Jul 8, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Israel’s war on Gaza continues, deliberately targeting children

Nine months after the Sharm el‑Sheikh peace agreement, signed with the Middle East regimes and major powers in attendance, Gaza lies in ruins, the Palestinians again face famine, and Israel has expanded its military control across most of the Strip.

The agreement was designed to secure the return of Israeli hostages while preserving Israel’s freedom to wage a war of annihilation against the Palestinians. Israel was merely asked to withdraw some troops, suspend military operations and allow the entry of 600 aid trucks per day into Gaza, coordinated by international organizations, including the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Crescent. Later phases would focus on assembling an International Stabilization Force to disarm Hamas.

Israel has been free to violate conditions without consequence since the agreement contained no enforcement mechanism. It was “guaranteed” by the Trump administration, Israel’s chief backer. Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, Israel’s allies, signed on as “monitors” to provide diplomatic cover while Tel Aviv continued with its declared aim of driving out the Palestinians.  

Israel violated every term of Phase I. Verified reporting shows thousands of ceasefire breaches: airstrikes, raids, shelling, demolitions, shootings. More than 1,041 Palestinians were killed after the ceasefire began, with 3,372 others injured, bringing the total number killed since the start of the war to more than 73,000, with 173,480 people injured.

The most devastating evidence comes from the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry, which concluded that Israel’s campaign includes the deliberate targeting of Palestinian children. Israeli forces “deliberately carried out acts inflicting death and severe bodily and mental harm on hundreds of thousands of Palestinian children, irreparably destroying the sanctity of childhood, including family ties, identity, innocence, safety and future,” the report states.

Children accounted for roughly 30 percent of the more than 73,000 people killed—an even higher proportion than in Israel’s 2008–2009 and 2014 assaults. Since the ceasefire, at least 265 children have been killed, many shot or shelled near the ill‑defined “Yellow Line”: a boundary Israel uses to justify lethal force.

Israel’s actions demonstrate an intent “to destroy the existence of the Palestinians in Gaza as a group,” the report explains, noting that children “embody the biological and social continuity of the group.” By attacking children, Israel is “eroding the foundational structure of Palestinian society, weakening the demographic vitality and overall capacity of the Palestinian people to sustain and exercise its right to determine its future.”

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Meanwhile, Israel has cut humanitarian aid to a fraction of survival needs. The agreement required 600 trucks per day; Israel immediately cut that to 300, and in practice has allowed far fewer. UN agencies have reported that about 77 percent of Gaza’s population were experiencing acute food insecurity, inadequate water supplies, repeated displacement, damaged infrastructure, and continuing constraints on humanitarian operations, while civilians, including aid workers, remained exposed to Israeli airstrikes, shelling and gunfire despite the ceasefire.

Gaza authorities report that only 25 percent of minimum food needs are entering the Strip, with UNICEF confirming that famine thresholds have been breached and children are dying from malnutrition. 

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Even as the IDF violated the ceasefire, Türkiye’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ensured that the flow of strategic goods to Israel continued uninterrupted, particularly energy. Türkiye remains the central transit route, via the pipeline to Ceyhan, for Azerbaijani oil, Israel’s single most important external fuel source. 

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In May, Minister of Defense Israel Katz made clear his commitment to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza through large-scale migration of Palestinians, saying the government would implement a plan for them to leave Gaza “at the right time and in the right manner”. It follows Israel’s establishment of a bureau for “voluntary emigration” and the easing of travel restrictions for Palestinians who leave Gaza on a one-way ticket. 

Israeli human rights organizations and lawyers have warned that Israel has created such horrific conditions in Gaza that no departure can be considered voluntary.

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According to a recent report in the Times of Israel citing an Associated Press investigation, the right-wing group Ad Kan secretly organized several flights taking Palestinians from Gaza to South Africa and Indonesia between May and November last year. It hid behind a company called Al-Majd, which claims to be a humanitarian Muslim charity supporting Palestinian lives. 

2. Kenya and Tanzania deploy security forces against Gen-Z-led Saba Saba protests

Security forces were mobilized across Kenya and Tanzania on Tuesday July 7 to suppress Gen-Z-led Saba Saba Day protests.

Saba Saba—“seven seven” in Kiswahili—has a distinct history in each country, but in both it has become synonymous with confrontation between the state and the working class.

Both regimes have reacted with the same police terror tactics.

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Kenya and Tanzania’s youth opposition are part of a single continental and global process, driven by the same underlying conditions: crushing IMF-dictated austerity, a debt spiral that consumes more than half of many national budgets, youth unemployment that reaches into the tens of millions, and a ruling class whose fortunes depend on maintaining and deepening exactly the conditions young people are rising against.

In both countries the youth have shown they can transcend the ethnic divisions long exploited by the ruling class; in both, they confront a political establishment—from pro-business Chadema in Tanzania to Kenya’s discredited opposition figures, several of whom share responsibility for killings carried out while they themselves held state power—that offers no alternative to the capitalist order driving the crisis.

The events of Saba Saba 2026 make clear that the defense of democratic rights in East Africa depends on the independent mobilization of the working class across national borders, against austerity, police violence and the deepening authoritarianism of the region’s ruling elites.

For a fuller analysis underlying the Kenya’s Gen-Z insurgency in 2024 and those of Tanzania in 2025, readers are encouraged to read “Kenya’s Gen Z insurgency, the strike wave and the struggle for Permanent Revolution“ and “The December 9 protest in Tanzania, Nyerere’s ‘African Socialism’ and the struggle for Permanent Revolution”.

3. Keiko Fujimori declared Peru’s president: The historical roots of fujimorism and the bankruptcy of the pseudo-left (Part One)

Three weeks after Peruvian voters went to the polls, Keiko Fujimori was declared the winner of the presidential election. The National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE) announced it had concluded counting 100 percent of the ballots, with Fujimori receiving 50.13 percent against 49.86 percent for her rival, Congressman Roberto Sánchez Palomino of the Together for Peru (JP) party. The margin was less than 50,000 votes out of nearly 20 million cast.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio congratulated Fujimori within hours of the ONPE announcement, hailing “her important electoral victory.” The speed and warmth of the US response came after Ambassador Bernie Navarro had declared during the count that the US Embassy was “monitoring the electoral process”—when Peruvian law does not allow any such official capacity to foreign diplomatic missions.

Despite Sánchez’s record as a faithful administrator of bourgeois interests—as trade minister under Pedro Castillo, he never challenged the Central Bank, the mining concessions, or Peru’s IMF commitments—Peru’s ruling class calculated that even the ambiguity of a “left” nationalist government, arriving wrapped in the expectations generated by the Castillo experience, was a risk it could not afford. Squeezed between mounting US imperialist pressure from above and a combative working class from below, the bourgeoisie could not leave even an inch of space for illusions in social reform that could fuel the class struggle. Fujimori offers no such ambiguity. 

4. Graham Platner and the fraud of “working-class” Democratic Party politics

The campaign of Graham Platner, the Democratic nominee for US Senate in Maine, is collapsing under the weight of a new sexual assault allegation, exposing not merely the personal degradation of the candidate but the political forces that manufactured and promoted him as a “working-class” tribune.

On Monday, Politico published an interview with Jenny Racicot, who accused Platner of raping her in 2021. Racicot repeated the allegation later that night in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper. Platner has denied the allegation. Within hours, leading Democrats who had tolerated or excused months of earlier revelations, including his Nazi-linked Totenkopf tattoo and history as a soldier and mercenary for US imperialism, rushed to call for him to withdraw. 

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Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who had been Platner’s most prominent national booster and appeared with him under the fraudulent “Fighting Oligarchy” banner, waited longer than others, but by Tuesday he posted on social media that he “recommended that he step aside.”

Under Maine election law, if Platner withdraws by July 13 the Democrats can select a replacement by July 27, a procedure that is now clearly being prepared.

The debacle confirms what the World Socialist Web Site explained from the beginning. After Platner won the June primary, the WSWS wrote that while the vote expressed real anger over inequality, “Platner’s promoters—large sections of the Democratic Party and the trade union apparatus, most avidly its so-called ‘progressive’ wing—present him as a genuine representative of the working class. He is nothing of the sort.”

Platner’s “working-class” identity was from the beginning a political marketing product. His supposed credentials for this position were the fact that he was a veteran, “oysterman,” and rural Mainer, combined with his vulgarity, tattoos, profanity and anti-billionaire demagogy. But this had nothing to do with the working class as a social force.

In fact, Platner is a small businessman, a former Marine, Army soldier and Blackwater/Constellis contractor, and a loyal Democrat. His social background and career belong not to the proletariat but to the upper-middle-class layers around the Democratic Party.

However, Platner’s manufactured persona was politically useful to Democratic-aligned consultants, the trade-union apparatus, Sanders/DSA operatives, and liberal media figures searching for a way to repackage the Democratic Party after its catastrophic loss of support within the working class. 

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The most important question is not why Platner collapsed, but why he was promoted in the first place, and by what social forces. Sanders held events with him under the “Fighting Oligarchy” banner. Ro Khanna defended him after the Nazi tattoo revelation. Jacobin, the unofficial press organ of the DSA, published repeated defenses, including one by David Sirota that stated that the debate over whether Platner was sufficiently “working class” had ignored that he “enlisted in the military for multiple combat tours for his country.”

“Progressive” commentator Krystal Ball declared herself more “ride or die” for him after the Nazi tattoo revelation. The United Auto Workers bureaucracy, led by DSA darling Shawn Fain, likewise waved away Platner’s record and Nazi tattoo and presented him as someone who had “chosen to stand with the working class.”

Joining the UAW, DSA and “progressives” in boosting Platner’s campaign were Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times and David Remnick in the New Yorker. Goldberg wrote that Platner was “nothing like the edgelord caricature” she encountered online, called him “largely convincing” in person, and compared his campaign energy to Obama. In another column for the Times she favorably compared Platner to a “Democratic version of the Tea Party,” writing that voters were seeking “to upend a system that they believe has failed them.”

The WSWS proceeded on an entirely different basis. It began from the class character of the Democratic Party, the AFL-CIO bureaucracy, the Sanders operation and the imperialist state. In several articles, it exposed the character of the Platner campaign and warned of the debacle it would produce. 

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Ten years ago, Hillary Clinton referred to Trump voters as the “basket of deplorables.” Now the ruling class manufactures “deplorable” personas to market to workers. Both express the same contempt for the working class. 

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The responsibility for this political fraud rests above all with Sanders and those around him, including Khanna, Jacobin, the DSA milieu and the AFL-CIO bureaucracy. It is an important political lesson for workers and young people in Maine and across the country.

5. UAW white paper “Trade and the American Dream”: A brief for economic nationalism and imperialist war

On July 1, the Trump administration refused to renew the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) at the pact’s six-year joint review. The agreement remains in force, but Washington’s refusal converts every subsequent annual review into an instrument of extortion, allowing the United States to extract fresh concessions from Canada and Mexico.

Trump is using the threat of withdrawal, tariffs and restricted access to the US market to discipline Canada and Mexico, force them to line up behind Washington’s trade war, and subordinate the continent to the requirements of American “national security.” The same strategy underlies his threats to annex Canada, militarize the border, attack Mexico under the pretext of fighting drugs, and use executive power to tear up existing legal and constitutional restraints.

The Trump administration wants to transform North America into a closed economic and military bloc—a Fortress North America—as it escalates trade war against China and launches military aggression around the world.

The United Auto Workers bureaucracy supports this imperialist project and is offering its services. Days before the USMCA deadline, the UAW released a 36-page white paper, “Trade and the American Dream: NAFTA, the USMCA, and the Future of the Working Class.” Its purpose is to demonstrate that the UAW can help administer trade war, supply-chain restructuring and labor discipline across the continent.

The UAW claims it cares about protecting “American” jobs while it is helping the Big Three and parts makers destroy them. Thousands of Big Three autoworkers have lost their jobs since the UAW secured ratification of the 2023 contracts under false pretenses. Even as the white paper was released, the union was holding a contract vote at Nexteer Automotive in Saginaw, Michigan at proverbial gunpoint inside the factory, to force through a deal workers rejected three times. At the same time, the UAW was also pushing through an agreement allowing the closure of International’s truck assembly plant in Springfield, Ohio.

The white paper builds its case on struggles the bureaucracy itself betrayed. It celebrates the 2023 Mack Trucks strike without mentioning that workers rejected the deal Fain personally endorsed by 73 percent before the apparatus isolated the strike and shut it down. It invokes the 2021 John Deere strike, in which workers twice voted down UAW-backed agreements before the bureaucracy forced through a third.

In reality, it is the interests of the union apparatus, and not the workers, that animate the document. Far from opposing the annual reviews with which Washington will bludgeon Canada and Mexico, the UAW bureaucracy demands a “seat at the table” where the bludgeoning is organized.

The document also bears the political fingerprints of the Democratic Socialists of America and Labor Notes advisers in Fain’s inner circle, who have worked vigorously to present the bureaucracy’s accommodation to Trump’s trade-war agenda as “working class” politics. The document’s real content is disguised with “pro-worker” phraseology and feigned concern for Mexican autoworkers.

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The white paper demands a “top-to-bottom revamp” of the USMCA enforced by tariffs and concludes with an ultimatum indistinguishable from Trump’s own: a new deal on America-first terms, or “the United States must get out of NAFTA 2.0.” 

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UAW President Shawn Fain states the document’s central argument in his introduction: “There is no future for the US working class that doesn’t address the free trade disaster ... trade is at the heart of the rise of global authoritarianism, wealth inequality, and the political weakness of the working class.”

This is not a “left” or “pro-worker” argument, but the classic position of the extreme right, which has always sought to counterpose workers supposedly rooted in the “national” soil to disloyal foreign or “international” bankers.

By “authoritarianism,” Fain does not mean the Trump administration, with which Fain is collaborating. In fact, his reference to the “free trade disaster” is lifted verbatim from the vocabulary of Trump’s trade war. He is using the standard euphemism for countries targeted for regime change by American imperialism, including China, Russia and Iran. 

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Under the heading “Build Here to Sell Here,” the UAW demands that corporations balance production and sales across North America or face punitive tariffs. The white paper says companies seeking tariff relief would have to meet a “1-to-1 production-to-sales quota.”

The UAW poses as a friend of Mexican autoworkers, who, it says, are “too poor to buy the cars they produce.” But its proposal means mass unemployment and poverty for these same workers. The white paper complains that the US produces only 61 cars for every 100 sold domestically, while Mexico produces 249 for every 100 bought. A one-to-one quota would require a drastic reduction of Mexican auto production, wiping out hundreds of thousands of direct jobs and many more across export-dependent regional economies.

The white paper never answers the obvious question: how will Mexican workers’ living standards be raised by shutting their factories and throwing them into the streets?

The white paper’s discussion of “independent unions” in Mexico continues along the same lines. For decades, the old charro unions—state-backed company unions that signed sweetheart contracts, intimidated workers and suppressed strikes—served as the chief instruments of labor control in Mexico. These organizations are now hated and discredited. After explosive struggles such as Matamoros and Silao, Washington, the AFL-CIO Solidarity Center and the union bureaucracies promoted a new layer of “independent” unions through the USMCA labor chapter and the Rapid Response Mechanism, seeking to contain Mexican workers within a framework supervised by American imperialism and its labor agents. 

The UAW proposes to make American union officials paid overseers in the colonial exploitation of Mexican workers. Under the heading “Build a System of True Tri-National Labor Rights,” the white paper calls for a new agreement that “establishes the right of U.S. unions to provide technical support to Mexican workers and independent unions.” It complains that the US Department of Labor has “just five labor attachés in Mexico” to combat “labor abuse and unfair trade practices” and adds that “staff from U.S. unions could dramatically expand support for Mexican workers if tariff revenues were used to support their work.” The UAW boasts that it already has “dedicated UAW staff in Mexico City and Washington” through its Mexico Solidarity Project.

The American union bureaucrats would operate among Mexican workers not as representatives of a common struggle against the corporations, but as personnel of a US-dominated labor-policing framework. The same tariff regime that threatens mass unemployment in Mexico would create new paid positions, institutional authority and privileges for UAW officials, paid for by the US government revenues from tariffs against Mexico.

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The culmination of the bureaucracy’s program is the “tri-national commission.” The white paper proposes a body of “unions, governments and academic experts” to work with industry in “rationalizing supply chains.” In plain language, this means the joint administration of austerity: state-supervised capacity cuts, plant closures, wage controls and production mandates enforced over the heads of workers in all three countries. The unions would receive an official role in imposing across the continent the restructuring demanded by the corporations and the American state.

This is corporatism: the integration of the unions into the state and management to suppress the class struggle in the name of defending the nation. The historical origins of corporatism are in Mussolini’s fascist Italy, which created state-controlled syndicates and corporations that brought together employers, fascist officials and so-called labor representatives under the doctrine that class conflict had to be subordinated to the national interest.

The UAW proposes a North American variant adapted to present conditions: unions, governments, academics and industry jointly reorganizing production, imposing labor discipline and subordinating workers to the demands of “competitiveness” and “national security.” 

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The UAW’s “America First” nationalism, which it has promoted since long before Trump ever ran for office, never saved jobs. It justified the destruction of jobs in the name of “competitiveness,” while scapegoating foreign workers for attacks the bureaucracy helped management carry out. 

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The UAW’s program today develops the old nationalism of the bureaucracy under conditions created by the historic decline of American imperialism. The United States is driven into ever more ruthless conflict against its rivals abroad and class war at home, seeking to reverse its economic decline through trade war, militarism and dictatorship. This has already produced the NATO war against Russia in Ukraine, US support for the Israeli genocide in Gaza, the war against Iran and advanced preparations for future war against China.

Fain has repeatedly invoked the UAW’s World War II alliance with the auto companies and the Roosevelt administration in the so-called Arsenal of Democracy—the years when the union enforced the no-strike pledge, policed speedup and victimized the leaders of wartime wildcat strikes, while the Roosevelt government jailed Trotskyist opponents of imperialist war.

Under Biden, Fain and the UAW apparatus functioned as semi-official partners of the administration. Biden appointed Fain to the President’s Export Council, an advisory body on trade policy that includes major corporate executives. In 2024, Biden gave a speech describing the AFL-CIO as his “domestic NATO.” This meant that the unions were to perform the role of disciplining opposition and preparing the country for war.

The same process extends across the union bureaucracy. The Teamsters under Sean O’Brien, the International Longshoremen’s Association and other labor apparatuses have embraced protectionism, tariffs and overtures to Trump. Their appeals to the would-be Führer are the highest expression of their integration with American capitalism and their hostility to the independent interests of the working class.

The DSA and Labor Notes milieu supplies the “left” credentials for this nationalist program. They have relentlessly defended Fain while he adapts to Trump’s trade war, presenting tariffs and national industrial policy as tools for workers rather than instruments of American capitalism. Their nationalism ideologically subordinates workers to Wall Street and the American state, leaving them politically disarmed before fascism, dictatorship and war.

This is the political service rendered by the pseudo-left not only to the bureaucracy, but to Trump and the extreme right. It takes workers and young people repelled by Trump and demobilizes their opposition back behind the union apparatus, the Democratic Party and the national interests of American capitalism. 

Autoworker, socialist, and working class hero, Will Lehman

Opposition to the nationalist and pro-war bureaucracy has been advanced by Will Lehman, the Mack Trucks worker and socialist who first ran for UAW president in 2022 and was nominated at last month’s UAW Constitutional Convention to stand again in 2026. In a May 2025 Newsweek editorial, Lehman wrote that Fain’s claims that Trump’s tariffs “would defend our jobs and livelihoods” were “a fraud and a deadly danger to the entire working class.” They are preparations for war with China, he said, whipping up hatred against Chinese workers “who are not our enemies but our class brothers and sisters.”

He continued:

Workers in the U.S. must reject the lie that we can only save our jobs at the expense of workers in other countries. We can only defend our interests by uniting with our class brothers and sisters throughout the world.

That’s why I urge autoworkers to form rank-and-file committees in every plant and to join the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC). The corporations are globally coordinated. We must be too.

We don’t need a trade war. We don’t need nationalism. We need a new strategy: internationalism and socialism. Not backing the nationalist competition between different corporations, but creating a society based on genuine equality, in which the global economy is controlled by the workers and for the workers.

6. Why the New York Times’ list of “definitive” movies about America is so unsatisfactory

...Unfortunately, eclecticism and pettiness prevail among the film writers, as they do in the broader milieu in which they circulate.

On the one hand, the writers apparently interpreted their task to involve considering primarily newer films, presumably the better to sum up 250 years more effectively. There is one movie from the 1930s, none from the 1940s and 1950s, one from the 1960s, three from the 1970s and one each from each of the past five decades. 

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Filmmaking has played and continues to play an outsized role in American social and cultural development, yet none of the writers thought to view it in the light of the issues and events bound up with the 250-year anniversary–equality and democratic rights, aristocracy and monarchy, insurrection and revolution, life-and-death social and political struggles.

That would mean, first of all, coming to terms with the contemporary crisis of political and social life, the decades of war, the lurch to the right by the entire establishment, the death-bed of bourgeois democracy that has placed a fascist in the White House. The Times specializes in soothing its readers’ nerves and reassuring them nothing decisive has changed, nothing requiring radical measures.

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A chief difficulty is that the various Times writers and critics have no substantive or objective criteria for making their selections.

None of them appears to have a meaningful theory about American society and its historical development. The result is a collection of relatively arbitrary and subjective shots in the dark. The overall outlook owes something to what Friedrich Engels termed an “essentially pragmatic” approach that “divides men who act in history into noble and ignoble and then finds that as a rule the noble are defrauded and the ignoble are victorious.” Therefore, “nothing very edifying is to be got from the study of history.” 

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... A writer describes Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point as “a hypnotic meditation on American ideals,” and that should be enough by itself to set off alarm bells. Film critics resort to the phrase “a meditation on” when they have no idea what a work is saying or what they themselves think about it. 

The birth of the movies in the US coincided almost exactly with America’s emergence as an imperialist power. The ensuing 125 years have witnessed earthshaking upheavals and many different stages in the struggle between the social classes. The vicissitudes of the social conflict have profoundly influenced filmmaking and art as a whole. As we have suggested before, perhaps because it is an art form bound up with modern industry and mass society, filmmaking tends to be most fresh and original, and ground-breaking, under conditions of intense popular mobility and activity. Strikes, protests, social discontent often propel the filmmakers, in ways that the artists themselves may not fully understand.

Individual filmmakers encounter and represent life differently, but not as free-floating atoms doing as they please. Generalized national, generational, institutional, class features and pressures shape them as they do everyone, the uniqueness lying in the particular “welding together” of the latter. What “serves as a bridge from soul to soul,” in other words, “is not the unique, but the common.” And the common is configured in humanity by the “the deepest and most persistent conditions which make up his ‘soul,’ by the social conditions of education, of existence, of work, and of associations. The social conditions in historic human society are, first of all, the conditions of class affiliation” (Trotsky).

An orientation to “class affiliation” and to the history of the struggle that erupts on the basis of class affiliation does not solve the problem of creating an artistically striking and memorable work (or criticizing one), but it does push to the forefront the questions and problems that inspire the sharpest artistic perceptions and inspirations, because they are the “deepest and most persistent conditions which make up [mankind’s] ‘soul.’” The filmmaker is neither a “free-floating atom” nor an empty machine for producing form. He or she is a participant in social life, tied to his or her social environment and times by the strongest and most necessary ties.

It is illuminating that the Times writers manage to avoid choosing a single work from the years in which Hollywood filmmaking was at the height of its realism and social and aesthetic seriousness, the late 1930s to the early 1950s, before the fully chilling effect of the anti-communist purges and the virtual illegalization of left-wing thought in the American cinema. During that decade and a half, writers, directors, actors and producers created scores of films that grappled with varying degrees of success with the conditions and challenges of life, not simply for the upper middle class, but for broader layers.

The Times piece cuts away at the social connections and responsibilities of the artists, reducing the filmmaker to a version of the social type in which the writers see themselves: “independent-minded,” beholden to no one, “spiritual” rebels, wry and skeptical (and passive) observers of the passing scene. From our point of view, they come across for the most part as “dazed and confused” in their own right, with very little grasp of America’s past or present.

7. NATO warmongers meet in Ankara

Against the backdrop of the summit, the United States again bombed Iran on Tuesday. That evening the US military announced “a series of powerful strikes against Iran,” hitting air defenses, coastal radar and missile sites near the Strait of Hormuz, hours after the Treasury cut off Iran’s oil sales. It was the latest escalation of the war that began on February 28, when US and Israeli strikes killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and has now dragged on for more than four months.

The bombing fell as vast crowds mourned Khamenei in Qom and the Iraqi city of Najaf. Iranian state media reported explosions at Bandar Abbas, Qeshm and Sirik, where shrapnel wounded several people at a commercial pier. US President Donald Trump had declared on Monday, in the Oval Office: “We’re either going to make a deal, or we’re going to finish the job.” He added, “It won’t be tough to finish the job.”

The summit’s main business is the escalation of the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine. The opening of the summit followed a sustained barrage of long-range strikes by Ukraine deep inside Russian territory, which the assembled powers openly celebrated. “Ukraine has a window of opportunity and is changing the dynamics on the battlefield,” NATO Deputy Secretary General Radmila Shekerinska told the summit. “Russia, for the first time, is faced with the reality of war.” 

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Even as they plotted war around the world, the imperialist gangsters quarreled among themselves. Trump renewed his threat to annex Greenland, the territory of NATO member Denmark, calling it “an important part for the United States” that “should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark,” and warned that Washington could “remove all of our soldiers out of Europe.” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen answered that a US seizure of the island “is not going to happen.” 

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Türkiye locked down Ankara for the summit. In the weeks beforehand, Erdoğan’s government banned all demonstrations in the capital for thirteen days and detained 225 people—among them leftists, lawyers, a university professor, a gay-magazine editor and a comedian who had mocked the president—jailing 103 of them. On Sunday, police detained scores of anti-NATO protesters and fired tear gas to break up their march. 

8. Police shoot patient inside Southern California hospital

The Los Robles shooting belongs to a documented pattern of police applying street-level compliance tactics—verbal commands, physical domination and lethal force—to patients suffering severe trauma, medical disorientation or acute psychiatric crises. In March 2023, Irvo Otieno, a 28-year-old Kenyan émigré experiencing a severe mental health crisis, was killed by seven Henrico County sheriff’s deputies and three hospital employees during intake at Central State Hospital in Virginia. Video footage showed as many as ten people piling onto a shackled and handcuffed Otieno for twelve minutes until he stopped breathing. 

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The conditions inside HCA hospitals have been the subject of repeated complaints from nurses and healthcare workers. At Los Robles itself, nurses fought HCA in 2023 over out-of-ratio assignments and unsafe staffing. SEIU Local 121RN reported at the time that nurses were demanding stronger contract language to prevent the hospital from placing nurses out of ratio and putting patients at risk. Rosanna Mendez, the union’s executive director, said then that nurses had “sounded the alarm” over unsafe assignments that endangered patients and produced enormous stress.

In another Los Robles case, SEIU reported that former RN Jacqui Rum worked in HCA’s StaRN program and faced “routine unsafe staffing” for 13 months, under conditions so intense that she resigned. HCA then sought to make her repay $4,000 for what it called training. In 2025, SEIU reported that HCA agreed to pay penalties and restitution over its training repayment agreement program, including approximately $83,000 in restitution to California nurses and more than $1.16 million in penalties to the state.

This provides significant context to the Los Robles shooting. Nurses and hospital workers confront real danger in emergency departments and inpatient units. They are placed in unsafe conditions by understaffing, overcrowding, inadequate psychiatric resources, management pressure and the general collapse of social supports outside the hospital.

The response of SEIU Local 121RN to the Los Robles shooting has been to accept the “law and order” framework of the police. Mendez issued a statement blaming “a series of failures and missed protocols.” She said Code Grey and Code Silver alarms were not activated, hospital security did not immediately respond and questions remained over whether the patient was properly restrained while in police custody.

The same logic underlies California Assembly Bill 2975, the “Secure Hospitals for All” Act, which Governor Gavin Newsom signed in 2024 after a campaign led by SEIU. The union celebrated the law as a measure to reduce or eliminate weapons in hospitals.

The law requires California’s occupational safety standards board, by March 1, 2027, to amend hospital workplace violence standards to mandate weapons-detection screening policies. The law requires screening devices that automatically scan people at specified hospital entrances, including the main public entrance, the emergency department entrance and a separately accessible labor-and-delivery entrance. It also requires trained personnel to operate the screening system and protocols for alternative searches and responses when a weapon is detected.

But the gun fired inside Los Robles did not enter through the emergency department waiting room in the hands of a visitor. It was brought into the hospital by the police.

9. Three children die of carbon monoxide poisoning in Michigan after massive power outage

Three children died of carbon monoxide poisoning in metro Detroit over the holiday weekend, as families struggled to cope with a massive power outage, which left 400,000 households without lights, air conditioning, refrigeration and other necessities after a storm Friday evening.

All three were killed after their families, left in the dark for days, ran gasoline-powered generators to restore electricity, generators that filled enclosed spaces with lethal carbon monoxide.

The deaths of these children were the consequence of deliberate policies that allow hundreds of thousands of people across metro Detroit to lose power during routine summer storms due to chronic under-investment in vital infrastructure.

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The immediate cause of the outage was a severe storm system. Thunderstorms with wind gusts exceeding 60 miles per hour swept across southeast Michigan over the holiday weekend, downing trees and power lines and knocking out electricity to more half a million utility customers statewide. At its peak, this including 120,000 customers of Consumers Energy. At its peak, nearly 400,000 DTE Energy customers lost service. DTE restored power to more than 325,000 customers within 48 hours, a figure the company has prominently publicized.

For working class families living paycheck to paycheck, the refrigerator and freezer represent weeks of careful financial planning. Families purchase meat and other expensive food when it is on sale and freeze it because it is the only way to stretch budgets gutted by inflation, rising utility costs and stagnant wages. Several days without power during a Michigan summer can destroy all of it. 

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In 1993, seven children died in a Detroit house fire after the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department shut off the family’s water over a $225 bill. Similar tragedies followed, including the deaths of three children in Sylvia Young’s Detroit home after DTE cut off heat and a 2009 Detroit family killed by carbon monoxide poisoning after using a generator following a power shutoff. The circumstances vary, but the pattern is the same: When electricity is treated as a commodity rather than a necessity, working class families are forced into dangerous choices.

*****

The deaths in Metro Detroit occurred amid official claims of a Detroit revival. The “Detroit renaissance” narrative is built around luxury developments, downtown projects, stadiums and corporate investment. It does not reflect the material conditions of working class neighborhoods throughout the city and surrounding communities.

Poverty, inflation and deteriorating public infrastructure continue to shape daily life for millions of workers. Food prices remain high, utility costs have increased, and many families have little or no financial cushion when disaster strikes. A storm that should be a temporary inconvenience becomes a life-threatening event when families lack the resources to protect themselves.

10. German government adopts historic war budget

On July 6, one day before the NATO summit began in Ankara, the Merz-Klingbeil government set in motion the largest rearmament budget in the history of the Federal Republic. The government draft of the 2027 federal budget adopted by the cabinet places the whole of society on a war footing.

The regular budget of the Defense Ministry will rise within a single year from €82.7 billion to €109.7 billion—a leap of 32.7 percent. No other ministry will see anything approaching such an increase. Added to this are €30 billion from the so-called special fund for the Bundeswehr and €11.6 billion for support to Ukraine. These three items alone amount to €151.3 billion. In addition, 6,000 new military posts and 2,100 civilian positions are being created in the Defense Ministry. 

*****

The political connection between the war budget and the NATO summit is unmistakable. The day after the cabinet decision, the meeting of heads of state and government began in Ankara, accelerating the implementation of the 5 percent target agreed in 2025 and the expansion of the European armed forces.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte describes this course as “NATO 3.0”—a “stronger European NATO” in which the European powers take over a larger share of conventional warfare and military burden-sharing with the United States is reorganized. He explicitly cited Germany as the leading example. “Germany is leading, and Germany is delivering,” he declared in Berlin at the beginning of July. Even before the presentation of the current draft budget, Rutte pointed out that Germany would increase its annual military expenditure to more than €150 billion by 2029.

