Feb 26, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Corruption scandal hits Greece’s GSEE trade union bureaucracy

At the center of scandal is an investigation concerning €2.1 million government and European Union funding, out of a €73 million total, provided between 2020 and 2025 for professional education and training programs.

2. Say Nothing: Everything essential about the Northern Ireland conflict left unsaid

Say Nothing (2024), about the Troubles in Northern Ireland, came to UK terrestrial streaming platform All4 last year after previous runs on Hulu and Disney+, the drama’s producers. Based on Patrick Radden Keefe’s 2018 book, the six-hour, nine-part series boasts an impressive cast and high production values.

It runs from the 1960s through the 1998 Good Friday Agreement to the 2014 arrest of Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams. Its occasional glimpses of something important cannot overcome a general superficiality.

The Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) waged a military campaign for some 30 years, involving heroic self-sacrifice from its volunteers. But that campaign ended in the nationalist Sinn Féin joining a power-sharing agreement that left the foundations of British imperialism untouched.

These events underscore the necessity of a critical political appraisal that can explain why the bourgeois nationalist program on which the IRA’s campaign was based led to that outcome.

This can only come from an international revolutionary socialist perspective. Without that, responses to the Troubles are driven into one of two dead ends—glorifying and replicating the perspective that led to this dead end, or rejecting the struggle against imperialism altogether.

Say Nothing adopts the latter conclusion, even though it focuses chiefly on those who viewed the signing of the Good Friday Agreement—establishing a power-sharing executive made up of Unionist and Republican parties—as a betrayal of their struggle and the sacrifices they made. The IRA volunteers at its heart are treated sympathetically, but as damaged victims of their own misguided principles. It is a cautionary morality tale, reflecting Keefe’s conclusion that the struggle against imperialism will destroy both those who undertake it and those around them.

Keefe is a talented investigative journalist, but his human-interest writing reflects his political outlook as a liberal critic only of some of imperialism’s worst excesses. A recent description, that he “hunts for ugly truths,” points to this. He is a solidly establishment figure, serving in 2010–11 as a policy adviser in the Office of the Secretary of Defense during the Obama presidency.

Keefe became interested in the Troubles and began his research after reading an obituary of Dolours Price in 2013.

Dolours and her sister Marian were among the first women accepted as active IRA volunteers upon its 1969 resumption of armed struggle against the British military occupation. They were members of the Belfast Brigade’s “Unknowns”, a secret cell reporting only to the highest local leadership to avoid information leaks to the British state.

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Keefe naturally offers only cursory nods to the long history of British oppression of Ireland, or to events in the North outside Belfast. Little or no context is given as to why people were prepared to risk their lives in this struggle.

After the 1922 Treaty partitioned Ireland, leaving the six northern counties a British colony, the IRA remained committed to the armed struggle for a united, independent Ireland. This was eventually suspended after the failure of the Border Campaign (1956–62), aimed at forcing withdrawal of British troops, and the IRA became somewhat dormant.

However, the Catholic working class in Northern Ireland was subject to appalling conditions and discrimination in work, housing and politics. Civil rights campaigns were bloodily suppressed amid a rising wave of loyalist attacks.

1969 was a turning point in the reanimation of the IRA’s activity. In that year, the Labour government sent British troops to Northern Ireland. Ostensibly sent to protect Catholic communities from loyalist attacks, they built up a military state apparatus that targeted nationalist protests.

The 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre in Derry, when British paratroopers opened fire on unarmed civil rights protesters, killing 14, galvanized opposition to British rule. It goes barely noticed in Say Nothing. We hear only that the IRA bombing campaign has escalated from 150 bombs in 1970 to 1,000 in 1972, its most violent year. 

British colonialism’s brutalities on the ground are barely explored in general. We see the Burntollet Bridge violence in 1969, when a loyalist mob brutally attacked a peaceful march while the Royal Ulster Constabulary watched, which played a part in radicalizing the Price sisters. But it is treated outside any wider context of imperialist occupation.

There is some acknowledgement that the intelligence operations headed by Brigadier Frank Kitson (Rory Kinnear) repeated the vicious tactics he had used against the Mau Mau in Kenya. But where Keefe is at pains to show how IRA activities affected its own members or civilians, he has next to nothing to say about British military collusion in the killing of Catholic civilians.

The brutality of British rule is reduced to a mirrored intrigue between the IRA and the army, with Kitson’s team beating information out of IRA suspects. When the IRA “disappear” two such assets, we see Kitson say that either the military were being fed vital information or they were driving the IRA to murder their own men—“either way we win.” 

There is a similar approach to the state brutality against the Price sisters. Imprisoned in a men’s facility in London, they went on hunger strike for transfer to a women’s prison in Northern Ireland and political status. For 167 days of their 208-day strike they were force-fed in a horrific manner.

The medical team administering the force-feeding quit in protest at the cruelty. This is not pursued further. Nor are the protests supporting the sisters.

Keefe’s description of the unfolding of a hunger strike as “morbid but undeniable entertainment” says a great deal about his own approach.

There were three IRA hunger strikes during this period, but producers decided “we can’t do a series with two hunger strikes.” They therefore omitted the 1981 strike in which 10 republicans died. More importantly, given the focus on Hughes, they also omitted the preceding strike, which Hughes called off in confused circumstances after 53 days.

The political content of the campaigns and the response of British imperialism are not Keefe’s interest. He has written that “As a test of the limits of human endurance, [a hunger strike] can become a spectacle for rubberneckers, a bit like the Tour de France.”

Keefe treats the IRA volunteers as irreparably damaged, with Adams’ political maneuvering contributing. But he follows the line of the British, Irish and above all American ruling classes, which saw power-sharing involving Sinn Féin as the necessary means of creating a stable environment for corporate investment and building a cheap labor platform in the North.

He portrays Adams as evasive and manipulative, while still praising him for his realpolitik: “Whatever callous motivations Adams might have possessed, and whatever deceptive machinations he might have employed, he steered the IRA out of a bloody and intractable conflict and into a brittle but enduring peace.”

A serious artistic appraisal of the Troubles, and serious attempts to understand their effect at a personal level, would have to begin from a historical and political understanding both of British imperialism and the limitations of bourgeois nationalism.

In a contemporary analysis rooted in Trotsky’s Theory of Permanent Revolution, the World Socialist Web Site explained the class basis for Adams’ and the Sinn Féin leadership’s actions in an editorial statement, “British-Irish agreement enshrines sectarian divisions”:

Once again, a movement that professed anti-imperialist credentials has exchanged army fatigues for business suits and been incorporated into new mechanisms for preserving the rule of big business. This is the logical outcome of the nationalist perspective.

Placing this in the context of the capitulation of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the African National Congress, the Sandinistas and others, the editorial continued:

The bitter lessons of this century demonstrate that the Irish capitalist class and the petty-bourgeois nationalists are incapable of overcoming imperialist domination and social and political inequality. The legacy of colonial and class oppression cannot be resolved through jerry-rigged agreements between the imperialist powers and parties that essentially function as their local representatives…

The objective conditions exist for overcoming the age-old divisions between Catholic and Protestant, Irish and British workers, provided they are united on a program that articulates their basic needs for decent jobs, health care, housing and democratic rights. These needs can only be realized on a program for the international unification of the working class against the profit system.

No one expects Keefe to have any sympathy for such a critique. But this does not detract from or excuse Say Nothing’s superficial artistic approach, which is rooted in Keefe’s own political hostility to the struggle against imperialism. This, it must be stressed, is ultimately why his work was chosen as the basis for such a prestige, big-budget drama by the Disney corporation.

3. Florida continues execution surge with lethal injection of Melvin Trotter

On the evening of February 24, the state of Florida continued its aggressive use of the death penalty, executing 65-year-old Melvin Trotter at Florida State Prison near Starke. Trotter, who had spent nearly four decades on death row, was pronounced dead at 6:15 p.m. following the administration of a three-drug lethal injection cocktail.

Witnesses observed Trotter breathing heavily and twitching for approximately a minute after the drugs began to flow, his movements slowing before a medic confirmed his death. He declined to make a final statement.

Trotter’s execution stems from the June 16, 1986, murder of 70-year-old Virgie Langford, a long-time grocery store owner in Palmetto who was on the verge of retirement. During a robbery in which Trotter stole approximately $100 and food stamps to fuel his cocaine addiction, he stabbed Langford seven times with her own butcher knife. Langford survived long enough to identify her attacker, noting he wore a “Melvin” name badge from Tropicana, before she died of cardiac arrest during surgery.

Trotter’s legal team long argued for mercy based on his intellectual disabilities and the fact that he was high on crack at the time of the crime and came to the store unarmed, demonstrating he lacked the capacity for premeditation.

His attorneys argued that his significant intellectual disabilities should have barred his execution under the Eighth Amendment, citing early school records, low IQ tests placing him on the border of clinical intellectual disability per Florida law, special education placement, and family testimony about his lifelong struggles with reading, financial management and independent decision-making. They highlighted evaluations from mental health experts during his competency proceedings, who described Trotter as a “slow learner” with impaired common sense, poor planning ability, distorted sense of reality, and reduced inhibition—exacerbated by chronic cocaine use tied to his traumatic childhood.

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Trotter’s execution took place against a backdrop of deep judicial and humanitarian concern. The US Supreme Court cleared the way for his execution by denying his application for a stay, but Justice Sonia Sotomayor said she was “deeply troubled” by the state’s record on lethal injections. 

