History and Theory
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By Socialist Appeal
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Friday, 29 August 2008 |
Gordon Brown used to draw attention to other countries'
economic performance only in order to show how much better his own policies
worked. Not any more. His stewardship of the British capitalist economy has
been shown to be a lamentable failure. It's back to boom and bust, despite all
the moronic sloganising to the contrary we have heard from him over the past
eleven years.
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By Socialist Appeal
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Friday, 29 August 2008 |
Gordon Brown used to draw attention to other countries'
economic performance only in order to show how much better his own policies
worked. Not any more. His stewardship of the British capitalist economy has
been shown to be a lamentable failure. It's back to boom and bust, despite all
the moronic sloganising to the contrary we have heard from him over the past
eleven years.
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By Socialist Appeal
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Thursday, 28 August 2008 |
As we have explained over
the past year or so, the effects of the financial crash and its political
consequences have represented a flash flood in British Politics. After many
years of apparent stability we have entered a period of sharp turns and sudden
changes as the deep underlying problems and contradictions in British society
have broken through the surface of events.
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By Ted Grant, 1964
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Wednesday, 27 August 2008 |
The initial
trigger for the writing of this document was the Sino-Soviet split, its
importance for the world Communist movement at the time, and its significance
for the forces of genuine Marxism, the Trotskyists. In the first place Ted
declares that the split confirms Trotsky’s brilliant prediction, “That the
theory of ‘socialism in one country’ would lead inevitably to the degeneration
on nationalist lines of the parties of the Communist International.”
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By Nathan Morrison
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Wednesday, 27 August 2008 |
On the 26th of Ocotber 1972, the then President of the Republic of
Dahomey was deposed in a coup d'etat led by Major Mathieu Kérékou. He deposed a
system in which three members of a presidential council would rotate power. He overthrew the President Justin Ahomadegbé,
who was placed in house arrest until 1981 alongside the other members of the presidential
governing council who were Hubert Maga and Sourou-Migan Apithy.
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By Steve Kelly (London Construction Unite)
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Tuesday, 26 August 2008 |
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The blacklist in construction is back
with a vengeance. It is a well known fact that the blacklist has been used
against construction workers for many years especially since the Shrewsbury
strike in 1972.
It was
always difficult to prove, but in 2006 a case involving three Manchester
electricians who were sacked from a job at the Royal Infirmary Hospital in
Manchester (having been elected by the workers on that site as their shop
stewards and safety rep), was heard at industrial tribunal brought by the T&GWU,
now Unite, for unfair dismissal.
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By Rick Grogan (RMT)
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Tuesday, 26 August 2008 |
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23 passengers, including a child, were trapped in a lift at Elephant and
Castle station for nearly an hour-and-a-half on Friday night.
The passengers' ordeal, which began
at around 21:30, was prolonged unnecessarily because inexperienced and
inadequately trained managers drafted in to scab on striking station staff had
been left in charge, RMT said today.
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By Patrick Orr
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Friday, 22 August 2008 |
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Last Wednesday August 20th,
150,000 Scottish public sector workers from UNISON, UNITE and the GMB took
unified action against a below-inflation pay offer of 2.5%. They were joined by
PCS workers employed by the Scottish Parliament, who the SNP have also been
trying to fob off with a real pay cut. Bins remained uncollected, council
offices stayed closed, Caledonian MacBrayne ferries did not run. A thousand
schools were closed across Scotland and, in some cases, teachers refused to
cross picket lines.
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By Fred McDowell
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Friday, 22 August 2008 |
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The
Observer (17.08.08) ran a front page headline “Health chief attacks drug giants
over huge profits.” Sir Michael Rawlins hit out after the National Institute
for Clinical Excellence (NICE) was accused of ‘barbarism’ for refusing to
approve expensive kidney drugs. NICE said the drugs ‘only’ gave the patient an
extra few months of life. We wonder if they would be so insouciant if it were their
lives on the line?
“We
are told we are being mean all the time, but what nobody mentions is why the
drugs are so expensive,” Rawlins commented.
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By Mark Turner
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Friday, 22 August 2008 |
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A
Review of ‘There Will Be Blood’, the film written and directed by Paul Thomas
Anderson And ‘Oil
!’, the novel by Upton Sinclair
The poster for
this film says that it is based on Upton Sinclair’s 1927 novel. Socialists, and
lovers of American literature, should be grateful to Anderson for being
responsible for Sinclair’s novel being back in print and in the shops. But not
for much else. Indeed, I would advise
anyone who has read and enjoyed ‘Oil!’ to steer well clear of the much lauded
film.
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By Rick Grogan (RMT)
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Friday, 22 August 2008 |
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RMT Station
Staff working at eleven Tube stations between Plaistow and Upminster on London
Underground’s District Line and at Elephant and Castle, Charing Cross and
Lambeth North on the Bakerloo are to strike for 24 hours from 04:30 tomorrow,
Friday August 22 in two separate disputes.
More than 90
staff on the East Ham group voted by a margin of more than 20 to one to take
action over a breakdown of industrial relations sparked by local management
ignoring procedures, the victimisation and harassment of staff and union reps
and the sacking of station assistant Sarah Hutchins who had taken time off for
pregnancy-related illnesses and after being assaulted at work.
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By David Brandon
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Thursday, 21 August 2008 |
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In Part Five
we examine how and why the Independents around Fairfax and Cromwell, previously
the more left-leaning elements of the bourgeoisie, carried out a balancing act,
trying to develop their own interests while manoeuvring between the
Presbyterians on their right and the Levellers to their left. Eventually they
felt compelled to try to eradicate the Levellers altogether.
Colonel Rainborough: "The poorest he that is in England hath a life to live
as the greatest he; and I think it is clear that every man that is to live
under a government ought first by his consent to put himself under that
government."
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By Alan Woods
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Wednesday, 20 August 2008 |
This is an edited version of an article by Alan
Woods originally published in 1968. Forty years
ago, on the night of August 20th-21st Russian and other Warsaw Pact forces invaded
Czechoslovakia, thus putting an end to the ‘Prague Spring.’ “Lenin wake
up, Brezhnev has gone mad.” This was one of the slogans chanted on the street
of Prague 40 years ago. The upheavals in Czechoslovakia had begun with a stormy
session of the Writers Union which passed a resolution supporting Soviet author
Solzhenitsyn's protest against censorship.
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By David Brandon
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Tuesday, 19 August 2008 |
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The outcome
of the military struggle was largely decided by the result of the Battle of
Naseby in June 1645 but the war and the embryonic revolution continued. In Part
Four we examine how a radical wing developed to the left of the Independents -
who consisted of the more ‘moderate’ protestant elements on the Parliamentary
side.
The most
prominent radical democratic grouping was the Levellers. In simple terms the
twin demands of the Levellers were freedom of conscience in religious matters
and the inalienable right for citizens to choose the government they wanted.
Such a government therefore owed its power to the people’s consent. With
unprecedented boldness the Levellers advanced the idea that the people must be
sovereign.
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By Rick Grogan (RMT)
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Tuesday, 19 August 2008 |
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Tube Lines boss
Terry Morgan should stop throwing petty insults around and get around the table
to negotiate a solution to the current pay and conditions dispute, London
Underground’s biggest union says today.
Some 1,000
RMT members are set to down tools from noon on Wednesday in the first of two
72-hour strikes called after the company tabled a pay and conditions offer
substantially below that agreed by Metronet for people doing identical work.
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