with the rest of the inmates--where their special gray bracelets clearly identify them. The set up allows prisoners to be divided by their guards, and played off each other. While some gay prisoners might lie about their orientation, others could easily be falsely labelled. The idea of "protective custody" in prison is a false one to begin with, as the greatest threat to prisoners is from the guards and the state. Who's protecting who? Notes: New York Times 9/10/90 MARION'S BAD REPUTATION The government of Colombia is looking into charges that U.S. prison officials are mistreating Colombian nationals in Amerikan jails. The interest comes, not surprisingly, from Marion, Illinois, where a supposed Colombian drug baron is in jail for life. Carlos Lehder complained to his government, and now the Colombians are asking for information about the rights of 3,000 Colombians in jail in the United States. They won't have to look far to find the violent repression, especially if they start at Marion. Notes: Detroit Free Press 9/13/90 DEATH The state of Illinois has carried out its first (legal) execution in 28 years. The victim was 50-year-old Charles Walker, who was convicted of killing two people in a hold-up. Illinois is one of several states jumping back on the death penalty bandwagon, riding a public opinion wave of reaction against crime--part of the increasing fanaticism which follows the U.S. descent toward fascism. Walker was killed by lethal injection.(1) Florida executed James Hamblen on Sept. 21. 140 people have been executed since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.(2) Notes: 1. Detroit Free Press 9/13/90 2. NYT 9/22/90