She said death row inmates have not been able to prove their suspicions that the state is using expired drugs and engaging in other questionable practices because the Florida Supreme Court hasn’t allowed the inmates access to documents that could back up their claims.

“By continuing to shroud its executions in secrecy, Florida undermines both the integrity of its own execution process and, potentially, this Court’s ability to ensure the State’s compliance with its constitutional obligations,” she wrote.

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This secrecy is part of a broader history of executions in Florida gone horribly wrong. The state’s executions by the “Old Sparky” electric chair came under scrutiny in March 1997 when foot-long flames erupted from the head of Pedro Medina as he was being put to death. Another condemned inmate, Allen Davis, suffered visible agony during his electrocution in July 1999, when blood gushed from his mouth and chest and it took several minutes for him to die.

In December 2006, the lethal injection of Angel Diaz was also horrifically botched when the prisoner squinted, grimaced and tried to mouth words after the first injection, a sedative, was administered. An autopsy revealed that the chemical had been injected into soft tissue, rather than a vein, rendering the drug’s sedating mechanism ineffective before the second and third deadly chemicals were injected. 

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Under Governor Ron DeSantis, Florida has seen an unprecedented surge in executions. In 2025, Florida led the nation by putting 19 inmates to death—the highest single-year total for the state since the death penalty was reinstated by the US Supreme Court in 1976. DeSantis maintains complete control over signing death warrants and setting execution dates, a process that allows the governor to champion his reactionary, pro-death penalty agenda and gain favor with the Trump administration. 

Florida recently enacted laws that further erode the rights of the condemned. In 2023, the state lowered the jury threshold for death sentences from a unanimous vote to an 8-4 recommendation. This move contradicts the Supreme Court’s 2016 Hurst v. Florida ruling, which had temporarily required jury unanimity after the Court struck down Florida’s prior sentencing statute. Florida also expanded death-eligible crimes to include non-homicidal offenses, a direct challenge to the 2008 high court ruling in Kennedy v. Louisiana.

The relentless pace of executions in Florida is particularly alarming given the state’s record of error. Florida leads the nation in death row exonerations, with 30 individuals cleared of wrongful convictions since 1973.

3. Hanau shooting memorial highlights political shift to the right in Germany’s political establishment

On the sixth anniversary of the racist terror attack, the families of the victims warn of the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) and the "fascistic escalation" in the US. At the same time, the establishment parties are distancing themselves from such commemorations.

4. Amid deepening crisis of class rule, Peru saddled with eighth president in 10 years

On the night of February 18, the Peruvian Congress, meeting in extraordinary session, voted to install a new president to replace José Jerí, the eighth Peruvian head of state in barely a decade. Jerí, a right-wing politician, has been ousted after just four months in office, the latest president to fall victim to charges of corruption and personal scandal. Only time will tell whether he joins four of his predecessors who are behind bars.

Neither Jerí nor his immediate predecessor, Dina Boluarte, won popular elections, but rather were imposed in what amount to parliamentary coups by the Congress. José María Balcázar is the latest to be installed by the Congress as interim president. His main task will be to oversee the presidential elections set for April 12 and serve as a caretaker president until a new one is inaugurated in July, if he lasts that long.

Balcázar, 83, has past ties to Peru Libre, the party of ousted and imprisoned president Pedro Castillo, a former teachers union official who was removed from office in December 2022 after attempting to block a trumped-up, US-backed congressional impeachment.

This has led to a vicious media propaganda campaign aimed at casting Balcázar, a conservative ex-judge, as a “communist.” Ominously, the Naval Union, representing retired Navy officers, issued a public statement warning that the government had been captured by “Marxist-Leninists.”

It has been suggested that the aim of the right-wing parties that control Congress was to install Balcázar as a political foil, allowing their candidates to disassociate themselves from a supposedly “left” government under conditions in which the approval ratings for both the executive and legislative branches of government have rarely risen beyond the low single digits.

For his part, Balcázar has done everything possible to dispel any illusions that there will be anything “left” about his presidency. His first official meetings were with the US ambassador, the head of Peru’s central bank and business leaders of the National Society of Industry.

Most consequentially, he chose the right-wing economist and former presidential candidate Hernando de Soto as his prime minister.

De Soto, a long-standing asset of US imperialism and the International Monetary Fund, is the founder of the right-wing think tank Instituto Libertad y Democracia (ILD), whose operations were funded by the National Endowment for Democracy, the US agency created to carry out overtly the kind of political influence interventions previously performed covertly by the CIA. In the 1990s he was a chief adviser to President Alberto Fujimori and is considered the author of the “Fujishock,” a drastic economic austerity package that plunged large sections of the Peruvian population into poverty overnight by scrapping subsidies, currency and price controls along with most social spending. The package was imposed by dictatorial measures, with troops in the street.

At the last minute on Tuesday, however, Balcázar announced without explanation that his prime minister will be Jerí’s ex-minister of the economy, Denisse Miralles, a long-time technocrat in Peru’s financial institutions, and not De Soto.

For his part, De Soto claimed that his replacement came in response to disagreements over cabinet appointments and that Balcázar had failed to pass a “trial by fire” when he demanded that the interim president make changes. He also made statements that Balcázar had been “kidnapped” by business and political interests and issued warnings of the “Venezuelaization” of Peru. The new cabinet includes seven members who are holdovers from that of Jerí. Balcázar supporters have charged that De Soto attempted to change cabinet appointments after they had been agreed upon. 

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In a country where 70-85 percent of Congress is facing criminal charges and past presidents have been jailed over multi-million-dollar kickback schemes, many involving the Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht, the known offenses for which Jerí was ousted seem relatively minor. He is accused of violating protocol governing the scheduling of meetings outside the presidential palace. These meetings took place in a “chifa”—the name used in Peru for Chinese restaurants, giving rise to the scandal known as “Chifagate.” The meetings were with Zhihua Yang, a businessman and fixer with connections to Beijing. Trying to hide his identity with a hoodie that covered part of his face, Jerí did not realize he was being filmed and that videos of the illicit meeting would go viral on social media.

Congress also accused Jerí of holding nighttime meetings with young women at the presidential palace. At least five of them were hired by the legislature with monthly salaries between 6,000 and 11,000 soles (approximately US$1,800 to US$3,300).

That the issue precipitating Jerís fall centered on purportedly illicit Chinese influence is hardly a coincidence. Peru has become a focal point in the drive by US imperialism to roll back China’s economic influence and reassert Washington’s hegemony in Latin America under the so-called “Donroe Doctrine.”

Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) in Peru reportedly stands at US$30 billion, far outstripping the US, which accounts for just US$6.7 billion. China, meanwhile accounts for 36 percent of Peruvian foreign trade, and the US just over 14 percent. Meanwhile, in Peru as in the rest of South America, China has far overtaken the US as the biggest trading partner. 

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The corrupt and impotent Peruvian bourgeoisie, incapable of adopting any independent position, is torn between its economic interests tied to China and its dependence upon US imperialism in matters of “national security,” i.e., counterrevolutionary repression. 

Washington’s pressure is aimed at seeing Peru join the Latin American countries that have elected far‑right presidents committed to putting the full weight of the crisis onto the shoulders of the working class and lining up with US imperialism in its preparations for war with China: Milei in Argentina, Katz in Chile, Paz in Bolivia, Noboa in Ecuador, Bukele in El Salvador and Asfura in Honduras.

The latest poll by the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos (IEP) reflects the alienation of the broad masses of the Peruvian population from all of the existing capitalist parties in an election year with 36 presidential candidates. It puts Rafael López Aliaga, the far-right businessman and former Lima mayor in first place with 14.6 percent, while second place is given to Keiko Fujimori, the right-wing daughter of the former dictator, who rose from 8.1 to 10.3 percent in the last month. In third place with 5.3 percent is Alfonso López Chau, an economist and academician who describes himself as “center-left” and has, predictably, been denounced as a communist by his far-right opponents.

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Underlying the unrelenting political crisis of the Peruvian capitalist ruling class and its virulent anti-communism is an overwhelming fear of a movement from below by the working class and oppressed masses in a country plagued by massive social inequality, with nearly 30 percent of the population living in poverty and the majority laboring without basic benefits or protections in the so-called informal sector. The supposedly strong Peruvian economy, characterized by a boom in metal prices and record bank profits, has done nothing to ameliorate the conditions facing the vast majority of Peruvians.

Recent months have seen a series of strikes by transport workers over the carnage inflicted by politically connected extortionist mafias, with 20 drivers killed per week so far in 2026. Youth marching under the banner of Gen Z have clashed with riot police, and healthcare and construction workers have staged strikes and protests.

The fundamental challenge confronting this emerging movement of social struggle is the absence of a revolutionary leadership in the working class.

For decades, Stalinists of the Peruvian Communist Party undermined proletarian struggles through their dominance of the General Confederation of Workers of Peru (CGTP) and subordination of workers’ struggles to bourgeois parties and governments. For their part, Pabloite revisionism and its main representative in South America, Nahuel Moreno—who died in 1987—bear responsibility for thousands of deaths and historic defeats by promoting petty-bourgeois guerrillaism, Castroism and alliances with bourgeois nationalists as substitutes for the building of revolutionary parties in the Latin American working class. This paved the way to the US-backed military dictatorships that dominated the region over the course of two decades beginning in the 1960s.

