9/11 -- Thirty Five Years On
Today is the thirty-fifth anniversary of the coup in Chile; a coup in which a terrorist superpower brutally overthrew a democratically-elected government.
Few Americans will remember this anniversary, they'll be solemnly remembering one of their own -- an anniversary brought about, in part at least, because of the kind of imperialist despotism that September 11, 1973 so clearly reminds us.
Long live the memory of Salvador Allende and the brave Chilean people!
September 11, 2008 in America Inc, Chile, History | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack
Vancouver's Race Riots
On September 7, 1907, white racists rioted in Vancouver. They attacked and rampaged through Chinatown, and they attacked and were beaten back from Japantown. No one died, but only through luck. The riot was spurred by a march of the Asiatic Exclusion League, a labour union-supported group of racists seeking to exclude all non-white labour from British Columbia.
We can tell ourselves that this was now a hundred years ago. Unfortunately, the riot was only the beginning. Over the next fifteen or so years, these same racists managed to have laws passed that reduced Japanese, Indian and Chinese immigration to a trickle. They also had the Native Canadians moved to reserves. The Chinese Exclusion Act stayed on the books until 1947; and Natives were not given the vote until as late as 1960.
Canada's racist past is nowhere near as deep nor as broad as that in many countries, but it does exist, and we will be obliged to repeat our sins if we choose to forget the sins of our own history.
September 7, 2008 in B.C., Canada, History, Vancouver | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Solidarity Forever
On 31st August, 1980, the Polish communist government gave in to the demands of the striking workers at the Lenin Shipyards in Gdansk. The workers were now free to organize and bargain freely.
There is no doubt that Reagan, Gorbachev and Thatcher played major roles in ending that vicious and dangerous period of history known as the Cold War. But we must never forget the vital role played by the epic struggles of Lech Welesa and his fellow workers in Gdansk.
It is a shame their extraordinary bravery was followed by rampant Reaganite globalization fueled by speculative consumer-capitalism, and leaves us today with a hard-hearted corporate-driven pre-emptive American hegemony, but still the original bravery deserves remembrance.
August 31, 2008 in America Inc, Current Affairs, History | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Free Marijuana Day!
On this date in 1937, FDR signed the Marijuana Tax Act, effectively making marijuana illegal. That worked well, didn't it? The legislation and its successors has made criminals of -- literally -- millions of Americans; it has ruined many millions more in affected families, and has created the incarceration crisis that threatens to overwhelm the US today.
In memory, therefore, it would be good to make August 2nd Free Marijuana from the Clutches of The Law Day.
August 2, 2008 in America Inc, Drug War, History | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack
The Invasion of the Dominican Republic
43 years ago today, in order to protect the world from "a second Cuba", US President Lyndon Johnson -- obviously not distracted enough by losing the Vietnam War -- ordered the US Marines to invade that Caribbean superpower, the Dominican Republic. Operation Power Pack was launched on April 28th, 1965 and the occupation by the imperialist forces lasted until September 1966 after a pro-Trujillo, pro-American president was elected. About 3,000 civilians are thought to have died to save the American Empire.
Lest we forget.
April 28, 2008 in America Inc, Capitalism, History | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
The Coup in Hawai'i
Today is the 115th anniversary of the takeover of the Hawai'i Islands by American trading interests, overthrowing the native kingdom. America already had a long history of violent and genocidal imperialist annexation ("Manifest Destiny") on the mainland. The coup in Honolulu was a logical, if long, step into the Pacific.
January 17, 2008 in America Inc, History | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The Invasion of Grenada
On October 25, 1983, the United States invaded the tiny Caribbean nation of Grenada ("Operation Urgent Fury"). The 1,500-strong Grenadian Army, along with 600 Cuban allies, were considered such a strategic threat to the Imperial Power that Ronnie Reagan sent in the Marines, lying through his teeth to his erstwhile ally Margaret Thatcher all the while.
Lest we forget: opposition to the power will be crushed ruthlessly no matter how petty it makes the power look.
October 25, 2007 in America Inc, History | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Beep, beep, beep.....
I was just a few weeks away from my 8th birthday when my father sat me on his knee specifically to listen to our old radio spit out some strange sounds -- "Beep. Beep. Beep." Even through the static we knew we had never heard the like of it before.
On October 4th, 1957 -- just fifty years ago -- the space age began with the launch by the Soviet Union of Sputnik, the first man-made satellite. I'm sure the surprise in the US was far greater than we felt in Europe. We Europeans were already terrified of the power of the grey beasts just a few hundred miles to the east of our cozy nest in West London. It seemed to many that Russian tanks could overrun Europe at any moment, and the technological genius of Sputnik simply confirmed our anxiety.
But again, there was always that secret spot inside that reveled in the fact that a European power had beaten the Americans into space. And for my socialist grandfather and his cadre of friends, it was yet another sign that the Workers' Paradise was superior in every respect to the Mickey Mouse- and Doris Day-loving capitalists.
In the end, I'm sure this had little to do with the ultimate end of the Cold War. The costs of the space race were minuscule compared to the economy-shuddering trillions spent on the arms race by both sides. But without Sputnik and all that followed, we would be a very different and more distanced world today.
October 4, 2007 in History | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
9/11 -- Thirty Four Years On
Today is the thirty-fourth anniversary of the coup in Chile; a coup in which a terrorist superpower brutally overthrew a democratically-elected government.
Few Americans will remember this anniversary, they'll be solemnly remembering one of their own -- an anniversary brought about, in part at least, because of the kind of imperialist despotism that September 11, 1973 so clearly reminds us.
Long live the memory of Salvador Allende and the brave Chilean people!
September 11, 2007 in America Inc, Capitalism, Chile, History | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
100 Years: Vancouver's Racist Riot
On September 7, 1907, white racists rioted in Vancouver. They attacked and rampaged through Chinatown, and they attacked and were beaten back from Japantown. No one died, but only through luck. The riot was spurred by a march of the Asiatic Exclusion League, a labour union-supported group of racists seeking to exclude all non-white labour from British Columbia.
We can tell ourselves that this was now a hundred years ago. Unfortunately, the riot was only the beginning. Over the next fifteen or so years, these same racists managed to have laws passed that reduced Japanese, Indian and Chinese immigration to a trickle. They also had the Native Canadians moved to reserves. The Chinese Exclusion Act stayed on the books until 1947; and Natives were not given the vote until as late as 1960.
Canada's racist past is nowhere near as deep nor as broad as that in many countries, but it does exist, and we will be obliged to repeat our sins if we choose to forget the sins of our own history.
September 7, 2007 in B.C., Canada, History, Vancouver | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack