Socialist Appeal 162 out now!

162-coversmall.jpg A new issue of Socialist Appeal is out. Read more about it or get your copy now before it is too late.
 

Economy in crisis

Profits, crisis and credit crunch: can 1929 happen again?

The NUT Strike Ballot Print E-mail
By Ed Doveton (Wakefield NUT)   
Monday, 10 March 2008
untitled-1.jpgLast month the National Union of Teachers’ Executive announced a ballot for a 24 hour strike on 24th April for all school-based members. The ballot is currently underway, having started on February 24th and will end on 31st March.
 
Audio File: ULU Marxist Society - 100 years of International Women's Day Print E-mail
By Barbara Humphries   
Friday, 07 March 2008

housewife1950s.jpgWhatever happened to Women's liberation?

Tomorrow is International Women's Day. Although governments and political parties around the world pay lip service to women's liberation, the liberation of women remains elusive. Barbara Humphries, long-term labour movement activist and Marxist, spoke on Wednesday evening at the ULU Marxist Society on the origins of International Women's Day, the necessity for capitalism to divide society on the basis of sex and how the emergence of class society made women second-class citizens.

 
Irish Republican Socialist Youth Movement Day School Print E-mail
By Ewan Gibbs   
Friday, 07 March 2008
irsm-school.jpgOn February 23 three comrades of the International Marxist Tendency attended the Republican Socialist Youth Movement’s (RSYM) winter day school in Belfast. Jim Daly, Sean McGowan and Bernadette McAliskey spoke on various aspects on the question of Republicanism and Socialism and the role of the working class. Francesco Merli spoke on Venezuela. There was keen interest in the ideas of Marxism and the school bodes well for the development of the RSYM.
 
Virgin protests, Reissmann, Bakhsh, democracy and Pay Print E-mail
By www.labournet.org.uk   
Friday, 07 March 2008
bakush.jpgFrom LabourNet : People may be aware that UNISON HQ has ruled that Karen Reissmann can not stand for re-election to their seats to UNISON’s Health Service Group Executive. Karen was excluded because she was sacked by her Trust in the run up to the election and was therefore not working in the health service!
 
Editor of Marxist.com speaks at Eton Print E-mail
By Socialist Appeal   
Thursday, 06 March 2008
eton.jpgAlan Woods was invited to speak at Eton, the most prestigious private school in Britain (known as a “public” school in English), by the school’s Orwell Society. Alan gave a very clear explanation of why society needs to be changed and why the only direction in can go in is socialism. We believe the points raised and the answers given provide a very good outline of what Marxism stands for today.
 
Marketing wheezes spread diseases Print E-mail
By Beatrice Windsor   
Thursday, 06 March 2008
flu.jpgWe are now due another flu pandemic. This is nothing to do with some evil 'Spooks' style conspiracy but a fact of life. Every 37 years or so, the flu virus mutates or morphs into a new strain that humans haven't suffered before. A dilemma for the State - they have spent the past decade whipping us into work, regardless of how ill we were.
 
Solidarity with Colombian Coca Cola Workers Print E-mail
By Nathan Morrison   
Wednesday, 05 March 2008
cola-killer-cola.jpg The date is the second of November 2007. Trade unionists from the Sinaltrainal food industry union walk into the central cafeteria of the Universidad Pontificia, to find an envelope addressed to them from the Black Eagles’ Front of the AUC, the supposedly disbanded right-wing paramilitary organization. The contents of this letter were as follows...
 
Fuel Bills: Why they're walloping you Print E-mail
By Eric Hollies   
Wednesday, 05 March 2008
gas_ring_120160a.jpgBritish Gas delared record £571m profits this year. Regulator Ofgem has claimed the energy giants are making £9 billion in windfall profits. As soon as the government talks about a windfall profits tax or even suggests these monster companies do something about 'fuel poverty' they threaten to cut investment in clean energy. As Julia Finch (Guardian 5th March) says "Their audacity knows no bounds." Do we control them or do they control us and the government? The case is overwhelming. We need to take back the fuel companies into public ownership. Then we'll pocket the profits
 
Socialist Appeal 160 is out now! Print E-mail
By Socialist Appeal   
Tuesday, 04 March 2008
socialist_appeal.jpg Socialist Appeal 160 is out now!
 
Still no pay deal at the British Library Print E-mail
By Mike Docherty (PCS)   
Monday, 03 March 2008
british-library.jpgBritish Library (BL) staff are still waiting for the outcome of their 2007 pay deal which is now over six months late. Funding was in place in August for a 1 year deal but management (without consulting the unions) decided to delay all pay talks until the outcome of the government's Comprehensive Spending Review (CSR). The unions asked for a meeting with management in order to express staff concerns at the continuing delay and were told that such a meeting "is not justified."
 
Editorial - Northern Rock: capitalism has failed Print E-mail
By Socialist Appeal Editorial Board   
Friday, 29 February 2008
The government has finally been forced to nationalise Northern Rock after months of dithering. They have wasted more than £55 billion of our money - to no purpose. The 'geniuses' who ran the Rock as a capitalist bank made a total hash of it and lost billions of pounds of other people's money. It's not just the bank's management who stand indicted. The whole capitalist system is shown to be based on swindling and gambling.
 
World Perspectives 2008 draft - Part Two Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Thursday, 28 February 2008
world-turmoila.jpgAn analysis of the growing political and social turbulence in Europe, the United States, Latin America with an emphasis on Venezuela, the Middle East and Asia with particular emphasis on the explosive situation in Pakistan and ends with an appeal to help build the International Marxist Tendency in all countries. At this stage it is a discussion document.
 
‘Reforms’ at the University of Sussex and Their Broader Implications Print E-mail
By a University of Sussex student   
Thursday, 28 February 2008
university-of-sussex.jpg The management at the University of Sussex in Brighton is attempting to restructure the entire academic institution to make it fit for ‘the market’. The proposed ‘reforms’, which would change the entire culture and tradition of the university, are part of a broader process that is currently taking place in higher education in Britain and around the world: the marketisation and privatization of education.
 
Egypt Strikes Update: Wave of action continues Print E-mail
By Ian Aylett   
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
egypt-strike.jpgThe magnificent wave of industrial action in Egypt, which started over a year ago, is continuing. And it continues to be ignored by the media. Price rises are the central focus of protest. But in a very important development, at the Ghazl al Mahalla textile company have raised political demands for the first time.
 
Reclaim Our Past And Organize Our Future! A Report of the Islington Trades Union Council AGM Print E-mail
By Mel MacDonald   
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
jeremycorbynituca.jpgThe newly formed Islington Trades Union Council held its AGM last week at the Town Hall, which was an eye-opening historical tour into the fighting past of the borough. A host of interesting speakers were present including Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn, who reminded us that Islington was once the home of Karl Marx, and Vic Turner, one of the Pentonville Five who recounted the significance of the 1972 Dockers' strike.
 
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Audio

miners-strikesmalll.jpgThe Miners strike 1984-5

At the University of East Anglia recently Rob Sewell of the Socialist Appeal gave a talk on the Miners strike in Britain 1984-5. The strike was a culmination of the inevitable build up of tension between the ruling and working class. In the post-war period the decline of British imperialism had occured. The Tories of the 1980s were a rabid reaction to that phenomenon, determined to destroy the organised labour movement by taking on its most militant section, the National Union of Miners.

Listen here to Part 1 and Part 2 .

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