Join Black Workers for Justice in remembering and continuing the march towards justice. On April 4th, the anniversary of Dr. Kings assassination, we salute his support for Labor. Tickets are $40 and include food and entertainment.
The world is in significantly greater danger than it was before Thursday when Donald Trump ordered the assassination of Qassem Soleimani, a prominent Iranian General and political figure. This violation of international law is a declaration by US imperialism that it’s not accountable to the global democracy or human rights. Trump has been spoiling for this fight from day one of his presidency, but it is clear that this act is a diversion from the impeachment trial he faces.
We join thousands of organizations and millions of people across the globe in condemning the Coup carried out against President Evo Morales of Bolivia. To suggest that he voluntarily resigned ignores the demand placed on him by the military, which, along with the police, had been influenced by US intelligence services and aligned with the right wing opposition.
Sisters’ Call to Action in
Solidarity with “The Squad”
“And still we
rise.” — Maya Angelou
The Sexual Predator on Pennsylvania Avenue in
his recent vicious attacks on “The Squad”: Ilhan Omar, Ayana Pressley, Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez, and Rashida Tlaib, told these women of color to “go back to
their crime-infested” countries. All of these women are American citizens. All
of these women are proud of their heritage and work for their respective
communities. All of these women are being attacked because they fight for the
working class, challenge white supremacy, and patriarchy because they are
women. They dare to be women who have political conviction around their support
of Palestine, their support of Venezuela, and their denunciation of border
camps.
We call on all women and their
communities to join us in solidarity with “The Squad” by signing this letter,
asking others to sign this letter, and joining us on August 31st (3 days after the
anniversary of the murder of Emmitt Till and in honor of his courageous mother,
Mamie Till.) These women who are Somali, Black American, Puerto Rican, Arab,
Muslim, and non-Muslim women have fought together for the interests of all
communities: workers, women, Latinx, Black, Muslim, LGBTQ, straight, indigenous/First
Nation and immigrants against the rich and powerful. If we allow any one of our
communities’ human rights to get picked off and pitted against each other, we
will all lose. An Injury to one is an injury to all!
Trump has tried to erase their
legal status as U.S. citizens and tries to make them “the Other.” As we
have seen with racist U.S. policy “The Other” dies in prisons. “The Other”
suffers in cages. “The Other” is shot down in the street. “The Other” dies face
down drowned in raging rivers seeking the asylum that the Statue of Liberty
promised.
But
it goes deeper than that. The economic system of the United States and the
fascist policies that maintain it were built into how the black population has
been controlled and contained from the inception of the U.S. in order to
guarantee the labor of African people from slavery in the 1700s to Jim
Crow, during the 1960s, and through today. During slavery, Black women were
forced to re-produce the labor force. This is the foundation of this country.
Trump is attacking women like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna
Pressley and Rashida Tlaib because they dare to question and fight against
America’s unjust economic past and present.
Trump
also attacks reporters and undermines a free press. It is dangerous when one
man wants the public to believe that he is the only person to be trusted. This
is a hallmark of fascism. Blaming “the Other” as the cause of low wages,
unemployment, high rent, high utility bills, high deductibles is what Mussolini
and Hitler in WWII and is what Trump is doing now. Blaming “The Other” is what
fascism does.
We
stand with them in solidarity and show our collective outrage by
signing this letter, asking others to sign this letter, and joining us
The BWFJ is an organization of Black workers formed in December of 1982 out of a struggle led by Black women workers at a K-mart store in Rocky Mount, North Carolina against race and gender discrimination. After organizing a boycott of the local K-mart store and reaching out to workers at other workplaces and communities, Black workers and community activists from 10 counties met at the First Missionary Baptist Church in Fremont, NC in December 1982 to form BWFJ as a statewide organization.