In Peru, at the beginning of the 1980s two currents emerged: Izquierda Unida (IU) and Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path, SL). The former chose the electoral road, winning the mayoralty of Lima (1984–1986) with its leader Alfonso Barrantes providing a “left” face for bourgeois rule. The latter, a Maoist tendency, launched a guerrilla war that was met with murderous state repression, costing some 70,000 lives, most of them from Indigenous communities, over the course of two decades.

The bitter lessons of this history must be assimilated by a new generation as part of the struggle to forge a new revolutionary leadership in the working class based upon the perspective of international socialism and Trotsky’s theory of Permanent Revolution. This means building sections of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) in Peru and throughout Latin America to unite the struggles of workers in these countries with those of workers in the US and internationally.

5. Former Fiji PM Bainimarama arrested on charges of inciting mutiny

The renewed legal offensive against Bainimarama is an expression of intensifying factional struggles amid Fiji’s growing social crisis.

6. Kaiser Permanente files $95 million insurance lawsuit after record Medicare Advantage fraud settlement

The month-long strike of 31,000 healthcare workers at Kaiser Permanente was abruptly brought to an end by the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals (UNAC/UHCP) as a series of legal confrontations arose, which expose the rottenness of America’s profit-driven healthcare system.

On February 20, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan and Kaiser Foundation Hospitals filed suit against nine major insurers, led by American International Group and Chubb Limited, seeking up to $95 million in directors and officers liability coverage. The payment would partially offset Kaiser’s recent $556 million settlement of whistleblower allegations accusing the organization of manipulating Medicare Advantage reimbursements through systematic diagnostic “upcoding.”

Kaiser employees will now confront the consequences of the betrayal of the UNAC/UHCP bureaucracy—deteriorating wages, medical coverage and working conditions. By contrast, the healthcare giant is maneuvering for reimbursement after a record fraud payout.

In January 2026, Kaiser affiliates agreed to pay $556 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations brought by the US Department of Justice. The resolution, the largest recovery ever tied to Medicare Advantage risk-adjustment practices, involved multiple entities, including Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc. and several Permanente Medical Groups.

The case originated in whistleblower lawsuits filed by former employees Ronda Osinek and James Taylor. Osinek, a medical coder, alleged that Kaiser pressured physicians to retroactively add diagnosis codes in order to increase reimbursement rates. Taylor, a physician medical director, reportedly attempted to correct coding irregularities internally before filing his own complaint. Under the False Claims Act’s whistleblower provisions, the former Kaiser employees—the relators in the case, ie., the ones who brought the case on behalf of the US government—received a combined $95 million.

Prosecutors contended that between 2009 and 2018 Kaiser conducted retrospective record reviews that generated roughly 500,000 unsupported diagnoses. These additions allegedly produced about $1 billion in excess Medicare payments, despite internal compliance warnings.

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The UNAC/UHCP apparatus shut down the powerful month-long strike without a new contract or tentative agreement, let alone a vote by its members. This underscores the compounded threats healthcare workers face from corporate wealth, profit-driven healthcare and management’s “labor partners.” While executives debate insurance coverage for a half-billion-dollar settlement, frontline workers continue to confront workloads that threaten both patient safety and their own livelihoods.

While the union bureaucracy tries to limit the outlook of workers to trade union negotiations, the Kaiser litigation demonstrates that healthcare crises are inseparable from the financial architecture governing the capitalist system. Billing practices, insurance markets and corporate reserves shape not only profits but staffing levels, patient outcomes and workplace conditions.

Regardless of the verdict, the litigation has exposed the fraudulent “nonprofit” status of Kaiser Permanente and Medicare Advantage. No outcome under the current framework addresses the underlying reality: healthcare under capitalism operates through complex financial circuits that prioritize revenue extraction over public health. Fraud settlements, insurance disputes and regulatory negotiations represent symptoms of a system structured around profit rather than care.

7. United States: Trade unions hold town hall at George Mason University: University workers need independent organization, not appeals to Democrats

The “Virginia Labor Coalition” meeting at GMU seeks to tie workers to Democrats and unions while suppressing broader struggles over wages and democratic rights in the face of the Trump administration’s assault on democracy.

8. Australia: Victorian Labor government hands police expanded stop-and-search powers

Such police-state powers mark a further shift to the right by Labor governments, seeking to crush dissent.

9. Thirty-thousand LA school support workers overwhelmingly vote to strike

An overwhelming 94 percent of 30,000 classified school workers in Los Angeles have voted to authorize a strike against the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the second-largest school district in the United States. The vote, conducted by SEIU Local 99, signals a sharp escalation of class struggle in a district serving more than 400,000 students across over 1,000 schools.

This follows the 94 percent vote three weeks ago by members of United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) to authorize a strike by 35,000 teachers. Taken together, 65,000 teachers and support staff are now preparing to strike.

The classified workers are the backbone of the public school system. They include instructional and special education aides, custodians and maintenance workers, bus drivers, food service employees, campus safety officers and logistics staff. Schools cannot function without them. Yet they are paid poverty wages and treated as expendable.

This struggle is not isolated. Across California and the United States, class tensions are intensifying. In addition to LA teachers, 40,000 graduate student workers in the University of California system have voted to strike with their contract expiring on March 31.

More than 35,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers just waged a month-long strike before it was abruptly shut down by the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals without even reaching a tentative agreement. Skilled trades workers in the California State University system and San Francisco teachers conducted four-day strikes earlier this month, and nurses at USC Keck Medical Center are also engaged in contract battles.

The SEIU vote reflects a workforce pushed to the brink by relentless cost-of-living increases in one of the most expensive metropolitan regions in the country. The average salary for classified school workers is $35,501, classified as “extremely low income” in Los Angeles. Many workers are employed only part-time, working the 10-month school year and earning closer to $30,000 or less. A significant number fall below the federal poverty line.

Nearly 90 percent of these workers are Latino or African American, and a substantial proportion are immigrants or the children of immigrants. Many are themselves parents of LAUSD students. They confront not only economic hardship but also the broader climate of repression directed at immigrant communities, including the escalation of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids under the Trump administration.

10. With US imperialist war machine in position, Trump menaces Iran in State of the Union speech

The absence of any expression of popular opposition to the war reflects both the backing among the European imperialist powers and broad support among the privileged middle class “left” for a “regime change” operation led by Washington.

11. Report on impact of AI triggers market turmoil

The extreme nervousness on Wall Street about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on a range of companies, particularly those supplying software and software services, was highlighted on Monday when a report by a small research firm played a significant role in a market selloff.

The report by Citrini Research was widely circulated and cited as a contributing factor in the fall, which saw the Dow drop by more than 800 points or 1.7 percent, the S&P 500 by 1 percent and the NASDAQ by 1.1 percent.

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The main concern in the past months has been whether the massive spending on AI data centers by the hyperscalers, such as Meta, Google, Amazon and Microsoft, would generate a sufficient rate of return. Those fears remain.

But new ones have emerged in recent weeks centering on the impact of AI tools which contain the possibility of upending existing information and software systems by massively reducing time and labor costs.

Pointing to these effects, the Citrini report began: “What if our AI bullishness continues to be right … and what if that’s actually bearish?”

In other words, what will be the impact on the economy if the potential productivity gains of AI are realized.

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One of the big questions arising from the AI-induced rout of software-based firms, and the possibility that some may go under, is the impact on the private equity funds that have played a major role in financing their activities.

The amounts run into the trillions of dollars. This month, according to a recent FT report, the value of two of the world’s largest software companies, Salesforce and ServiceNow, have fallen by a fifth.

This has led to concerns over the exposure of private capital groups, including Blackstone, Ares, KKR and Blue Owl, which have exposure to software investments. 

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Investors fear that if the use of AI expands as rapidly as the latest daily developments indicate, then private equity firms will have billions of dollars tied up in software companies that will either be severely disrupted or on their way to extinction.

A report on Bloomberg dealing with the travails of the private equity firm Blue Owl, the shares of which have now plunged 60 percent in the past 13 months, evoked the lead up to the financial crisis of 2008.

12. The Socialist Equality Party replies to Trump’s fascist address to Congress

 

In the United States, where the capitalist two-party system has been in place for 150 years, all those genuinely opposed to the policies and interests of the ruling class are denied the right to address the people. However, if the Socialist Equality Party had been given the opportunity to deliver a televised rebuttal, not only to Trump’s State of the Union Address but also to the Democrats’ reply, this is what we would have said.

[This headline perspective is published in full in the previous post at this blog, but readers are encouraged as always to visit the original article at the World Socialist Web Site.] 

13. South Australian election: Labor government campaigns on support for property developers, austerity and militarism

The March 21 state election will resolve nothing for workers and young people. 

14.  Epstein files naming Trump as attacker were withheld by DOJ

Multiple media reports quote Epstein victims whose statements to the FBI were recorded, but not released by the Department of Justice last month.

15. Palestinian Nerdeen Kiswani files civil rights lawsuit against Zionist Betar USA under Ku Klux Klan Act

Kiswani’s suit alleges that the violent far-right group has been targeting her for over a year, including by supplying her name to the Trump administration for deportation.

16. Oppose the pro-imperialist Kurdish nationalist coalition in Iran

The “coalition of political forces of Iranian Kurdistan” represents yet another episode in the protracted and disastrous alignment of Kurdish bourgeois nationalist organizations with American imperialism.

