Dec 10, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Expert report shatters fraudulent case against Bogdan Syrotiuk: Deepen the international campaign for his freedom!

Bogdan Syrotiuk in front of a poster of Leon Trotsky

The campaign to free the Ukrainian socialist Bogdan Syrotiuk has reached an important turning point with the publication of a forensic linguistic analysis that shatters the fraudulent case against him. Commissioned by Syrotiuk’s defense attorneys, the 65-page report by Professor Yuri Borisovich Irkhin—one of Ukraine’s most prominent criminologists—demonstrates unequivocally that the charge of “state treason” is a political frame-up aimed at outlawing socialist and internationalist opposition to the NATO–Ukraine war against Russia.

Syrotiuk, 26, is a leading member of the Young Guard of Bolshevik-Leninists (YGBL), the Trotskyist youth movement in Ukraine affiliated with the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). He was arrested in April 2024 and charged under wartime statutes with “state treason,” a crime carrying a sentence of 15 years to life. The “evidence” consists almost entirely of political analyses published by the WSWS and the YGBL—denounced as “Russian propaganda” because they oppose both the NATO-backed war and the capitalist regimes in Kiev and Moscow.

For years, Ukrainian courts have weaponized so-called “linguistic expertise” to criminalize dissent. State-appointed “experts” scour political texts searching for phrases that can be twisted into proof of a supposed crime. In Bogdan’s case, the official expert, functioning as an arm of the Ukrainian Secret Service (SBU), declared that his writings supported Russia’s invasion.

But Professor Irkhin’s independent review is a devastating repudiation of this fraudulent conclusion. From that standpoint it also will be an important tool before the European Court of Human Rights, which accepted Bogdan’s case earlier this year. After examining more than a dozen WSWS and YGBL publications—including articles by Syrotiuk, speeches at the 2023 International May Day Rally and statements on the Gaza genocide—Irkhin concluded:

There are no statements, phrases, sentences, or word combinations that contain public calls aimed at undermining the national security of Ukraine … and NO statements that have signs of propaganda aimed at supporting the armed aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine. (Emphasis in original)

The report’s thoroughness and Irkhin’s stature—he is a widely cited criminologist and former deputy head of the psychological service of Ukraine’s Interior Ministry—forced even a hostile court in Pervomaisk to order a third expert review. This is far from a guarantee of justice, but it constitutes a significant legal blow to the SBU and a major advance for the international campaign demanding Syrotiuk’s release.

The implications of this development extend far beyond Bogdan’s individual defense. From its inception, the prosecution of Syrotiuk has been a political show trial aimed at banning opposition to the war. The SBU’s case rests on the reactionary premise that any critique of NATO, denunciation of the Putin regime from the left or call for the unity of Russian and Ukrainian workers constitutes treason.

In their attempt to criminalize internationalism, the authorities effectively placed the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) itself on trial. This strategy has now exploded in their hands. Irkhin’s report confirms what every honest reader already knows. In analyzing statements produced by Bogdan and fellow YGBL leading member Andrei Ritsky to the 2023 May Day rally, Irkin concluded:

The speeches express the position of the Trotskyist movement, which condemns both the policies of the US and NATO and the actions of Putin’s regime, viewing the war as a consequence of the global crisis of capitalism and imperialist rivalry. The text contains criticism of historical Ukrainian nationalism and the cult of the OUN-UPA, as well as condemnation of Putin’s regime and the Russian oligarchy as heirs to Stalinism. Both speeches contain a call for the unification of the international working class on the basis of the anti-war movement and revolutionary internationalism.

*****

The timing of this blow to the prosecution is politically significant. The NATO-Ukraine war is in deep crisis. After sacrificing hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian lives and exhausting tens of billions of dollars, the much-heralded NATO offensive has failed catastrophically. Zelensky’s government, which rules on the basis of martial law, is disintegrating under corruption scandals, and he has dismissed his closest confidant, Andriy Yermak. European governments, facing mass opposition at home, openly accuse Washington of strategic betrayal.

These internal fractures are driving both the Zelensky regime and NATO to ever more desperate and reckless measures. The European imperialist powers—above all, Germany and France—are sharply escalating discussions about the deployment of troops to Ukraine, the expansion of long-range strike capabilities and the shift to wartime economies.

The Ukrainian state’s persecution of Bogdan Syrotiuk is an integral part of this broader war policy. The imperialist powers fear above all the emergence of a conscious, internationalist movement of workers and youth against the war. They intend to silence those who oppose the propaganda lies used to justify the slaughter and who fight to unite the working class across borders.

*****

The refutation of the frame-up provided by Irkhin’s report places immense responsibility on the international working class. The fight for Bogdan’s freedom is inseparable from the struggle to build a conscious, organized movement against the drive to world war.

As the WSWS wrote when Bogdan was first arrested:

The fight for Bogdan’s freedom must be taken up by workers, students and all those who are committed to the defense of democratic rights and opposed to the escalation of imperialist wars that, unless stopped, threaten humanity with a nuclear catastrophe.

*****

The fight to free Bogdan Syrotiuk is in essence the struggle to mobilize the working class in Ukraine, Russia and internationally against the war. His defense is inseparable from the struggle to build a global movement of the working class capable of ending the system that is plunging humanity toward catastrophe.

2. Teachers in West Contra Costa speak out: “We need a general strike to fight the oligarchs”

The strike by teachers in the West Contra Costa Unified School District (WCCUSD) in California has reached its fourth day, under conditions of intensifying pressure from the district, the Democrats and the union apparatus to shut it down. Negotiators from the United Teachers of Richmond (UTR) are entering another round of talks tonight.

The Teamsters 856 bureaucracy yesterday ordered 1,500 classified workers back to work and announced a tentative agreement that has not even been voted on. This sellout, almost identical to the deal workers already rejected, has effectively split the strike in half in order to weaken and isolate teachers.

The World Socialist Web Site calls for a resounding NO vote by classified workers, but a NO vote alone is not enough. The central question is how to place the conduct of this struggle into the hands of rank‑and‑file workers themselves. A rejection of the tentative agreement must be tied to demands for the reinstatement of the strike by classified workers, unification with teachers on the picket lines, and the formation of democratically elected rank‑and‑file committees in every school and worksite to take the struggle out of the hands of the union bureaucracy.

*****

San Francisco teachers voted 99 percent to strike this week, with no date yet announced by the United Educators of San Francisco (UESF) bureaucracy. In Los Angeles and Berkeley, talks have reached formal impasse, with Berkeley facing a steep budget deficit. Other districts statewide confront cuts.

Every immediate demand raised by teachers and classified staff—substantial inflation‑beating raises, full staffing, no cuts, safe and well‑resourced schools—poses the broader question: who controls society’s resources, and in whose interests are they deployed? The working class cannot place any confidence in the Democratic Party or the union apparatus that ties them to the capitalist state. Only the independent political mobilization of the working class, nationally and internationally, can force a massive reallocation of wealth from billionaires and war spending to schools, healthcare and social services.

The World Socialist Web Site spoke with two educators in Northern California on the West Contra Costa teachers strike and the broader conditions facing public education. Karen is a striking English teacher in WCCUSD and Dan is a teacher in Berkeley who lives in WCCUSD (El Cerrito).

3. White House doubles down on September 2 boat strike cover-up

US President Donald Trump on Tuesday reneged on his earlier statement that he would have “no problem” with releasing the full video of the September 2 murder of 11 unarmed civilians in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Venezuela. In a bald-faced lie, he declared, “I didn’t say that.”

Trump now says he has left the decision with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, declaring, “Whatever Hegseth wants to do is OK with me.”

*****

Trump hurled insults at the reporter who asked about his earlier pledge, calling her “fake news,” “obnoxious” and “terrible” for asking him about his earlier statement that “whatever they have, we’d certainly release no problem.”

Trump’s comments came after NBC confirmed earlier reporting by the Washington Post that Hegseth had given an explicit verbal order to kill everyone on board the boat, claiming that they were on a list of terrorism suspects. Hegseth “ordered the US military on September 2 to kill all 11 people” on board the boat, NBC wrote.

Last week, the New York Times reported that the full video, shown to two congressional committees in closed-door hearings, shows that “two survivors of the US military’s first boat strike on Sept. 2 climbed atop the overturned hull and waved to something overhead.” The people who saw the video told the Times the “most logical explanation was that the two survivors had seen the American aircraft above them and started signaling for a rescue.”

The Pentagon’s law of war manual declares that soldiers have a duty to refuse to carry out “clearly illegal” orders, such as killing shipwrecked sailors. “Orders to fire upon the shipwrecked would be clearly illegal,” the manual declares.

The Geneva Conventions states that “persons … who are at sea and who are wounded, sick or shipwrecked … shall not be murdered or exterminated.”

*****

The Trump administration has surged military assets off the coast of Venezuela, approved covert military actions inside the country in October and last month pledged to begin ground attacks “very soon.”

On Tuesday, two US fighter jets, launched from the USS Gerald R. Ford stationed off the coast of Venezuela, circled the Gulf of Venezuela and came within 20 nautical miles of Venezuelan territory. The move follows similar overflights by nuclear-capable B-52 and B-1 bombers.

*****

Last week, the Trump administration published a new National Defense Strategy that places central emphasis on US domination of Latin America as a supply base in the conflict with China and other states.

The document declares: “We want to ensure that the Western Hemisphere … remains free of hostile foreign incursion or ownership of key assets, and that supports critical supply chains; and we want to ensure our continued access to key strategic locations. In other words, we will assert and enforce a ‘Trump Corollary’ to the Monroe Doctrine.”

The document makes clear that the Trump administration is seeking to reduce Latin America to colonial slavery through war, regime change, economic strangulation and other destabilization operations. The criminality of Trump’s murders on the high seas is just a foretaste of the vast crimes that this administration is hoping to unleash on the people of Latin America. 

4. UK inquiry told special forces had “deliberate policy” to “kill fighting-aged males” in Afghanistan

According to material released at the Independent Inquiry relating to Afghanistan, a UK special forces unit had a “deliberate policy” to “kill fighting-aged males... even when they did not pose a threat” during the US-led imperialist occupation (2001-2021). Evidence proves there was a “conscious decision” made by the chain of command to cover it up.

The Inquiry, now in its third year, was established by the then Conservative government to investigate allegations of 80 unlawful killings by UK Special Forces in Afghanistan between 2010 and 2013. This was forced by a July 2022 broadcast of an episode of the BBC Panorama documentary series, SAS Death Squads Exposed: A British War Crime?

Chaired by Judge Charles Haddon-Cave, the inquiry’s hearing began in October 2023. It is specifically investigating alleged extra-judicial killings by the Special Air Service (SAS), the main special forces unit of the British Army. The inquiry opened after years of allegations of unlawful killings, and was pre-empted by a legal challenge made by bereaved family members and media outlets into the conduct of UK special forces (UKSF).

*****

Among the documents released by the inquiry was a summary of an interview between [a senior officer codenamed] N1466 and the Royal Military Police (RMP) in October 2018.

During the exchange, the officer described an incident where members of UKSF1 went to clear a compound and found a room where some Afghans were hiding under a mosquito net.

N1466 stated, “They did not reveal themselves, so the UKSF1 shot at the net until there was no movement. When the net was uncovered it was women and children.

“The incident was covered up and the individual who did the shooting was allegedly given some form of award to make it look legitimate.”

“I will be clear, we are talking about war crimes,” he said.

*****

N1466 is the highest-ranking former special forces officer to provide evidence of war crimes. He was the assistant chief of staff for operations in UKSF headquarters. 

*****

In 2021, Boris Johnson’s Tory government enacted the Overseas Operations Act (OOA) which provides the Armed Forces with increased protection against legal scrutiny on overseas activities. The legislation also introduced a “presumption against prosecution” for criminal offences five years after an alleged incident and a time limit on civil claims for torture and murder. Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party refused to oppose the bill, penalizing MPs who voted against. Now in government, Labour has kept the legislation on the books.

While providing more evidence for what is already widely known—that UK forces were involved in a brutal military occupation which saw the murder of many civilians—the current and previous inquiries provide no justice for these crimes.

Operation Northmoor was opened in 2014 to examine allegations of over 600 offenses by British forces in Afghanistan, as well as executions by special forces, including of children. The investigation was terminated in 2019, and resulted in no prosecutions.

An investigation by the RMP, Operation Cestro, resulted in just three soldiers being referred to the Service Prosecuting Authority. None were prosecuted.

5. China trade surplus tops $1 trillion

In the first 11 months of this year China’s trade surplus reached $1.08 trillion beating the previous record of $993 billion for 2024 with still a month to go. The Wall Street Journal characterized it as a “remarkable figure, never before seen in recorded economic history.”

*****

Southeast Asia is a crucial destination for Chinese exports, some of which are aimed at skirting around the imposts imposed on its goods by the US. The Financial Times (FT) reported over the weekend that Chinese exports to this region “are growing at almost twice the rate of the past four years, as Donald Trump’s trade war pushes Beijing to tighten trade links with its neighbors.”

In the first nine months of this year Chinese exports to the six largest economies in the region—Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia—have risen by 23.5 percent for the first nine months of this year.

*****

China has been accused of “dumping” its products in the region but... “much of what they are exporting is actually pro-growth.” As much as 60 percent of exports were components for products manufactured in the region that were exported to other countries. In other words, Chinese exports are part of the operation of a global supply chain, rather than finished products. 

*****

One of the fastest growing areas in finished goods is cars which is hitting Japan. The market share of Japanese companies in the region’s auto market has fallen from 77 percent in the 2010s to 62 percent in 2025, with car buyers shifting “in droves” to more affordable electric vehicles made by the Chinese company BYD, according to the FT.

Apart from the superiority and lower cost of Chinese manufacturing in a range of products from pharmaceuticals, steel, solar panels, EVs and a vast array of high-tech products, Chinese exports have benefited from what is considered to be the undervaluation of its currency, the renminbi, possibly by as much as 30 percent. 

*****

Plans for restrictions by the EU are already well under way. A draft law is due to be submitted today under which the EU is considering setting a “made in Europe” content of up to 70 percent for certain products, including cars. 

According to a report in the FT, the policy would cost EU companies more than €10 billion annually by pushing them to buy more expensive European components.

The plan is being overseen by Stéphane Séjourné, France’s executive vice-president for Prosperity and Industrial Strategy at the European Commission.

6. Hundreds of high school students in Oregon and Minnesota walk out to protest ICE kidnapping operations

Students in Oregon and Minnesota walked out of class this week to protest ongoing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) kidnapping operations in their communities and across the country. Following the mass walkouts in North Carolina last month, the actions this week reveal widespread revulsion and opposition to attacks on immigrants among large sections of youth.

On Tuesday morning, hundreds of students at Burnsville High School, located about 15 miles south of downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, walked out of class to protest ICE raids in their community. Video shows students carrying signs and chanting, “No more ICE! No more ICE!”

The walkout was triggered in part by a raid on a multi-family home in Burnsville this past weekend. On December 6, more than a dozen heavily armed immigration agents raided the home, shattering doors and breaking locks in the process. In the course of the raid, immigration agents disappeared four people, three of whom left behind children.

Speaking to local media, a family living upstairs was able to prove their citizenship to prevent being kidnapped, but a young couple living downstairs were taken by immigration thugs when they returned home from the grocery store, leaving their 7-year-old child behind. According to an attorney representing the parents, the father of the 7-year-old has a valid work permit yet was still taken by ICE.

During the same raid, ICE agents also arrested two other men, one of whom leaves behind a pregnant wife. Speaking to NBC KARE 11 in Spanish, the pregnant mother said, “They opened the door for me, when I went out, they were pointing their guns at me. My daughter was with me, and I had the little boy asleep on my shoulder.”

Hundreds of students also walked out of class on Monday morning across high schools in Washington County, Oregon, to protest ongoing immigration raids in their community and across the country. Of the over 611,000 people that call Washington County home, some 105,000 were born outside the United States. Major cities in the county, located to the west of Portland, include Hillsboro (110,000), Beaverton (98,000), Tigard (55,000) and Forest Grove (27,000).

Walkouts occurred Monday at high schools located in Beaverton, Hillsboro and Forest Grove. Students carried signs that read: “Education not deportation” and “Stop separating families.” 

*****

In addition to terrorizing longtime community members and separating families, ICE thugs continue to illegally detain and assault US citizens. Early Tuesday morning, a 55-year-old American citizen was taken by ICE while she was filming them in north Minneapolis. Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) News reported that Susan Tincher was taken by ICE after she responded to an alert from a local group she is a part of that ICE was conducting operations in the Willard Hay neighborhood.

Tincher, armed with a cell phone and standing 5 foot 4 inches tall, said she approached what appeared to be an ICE agent standing on the sidewalk across the street from a house that was being raided. Tincher said she asked the person if they were with ICE. The person did not identify himself but simply yelled, “Get back.”

Tincher did not move, at which point multiple agents descended on her. She told MPR News, “Pretty soon they were throwing me on the ground and handcuffing me and then putting me in their unmarked truck.” She guessed the whole interaction happened in a matter of seconds. “There were other watchers, who were asking me what my name was and everything,” she said, “so I identified myself to them, then I started yelling, ‘Help!’ because I was being kidnapped.”

*****

While Tincher was handcuffed in the vehicle, ICE thugs menaced and threatened her saying that if she did not “watch herself,” they were going to pull over and pepper spray her. Jim Tincher, Susan’s husband, told the outlet he did not know where his wife was for hours. He said it is “incredible” to see that the “government can do this, arrest somebody for doing nothing illegal, and throw her down, handcuff her.”

He added that seeing video of his wife being thrown down to the ground and handcuffed “was chilling.”

*****

Even after being illegally detained, Susan Tincher told MPR News she will not stop supporting immigrants. “I’m just so concerned about our neighbors, our peaceable neighbors being abducted and the worries their families are going through,” she said. “I just don’t want this to be happening in our country.” 

*****

The raids in Minnesota are part of a fascist and racist campaign launched by the Trump administration aimed at stoking fear and dividing the working class. Since the shooting of two National Guard soldiers in D.C. last month, Trump has embarked on a concerted campaign to paint all people from Somali as uniquely criminal and subhuman. Minneapolis-St. Paul is home to the largest Somali diaspora outside of Africa and is also represented in Congress by Democratic lawmaker Ilhan Omar, the first Somali American elected to Congress.

At a tiny fascist rally in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania, President Donald Trump again attacked Somalis and Omar. Speaking on the former, Trump grunted, “They oughta get ‘em the hell out of here. They hate our country.”

Referring to Omar, he said, “And she hates our country and [Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez] hates our country. They all do.” Trump later mocked Omar’s “little turban” and accused her of doing “nothing but bitch.” He again accused her of being in the country “illegally,” prompting the small crowd of human dust to chant, “Send her back!”

7. More than 1 million people in Germany without housing

According to a press release issued in November by the Federal Working Group on Assistance for the Homeless (BAGW), the number of people without housing in Germany has, for the first time, risen to at least 1,029,000 in 2024. This increase directly reflects the policies of the federal and state governments, which are driving through savage social cutbacks to finance insane levels of military rearmament.

*****

Of the more than 1 million people currently without housing, around 840,000 are accommodated within the so-called “emergency housing assistance” system, that is, in municipal shelters. Seventy-four percent—around 765,000 people—are adults. Around 26 percent are children and young people, who are mostly housed together with their parents. In total, around 820,000 people affected do not hold German citizenship.

War refugees from Ukraine make up the largest group, accounting for around 25 percent. While the federal government is doing everything to escalate the war against Russia, deporting ever more Ukrainians and sending them back to the slaughter of war, refugees here are forced to live under miserable conditions.

