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By Steve Kelly, UNITE (Amicus) London Construction Branch
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Thursday, 07 February 2008 |
The construction industry consists of roughly 1.2 million workers at
present, a massive boost for the capitalists and the UK economy. Just
think how much can be made once all the new office blocks and
'affordable' housing, and not forgetting the Olympic Games, are built.
Any chance of the workers who build these new structures getting a
slice of the cake? You are more likely to be sacked or even killed on a
building site in Britain today.
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By Alan Woods
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Thursday, 07 February 2008 |
Until recently
Kenya
was held up as a glowing example of the success of the free market
economy. It was supposed to be a shining example of democracy, a
beacon of hope for what Europeans used to call "the dark continent."
Now all these dreams lay in ashes. In recent weeks Kenya has been
torn asunder by a wave of ethnic and tribal violence that has claimed
nearly a
thousand lives.
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By Heiko Khoo
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Wednesday, 06 February 2008 |
The largest human migration
in the world gets under way every Chinese
New Year, as China's 120
million strong army of migrant workers make
their annual trip home. This
year heavy snows led to railways and
roads being overburdened and
transport bottlenecks wreaked sudden
nationwide chaos.
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By Anthony Healy
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Wednesday, 06 February 2008 |
Caroline Flint, the new
Housing Minister has proposed that new tenants on council estates will have to
sign up to "actively seek work" as a condition of their tenancy. So now it's a
case of "no dog, no cat, no loud music, keep the place spick and span and you
must get a job". There is something
disturbingly familiar about this rubbish: it's like the old Victorian notion of the deserving and
undeserving poor.
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By Nathan Joel morrison
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Wednesday, 06 February 2008 |
Former military heads of
the British army have attacked proposals for Parliament to have to
approve any declaration of war made by the British state. The ruling class is
eager to keep a direct grip on its bodies of armed men; the police and the military,
the chief instruments of class suppression. These are vital to the ruling
class' ability to keep control of society, and sections of the boureoisie are
reluctant to relinquish them even to their own organs of so-called democratic rule.
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By Ed Doveton
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Tuesday, 05 February 2008 |
In 2006 a report from the UN showed
that the world's richest two percent of adults owned more than half the
global wealth, while half the world's population own only one percent.
Inequality has been increasing, particularly over the last decade, with
the rich getting richer, the mega rich getting richer quicker than the
rich, and the poor getting even poorer, with the number of people
living on less than $2 a day increasing.
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By Caron Walker
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Tuesday, 05 February 2008 |
Since 1979 UK child
poverty has doubled. In 2006, 3.8 million children were living in poverty in
homes on less than 60% of average income. Although this is a fall of about
600,000 since 1998, this still leaves 500,000 children above the Government's
own target. This is not the whole picture either - poverty in the whole
population is increasing.
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By John McDonnell MP
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Monday, 04 February 2008 |
From The Guardian, Wednesday
January 23, 2008: Individual hopes of betterment through education
are often destroyed by the fear of debt, says John McDonnell, who asks why then
is the government ensuring the private sector profits from it.
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By Harry Whittaker
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Friday, 01 February 2008 |
If there was one man who embodied the spirit of revolutionary democracy,
it was Tom Paine. He inspired the American Revolution of 1776, took part
in the French Revolution of 1789 and, while abroad in France, was tried
in Britain for seditious libel for writing his book 'The Rights of Man'
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By David Brandon
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Friday, 01 February 2008 |
Pentrich in Derbyshire is a quiet place these days. But in 1817 it was the centre of a plot to
overthrow the Government of the day. Britain had been at war with Revolutionary and Napoleonic
France almost continuously until 1815. When war ended, the
economy slumped. It was the poor who had borne the brunt
of the fighting. Now they were required to bear the economic and
social fallout from the subsequent peace.
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By Barbara Humphries
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Thursday, 31 January 2008 |
The liberation of women and the socialist revolution are inseperable tasks requiring the active participation of women workers in the organised labour movement. This recording of Barbara Humphries speaking at the Socialist Appeal xmas day school explains the double expoitation of women under the capitalist system, the history of women in the labour movement, the impact of imperialist aggression on women and the nature of feminism and positive discrimination.
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By Andy Viner (ASLEF)
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Thursday, 31 January 2008 |
Sixty years ago Railway companies up and down the
country were nationalised. They were not necessarily nationalised for
ideological reasons - the vast majority were were hindering the
development of the British economy after the Second World War. At the time the
view was that you cannot plan what you don't control and you can't
control what you don't own. That view still holds true today.
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By Eric Hollies
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Thursday, 31 January 2008 |
Over Christmas the railways were in chaos - again. Why does
this sort of thing happen in Britain? It hasn't always been like this. The
problem started with privatisation. The Tories under John Major plotted a
privatisation so stupid that even Thatcher had thought better of it.
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By Leon Trotsky
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Wednesday, 30 January 2008 |
Seventy-five years ago today, on January 30th 1933, Hitler was appointed
Chancellor of Germany. Two months later the Reichstag voted him
dictatorial powers. The workers' parties were banned and their leaders
thrown into concentration camps. The strongest labour movement in
Europe was destroyed without even breaking a pane of glass, as Hitler
boasted. The way was clear for genocide and world war.
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