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.

Feb 25, 2026

The Socialist Equality Party replies to Trump’s fascist address to Congress

David North

A perspective by National Chairman of the Socialist Equality Party (US) David North [in full]:

In the United States, where the capitalist two-party system has been in place for 150 years, all those genuinely opposed to the policies and interests of the ruling class are denied the right to address the people. However, if the Socialist Equality Party had been given the opportunity to deliver a televised rebuttal, not only to Trump’s State of the Union Address but also to the Democrats’ reply, this is what we would have said.

***

Good evening. The Socialist Equality Party welcomes this rare opportunity to present our assessment of the State of the Union.

Speaking as a representative of the SEP, I am addressing these remarks not only to workers and youth in the United States but to our class brothers and sisters throughout the world. You are not our enemies. American working people are opposed to and want no part of any war launched by the power-mad oligarchy in a desperate attempt to solve the crisis of the capitalist system.

What you have watched—if you could stomach it—has been a grotesque and degrading spectacle. There was Trump himself, spewing hate, threats and resentments for nearly two hours. In Spielberg’s cinematic biography of Lincoln, there is a scene in which the great radical leader, Thaddeus Stevens, berates a contemptible reactionary congressman. He is, proclaimes Stevens, “a moral carcass … more reptile than man.” As I watched Trump bobbing his head up and down, licking his lizard-like lips and mouthing his idiocies, the words of Stevens came to mind.

And then there were the congressmen and congresswomen. With few exceptions, they vindicate the words of another great American, Mark Twain, who observed: “It could probably be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinctly native American criminal class except Congress.”

On one side of the aisle sat a pack of Republican fascists, leaping to their feet to grunt “USA, USA!”—the American equivalent of “Sieg Heil”—every time their Führer paused for breath.

On the other side sat the cowardly representatives of the fake opposition Democratic Party, hands folded in their laps, enduring nearly two hours of open insults, abuse and incitement from a man who called them “sick people,” “crazy,” “cheaters” who are “destroying our country.” And when it was over, they shuffled out of the chamber and handed the microphone to a former CIA officer, Governor Abigail Spanberger, who delivered a sleep-inducing rebuttal about “affordability” and “competent management.”

This is the state of American democracy in 2026. A fascist president and a compliant opposition. A ruling class united in its essentials—the defense of profit, the prosecution of war, the suppression of the working class—and divided only over which faction gets to manage the looting.

No one in that chamber spoke for you last night.

The fight against fascism, against imperialist war, against the dictatorship of the billionaire oligarchy, will not come from the marbled corridors of the Capitol. It will come from below—from the factories, the warehouses, the hospitals, the schools, the neighborhoods where working people actually live and labor. It will come from the independent political mobilization of the working class on the basis of a socialist program. Or it will not come at all.

Trump’s speech was a pack of outright lies. He declared that the economy is “roaring like never before” and that “prices are plummeting.” He boasted of gasoline prices and investment commitments conjured out of thin air, and recited a string of cherry-picked and manipulated figures on jobs, wages and tariffs, as if repetition could turn propaganda into reality. This was a salesman’s pitch, delivered on behalf of the financial oligarchy, aimed at obscuring the facts known to every worker: that basic necessities are unaffordable, and society is being looted while billionaires gorge themselves at the public trough.

The president—whose agents committed the murder of Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, whose administration justified the killings, whose vice president declared that Good’s death was “a tragedy of her own making”—stood before Congress and did not utter one syllable about them. Instead, he taunted the Democrats for refusing to stand when he demanded they affirm that “the first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.” 

He unleashed a torrent of racist lies, branding Minnesota’s Somali community as “pirates,” who have “pillaged” tens of billions from the American people. This is the language the Nazis used against Jews as they laid the groundwork for the Holocaust. Trump speaks of “corruption,” not in relation to the looting carried out daily by Wall Street, the Pentagon contractors and the billionaires who write the laws but to manufacture a pretext for raids, mass arrests and the federal occupation of cities. He threatened that what was done there will be done elsewhere.

Under the banner of the “Save America Act,” Trump demanded measures to bar “illegal aliens and others” from voting and claimed, without a shred of evidence, that “cheating is rampant.” This is a preemptive declaration that any election outcome that does not produce a Republican victory is illegitimate. It is a blueprint for voter suppression, intimidation and the criminalization of opposition, with Trump preparing to hold the coming elections under the barrel of a gun, monitored by ICE demanding identification like Gestapo agents in Nazi Germany. 

Trump’s address was also a celebration of imperialist gangsterism and the supposed “right” of American imperialism to invade, bomb, assassinate and abduct at will. In the course of his remarks he treated the military invasion of Venezuela—the killing of civilians and the abduction of its elected president—as a triumph to be applauded. He awarded a Medal of Honor to a helicopter pilot wounded in the raid and narrated the operation with the relish of a man recounting a hunting expedition. 

Under the standards established at the Nuremberg trials after World War II, this is an illegal “crime against peace,” comparable to the acts which sent the Nazi defendants to the gallows. But for the Trump regime, international law, the sovereignty of nations and the prohibition of wars of conquest are, as Secretary of State Marco Rubio put it, “abstractions,” to be brushed aside. Trump boasted that the United States has “very seriously damaged their fishing industry as well. No one wants to go fishing,” a sadistic and gloating reference to the murders of fishermen carried out in the Caribbean and the Pacific. 

Gaza was erased from existence. The word “Palestinian” did not appear in the speech. With American weapons and political and logistical support, tens of thousands of men, women and children have been killed; hospitals were destroyed; universities were leveled; a civilian population has been subjected to starvation and bombardment. Israel continues to carry out airstrikes in defiance of the ceasefire Trump claims to have brokered. Hundreds have been killed since the so-called truce. The genocide proceeds, and the president who enabled it has declared it resolved.

Trump spoke for more than 90 minutes before mentioning Iran, as if no one in the country has any right to know why or when the United States plans to launch a war. And when he finally mentioned Iran, his remarks were confined to a few sentences which explained nothing, while the largest US military deployment in the Middle East since 2003 is currently underway.

The Epstein files—a veritable “Who’s Who” of the US and international ruling class—were not mentioned. Despite the release of over 3 million pages of documents exposing the degenerate social universe of the American and international capitalist oligarchy—the billionaires, politicians, intellectuals, tech executives and royalty circulating through the orbit of a convicted child sex trafficker—the president, whose intimate, decades-long association with Epstein, is documented in photographs, flight logs and witness testimony, said nothing. On the day of Trump’s speech, an NPR investigation reported that the Justice Department had removed or withheld Epstein-related records that reference allegations involving Trump, underscoring the ongoing cover-up by the state apparatus.

The Epstein files expose a ruling class composed of degenerates. Neither party wants them discussed because both are implicated—Clinton and Trump, Summers and Bannon, liberal academics and fascist operatives.

And now we arrive at the Democrats. The Democratic Party is not an opposition party. It is a party of the American ruling class. Its function is to absorb and neutralize social opposition, block the independent political movement of the working class, and ensure that no challenge to capitalism emerges from below. 

The party’s official reply was delivered not by a senator or congressperson but by Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger. Always keeping their options open, neither Bernie Sanders nor Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez insisted on delivering the Democratic Party’s response to Trump.

The Democrats, predictably, presented an ex-CIA operative who invoked her intelligence credentials and warned that Trump was “ceding economic power and technological strength to China” and “bowing down to a Russian dictator.” The message was not aimed at working people but at the ruling class: We are reliable, we are serious, we can run the empire with greater competence and fewer public embarrassments. 

What Spanberger did not say is a self-indictment. She did not demand the abolition of ICE. She did not speak the names of Renée Good or Alex Pretti. She did not denounce the invasion of Venezuela or the genocide in Gaza. She did not challenge the trillion-dollar military budget or the assault on social programs. 

The Democrats do not object to the machine of repression and war. They object only to the crudeness with which Trump operates it. 

In order to establish a dictatorship, Trump does not need to physically smash the Democratic politicians. Significantly, when one Democratic congressman, Al Green, held up a sign denouncing Trump’s racism, he was dragged from the chamber by security without any objection from his party colleagues.

The Democrats fear that if they do anything that undermines the obsolete procedures of congressional decorum, it will encourage popular opposition and mass working class action that they cannot control, and which will prove threatening to the capitalist system.

The working class must speak for itself

Governor Spanberger began her remarks by stating that the US was based on the idea that the people could “band together to demand better of their government.” 

That’s false. Thomas Jefferson, no coward, actually wrote that when confronted with an oppressive government, “it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government.” The Founders did not “demand better” of King George III. They declared independence and waged an eight-year revolutionary war. That is the tradition that should inspire the working class today.

Two hundred and fifty years later, the demand of the working class must not be that Trump or the Democrats “do better.” The time has come to break with the politics of self-delusion. 

The central lesson of last night’s spectacle is that the working class has no voice in the political system of American capitalism. Neither party represents your interests. Neither party will defend your rights. The entire framework of official politics exists to prevent the working class from recognizing itself as a class, from organizing itself independently, and from fighting for its own interests against the class that exploits it.

This must change. The working class must speak for itself.

The Socialist Equality Party calls for:

The abolition of ICE and the entire apparatus of immigration terror. Immigrant workers are not the enemy of the American working class. They are part of the international working class. The scapegoating of immigrants is the oldest weapon in the arsenal of the ruling class—the deliberate cultivation of racial and national divisions to prevent the unity of the exploited against the exploiters. We demand full citizenship rights for all immigrants.

