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May Day




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People seem to know about May Day everywhere except where it began, here in the United States of America. That’s because those in power have done everything they can to erase its real meaning. For example, Ronald Reagan designated what he called, “Law Day”—a day of jingoist fanaticism, like an extra twist of the knife in the labor movement. Today, there is a renewed awareness, energized by the Occupy movement’s organizing, around May Day, and its relevance for reform and perhaps eventual revolution.

 

If you’re a serious revolutionary, then you are not looking for an autocratic revolution, but a popular one which will move towards freedom and democracy. That can take place only if a mass of the population is implementing it, carrying it out, and solving problems. They’re not going to undertake that commitment, understandably, unless they have discovered for themselves that there are limits to reform.

 

A sensible revolutionary will try to push reform to the limits, for two good reasons. First, because the reforms can be valuable in themselves. People should have an eight-hour day rather than a twelve-hour day. And in general, we should want to act in accord with decent ethical values.

 

Secondly, on strategic grounds, you have to show that there are limits to reform. Perhaps sometimes the system will accommodate to needed reforms. If so, well and good. But if it won’t, then new questions arise. Perhaps that is a moment when resistance is a necessary step to overcome the barriers to justified changes. Perhaps the time has come to resort to coercive measures in defense of rights and justice, a form of self-defense. Unless the general population recognizes such measures to be a form of self-defense, they’re not going to take part in them, at least they shouldn’t.

 

If you get to a point where the existing institutions will not bend to the popular will, you have to eliminate the institutions.

 

May Day started here, but then became an international day in support of American workers who were being subjected to brutal violence and judicial punishment.

 

Today, the struggle continues to celebrate May Day not as a “law day” as defined by political leaders, but as a day whose meaning is decided by the people, a day rooted in organizing and working for a better future for the whole of society.

 

Zuccotti Park Press, a project of Adelante Alliance, a Brooklyn-based immigrant advocacy group, is releasing Occupy, a new book by Noam Chomsky, on May Day.

  

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Capitalism's Dirty Little Secret

By Gorman, Sharee Anne at May 03, 2012 01:18 AM

Excerpt from Occupy's Day of Reform:

Every day, whether we call it Nationalism or Patriotism, Fighting Evil or National Security - chances are, we're invading some country to bring them their "Gol' Darn Freedom"...while turning vulnerable people into slave labor and stealing their natural resources (with the help of a puppet government that we install in the name of "Stability").
This is not the image we are given of ourselves. But with a camera in every corner of the globe we can no longer ignore the consequences of Capitalism.

And, by we, I don't just mean the gullible or willfully-blind citizens of Empire (we can't handle the truth, so we don't ask), but the Ruling Class...the managers of our destiny...(more)http://annienomad.blogspot.com/2012/05/dirty-little-secret-of.html

Sharee anne Gorman
annienomad-cyberpoet
 





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Work Abuse

By Adamcik, David at May 01, 2012 01:07 AM

Hierarchies in the work place cannot be justified - especially considering our new technologies.  I hope the Occupy Wall Street protests on May Day 2012 in New York include a strong resistance to workplace bosses.

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