*****

Facilities for people without housing are increasingly being used by people in work. Almost 15 percent now have a job, an increase of 2 percentage points compared to 2015.

The bold declarations from federal and state governments that homelessness and rough sleeping in Germany will be “overcome” by 2030 are sheer cynicism. Berlin’s Senate administration recently stated that the so-called “needs forecast” for accommodation, which currently stands at around 55,000 places, will rise to more than 85,000 by the end of 2029. This corresponds to an increase of 55 percent.

In 1995 there were still 2.7 million social housing units in Germany. Thirty years later, fewer than 1 million remain. In Berlin, the number of social housing units fell from 340,000 in 2000 to around 85,000 today—only a quarter of the original stock—as a result of selloffs by state governments of the SPD and the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) or its successor, the Left Party. In 2024 there were 2,495 forced evictions in Berlin, an increase of 5.3 percent compared to 2023, when there were 2,369. Across Germany, the number of forced evictions rose over the same period from 32,669 to 35,028 in 2024 (an increase of 7.2 percent).

*****

For the beginning of 2026, the municipal housing companies in Berlin have announced substantial rent increases for around 99,000 households, between 2.5 and 5.5 percent.

The practices of unscrupulous property corporations are further fueling the precarious situation on the housing market. The property giant Vonovia has been forced to withdraw recent rent increases of 15 percent. The blue-chip company, listed on the DAX stock index, had justified this brutal increase in tens of thousands of cases by inventing fictitious features not provided for in the local rent index. Recently, the Berlin Regional Court ruled that this practice was unlawful. However, as Vonovia has pointed out, tenants must accept the unlawful rent rise if they have already agreed to it.

8. Legendary Stax Records guitarist Steve Cropper (1941-2025)

The widely influential guitarist Steve Cropper self-effacingly and all too modestly told Guitar Player Magazine in 2024, “My playing has always sucked, but it sells … I keep it simple, I guess. I’m not a guitar player. I never took the time.” By that time, he was early into his ninth decade and had been in the forefront of the Memphis soul-rock scene for a full six of them. 

Cropper died in a rehabilitation facility on December 3 at 84. He was well-renowned as a soul rock music icon among millions of fans. It can be safely assumed that many who love his music may not even know him by name. As Booker T. & the MGs’ guitarist, he contributed to an informal jam session which was recorded and became a top hit nationally in 1962. “Green Onions” has since become an early soul rock classic.

Eschewing flashy guitar solos and pretentious showmanship, Cropper was known for “playing for the song.” In a 2021 interview on guitar.com, he said “I’ve always thought of myself as a rhythm player … I get off on the fact that I can play something over and over and over, while other guitar players don’t want to even know about that. They won’t even play the same riff or the same lick twice.”

He told Total Guitar Magazine in October 2024, “In the early days when I was playing guitar, I knew the world didn’t need another B.B. King, Chet Atkins or Les Paul. So, what are you gonna do now? I thought, ‘Just be yourself and do your thing. Don’t go changing.’”

*****

Special note must be taken of his work with Otis Redding. He described working with him (also in 1984) at Stax: “Otis was one of those type of people that really walked around with a guitar full, or a handful, or a suitcase full of songs. He always had 10, 12, whatever, how many ideas, running around of unfinished things. And usually when he came to town, it was a very short stay. I mean, it was never longer than, like, a couple weeks.

So we really had to burn the midnight oil, so to speak, in the first two, three days he was here. And I just sort of, he’d throw this at me, and I’d throw something at him that I’d been doing. And we just sort of, together, collaborated on certain ideas, and I just sort of picked the best of it.

And I think, of course, I was very fortunate to be working with somebody like Otis Redding, who was so talented, but he really influenced me, and the funny thing that I, every time I look back on it, I used to write, if anybody ever listens to the songs themselves, a lot of the songs that we wrote together.

 “Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay” was cowritten and produced by Cropper. It was released in 1968 after Redding’s untimely death at the age of 26 in an airplane crash.

*****

Money was tight at Stax in those early days. “I get asked sometimes, ‘How come there was only one guitar player on those records?’ I tell them, ‘Because they couldn’t afford a second guitar player!” And that’s why. Stax couldn’t even afford me! In fact, I think I did a lot of those sessions for nothing.”

From starting out producing country music tunes in a garage in North Memphis, the label transitioned to recording black artists. It’s first hit on the Satellite label #101 was “Fool In Love” by the Veltones in 1959.

What was striking about collaboration at Stax Records is that it was interracial. Memphis was completely segregated at the time Cropper and Stax started out, but inside the studio, “there was no color.” Cropper described it as “family.” When doing tours, there were issues “which we had no control over.”

*****

Cropper’s last days at Stax coincided with the financial insolvency of the label. He went on to form his own label and moved on to other ventures. In 1978, he and Duck Dunn appeared in the cast of the film starring two Saturday Night Live veterans, John Belushi and Dan Akroyd, called Blues Brothers. Not a great film, but it was successful at the box office due to featuring popular music stars Aretha Franklin, James Brown, Chaka Khan, Cab Calloway and others. A 1998 sequel, Blues Brothers 2000 also featured Cropper and Dunn with many of the same artists in addition to B.B. King, harmonicist John Popper and many others.

Cropper was known widely as humble and unassuming. Later in his career, he played with many of the most renowned popular music artists in the world. He performed, recorded and gave interviews until recently. His last album was released in 2024 called Friendlytown.

9. Former deputy Australian prime minister defects to far-right One Nation

Barnaby Joyce’s decision to join the far-right party is another expression of the crisis of the conservative Liberal-National Coalition and the lurch to the right by the entire political establishment. 

10. Mount Sinai Hospital disciplines New York nurses who raised safety concerns

Management refused to tolerate nurses discussing how to improve security after an attempted shooting in the emergency room.

11. German government’s drug commissioner advocates restricting medical care for the elderly

Drug commissioner Hendrik Streeck (CDU) has underlined the inhumane and de facto murderous measures the ruling class is prepared to take by proposing drastic cuts to medical care for the elderly.

12. Mobilize to stop GM layoffs at Factory Zero in Detroit – Build Rank and File Committees

The layoffs at GM are part of a growing global jobs massacre by a money mad ruling class.

13. Denmark’s Social Democratic government leads Europe’s vicious anti-immigrant crackdown, allied with Italy’s fascist Meloni

Denmark’s Social Democrat-led government has used its six-month chairmanship of the European Union (EU) Council to expand the country’s cooperation with fascist Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, especially in the fields of immigration and refugee policy. 

This strategy culminated Monday with the decision by EU interior ministers to adopt a hardline package escalating the persecution of immigrants, including by expanding the list of countries that people can be deported to and clearing the way for the establishment of “return hubs” outside the EU.

*****

Copenhagen has long pursued a hardline approach on immigration, which the Social Democrats have spearheaded by embracing wholesale the far right’s policy demands. The “Danish model,” formerly held up by liberal reformists to bolster their claim that capitalism could be “humanised,” now inspires far-right parties and governments across the continent.

In May this year, Prime Minister Mette Fredriksen joined Meloni to initiate a letter ultimately signed by nine EU states that called for a break with the European Convention of Human Rights. The letter also demanded the curtailing of the European Court of Human Rights’s ability to enforce basic rights like the right to asylum and right to residency. The document advanced the typical arguments of Europe’s far right, demanding “more room nationally to decide when to expel criminal foreign nationals.” It denounced ECHR decisions that have “in some cases limited our ability to make political decisions” and insisted, “There is much more to be done before Europe regains control of irregular migration.”

*****

Meloni, an admirer of the fascist dictator Mussolini, heads a government that is notorious for systematically blocking efforts by private humanitarian organizations to rescue refugees in the Mediterranean, where thousands drown every year due to the EU’s “Fortress Europe” policies. Italy is working to set up a “return hub”for asylum seekers in Albania, where applications would be processed outside of the EU’s borders.

The fact that Frederiksen and Denmark’s Social Democrats solidarize themselves with this record and demand that Europe’s governments go even further exposes the hostility to basic principles of international law throughout Europe’s entire political establishment, in both its nominal “left” and right flanks.

Denmark has pursued one of the strictest anti-immigrant courses in Europe for over two decades. When governments want to launch crackdowns on migrant rights, like Keir Starmer’s Labour government in Britain, they cite Denmark as a model. 

*****

These developments underscore how the fight to defend the rights of immigrants, who are a key component of the working class across Europe, is inseparable from the struggle to mobilise the working class continent-wide against militarism and war, and the attacks on wages, public services, and jobs imposed by the ruling elites. 

Workers in Denmark, Italy, and throughout Europe disgusted by the sharp shift to the right of official politics and the witch-hunt against immigrants, which recalls nothing so much as the rabid antisemitism of the Nazis and other fascist regimes of the 1930s, must take this struggle forward on the basis of a socialist and internationalist program.

14. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk!

Bogdan Syrotiuk holds a copy of John Reed's Ten Days That Shook the World 

  • Sign the petition demanding his immediate release!
  • Donate to the campaign! 
  • Make this case as widely known as possible! 
  • The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.

    Dec 9, 2025

    Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

    1. “Our family wants answers that we have not gotten”: 8 months since the death of Stellantis worker Ronald Adams Sr.

    December 7 marked eight months since the death of 63‑year‑old machine repairman Ronald Adams Sr. at the Stellantis Dundee Engine Complex in Michigan. His death on the shop floor—crushed while performing maintenance on a gantry hoist that suddenly activated—continues to be shrouded in silence. 

    The Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA) has still not issued the results of its probe into the April 7 fatality, with MIOSHA spokesman Mike Krafcik informing the WSWS by email Monday that “the investigation remains open.” He did not provide any explanation for the long delay, stating only that “fatality investigations can take significant time due to their complexity, including the availability of witness interviews, technical and engineering review, records examination and required legal due process.” 

    Far from holding the company accountable, the United Auto Workers union has been complicit in suppressing the facts. UAW President Shawn Fain and UAW-Stellantis Department head Kevin Gotinsky assisted management in bringing the plant back to full production, and Stellantis is churning out engines for new Stellantis models as if nothing happened.

    This cold bureaucratic choreography—management’s cover‑up, the union’s whitewash and the state agencies’ delays—is the logic of a system that treats workers’ lives as expendable.

    “The holidays are especially difficult for our family” Ronald’s widow, Shamenia Stewart-Adams, told the WSWS. “We miss him in a way that is beyond words. We had no time to prepare. There was no illness. One day, he was just gone.

    *****

    On July 27 the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) held a public hearing in Detroit, where it presented the initial findings of its independent investigation into the death of Ronald Adams Sr. During the hearing, Adams’ widow made an impassioned appeal for his co-workers to come forward and provide information to uncover the truth and hold accountable all those responsible.

    Now, Shamenia has spoken out in support of the families and co-workers of two United States Postal Service (USPS) workers, who were killed in the space of a week last month. On November 8, 36-year-old maintenance mechanic Nick Acker was crushed to death by a mail sorting machine at the Detroit Network Distribution Center in Allen Park, Michigan. One week later, on November 15, mail handler assistant Russell Scruggs, Jr., 44, fell and hit his head at a mail processing center in Palmetto, Georgia. 

    Shamenia said: 

    Find the strength and don’t stop fighting for workers to be treated not just as an employee ID number but a human being who was just trying to make a living for their family. These are not just numbers being sacrificed but are our loved ones, our husbands, fathers, brothers, uncles and grandfathers who deserve to be valued. 

    A lot of these companies have the mindset their workers are just numbers, who have no value. That’s where we are at now. My husband went to work. He did his job. He did it well. He saved lives on that job, multiple times, and I feel like his life was devalued and that hurts. In a nutshell, our family just wants answers.

    *****

    In his report to the public hearing, Will Lehman, a leader of the IWA-RFC, called Adams a “martyr in the class war against the working class,” explaining that at least 15 workers are killed on the job every day in the US, or roughly 450 workers each month, or over 5,200 every year. Globally, nearly 3 million workers lost their lives from workplace injuries and occupational diseases, an average of 8,000 deaths each day. 

    Lehman pointed to the broader political context pointing to the Trump administration’s drive to gut whatever is left of OSHA and lift any restriction on the exploitation of the working class and further enrich the oligarchy of mega-billionaires.

    Workers cannot look to the Democrats or the union bureaucracies to defend their lives, Lehman said, but had to build rank-and-file committees in every workplace “to fight for the principle that no job should be carried out unless and until it is made safe. In consultation with trusted safety experts of our own choosing, workers must have full authority to set safety standards and shut down unsafe operations through collective action.”

    2. Vote NO on the West Contra Costa schools sellout deal! Organize rank-and-file committees to unite educators and school support workers!

    In the early hours of Sunday morning, Teamsters Local 856 announced a tentative deal to end a strike of 1,500 school support workers at the West Contra Costa Unified School District (WCCUSD) in northern California. The deal isolates around 1,500 of the district’s classified staff from educators in the United Teachers of Richmond, with whom they launched a strike on December 4, following strike votes of 96 percent and 98 percent respectively.

    The deal, which workers have not even voted on, is almost identical to one which workers overwhelmingly rejected only two weeks ago. Workers must reject this sellout, but this is only the beginning. Workers must organize themselves into rank-and-file strike committees to force the re-launch of the strike alongside their brothers and sisters among the teachers, and to override any further violations of their will by the union officials.

    *****

    Classified workers in WCCUSD earn as little as $34,000 a year, with the highest-paid positions rarely exceeding $60,000. Teachers, whose salaries average between $69,000 and $84,000, cannot afford the basic costs of living required to support a family in the Bay Area. Yet the union bureaucracy and the district insist that it is workers who must tighten their belts and accept “budget constraints,” even as billions continue to flow without question to Wall Street and the U.S. war machine. 

    *****

    Almost every major school district in California has operated the entire fall semester on expired contracts, but the California Teachers Association has refused to call strikes anywhere. Recently, impasses have been declared in contract talks in Los Angeles, Berkeley, Oakland, Twin Rivers, Natomas, Madera and San Francisco. In San Francisco, more than 99 percent of United Educators members authorized a strike last week.

    But the West Contra Costa strike shows that, if the CTA calls walkouts at all, it would do everything in its power to limit and undermine them. A stand taken by Local 856 members, on the other hand, would create momentum for a broader movement capable of overriding the delaying tactics and enforcing the rank-and-file’s decision for a statewide strike.

    *****

    The Teamsters contract would do nothing to address the funding crisis in the district. WCCUSD schools began the year with 71 classrooms lacking permanent teachers, relying on temporary replacements, substitutes and rotating staff. Special education is in crisis, with severe shortages in paraprofessionals and specialists. Educators report unbearable class sizes, collapsing learning conditions, and the near-impossibility of providing individualized support. 

    *****

    The district claims that a $17 million deficit leaves its hands tied. But this crisis is not the fault of educators and classified workers. It is the product of decades of bipartisan austerity. For more than half a century, both Democrats and Republicans have slashed public education and privatized services, while pouring billions into tax cuts, policing and the global war machine.

    *****

    The Trump administration is brutally attacking immigrants, dismantling every vital social service, including education, to pay for capitalism’s endless wars and to secure profits for the wealthy. The democratic and social rights of the workers are under attack by the ruling class.

    Meanwhile, Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien, who has helped destroy tens of thousands of jobs at UPS and other logistics companies, is one of many union bureaucrats to become major Trump supporters. Their joining the would-be Führer in his attacks on immigrants and foreign workers confirms that the apparatus stands squarely with U.S. nationalism and corporate interests.

    The Teamsters tentative agreement must be rejected with the same determination workers showed before. But simply voting “NO” is not enough. The bureaucracy will continue to manipulate the process and attempt to ram through concessions even after multiple rejections, as seen throughout the country.

    This is why workers must organize independent rank-and-file committees, democratically controlled by educators, classified staff, parents and students, not the bureaucracy. Such committees should demand:

    • Drastic pay increases, full staffing and safe learning conditions
    • An end to all cuts, with budgets expanded dramatically at the expense of the state’s tech billionaires and massive corporations, and;
    • Substantially improved classroom sizes.

    To prepare for this fight, and to prevent another betrayal, classified staff must take the conduct of the struggle into their own hands. They should organize a rank-and-file strike committee, with joint membership of both Teamster members and teachers from the UTR, to enforce a new strategy including:

    • Full strike pay, paid from the nearly half-billion in assets controlled by the Teamsters union, supplemented by the furloughing of non-essential union personnel;
    • Full rank-and-file control over future bargaining sessions, which must be livestreamed publicly;
    • No back to work without a ratified contract, and adequate time to study before the vote, and;
    • Delegations of workers sent to school districts across the state to establish contact with other rank-and-file educators and prepare a statewide strike.

    The strike has revealed enormous determination. Now workers must take the next step: seize control of their struggle and expand it.

    3. Canada: Top Ontario union official defends Tory government’s multi-billion-dollar training program amid fraud scandal

    Ontario’s Progressive Conservative government is mired in another corruption scandal. This one concerns its now well-documented use of a $2.5 billion Skills Development Fund to steer government largess to trade union and business supporters.

    The Skills Fund is ostensibly meant to enable organizations to train, re-train and hire workers to ensure there is a resilient and skilled workforce to fill “in-demand” jobs in a “challenged” economic environment.

    However, evidence continues to emerge demonstrating that the initiative has largely served as a political slush fund.

    *****

    The corruption evident in the government’s skills development program is of a piece with the charges of corruption surrounding the Ford regime’s dealings with big land developers in the Green Belt sell-off and in the recent Ontario Place development boondoggle. But scandal in bourgeois politics is not simply an accidental by-product of a few bad actors or even an unmoored political party. It is an expression of deeper social and economic processes rooted in the capitalist system.

    At the most immediate level, corruption—bribery, patronage, crony contracts, revolving doors between state, corporations and union bureaucracies—represents the means by which the capitalist elites secure access to state funds and shape government policy to boost their profits. These practices are not extraneous to the functioning of the state; they are built into it. The capitalist state is a political instrument that organizes and enforces class rule. Corruption is the crude, visible face of that instrument when private interests circumvent norms and institutions to extract contracts and favors or privatize public wealth.

    The fact that the union bureaucracies are so fully integrated in this process underscores their transformation over the past four decades into corporatist appendages of the state and big business. These organizations no longer even represent workers’ interests in a limited sense, but rather defend the privileges and perks of a privileged middle-class layer that functions as an arm of management and the state in policing the working class.

    This corporatist partnership is expressed in the unions’ systematic suppression of the class struggle. They impose concessions and job cuts in the name of ensuring corporate “competitiveness,” and sabotage worker resistance by isolating strikes and enforcing anti-strike laws.

    Politically, the unions subordinate workers to right-wing capitalist parties. For six years, the union bureaucracy—through its political mouthpiece, the NDP—has propped up successive minority Liberal governments, as they have broken strikes, massively increased military spending, and presided over a massive intensification of economic distress. Now, the union bureaucrats are serving as pliant junior partners in “Team Canada.” That is in the ruling class’ alliance to defend its profits and strategic interests in the name of opposing Trump’s trade war and annexation threats through a massive shift further right. This includes adopting large swathes of Trump’s oligarchic social policy.

    The working class needs independent organs of struggle—rank-and-file committees—independent political organization, and a program to break the grip of the corporatist union bureaucracies over their struggles. This program must be based on the fight for the political independence of the working class from all bourgeois parties and their supporters, i.e., a socialist and internationalist perspective aimed at securing workers’ power to put an end to corrupt dealings and privileges for the few, and meet the social needs of the vast majority.

    4. United States: The Bondi memorandum: FBI, DOJ seek to outlaw political opposition

    A memorandum from US Attorney General Pam Bondi, issued December 4, instructs all federal prosecutors and law enforcement agencies to compile lists of organizations to be slandered and criminalized as “domestic terrorists” because they oppose fascism and capitalism and advocate for socialism.

    The six-page document, uncovered and made public by journalist Ken Klippenstein, is a blueprint for federal officials on how to implement National Security Presidential Memorandum-7 (NSPM-7), issued by Trump on September 25, after the assassination of ultra-right activist Charlie Kirk, a close associate of the fascist cabal in the White House.

    NSPM-7 is so broadly worded that, as the World Socialist Web Site warned at the time, it would criminalize virtually all political opposition to the Trump administration, even including the Democratic Party, which holds 47 out of 100 seats in the US Senate and 213 out of 435 seats in the House of Representatives.

    Its language is reproduced in the Bondi memorandum, which describes “domestic terrorists” as advocating “opposition to law and immigration enforcement; extreme views in favor of mass migration and open borders; adherence to radical gender ideology, anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, or anti-Christianity” and “hostility towards traditional views on family, religion, and morality .…”

    *****

    A major factor underlying the actions of the Trump administration is preparations for elections in 2026. In addition to the Bondi memo, Trump officials have repeatedly threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act, giving the president the authority to deploy the military domestically. This would allow for any elections, if held at all, to proceed under conditions of effective martial law. 

    The latest document from Bondi spells out a series of steps by federal officials and agencies to fulfill Trump’s demand for a sweeping crackdown on political opposition.

    Within 14 days of the issuance of the Bondi memorandum—December 18, 2025—all federal law enforcement agencies are to deliver to the FBI all files “for Antifa and Antifa-related intelligence and information.” Given that Antifa is not an actual organization but rather a label applied to anyone engaged in anti-fascist political activity of any kind, this means the centralization into the hands of the FBI of all information on virtually all left-wing political groups.

    *****

    The Bondi memorandum lists no less than 25 separate legal provisions that could potentially be used against targeted groups. This lumps together such crimes as murder for hire and planting explosives with non-violent civil disobedience tactics, described as “resisting or impeding federal officers” and “picketing or parading with intent to obstruct the administration of justice.” Virtually any political act of protest against Trump’s immigration Gestapo would be criminalized on this basis.

    Whenever Trump and his fascist cohorts speak of “domestic terrorism,” they are not referring to actual advocates of violence but to left-wing political opposition, particularly that developing from the working class. Trump’s real attitude towards political violence was shown in his action on the first day he reentered the White House, when he pardoned all of the fascist thugs who stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021 and temporarily halted the congressional certification of Trump’s defeat in the 2020 presidential election.

    It is a measure of their utter cynicism and contempt for public opinion that Trump and Bondi propose to use the same laws under which the January 6 rioters were indicted and convicted to target those who oppose the administration’s persecution of immigrants and its preparations for presidential dictatorship.

    While they denounce “anti-fascism,” claiming it is a smear tactic and a pretext for violence, the same administration has just issued a National Security Strategy document that openly aligns US foreign policy with fascist parties in Europe like the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and the French National Rally (RN), and effectively embraces the neo-Nazi “Great Replacement Theory,” that whites are being deliberately replaced by non-whites in a conspiracy orchestrated by wealthy Jews.

    In the wake of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the Socialist Equality Party issued a statement summing up the dangers posed to democratic rights and warning working people and young people. We declared: “It is necessary to put aside all self-deluding hopes that what is unfolding is anything less than a drive to establish a presidential dictatorship, based on the military, police, paramilitary forces and fascist gangs.”

    In the 80 days which have passed, the danger has not lessened. On the contrary, the Trump administration has begun to systematize its attacks on democratic rights, beginning with the persecution of immigrant workers but directed ultimately against the entire working class.

    *****

    The response of the Democratic Party to the Bondi memo has been one of silence. Leading Democrats have not only failed to denounce this fascistic declaration of war against political opposition—They have made clear through their actions that they will do nothing to stop Trump’s drive toward dictatorship. Their response to the mass opposition expressed in the October “No Kings” demonstrations was to end the government shutdown on Trump’s terms and bail out the administration. When it comes to the assault on left-wing opponents of inequality, war and dictatorship, the Democrats—a party of Wall Street and American imperialism—are co-conspirators.

    The Bondi memo must be understood as part of an ongoing and escalating conspiracy. The Trump administration, in crisis and facing growing opposition, is not retreating. It is doubling down. The working class must respond with its own offensive.

    5. Zohran Mamdani, Jessica Tisch and the NYPD’s mass surveillance program

    After officers of the New York Police Department (NYPD) arrested protesters who blocked ICE Gestapo forces from leaving a garage in New York City’s Chinatown late last month, Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) mayor-elect, took to social media (with a week’s delay) to comment on the incident. He advised immigrant workers of their rights—the need for a judicial warrant for ICE to enter private dwellings (that ICE routinely violates), the right to film ICE, etc.

    But before the video clip is two-thirds done, Mamdani tells viewers not to “impede their investigation, resist arrest or run” and follows up with political pablum directed to his supporters, that he will as mayor “protect, support and celebrate our immigrant brothers and sisters.”

    The essential political content of the video is, however, that the NYPD will arrest anyone who interferes with ICE operations. The intended audience of the video is the NYPD brass and the Trump administration. The video seeks to reassure them that a Mamdani government will uphold ICE operations in the city. It is worth noting that since Mamdani met with Trump in November, he has not posted a single item on social media criticizing Trump.

    The pact between Trump and Mamdani has a concrete—and chilling—meaning: Mamdani will allow the work of the repressive apparatus of the state in the city, in this case primarily the NYPD, to continue its operations unimpeded. 

    This is the significance of his reappointment of NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, the pioneer of one of the most sinister mechanisms of repression aimed at the working class, the NYPD’s mass surveillance tools. 

    Tisch is not only a scion of an ultra-wealthy family that has played a prominent though largely behind-the-scenes role in New York City politics for the last 50 years. She has also devoted her career to designing and implementing a pervasive spying infrastructure known as the Domain Awareness System (DAS).

    *****

    DAS is constantly being expanded and modified. In August, an investigation by New York Focus uncovered a little-known NYPD program to expand CCTV (closed-circuit television) surveillance at New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) buildings and use the free internet service that the Adams administration had set up, Big Apple Connect, to link the cameras.

    At City Council hearings in October prompted by New York Focus’s exposure, Anthony Mascia, the commanding officer of the NYPD’s Information Technology Bureau, testified that the NYPD plans to link 1,900 cameras across 19 more NYCHA properties and eventually 17,897 CCTV cameras across 119 NYCHA developments.

    NYCHA houses almost exclusively the poorest sections of the working class in New York City. If not for cheaper city housing, below the current $4,000 monthly average rent for a one-bedroom apartment on the open market, hundreds of thousands of its residents would be homeless. This is the section of the working class most vulnerable to cuts in SNAP benefits and inflation.

    As New York Focus noted about the city council hearings, “Michal Gross, a public defender at the Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem, told the committee that police already use NYCHA CCTV footage for reasons other than responding to crimes. The police department, she said, has admitted in court to ‘surveilling youth via NYCHA video, watching who they spend time with, who their friends are, and even documenting how they spend time with their own family members.” 

    *****

    If any ruling class politician were looking for someone with deep connections to the ruling elite of New York City and to its worldwide financial operations, who has been embedded in the capitalist state apparatus for years and is now implementing the state’s “bodies of armed men” with technologies that scrape mass information about ordinary working people from multiple sources, Jessica Tisch would be that person.

    It is significant that Mamdani’s public safety plan, released in March, does not even mention the NYPD’s pervasive spying on New York’s population. The Democratic Party has been involved with the deployment of this apparatus for decades, as the promotion of Tisch by de Blasio and Adams testifies. The close integration of the DSA with rest of the Democratic Party in New York indicates that it never had any intention of fighting it or any other tool of repression.

    St. Louis, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Detroit operate or have funded Real-Time Crime Centers. These centers function as surveillance hubs that achieve the same kind of data aggregation as the DAS. Invariably, the ruling class is seeking to ensure that the technology and techniques will come to every part of the United States, rural and urban. The National Security Agency (NSA), as Edward Snowden exposed in 2011, is already harvesting the metadata of millions of private calls, including all international calls whether they are made from New York or Little Rock. There can be no doubt that Artificial Intelligence is now being applied to the aggregation of data by DAS.

    The essential political lesson of Mamdani’s reappointment of Jessica Tisch as New York City’s Police Commissioner is that the DSA, like all other sections of the Democratic Party, is actively facilitating a principal technology of dictatorship.

    6. California, United States: El Centro police fire dozens of rounds into 14-year-old Mikey Jimenez, body camera video reveals

    Body camera footage released this week exposes how El Centro police gunned down 14-year-old Mikey Jimenez. Jimenez was killed on October 5, yet the edited video was withheld for more than six weeks before being made public on November 19. 

    The footage leaves no ambiguity. Police opened fire almost immediately, unleashing a barrage of bullets at a terrified child who posed no threat. The video confirms Jimenez was executed in a storm of gunfire.

    Police claim they were responding to an automated license plate reader alert that flagged a white Hyundai sedan as stolen. Officers located the car in the parking lot of a local restaurant, then moved in with multiple vehicles to box in 14-year-old Mikey Jimenez, setting the stage for the killing that followed.

    The released footage shows Jimenez driving from behind the restaurant toward the exit as officers rush in. Before any officer opens fire, Jimenez turns the wheel to the right, appearing to steer away from police and their vehicles. Despite this clear attempt to avoid them, officers begin shooting almost immediately.

    *****

    Two other juveniles were inside the car during the shooting. Somewhat miraculously, neither was injured. Police detained both of them after the killing but filed no charges.

    The El Centro Police Department claims it released all available body camera footage. This raises only two possibilities: the officer who fired first either was not wearing a camera in violation of department policy that requires every officer to carry a “portable recording device,” or the department is withholding the footage.

    So far, the El Centro police have provided no proof that Jimenez stole the vehicle. Even if he had, the maximum penalty for a first offense is three years in jail. It is not summary execution by a police firing squad.  

    *****

    Firing at a moving vehicle is widely recognized as reckless and ineffective. It rarely stops a car and often increases the risk of killing bystanders. For these reasons several major cities prohibit officers from shooting at moving vehicles and instruct them to move out of the vehicle’s path rather than open fire. 

    *****

    This is the second police killing in El Centro this year. In May, officers shot and killed Ezequiel Obed Espinoza after a resident reported a man in her backyard with a gun. When police confronted him, Espinoza raised a bicycle seat, which officers later claimed resembled a “shooting stance.” They opened fire within seconds and declared him dead at the scene. The department released only limited, audio-less footage and brief excerpts of the 911 call and witness interviews. Nothing in the available material shows the officer attempting to determine whether Espinoza was actually armed or making any effort to deescalate before shooting him just 14 seconds after initial contact. 

    *****

    The United States justice system functions to shield police and the wealthy from accountability, while workers and the poor bear the brunt of police violence and prosecutorial power. It is a system structured to protect the state and capital, not the lives of those it routinely targets. It cannot be reformed or “re-imagined” to serve the class interests of workers. 

    Imperial County law enforcement has a long record of corruption. In 2014, the nearby Calexico Police Department was raided by the FBI during an investigation into extortion, drug use, drug smuggling, missing guns, theft of city funds, and the misuse of money by the local police union.

    Family attorney Marcus Bourassa underscored this history during the November 22 press conference. “It’s the same district attorney’s office that they work with, day-in and day-out,” he said. “The fear is that if this is an in-house, inside investigation, we’re going to get the expected results that there’s no prosecution and therefore there will be no criminal justice.”

    Imperial County is among the most impoverished regions in California, with unemployment reaching 20 percent. The area depends heavily on its two state prisons and a large Border Patrol facility, making law enforcement and corrections some of the only stable, better-paying jobs available and a major conduit for state and federal funding. This economic dependence creates strong political pressures on local officials to defend police involved in incidents like this, further undermining the already slim prospects for an impartial investigation.

    Jimenez is one of at least 1,079 people who have been killed by the police in the US in 2025. For more than a decade, increasingly militarized police in the US have killed over 1,000 people every year.

    The execution of a 14-year-old is an indictment of a decaying and discredited economic, social, and political order that now relies on naked violence to sustain itself. It unfolds as the US military murders fishermen and boaters in the Caribbean and as US-backed Israeli occupation forces execute Palestinians in the West Bank and carry out genocide in Gaza. A system that commits atrocities abroad is fully capable of committing them at home, reflected in the destruction of due process and the transformation of the police into judge, jury and executioner.

    7. English folk singer and guitarist Martin Carthy: An appraisal of his six-decade career

    On the sixtieth anniversary of his first album, veteran folk singer Martin Carthy this year released Transform Me Then Into A Fish, revisiting and reinventing his debut album and other highlights of his influential career. At 84, he became the oldest person ever nominated for the Mercury Prize (awarded for the best album released by a musical act from the United Kingdom or Ireland), eventually won by Sam Fender

    Carthy wears his considerable history lightly. His album was reflective without being nostalgic or complacent, building on a lifetime’s commitment to the performance and interpretation of traditional music. His playing all but created revival guitar styles, while his compelling singing shaped the folk scene’s traditional repertoire. Paul Simon and Bob Dylan both picked up material from him.

    He has always seen folk as reflecting social life and conditions, so has never shied away from social and political issues.

    8. New Zealand Defense Force aims to double recruitment

    New Zealand’s military head, Air Marshal Tony Davies, told a parliamentary committee on December 2 that the NZ Defense Force (NZDF) was “dusting off the history books” and looking at “what New Zealand had to do to survive and grow its military back in 1938.” The NZDF must make “drastic changes,” Davies declared, to raise recruitment numbers “significantly higher, just as our forebears did around each world war or each major conflict.” 

    Davies’ referencing of two world wars is a stark warning of the rapidly advancing political and military crisis. NZ’s ruling elite is complicit in US-led imperialist wars around the globe—from supporting the Gaza genocide and the NATO war against Russia over Ukraine to warmongering against China. These are fronts in a developing third world war, which threatens a catastrophe far greater than the wars of the last century.

    In May, US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth declared that China posed an “imminent” threat and demanded that US allies in Asia prepare for war over Taiwan by 2027.

    New Zealand, a minor imperialist power allied to the US, is in the process of doubling military spending from 1 to 2 percent of GDP. Invoking the Australia and NZ Army Corps (Anzac) alliance of World War I, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon stated earlier this year: “We want to be a force multiplier, we want to be one essential Anzac force operating within our region.”

    Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Winston Peters recently announced another $NZ15 million to supply Ukraine with weapons and equipment. This brings NZ’s total support for the war against Russia, including during the previous Labour-Greens government, to over $NZ168 million.

    *****

    A new Defense Industry Strategy, launched in October by Defense and Space Minister Judith Collins, puts the development of space related technology “front and center” at the same time that US space weapons are in record demand. The strategy emphasizes strengthening local companies to take advantage of growing export potential, including the production of drones and other hardware.

    The NZDF has already begun playing a regular part in “kill chain” multinational exercises, joining with allied command-and-control centres across a mega-network of sensors, which is among the US Pentagon’s top priorities. The US-NZ company Rocket Lab, with a capacity to launch satellites from NZ soil, has recently expanded its ability to supply space-based missile warning systems.

    *****

    The expanding drive to war abroad means war against the working class at home. The $12 billion allocated over four years for the military will only be found at the expense of the social programs and living standards of workers, who have already undertaken significant strikes against the government attacks on wages and conditions.

    9. Australian safety regulator’s initial report on fatal Cobar mine explosion: more questions than answers

    The first word in almost a month from government safety authorities about the October 28 explosion at Endeavor mine in Cobar, outback New South Wales (NSW), which killed two miners and injured another, provides more questions than answers. The NSW Resources Regulator’s “Investigation information release” neither explains what caused the tragedy nor makes any recommendation for how to stop more workers being killed. 

    The mining safety authority published the document on November 25, exactly 28 days after the incident, in line with the agency’s statutory responsibilities. The regulator is not required to provide any further updates until the investigation is complete, likely years from now.

    The entire process is opaque. The report gives no explanation of what investigators have examined so far, what they have found, who has been spoken to, what steps are next, or how long the whole operation is expected to take.

    While the agency has taken four weeks to prepare this perfunctory document, mine owner Polymetals has not wasted a moment. With the agency’s approval, the company began reopening the mine just eight days after Ambrose McMullen and Holly Clarke were killed, and fully resumed operations on November 15. 

    The report does not mention that the mine has been reopened, let alone explain why this was allowed when, at least according to what has been publicly stated, neither the regulator nor the Polymetals know what caused the tragedy.

    *****

    The Mining and Energy Union and the Australian Workers Union have not said a word in response to the regulator’s release, just as they have maintained a complicit silence as the company has herded workers back in to the Endeavor mine. This is revealing of the union bureaucracy’s attitude to workers, not just in Cobar but throughout the mining industry. The unions’ silence is a deliberate act to suppress discussion of, and opposition to, the continued use of electric detonators and ballistic disc explosives, potentially risking the lives of countless mining workers elsewhere.

    Mining workers, their families and the Cobar community can place no faith in the government safety regulator or the trade unions. The truth will only be exposed through an investigation led by Endeavor workers themselves, overseen by a rank-and-file committee. In the first instance, this committee should oppose and fight to reverse the reopening of the mine and insist that workers are paid in full for the duration of the investigation.

    The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party pledge to provide every political assistance in this fight for truth. We urge workers at Endeavor and others in Cobar and throughout the mining industry to contact us with whatever information you have about the October 28 incident and safety in the mines. We will protect your anonymity from the companies, unions and government authorities.

    10. Sri Lanka: Survivors of Cyclone Ditwah in war-ravaged Northern Province accuse government of negligence

    World Socialist Web Site reporters visited the village of Iyankoyiladi, Murasumottai in the Kilinochchi District, located in Sri Lanka’s war-ravaged Northern Province, to speak with survivors of Cyclone Ditwah, which has devastated large parts of the island.

    According to the Disaster Management Centre (DMC), the island-wide death toll has risen to 627, with 73 people still missing. The DMC further reported that at least 275,819 individuals from 84,729 families have been affected. Temporary shelter centers are housing 7,177 families, comprising 22,139 individuals.

    In the predominantly Tamil Northern Province, the death toll stands at nine, with four people reported missing. Due to the inadequate conditions in the government-run shelters, many survivors told the WSWS they preferred to remain in their homes, despite extensive damage.

    *****

    Nadarasa Ravichandran, a daily wage worker, explained: “The flood rose above our waists. Our stored food and paddy sacks were destroyed. Crocodiles that came with the flood ate our cattle.”

    He described their current conditions in the shelter: “We survive on the food relief we received while staying here. The government gave us 5,000 rupees [about 16 US dollars].”

    He continued: “I support my family as a daily wage worker. If I work full-time, I earn 3,000 rupees a day. But there is no work during the rainy season. We are now living in extreme poverty. The flood broke our doors, and our house is damaged.”

    Ravichandran described their ongoing hardship: “We keep facing the same situation over and over again. Previous governments promised to provide us with a house or land in another place. But nothing has been given.”

    He explained why they cannot move: “We can’t relocate. We can only go to daily wage jobs if we stay here, because we do agricultural work. Everything we have depends on the income from that. We are not able to educate our children. There are four of us in the house. We don’t have the money to buy land elsewhere. We’ve lived on this land for almost 40 years.”

    He also spoke about the impact of the communal war and broken promises afterward: “Our situation hasn’t changed since the war ended. Our relatives were killed. We have gunshot wounds. My wife was also injured. After the war, we lived in refugee camps. We had to leave everything behind. When we returned, we had nothing. We resettled in temporary huts. There was no compensation for the damages caused by the war.”

    *****

    T. Sivakumar, a 50-year-old farmer from Jaffna:

    “Politicians only come during election time. They don’t visit to see people’s suffering or offer help. Rice crops and vegetable gardens have been destroyed. Because of this, it is possible that prices for commodities will rise. Even now, a kilo of tomatoes costs 1,000 rupees. In the future, people won’t be able to survive.”

    11. Supreme Court poised to empower Trump to fire independent regulators without cause

    On Monday, the US Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case that, if decided in Trump’s favor, would vest within the White House the power to remove independent regulatory agency commissioners and members of boards created by Congress without cause.

    The case heard Monday has far-reaching consequences for the management of the capitalist state. It directly concerned whether President Donald Trump can fire Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission who does not support Trump’s agenda and whom Trump fired earlier this year.

    For 90 years, the courts have followed the unanimous 1935 ruling in Humphrey’s Executor v. United States which held that the president can only fire heads or board members of independent agencies, such as a member of the Federal Trade Commission, for “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.”

    Trump’s lawyers have never claimed that Slaughter was guilty of “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.” They have instead advanced arguments based on the ultra-right “unitary executive theory” which claim that Article II of the Constitution vests within the presidency immense power to rule over all “executive” decisions, including the hiring or firing of the members and heads of independent agencies specifically created by Congress so as to not be under the same White House purview as departments of the executive branch. 

    The Court’s ruling will affect dozens of agencies that regulate and mediate large sections of the US economy, including transportation, finance, nuclear energy and communications. Agencies potentially impacted by the overturning of Humphrey’s Executor include the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), and Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). 

    *****

    In 1887, 10 years after the Great Railroad Strike and one year after the Haymarket frame-up, Congress created the first so-called independent regulatory agency through the Interstate Commerce Act in 1887. Under conditions where rail barons like Jay Gould and Cornelius Vanderbilt wielded enormous monopoly power, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) acted as a stabilizer between rival capitalist dynasties, not a neutral arbiter protecting the public or workers.

    To this day, agencies such as the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are touted by capitalist politicians and elements of the pseudo-left as mechanisms of reform, or independent and bipartisan neutral bodies capable of protecting the interests of workers. In reality, agencies such as the NLRB, often working with union bureaucracies, are used to suffocate strikes and workers’ militancy and channel the class struggle into the dead end of legalistic processes that do not challenge the power of the capitalist state.

    Today, under conditions of inequality not seen in a century, in which a tiny handful of oligarchs dictate the policies in both parties, the nominal independence of some of these agencies is no longer to be tolerated. The dictatorship of the oligarchy is reflected in the structure of the state itself. Congress, the “people’s chamber”, is increasingly sidelined and ignored as more power is vested in the executive branch through a bought-and-paid-for Supreme Court.

    *****

    Last summer the Supreme Court, in the counter-revolutionary ruling Trump v. United States, granted Trump immunity from his failed January 6 coup, and from any new crimes he should commit in office. That the Supreme Court now appears poised to hand more power to the fascist executive only confirms that the working class must intervene in the situation independently of both political parties and the institutions of the bourgeois state. The question for workers is not saving the capitalist state, but abolishing it and the capitalist system.

    12. Fraud charges mount in Honduras after week-long vote count and no clear winner

    More than one week after the November 30 national elections in Honduras marked by an unprecedented level of intervention and intimidation from Washington, there is still no clear winner.

    As of Monday, after the vote count remained frozen for more than two days due to what election authorities described as “technical difficulties,” the margin separating the candidates of Honduras’ two traditional right-wing parties, Nasry Asfura of the National Party and Salvador Nasralla of the Liberal Party, fell to as little as 11,000 votes. Rixi Moncada, candidate of the incumbent Libre Party was running a distant third, with less than 20 percent of the vote.

    *****

    Asfura is the chosen candidate of US President Donald Trump, who labeled Moncada a “communist” and Nasralla a “borderline communist,” while threatening that there would “be hell to pay” if the election did not turn out to his liking.

    On the eve of the election, Trump sought to further plant his thumb on the electoral scales by pardoning former National Party President Juan Orlando Hernández, who in 2024 was convicted in a US Federal Court for his leading role in what prosecutors described as “one of the largest and most violent drug-trafficking conspiracies in the world.” Hernández, who was sentenced to 45 years in prison, famously told his co-conspirators that he wanted to “stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses.” He was credited with facilitating the importation of a staggering 500 tons of the drug into the US.

    The pardon has given the lie to all of the pretensions by the Trump administration that its ongoing killing spree in the Caribbean and its massing of an unprecedented armada off the shores of Venezuela are directed at halting the flow of drugs from Latin America. Its aggression against Venezuela, which is responsible for a negligible share of this flow, and the pardon for Hernández, the archetype of a narco-dictator, are both rooted in the drive by US imperialism to reconquer its hegemony in the Western Hemisphere and reverse the ever-growing influence of its strategic rivals, in particular China. 

    *****

    US interventionism and electoral fraud have a long and filthy history in Honduras. The country was used as a staging ground for Washington’s imperialist interventions in the region for decades, from the 1954 CIA coup that overthrew the government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala to the US-backed counterinsurgency campaign in El Salvador and CIA-organized “contra” war against Nicaragua that claimed hundreds of thousands of lives in the 1980s. During this period, it was ruled by a succession of right-wing regimes and military dictatorships that unleashed death squads against their opponents.

    The country continues to host the most important overseas US military base in the region, the Enrique Soto Cano air base, where at least 1,500 US troops operate the country’s largest airstrip, a critical hub for the projection of military power throughout the hemisphere.

    The present electoral crisis traces its immediate history back to the US-orchestrated 2009 coup that overthrew President Mel Zelaya, then of the Liberal Party. A conservative businessman, Zelaya had aligned his administration with the so-called “Pink Tide” of bourgeois nationalist Latin American governments that utilized windfalls from the commodities boom of the first decade of the century to fund minimal social assistance programs and achieve a semblance of independence from Washington based upon economic ties with Beijing. In the case of Honduras, a key attraction was the supply of discounted Venezuelan oil by the government of Hugo Chávez.

    The coup, supported by the Democratic administration of Barack Obama, brought the National Party back to power, with the gunpoint election of Porfirio Lobo Sosa, who ushered in more than a decade of intense repression and rampant corruption. In 2014, Lobo was succeeded by Juan Orlando Hernández, who ran again in the 2017 election, riding roughshod over Honduran constitution, which prohibits any more than a single term. 

    *****

    The brutish intervention of the Trump administration in the Honduran election is part of a broader strategy spelled out in the 2025 National Security Strategy document released last week. This openly fascist document announces the advent of a “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. It is aimed at extending the 200-year-old US foreign policy statement, first drafted to oppose European recolonization of newly independent countries in Latin America, beyond anything ever seen before in the long and bloody record of US interventionism.

    Eschewing any of the previous pretenses of promoting “democracy” or a “rules-based order,” the new Trump doctrine asserts US imperialism’s “right” to intervene wherever it sees fit “to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere, and to protect our homeland and our access to key geographies throughout the region,” as well as to “deny non-Hemispheric competitors the ability to position forces or other threatening capabilities, or to own or control strategically vital assets, in our Hemisphere.”

    *****

    Whatever temporary successes achieved by Washington through this policy of violence and intimidation, it cannot reverse the historic decline of US economic and political dominance in Latin America or, more importantly, overcome the deep social crises that prevail in this, the most socially unequal region on the planet.

    The burning question is that of revolutionary leadership. No section of the Latin American bourgeoisie, including the left-talking populists of the Pink Tide, is capable of mounting a genuine resistance to the pressures of US imperialism and the capitalist world market. That task falls to the Latin American working class, which must unite its struggles with those of workers in the United States and internationally to put an end to the profit system and oligarchic rule through the socialist reorganization of society.

    13. Trump’s National Security Strategy deepens split within NATO

    The new US National Security Strategy shows that the transatlantic alliance is not just superficially damaged, but deeply divided. What President Donald Trump has announced in individual tweets and Vice President JD Vance in a speech at the Munich Security Conference is now official US foreign policy.

    The strategy document, which is usually revised once during each presidency, translates Trump’s slogan “Make America Great Again” into the language of foreign policy. Since President Woodrow Wilson published his “14 Points” at the end of World War I, the US had always veiled its quest for world domination with phrases about “freedom,” “democracy,” and “the rule of law.” This was still the case in Trump’s first National Security Strategy in 2017. That is no longer true today.

    The new strategy openly states its predatory goals. “The purpose of foreign policy is the protection of core national interests; that is the sole focus of this strategy,” the document states. The strategy aims to ensure “that America remains the world’s strongest, richest, most powerful, and most successful country for decades to come.” 

    To this end, the US wants to “recruit, train, equip, and field the world’s most powerful, lethal, and technologically advanced military,” build “the world’s most robust, credible, and modern nuclear deterrent,” and have “the world’s strongest, most dynamic, most innovative, and most advanced economy.”

    All relations with all other countries will be subordinated to these goals.

    *****

    The strategy document has caused a storm of indignation in the European press. The French newspaper Le Monde wrote:

    The split is final, pending the division of assets. That is how the publication of the national security strategy by the White House on Friday, December 5, appears from a transatlantic perspective. ... [It] marks a historic rupture. Never before had an official document of this nature demonstrated such indifference toward America’s adversaries and such disregard toward its traditional allies, especially those in Europe.

    The German weekly Die Zeit described the document as an “anti-Europe doctrine” and a “brutal wake-up call for all transatlanticists who wanted to hold on to the idea of a value-bound West,” while the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung called it a “paper in which the US settles scores with Europe.”

    ***** 

    The European powers have no answer to the growing conflict with the US other than war and class war. The US enabled discredited Western European capitalism to survive after World War II, and the Cold War against the Soviet Union welded the imperialist powers together. This formed the basis for the economic upswing and social compromises of the postwar period.

    But now, as we wrote in an earlier article, “The global crisis of capitalism and the accompanying bitter struggle for raw materials, markets, and profits are destroying the alliance between the two largest imperialist power blocs, which together account for 45 percent of global economic output.” Trump is not the cause, but merely the subjective expression of this development.

    Germany and the other European powers have been striving for years to free themselves from US hegemony and once again play an independent role as a major power. Now they are accelerating these efforts, investing hundreds of billions in rearmament, continuing the war against Russia, and compensating for the enormous costs through social cuts and mass layoffs. Like Trump, they are building a police state and have long since adopted the brutal migration policies of the far right.

    The working class must not support either side in the escalating transatlantic conflict. It must unite internationally and fight on both sides of the Atlantic for the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of a socialist society.

    14. Philadelphia transit and trade union officials announce tentative agreement to keep workers on the job days before Christmas

    Negotiators for the Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 234 and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) announced a tentative agreement on Monday, aimed at heading off a strike by over 5,000 SEPTA transit workers in Philadelphia. Transit workers in Pennsylvania’s most economically important region have been laboring without a contract for more than a month. 

    After holding a strike authorization vote on November 16 under conditions of mounting rank-and-file anger, TWU officials deliberately kept workers on the job, demobilizing their power while openly collaborating with management and the state.

    “I am very pleased that we were able to settle without a strike,” said TWU 234 President Will Vera in a public statement following the announcement. Vera singled out Pennsylvania Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro for special praise, stating the latter had “got key people from both sides in the same room last night, stopped the run-around, got promises from both sides and we reached a deal. Without the Governor’s intervention, we would have been on strike this morning.”

    After the expiration of their one-year contract on November 7, the TWU 234 leadership kept members guessing about what would come next. Only after mounting pressure from below did the leadership formally call a strike authorization vote more than a week later on November 16, when members voted unanimously for a strike.

    The announcement comes just a few days after TWU officials declared a strike to be “imminent.” On Friday, Vera declared that his “patience has run out” and the TWU International President John Samuelson joined the local leadership at a press conference. However, the statements were followed by a weekend of negotiations in which Governor Shapiro was said to be “closely” involved. On Sunday, the transit union and management officials were apparently on good terms again and the “imminent” threat of a work stoppage was called off.

    Far from a near-miss, the transit union officialdom knew a deal was at hand, deciding to issue pompous threats in order to make the impending deal appear to be the product of their so-called “militant” posturing. Similar farces have occurred in recent times, such as the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers’ series of “strike ready” events, which preceded the announcement of a sellout contract in August. These were modeled on the Teamsters’ own “strike ready” campaign at UPS, which it used to help force through a contract under suspicious circumstances in 2023.

    The tentative agreement (TA) is a blatant sellout of the membership, which has had zero say on the terms and conditions of their employment throughout the entire ordeal. The TA’s ratification has been presented to the membership and public as a done deal. This is despite the fact a ratification date has not even been set. “What have we lost? Because we definitely lost something as usual!” stated one SEPTA worker on social media in response to the union’s announcement on Monday.

    *****

    The unanimous strike authorization reflects growing militancy within the working class. Philadelphia in particular has been at the epicenter of growing working-class anger on the United States East Coast. Five months ago, 9,000 city municipal workers launched a powerful eight-day strike that brought city services to a standstill, upending the city amid a heat wave and the lucrative July 4 Independence Day holiday.

    Only with the combined efforts of the AFSCME District Council 33 leadership, the city’s Democratic Party government and the trade union bureaucracy was the strike corralled and isolated. Despite popular support from the city’s working population, workers were offered a TA that met none of their demands and only gave them a raise 1 percent higher than the offer they had rejected when they went on strike.

    Following this, the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers rammed through a sellout in August right before the contract for 14,000 public school teachers expired. Teachers were given one two-hour Zoom call in which criticism of the TA was suppressed before a vote was called. This was a deliberate move to ensure the contract’s ratification and keep the workforce from striking.

    Since then, the School District of Philadelphia has advanced plans to close or co-locate a substantial portion of its 300 public schools. In November, the school district announced it would delay the plan’s release until it could receive more community feedback. SDP superintendent Tony Watlington has previously declared plans to “rightsize” the school district, a euphemism for closing “underperforming” schools.

    *****

    It is a burning need for SEPTA workers to oppose this TA, organizing in rank-and-file committees to enforce its rejection. But voting “no” is only the beginning. The rank and file must take the initiative out of the hands of the TWU leadership.

    As the Philadelphia Workers Rank-and-File Committee wrote last August: “It is a proven, iron law that as long as a struggle remains in the hands of the bureaucracy, the only possible outcome is a betrayal. The only path to victory is building independent rank-and-file strength and solidarity.”

    Such a struggle will necessarily bring workers into conflict with the capitalist state, including the Democratic Party, which runs both the city and the state. This is most of all reflected by the Shapiro administration’s decision to get involved in the SEPTA talks. It is critical that workers mobilize wider sections of the working class to deepen their struggle and prepare for a direct confrontation with the capitalist state, the enforcer of inequality and poverty. 

    15. Elisabeth Zimmermann-Modler 1956–2025: Trotskyist and fighter for the working class

    Elisabeth Zimmermann-Modler in 2023
    Elisabeth Zimmermann-Modler devoted her entire adult life to building a better, socialist society. In 1975, at the age of 19, she joined the German section of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) and remained an active and leading member for the rest of her life. On November 28 she died from the consequences of a tragic accident in her flat in Duisburg. 

    Her German and international comrades will remember “Elli,” as everyone called her, for the tireless energy with which she championed Marxism among workers and party members, for her firmness of principle and for her human warmth. Dozens of messages of condolence received by the Sozialistische Gleichheitspartei (Socialist Equality Party, SGP) from all over the world express this. 

    The World Socialist Web Site provides a comprehensive and informative memorial article describing Elisabeth's remarkable life and times. 

    16. Workers Struggles: The Americas

    Argentina:

    Buenos Aires bus drivers strike
     
    Protests by pensioners and people with disabilities

    Bolivia:

    La Paz police attack protesting park workers

    Canada:

    Canadian Air Transat pilots set to strike

     Puerto Rico:

    Humacao Hope Medical Center workers’ protest

    United States:

    Tentative agreement in Moses Lake, Washington week-long teachers strike
    Teamsters announce strike authorizations at three dairy plants in Southwestern Wisconsin

    17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk!

    The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism. 

    18. Leading Ukrainian criminologist finds charges of “state treason” against Bogdan Syrotiuk baseless

    On December 4, a Ukrainian court in Pervomaisk reviewed the linguistic expertise commissioned by the defense lawyers of imprisoned Trotskyist Bogdan Syrotiuk. Now 26 years old, Syrotiuk was arrested in April 2024 and charged with “state treason under martial law,” a crime which carries between 15 years and life in prison. Far from operating on behalf of the Putin regime, as the prosecution charges, Syrotiuk was the founder and leader of Trotskyist youth group the Young Guard of Bolshevik-Leninists, which has opposed the war in Ukraine by fighting for the unity of the Russian and Ukrainian working class. 

    The defense lawyers commissioned Yuri Borisovich Irkhin, one of Ukraine’s leading criminologists, to conduct a “linguistic examination” of the statements and articles that Bogdan wrote and published, and that have served as the principal foundation for his prosecution. Irkhin found that they provide no basis whatsoever for his prosecution as a “traitor” and a supporter of the Putin regime.

    *****

    In his 65-page report, Irkhin examined more than a dozen publications by the World Socialist Web Site, which the indictment cited, denouncing the WSWS as “a Russian propaganda and information agency.” Among them are several statements by the Young Guard of Bolshevik-Leninists, such as their November 2022 statement against the war, articles by Bogdan Syrotiuk on Ukrainian fascism, reports on the mood among Ukrainian youth, articles by the WSWS on NATO’s role in the war, as well as an October 2023 lecture by David North on the Gaza genocide. Irkhin subjected all of these publications to a thorough semantic analysis, highlighting terms expressing opposition to the invasion of Ukraine by the Putin regime and the Putin regime itself. 

    His conclusion is unequivocal: 

    1. “….there are no statements, phrases, sentences, or word combinations that contain public calls aimed at undermining the national security of Ukraine, its national interests, the elimination of Ukrainian statehood and the destruction of Ukrainian identity, and the conduct of subversive activities against Ukraine in the information sphere to the detriment of Ukraine's information security, are NOT contained (in the articles and statements under examination).

    2. ….there are NO statements, phrases, sentences, or word combinations that have signs of propaganda aimed at supporting the armed aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine.” (Emphasis in the original)

    Given the authority of Irkhin and the thoroughness of his analysis, even the Ukrainian court, which has so far routinely ruled in favor of the prosecution, despite its lack of evidence, could not ignore it. In light of the extreme contrast between the results of the examinations by the prosecution and the defense, the court was forced to rule on December 4 that a third expert will have to produce another expertise. This decision marks a significant set-back for the prosecution. However, while this is an important legal development in the campaign to free Bogdan, the significance of Irkhin’s examination goes well beyond its implications in the courtroom.

    *****

    The linguistic report marks a major development in the campaign to free Bogdan Syrotiuk. It will be an important tool before the European Court of Human Rights, which accepted his case earlier this year. Above all, however, it should be seen as a powerful vindication of the struggle for the freedom of Bogdan Syrotiuk and for the principles of Marxist internationalism that he was imprisoned for. We call on all readers to respond to this development by expanding their efforts for his freedom!

    • Sign the petition demanding his immediate release!
    • Donate to the campaign! 
    • Make this case as widely known as possible!