The murders of Renée Good and Alex Pretti must be independently investigated by committees of the working class. Those responsible—from the agents who pulled the triggers to the officials who gave the orders—must be brought to justice.

An immediate end to all imperialist military operations. Withdraw every soldier from the Middle East. End the blockade of Cuba. End the occupation of Venezuela. Stop the preparations for war against Iran. Not one dollar, not one life for the predatory interests of American imperialism. The trillion-dollar military budget must be redirected to meet the social needs of the working class—healthcare, housing, education, infrastructure.

The expropriation of the oligarchy. The concentration of $7.8 trillion in the hands of 905 billionaires, while millions lack healthcare, housing, and food expresses the logic of the capitalist system. The banks, the giant corporations, the hedge funds, the tech monopolies must be placed under public ownership and democratic control by the working class. The obscene fortunes of the oligarchy—accumulated through exploitation, speculation, fraud and the impoverishment of the majority—must be expropriated and used to fund a massive expansion of social programs.

The reversal of all cuts to social programs and the establishment of social rights. Restore every dollar stolen from Medicaid. Restore food stamp eligibility. Guarantee universal healthcare, free public education through to the university level, affordable housing, and a secure retirement for every worker. These are not utopian demands. The wealth exists, created by the labor of the working class, but now hoarded by the ruling class. The task is to take it back.

The building of rank-and-file committees in every factory, workplace and neighborhood. The apparatus of the trade unions, long ago transformed into adjuncts of corporate management, will not lead this fight. Their institutional interests are bound up with the preservation of the very system that is destroying the working class. Workers must organize themselves independently, through democratically elected rank-and-file committees that answer to no one but the workers themselves. These committees must be connected across industries, across state lines, across national borders, through the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC)—the organizational framework for the unification of the struggles of the international working class.

The preparation of the conditions for a general strike. The crisis of American democracy cannot be resolved through the ballot box of a rigged political system controlled by two capitalist parties, both funded by the same oligarchs. The power of the working class resides in its labor—in its collective capacity to stop production, to halt the flow of profits, to bring the machinery of exploitation to a standstill. The political general strike is a powerful weapon of the working class, and the conditions for its deployment are maturing rapidly. The task is to build the organizational and political foundations now.

International working class unity. The working class is an international class. Capital operates globally; the working class must organize globally. The same corporations that exploit workers in Detroit exploit workers in Monterrey, in Shenzhen, in Dhaka, in Berlin. The same imperialist system that wages war in the Middle East impoverishes workers on every continent. The struggle against Trump and the American oligarchy is inseparable from the struggle of workers in every country against the world capitalist system. National divisions, racial divisions, ethnic divisions, religious divisions—All are weapons of the ruling class, deployed to prevent the one thing it fears above all else: the unity of the exploited.

The crisis of the working class is, in the final analysis, a crisis of revolutionary leadership. The objective conditions for a mass movement of the working class are not only present—They are intensifying with a speed that astonishes even those who have long anticipated them. What is lacking is the conscious political leadership that can transform the mounting anger, the spreading resistance, the growing recognition that the system itself is broken, into a unified movement for the socialist transformation of society.

In 1775, Tom Paine proclaimed in the immortal pamphlet, Common Sense, which inspired the American Revolution: “We have it in our power to begin the world over again.”

The new world will be socialist. The power that will build it is the working class.

Join the Socialist Equality Party.

Build rank-and-file committees in your workplace and your neighborhood.

Build the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees.

Read the World Socialist Web Site (wsws.org) every day.

The future belongs not to the oligarchs and their political servants but to the international working class.

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Union bureaucracy sabotages the Kaiser Permanente strike

On Monday afternoon, the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals abruptly shut down the month-long strike by 31,000 healthcare workers at Kaiser Permanente in California and Hawaii. There was no semblance of democratic discussion, no new contract and not even a tentative agreement. The UNAC/UHCP bureaucracy simply cited unexplained “significant movement at the bargaining table” and ordered workers back to work.

Once again a critical struggle of the working class has been sold out by the trade union bureaucracy.

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The shutdown of the strike was a deliberate act of sabotage, not only against Kaiser healthcare workers but against the broader movement emerging in the country. The strike was shut down the same day that 500 Kaiser operating engineers were to have joined the strike.

UNAC/UHCP ended the strike right when it was on the verge of gaining over 100,000 reinforcements from workers across California. Sixty-five thousand teachers and classified staff in the Los Angeles Unified School District have authorized strikes in the face of sweeping budget cuts. Forty thousand graduate and academic workers in the University of California system, members of the United Auto Workers, have voted to strike. A unified movement would have laid the basis for a powerful strike wave across the West Coast, encouraging similar action throughout the country.

The bureaucracy could not allow this because it would threaten their financial and social interests. Other similar betrayals have taken place over the last several days. Over the weekend, union officials in New York City shut down the final holdouts of a six-week strike by nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian, where nurses rejected an earlier deal the union put to a vote in violation of its own bylaws.

In California, union officials ended a four-day strike by 6,000 San Francisco teachers earlier this month. The city, awash in cash from the artificial intelligence boom, is pleading poverty for public schools. Layoffs were announced almost immediately after the strike ended, with the district citing declining enrollment.

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Similar patterns are evident elsewhere. The United Steelworkers pushed through a sellout agreement covering 30,000 refinery workers, setting the stage for an isolated strike at BP Whiting in Indiana, where management is demanding deeper concessions. As with the previous contract reached at the start of the Ukraine war, this is a war contract. Its purpose is to keep fuel flowing as the US military wages war against Iran.

Union officials in Minneapolis and across the country have directly opposed strike action against ICE raids. Teachers unions have instructed members not to encourage or participate in student walkouts protesting deportations. The UAW warns that the right to strike is at risk under the Trump administration, yet has proposed no action to defend it.

This conduct flows from the fundamental social and economic interests of the bureaucracy, not merely from a conservative outlook. Over the past four decades, even as strike activity was driven to historic lows, spending on union officials expanded dramatically. US unions spend hundreds of millions of dollars, drawn from workers’ dues and invested in the stock market, on six-figure salaries, luxury travel and a host of other privileges.

Their hostility to the working class is bound up with entrenched anticommunism, nationalism and deep connections to corporate politicians. Historically, the Democratic Party has been their principal vehicle. Increasingly, however, sections of the bureaucracy have aligned themselves with Trump, drawn by their support for “America First” policies and economic nationalism. 

*****

A clear rule has emerged: the more powerful the objective position of workers and the more a broader movement begins to develop, the more openly the union bureaucracy intervenes to sabotage it. No amount of “pressure” can alter the social interests of this layer any more than pressure can induce corporate management to abandon the capitalist profit motive.

Workers therefore must organize themselves to confront and override this sabotage. The task is not the reform of the apparatus but its removal from control over the struggle and the restoration of power to the shop floor. This is a necessary step toward establishing the political independence and freedom of initiative of the working class, linking immediate contract struggles with the fight against fascism, war and social inequality.

2.  Cuban worker describes hellish conditions, appeals to US workers to force an end to embargo

The humanitarian situation in Cuba has undergone a catastrophic decline in the three weeks following Donald Trump’s January 29 executive order declaring the island a “national security threat” and threatening tariffs on any nation supplying it with oil. Washington has effectively turned its long-standing embargo into an overt attempt to starve the population into submission.

While US officials discuss allowing only “small quantities” of fuel to prevent total infrastructure collapse, the White House demanded last week “very dramatic changes” in Cuba. The US Supreme Court, moreover, is considering cases demanding Havana pay billions in compensation to US corporations like ExxonMobil for key ports, plantations and other infrastructure expropriated six decades ago.

In this dire context, the World Socialist Web Site spoke with María, a 32-year-old worker and single mother in Matanzas (“María” is a pseudonym used to protect her identity.) Her harrowing testimony exposes the reality of “maximum pressure” and highlights the necessity of an independent mobilization of the international working class to break the siege.

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María describes a reality that exceeds the horror reported in the corporate media. Basic necessities like cooking gas have vanished entirely; many now rely on increasingly expensive charcoal or even broken furniture for firewood, she explains. While she views Trump’s policies as “asphyxiating,” she also holds the Cuban government responsible for the country’s debacle.

“I am 32 years old,” she continues, “I belong to a generation that went to university with enthusiasm and professional ambitions. The Cuban people are tired of being censored, without freedom of expression, afraid to speak freely about the fact that we live in a failed state.” The pain is sharpened by the fact that “Our friends and colleagues are political prisoners for peacefully disagreeing. The country has been on the road to disaster for years. This did not start with Trump, although it has worsened under him. … Nobody wants to stay here,” she says, noting that the sector of society that still trusts in the government is tiny and unrepresentative.

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The crisis has manifested in widespread hunger, including among children. María confirms that most families cannot afford three meals a day and survive on low-quality food with almost no protein. Often, a child’s only breakfast is an instant soft drink, as even bread has become scarce.

This malnutrition is compounded by outbreaks of respiratory and mosquito-borne diseases, which strike a population with weakened immune systems. In schools, meals are often reduced to a single boiled vegetable or a thin broth. María notes that a single bag of milk for her daughter costs half of her monthly salary.

*****

According to María, the Cuban government maintains a total monopoly on domestic media, while internet content is often manipulated by various political interests. Cubans are acutely aware that President Díaz-Canel and other officials frequently lie or provide incoherent data. During recent epidemics, the government denied the crisis even as people died in hospitals, choosing to minimize the crisis until the last possible moment.

Despite the misery, a “palpable” climate of fear prevents many from speaking out. Workers contacted by the WSWS reported being interrogated for hours, extorted, or threatened with jail for speaking out about social conditions.

*****

When asked about appealing to the American working class rather than the Trump administration, María notes that the ideological situation is complex. Decades of “indoctrination to remain silent, ideological disorganization, the lack of coherent political leaders, and the primitive survival mode” have left many Cubans unaware that the American people could offer real support.

But the thought that the American working class could mobilize to end the embargo is “moving,” she added, noting that most Cubans feel they do not matter to anyone.

María expresses interest in the fact that millions in the US have protested against the genocide in Gaza and that workers have the objective power to stop wars by mobilizing independently to stop weapons from reaching Israel. The same power could be used to supply Cuba with fuel, medicine, food and other vital goods and services and, ultimately, to end the blockade entirely.

*****

In the United States, workers instinctively recognize the need for solidarity. A New York teacher interviewed by the World Socialist Web Site stressed that more people need to be informed about the situation in Cuba, though many are currently pulled in different directions by crises in Gaza, Venezuela and Sudan. She explains: “I feel like the people that want to help are pulled in different directions.”

*****

A planned “Convoy to Cuba,” involving humanitarian organizations and figures like Greta Thunberg who supported aid flotillas to Gaza, is set to deliver humanitarian aid on March 21. Such efforts are courageous challenges to imperialist aggression, and the World Socialist Web Site insists that workers internationally must actively defend any such convoy against attempts to block it.

However, the limitations of such initiatives to overcome a decades-long embargo by the world’s dominant power must be recognized. The continuous provision of food, fuel and medicine requires the organized intervention of the international working class:

  • Oil, logistics and transport workers, including dockworkers and maritime sailors, must use their control over production and distribution to further the shipment of supplies to Cuba.

  • Port workers must also refuse to load or unload military and other ships enforcing the embargo.

  • Workers across the Americas and Europe must coordinate these actions through rank-and-file committees.

The International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees provides the framework for this global struggle. Only on this basis can the Cuban working class begin to chart a path out of the nightmare created by the crimes of US imperialism and settle accounts with the island’s bourgeois regime. 

3. UK Labour government in meltdown at arrest of Peter Mandelson over Epstein connections, as election defeat looms

Mandelson’s career is intertwined with the transformation of the Labour Party into an instrument of finance capital and an architect of illegal wars and imperialist plunder. Having now resigned five times from various positions—including being twice forced from office during the Blair years due to earlier scandals—he was repeatedly welcomed back to the summit of political power, including by Starmer. 

This was because, more than anyone else, Mandelson epitomized the New Labour agenda of serving every requirement of the money-mad banks and corporations. As this venal figure declared after New Labour took office, they were “intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich.”

For the working class, the central issue is not holding Mandelson or Mountbatten-Windsor to account through parliamentary debates, humble addresses, or official inquiries—including the public inquiry advocated by Your Party leader Jeremy Corbyn. 

The fundamental task is the building of a new, independent political party of the working class and a decisive break with the entire parliamentary set-up and all its rotten parties. It is the capitalist system they all defend that enabled the financial oligarchy—and figures such as Mandelson and Mountbatten-Windsor—to thrive and profit.

4. Actor Robert Duvall (1931-2026): A realist who went beyond his own conceptions

Duvall’s greatest strength, by all accounts and on the basis of viewing his film work, was his attraction and indeed dedication to psychological and, in a more limited way, social truth, as he construed it. His intensity in that effort seems unquestionable. Duvall worked and studied indefatigably. He was known to “inhabit” his roles with great ferocity and single-mindedness.

He held the firm belief that “research, research, research” was essential to crafting a script, he told students at Hollins University in 2022. “Immerse yourself in the subject matter and then put forth something that you love. I haven’t written that many screenplays, but sometimes I just sit down and start writing and just see where it goes. I go from A to B to C to D and just follow the logic of the script.” Duvall directed himself in The Apostle, about a rural evangelical preacher, based on his own script.

5. Pentagon gives Anthropic 3 days to drop AI safeguards or face blacklisting 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei until Friday evening to grant the military unfettered access to Anthropic’s Claude artificial intelligence system or face either blacklisting as a “supply chain risk” or compulsion under the Defense Production Act. The ultimatum was delivered in a tense meeting at the Pentagon on Tuesday morning, attended by six senior defense officials, including the department’s top lawyer.

On the same day, Elon Musk’s xAI signed a deal with the Pentagon to deploy its fascistic Grok AI system on classified military networks, thereby breaking Claude’s exclusive position on classified networks. xAI agreed without restriction to an “all lawful purposes” standard, the exact formulation Anthropic has resisted.

The confrontation with Anthropic was triggered by revelations that Claude was used—without Anthropic’s prior knowledge—in the illegal January 3 US military assault on Caracas, Venezuela, in which between 83 and 100 people were killed and President Nicolás Maduro was abducted. As the World Socialist Web Site documented at the time, the assault was the culmination of a long-planned imperialist intervention driven by the US ruling class’s determination to control Venezuelan oil and reassert hegemony over Latin America.

The dispute between Anthropic and the Trump administration is being presented in the corporate media as a clash between “AI safety” and “national security.” In reality, it is a conflict within the American ruling class over the terms under which the technology giants will place their most powerful AI systems at the unrestricted disposal of US imperialism’s wars of aggression. 

*****

Claude is widely regarded as the most capable frontier AI model in the world. Claude Code—Anthropic’s AI coding tool—has transformed software engineering to such a degree that their own head of product, Boris Cherny, recently warned that AI will make 2026 “a painful year” for software engineers, predicting the job title will “start to go away.” Engineers at major firms report AI writing the entirety of their code.

The Pentagon is not threatening Anthropic because it can afford to lose Claude. It is threatening Anthropic precisely because it cannot—because the most powerful AI system on the planet is indispensable to its plans for AI-driven warfare, and because the precedent of any company imposing conditions on the war machine is intolerable to the state.

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Anthropic’s post-meeting statement confirmed the dynamic. “During the conversation, Dario expressed appreciation for the Department’s work and thanked the Secretary for his service,” the company said. “We continued good-faith conversations about our usage policy to ensure Anthropic can continue to support the government’s national security mission in line with what our models can reliably and responsibly do.” The language—expressing gratitude to the man who had just threatened to destroy the company—is the unmistakable posture of a corporation preparing to capitulate. 

*****

The corporate press has largely presented Anthropic as a courageous company standing up to military overreach. This narrative is a fabrication.

Anthropic has pursued military integration aggressively over the past two years. Most significantly, in November 2024, it partnered with Palantir—the surveillance contractor whose entire business model is built on serving the US military and intelligence apparatus—and Amazon Web Services to deploy Claude on classified networks. In June 2025, it launched “Claude Gov” for national security agencies. The following month, it celebrated its awarding of a $200 million Pentagon contract. And last August, it offered Claude to government agencies for $1 to undercut competitors and win market share.

The company’s “red lines” are remarkably narrow. Its Acceptable Use Policy prohibits “fully autonomous weapons” and “mass domestic surveillance of Americans.” These are not prohibitions on targeted killing, foreign surveillance, drone targeting with a human “in the loop,” or planning assaults on sovereign nations, the very operation that triggered this crisis. The policy explicitly reserves the right to negotiate exceptions for government customers. The “red lines” are not lines at all; they are opening positions in a negotiation.

Any assessment of Anthropic’s independence must also reckon with who owns it. Amazon—whose AWS built and continues to provide the CIA’s primary cloud infrastructure—has invested $8 billion. Google has invested approximately $3 billion. Microsoft and Nvidia committed a combined $15 billion. Early funding included $500 million from Sam Bankman-Fried’s Alameda Research—invested using misappropriated FTX customer funds, as prosecutors established at Bankman-Fried’s fraud trial, in one of the largest financial swindles in American history. The notion that a company embedded within this web of military-intelligence capital represents an independent ethical actor is a fantasy.

*****

The confrontation with the Pentagon reveals the terminal limit of this liberal bourgeois position: when the state demands unconditional submission, corporate ethics and philanthropic pledges are powerless. 

*****

The announcement Tuesday that the Pentagon will begin using Grok AI on classified military networks, clearly timed to coincide with Amodei’s meeting with Hegseth, is an unmistakable sign that the Trump administration intends to utilize AI in the service of the most extreme surveillance and repression of democratic rights.

As Lawfare has documented, Grok has a “documented history of biased, misleading, antisemitic, and harmful outputs.” The record is extraordinary. In July 2025, Grok called itself “MechaHitler,” praised Adolf Hitler, recommended a second Holocaust to users with neo-Nazi profiles, deployed the antisemitic phrase “every damn time,” and blamed “Jewish executives” for “forced diversity” in the entertainment industry. xAI dismissed the episode as an “unintended update.”

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The Pentagon’s demand that Anthropic drop its prohibition on “mass domestic surveillance of Americans” must be understood in the context of what the Trump administration is already building. ICE has deployed Clearview AI facial recognition under a $3.75 million contract. Palantir—Anthropic’s own partner on classified systems—operates the $30 million “ImmigrationOS” platform providing “granular tracking” of immigrants. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has “significantly expanded the operational scope” of facial recognition and AI surveillance. The fascistic Trump regime is already using AI for mass surveillance; the Pentagon’s demand is that the most powerful AI model be made available for the apparatus of a police state and escalating war abroad.

6. Measles cases in the US surge past 1,000 in 2026

The United States has reached a catastrophic milestone in the resurgence of preventable infectious diseases, exposing the devastating consequences of a systemic assault on public health infrastructure. According to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the nation has already confirmed 982 measles cases in 2026, while CNN’s measles tracker reports an even higher toll of 1,030 infections.

The US did not breach the 1,000-case threshold last year until May, putting the country on a rapid trajectory to greatly surpass 2025’s three-decade high of 2,281 infections. This is not merely an epidemiological failure, but a historic regression in which a highly contagious virus, officially eliminated more than a quarter-century ago, is being allowed to rampage through the population. 

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The CDC has all but been left rudderless in a storm of infectious disease and politics. This is not incompetence; the absence of leadership is not a failure of policy but the intended policy itself—to bury the CDC in the quagmire and make it impossible to fulfill its mission.

The agency is now helmed on an acting basis by NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, a co-author of the notorious Great Barrington Declaration—the herd-immunity-through-mass-infection manifesto widely condemned by public health experts as a blueprint for mass death—who has entirely failed to flag South Carolina’s systematic underreporting or demand transparent hospitalization data, signaling a tacit federal endorsement of the state’s obfuscation.

The geography of this crisis highlights the social terrain where vaccine refusal has been deliberately cultivated. South Carolina has emerged as the undisputed epicenter, recording 973 cases in a massive outbreak centered in Spartanburg County. As the measles crisis explodes across the state, public health officials are engaged in dangerous obfuscation of the disease’s true severity. South Carolina does not require its hospitals to report measles-related admissions to the state. Consequently, the state is reporting a staggeringly low hospitalization rate of just 2 percent, or a mere 20 admissions. 

*****

South Carolina state epidemiologist Dr. Linda Bell has openly admitted that the agency is “not getting an accurate picture at all” of how the virus is ravaging the community, yet she simultaneously declared that the state has not even considered adding measles hospitalizations to its mandatory reporting list. This bureaucratic negligence is compounded by intense political pressure from right-wing state legislators and corporate health systems that are collectively pandering to a vocal, vaccine-resistant minority. Doctors treating patients on the front lines are left entirely in the dark, forced to rely on Facebook posts and local rumors to learn about severe local complications like pneumonia, dehydration or life-threatening encephalitis. 

This complete lack of federal oversight aligns seamlessly with the broader Trump-Kennedy administration agenda of normalizing mass infection and downplaying the deadly realities of vaccine-preventable diseases. By allowing states like South Carolina to hide the true extent of this outbreak, the CDC further erodes whatever fragile public trust remains in its authority, proving once again that the health and safety of the population have been entirely subordinated to anti-science political expediency and vaccine disinformation—and the results are now manifesting in communities across the country.

*****

The current public health crisis represents a tragic and deliberate reversal of one of the greatest scientific and social achievements of the 20th century. The combination of decades of sustained public health initiatives, comprehensive school immunization laws, and the removal of financial barriers through the Vaccines for Children program culminated in the historic elimination of endemic measles in the United States in 2000. These advances were not merely medical breakthroughs; they were monumental social gains won through collective effort, demonstrating that human progress and science could conquer ancient, deadly scourges.

Today, these hard-fought protections are being systematically dismantled by a ruling class and a social order in advanced decay. Having normalized mass death and debilitation during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic to protect corporate profits, the political establishment now treats disease prevention as an unacceptable impediment to profit-making.

7. IMF chief hails Sri Lanka “success story” as its austerity agenda deepens social crisis

The three-day visit of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva, who repeatedly hailed Sri Lanka as a “success story” under the IMF’s Extended Fund Facility program, has once again laid bare the class character of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna/National People’s Power (JVP/NPP) government. 

According to media reports, the purpose of the IMF visit was to “assess” the destruction caused by Cyclone Ditwah, which killed around 1,000 people, devastated homes and critical infrastructure, and affected more than 2.3 million people last December. The International Labour Organization has estimated the economic losses at $US16 billion, or approximately 16 percent of GDP.

Nearly three months after the disaster, neither the JVP/NPP government nor the major international powers have provided anything remotely close to the resources required to rebuild the shattered lives of thousands of families or restore devastated infrastructure. Anger is mounting among working people and the rural poor over the government’s failure to deliver adequate relief, including permanent housing for families who lost everything in cyclone-triggered floods and landslides.

Georgieva made clear that the devastation created by Cyclone Ditwah cannot justify any deviation from the IMF’s harsh austerity program. “IMF programs are designed to be flexible when circumstances change,” she said. But this “flexibility” operates strictly within the boundaries of debt sustainability and creditor confidence. Disaster relief must be administered without undermining fiscal targets. The government’s 2026 budget, prepared before the cyclone struck, will remain intact. There will be no policy reversal.

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For working people, the economic consequences are becoming catastrophic. Although headline inflation has dropped, prices of essential goods and services remain far above pre-crisis (i.e., 2022) levels. VAT increases and other indirect taxes are consuming a larger share of household income. Electricity, water, fuel, and cooking gas prices have risen sharply over the past two years under IMF-mandated adjustments. Real wages, however, have not recovered to their pre-2022 levels, and the government has told public sector workers there will be no wage increases.

Public hospitals continue to report severe shortages of essential medicines, equipment, chemicals, and staff. Schools, particularly in rural areas, struggle with overcrowding and inadequate resources and teaching staff. Many families remain heavily indebted after years of high interest rates. According to a World Bank survey conducted late last year, almost one third of the population (32.4 percent) lives below or just above the poverty line of $US2 per day. 

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The working class and rural masses are not responsible for the country’s foreign debts, which are the product of decades of borrowing to fund tax concessions for the wealthy, vast military spending, corrupt mega-projects, and integration into volatile global capital markets.

The so-called economic success story is built on the backs of working people. Only their independent mobilization, based on a socialist and internationalist perspective, can offer a genuine alternative to the austerity now being prescribed as the future of the working population.

8. At meeting to defend public health, Sri Lanka’s health workers express solidarity with counterparts in US

The meeting was organized as part of the Health Workers Action Committee's campaign to advance a socialist strategy to defend the country’s collapsing public health system and oppose the government’s austerity measures dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). It was held against the backdrop of more than a month of protests by 20,000 doctors demanding the restoration of allowances and the resolution of long-standing grievances.

Around 90 participants attended the meeting, including doctors, nurses and other health workers, as well as youth and workers from several other sectors. The broad composition of the audience underscored growing concern over the deepening crisis in the public health sector amid sweeping budget cuts, staff shortages and deteriorating hospital conditions.

Speakers addressed the mounting pressures faced by health workers and the crisis in public health system, linking them to the IMF austerity program being implemented by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna/ National People’s Power (JVP/NPP) government. Government austerity, the speakers explain, threatens to dismantle the island’s free public health system, which has long been regarded as a major social gain of the working class.

9.  Demand the immediate release of Communist Party Marxist-Kenya leader Booker Omole!

The Central Committee of the Communist Party Marxist Kenya (CPM-K) has reported that its secretary general, Booker Ngesa Omole, was violently abducted on Monday in Isiolo town by the Kenya Police Service.

In a public statement February 24, the party wrote: “This was not an arrest. This was not lawful detention. This was a kidnapping.” Omole was “beaten severely. Tortured. Brutalized to near death. His tooth was broken. His finger was cut with a pen knife.” They state that after the assault he was “dumped at Mlolongo Police Station,” a facility associated with extrajudicial kidnappings and killings. His phone signal, they report, was traced there.

The party posted a photo of Omole in a Mlolongo Police Station cell February 25, explaining that he is being held unlawfully, “and the police have refused all access to him. No lawyers. No comrades. No family.”

The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) denounces Omole’s abduction and demands that the Kenyan regime release him immediately.

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The repression against the CPM-K is part of the escalating violence of the Ruto regime since he came to power in 2022. In 2023, Ruto’s first year in power, security forces killed at least 31 demonstrators. In June 2024, during the Gen Z protests against Ruto’s International Monetary Fund (IMF) Finance Bill that sought to impose savage tax hikes, police killed more than 60. In 2025, at least 50 were killed in protests and hundreds injured.  

The abduction of Omole takes place amid an escalating campaign of repression against opposition figures in the run-up to next year’s elections. Weeks ago, police violently dispersed a rally in Kitengela organized by the former and expelled the general secretary of ODM, Senator Edwin Sifuna, firing tear gas and live rounds at thousands of supporters. One of the victims, 28-year-old Vincent Ayomo, was shot in the eye as he crossed the road from work and another 50 attendees were injured.

This deepening turn to repression unfolds against a backdrop of extreme social inequality and mounting economic hardship. Oxfam reports show that nearly half of Kenya’s population lives in extreme poverty, surviving on meager daily incomes, even as wealth accumulates at the very top. A minuscule layer of the super-rich has amassed obscene fortunes: the richest 125 individuals now control more wealth than 77 percent of the population—over 42 million people.

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The attacks on the CPM-K, the abductions, arbitrary detentions and cross-border renditions to neighboring Uganda under brutal dictator Yoweri Museveni, carried out by the Kenyan government, are political preparations for far broader assaults on the democratic rights of the population as a whole. What is being tested against one organization today will be used tomorrow against striking workers, protesting youth and impoverished communities resisting austerity.

These events lay bare the grave dangers confronting the masses as social tensions intensify and the ruling elite closes ranks in defense of its wealth and power. 

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The turn to open repression in Kenya is being emboldened by the example set by would-be dictator Donald Trump in the United States. Thousands of armed ICE agents have been sent into major urban centers, while detention centres have been built across the country, with 66,000 people held in immigration custody—the highest level in US history. These crackdowns have left two American protesters killed.

In France, President Emmanuel Macron and the political establishment have exploited the death of fascist activist Quentin Deranque—following clashes around an event addressed by Rima Hassan of La France Insoumise (France Unbowed)—to whip up a reactionary campaign against the left. Backed by the neo-fascist National Rally (RN) and the Socialist Party, a broad political front is seeking to criminalize opposition and prepare the ground for an authoritarian shift in advance of next year’s presidential elections. As with Charlie Kirk in the US, the death of a fascist is being weaponized to strengthen the repressive powers of the state and legitimize far-right forces.

In South Africa, the African National Congress (ANC) government is deploying the army into townships under the pretext of restoring order. It follows the mass killings of protesters in Tanzania in the aftermath of last year’s elections, where thousands were reported killed or disappeared amid a brutal post-election crackdown, and the ongoing suppression of opposition forces in Uganda under President Yoweri Museveni.

These developments are expressions of a global crisis of capitalism. From Washington to Paris, Pretoria to Nairobi, ruling elites confront deepening inequality, mass anger and political instability. Their common response is to fortify the police state apparatus, promote far-right forces and normalize violence against social opposition.

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The ICFI has well-documented and irreconcilable political differences with the CPM-K, which have been clearly presented in the World Socialist Web Site. But it unequivocally opposes this brutal attack on the organization’s general secretary, demands Omole’s immediate release, and calls for an end to all state threats and repressive acts against the CPM-K. 

10. An historic attack on citizenship rights: Labor blocks entry to Australians interned in Syria

It is now clear that the Albanese Labor government, urged on by Australia’s political and media establishment as a whole, is doing everything it can to prevent the return home of Australian citizens—women and children—who have been incarcerated in primitive concentration camps in Syria since 2019. 

This constitutes a historic assault on the core democratic right of citizenship, without which no other political or civil rights can effectively be exercised—including the rights to vote, reside, politically communicate, travel, work and access health, education and welfare services. It takes away the basic right to challenge government decisions, including arbitrary detention without trial.

To strip a person of Australian citizenship constitutes punishment “tantamount to civil death,” according to the High Court, Australia’s supreme court, which ruled in 2022 that citizenship cannot be revoked by ministerial decree.

The most immediate targets are 11 women and 23 children—all Australian citizens with valid passports—who were prevented from returning to Australia last week because of alleged various links to killed or imprisoned Islamic State (ISIS) fighters. 

The 11 families had left the Al Roj internment camp in northeastern Syria with plans to travel to Beirut and then Australia, only to be turned around 50 kilometres into their journey. Many of the children were born in detention and have known no other life, deprived of essential care and education, resulting in illnesses and deaths. 

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While the Labor government has denied media reports that it directly blocked the repatriation of the women and children by telling Syrian authorities they were unwanted “terrorists,” Albanese has doubled down on his declarations that the government will do nothing to assist them, even if it is “unfortunate” for the children. 

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Every day sees this assault taken to a new level. Yesterday, the opposition Coalition demanded that the government join hands with it to make it a criminal offense to help Australians “linked to terrorist hotspots or terrorist organizations” return home. This would even include charities such as Save the Children. 

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Last week, the Murdoch media’s Australian published an editorial insisting that lack of legality should be no obstacle to indefinite imprisonment. If the government could find no legal basis to bar the re-entry of the families, “a way (unspecified) must be found for them to be detained and evaluated for an extended period in a secure facility such as the one that already exists on Christmas Island.” The editorial said the women and children must be “effectively deradicalized before there is any chance they will be set loose on Australian soil.”

Christmas Island, a remote Australian territory in the Indian Ocean, hosts one of the notorious “offshore” detention camps in which successive Coalition and Labor governments have indefinitely incarcerated asylum seekers in violation of international and domestic law. Now that “black hole” regime is being proposed for Australian citizens who are deemed by a government and ASIO to require “deradicalization.”

This is a sweeping proposition, embracing some kind of brainwashing. It goes beyond those accused of sympathy for Islamic fundamentalism, without being convicted of any crime. It goes beyond Palestinians and anti-Gaza genocide demonstrators who have been falsely accused of antisemitism.

Such “deradicalization” language, linked to references to threats to “our way of life” or “Australian values,” can be used to justify barring entry or incarcerating anyone—including Australian citizens—who is designated by a government to be a “radical” enemy of the existing capitalist economic and political order.

Historically, there has never been a constitutionally protected right to citizenship in Australia. In fact, there is no bill of rights guaranteeing any basic right, including the right to vote. Instead, the 1901 Constitution, a British colonial era document adopted by the emerging Australian capitalist class, treated residents as “British subjects.” 

That designation continued until after World War II, when the Chifley Labor government introduced the 1948 Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948. Under this legislation, birthright (jus soli) citizenship made anyone born in Australia a citizen. That principle was overturned by the Hawke Labor government’s legislation in 1986, which mandated that at least one parent be a citizen or permanent resident. 

That marked a historic shift from basing citizenship on birth to requiring allegiance, or “loyalty to Australia,” and supposed shared values, together with a “pledge of commitment” from immigrants. Today that commitment, amended several times, requires new citizens to pledge their “loyalty to Australia and its people, whose democratic beliefs I share, whose rights and liberties I respect and whose laws I will uphold and obey.”

Yet these “rights and liberties,” as far as they ever existed, are being increasingly torn up.

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The intensifying saga surrounding the women and children trapped in Syria shows that the most basic legal and democratic rights, even citizenship itself, are threatened in the hands of the ruling class and its political servants. The defense of all such rights depends on the development of a mass movement of the working class, guided by a socialist perspective for the total reorganization of society on the basis of genuine democracy and equality, with full rights for all people, regardless of their country of birth.

11. Militarization of Australian universities intensifies: More than $200 million in defence contracts since 2024

The expanding contracts with universities feed into the next phase of the AUKUS military pact between the US, UK and Australia, targeting China.

12. Two Pennsylvania students remain imprisoned 4 days after anti-ICE protest as “Quakertown 5” face felony charges

Five teenagers arrested last Friday after police attacked an anti-ICE student rally in Quakertown, Pennsylvania are now facing felony aggravated assault charges, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Notably, no charges have been filed against Quakertown Police Chief Scott McElree, who was captured on video in plain clothes grabbing students by their shirt collars and placing a teenage girl in a chokehold.

The Inquirer reported that the five teens “face charges of aggravated assault and related crimes,” citing two people with knowledge of the case who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the ongoing investigation.

More than four days after the police assault, the cops have refused to release the teens’ names, ages, or specific charges. Despite tracking the students after they left the campus on Friday, police have refused to provide a detailed timeline of events leading up to the attack. They have withheld body camera footage and offered only a brief statement claiming police intervened after students were “throwing snowballs” and “blocking traffic.”

The paper confirmed that only children were arrested during the incident, contradicting earlier reports that an adult had been taken into custody.

A 17-year-old girl who attended the protest but was not arrested told the Inquirer that students were speaking with a uniformed officer when Chief McElree “barged onto the sidewalk” and grabbed a teenage boy by the back of the neck.

The students did not know the man in plain clothes was the police chief. “All the kids thought he was a counter protester. So everyone started to protect their friends.” 

She said she saw McElree throw one student to the ground and choke another. At least three students suffered significant injuries. One student’s nose was broken while a separate student suffered a chin injury that required stitches.

The teen recorded part of the encounter. “It was really scary, because it was a group of kids versus this really angry man.”

The students were held for over 72 hours before appearing before a judge Tuesday morning in a more than three-hour hearing that was closed to the public. Prosecutors declined to answer reporters’ questions after leaving the courtroom.

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These teenagers now face the possibility of spending years in prison, a significant portion of their young lives, while the billionaire president and his criminal administration continue to cover up the murders of American citizens in Minnesota, prepare for illegal war against Iran, carry out deadly murders in the Caribbean and Pacific, and suppress evidence of their own criminal conduct exposed in the Epstein files.

13. UAW presidential candidate Will Lehman calls for solidarity with Turkish miners’ wildcat strike

The miners have halted production to demand payment of unpaid wages, enforcement of promotion rights, retroactive contract benefits, guaranteed seniority and severance protections, and genuine health and safety measures.

14.. United Kingdom: Royal Mail workers in Keighley, West Yorkshire: “They are trying to kill off the postal service”

Postal workers at the Keighley delivery office in West Yorkshire spoke out against intolerable working conditions, mail backlogs and the collusion of the Communication Workers Union (CWU) leadership in enforcing Royal Mail’s restructuring agenda.

15. Mass protests in Detroit area against plans for ICE detention and operational centers

Hundreds of people in Romulus and Southfield, Michigan, protested Monday evening against plans to expand ICE operations across the Detroit metro area.

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

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.