In fact, no other major European power is proceeding as aggressively as Germany. Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) has repeatedly declared that the Bundeswehr is to be built up “as quickly as possible into the strongest conventional army in Europe.” When he took office, he explicitly justified this claim with Germany’s population size, economic strength and geographical location at the center of Europe. 

*****

War abroad and class war at home are two sides of the same policy. A society that permanently spends hundreds of billions of euros on military violence cannot guarantee democratic rights. The more opposition grows to conscription, social cuts and war, the more aggressively the state will proceed against strikes, protests and socialist opposition.

The NATO summit itself provides a clear warning. The government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan banned protests and transformed Ankara into a fortress with tens of thousands of police and security personnel. More than 100 participants in an anti-NATO demonstration were arrested. At the same time, the authorities carried out so-called anti-terror raids against hundreds of other people; with more than 100 of them placed in pretrial detention.

All NATO powers support this repression because they need the Erdoğan regime as a partner for their wars against Russia and Iran and their preparations against China. The measures in Ankara simultaneously illustrate the dictatorial methods with which the ruling classes in North America and throughout Europe will themselves suppress growing opposition to war, conscription and social devastation. 

11. Ford fired worker over a $1.95 cookie. The UAW told him to say sorry

Ford Motor Company fired the 60-year-old electrician with a perfect attendance record over the allegation that he took a $1.95 chocolate chip cookie without paying during his overnight shift on May 9. The worker, Kurt Kromm, was an 11-year veteran at the Kentucky Truck Plant (KTP) in Louisville. Co-workers described him as “an excellent worker…attentive and very helpful.”

Kromm, who is diabetic, had gone to the break room during a 12-hour shift after feeling lightheaded from low blood sugar. When the first self-service kiosk, operated by Aramark, flashed a red “payment failed” screen, he moved over to a second terminal, a transaction that his bank statement confirmed.

A week later, Kromm was called into his supervisor’s office and was informed by his UAW representative that he was being fired for theft under the company’s zero-tolerance policy. He was escorted from the plant immediately, barred from retrieving his own tools from his work station. 

*****

The Aramark vending system at KTP operates through self-checkout payment kiosks located in plant break rooms, where food and beverage items are displayed in the open and workers are expected to scan and pay using debit or credit cards. 

In practice, however, the kiosks are notoriously unreliable. Workers report that the machines routinely fail to process payments, display red error screens even when transactions have gone through, decline cards on first attempt only to accept them on a second or third swipe at a different kiosk, and frequently fail to produce receipts. 

These malfunctions have created a situation in which workers are uncertain whether a purchase has been completed, and in multiple documented cases, the payment discrepancies generated by the defective equipment have been used by Ford and Aramark as the basis for termination proceedings against employees. 

*****

KTP is the crown jewel of Ford’s global operations. The Louisville facility, employing over 8,000 workers, builds the Super Duty pickup Ford Expedition and the Lincoln Navigator — vehicles that together generated an estimated $25 billion in revenue in 2023 alone. The Super Duty anchors Ford’s commercial truck division, Ford Pro, which posted a staggering 12.4 percent profit margin that year, helping drive the company’s overall 2023 profits to $10.4 billion. 

Workers at KTP report that the Aramark payment kiosks have been malfunctioning for years and that the company and union are well aware of the problem. Kromm’s coworker Victoria Thomas, a 34 year Ford electrician, told Shifting Gears that the kiosk payment glitches are “well known” at the plant and have happened to her personally. “I have friends who were terminated because they bought a $2 drink.” 

*****

Ford and the UAW have responded to these complaints with evasion. Ford spokeswoman Jessica Enoch offered a carefully worded statement acknowledging only that “there are times when we look into things and realize it could have been handled differently.”

Aramark, the $16 billion food service contractor that operates the kiosks refused to address the malfunction issue at all, with its spokesman issuing a vacuous assurance that the company remains “focused on providing convenient, flexible snack options.” 

*****

Only after Kromm fought his case on his own did the UAW belatedly inform him that Ford would change its policy from immediate termination to suspension in cases of disputed kiosk transactions — a tacit admission that the system has been destroying workers’ livelihoods on the basis of defective equipment with the union’s full complicity.

The UAW’s refusal to defend Kurt Kromm does not represent the failure of the union apparatus, it is the apparatus functioning exactly as intended. The UAW long ago abandoned any defense of the workers it supposedly represents in favor of unlimited collaboration with management, suppressing strikes and imposing management’s dictates inside the plants. For these services it is well rewarded. It sits on a $1.25 billion strike fund, extracted from the dues of workers it refuses to defend, while its officials collect six-figure salaries, vacation at luxury resorts, and serve as de facto personnel managers for Ford.

When Kromm was hauled into the labor office and told he was being fired for stealing a cookie, the union bargainer did not challenge the accusation, did not raise the years of documented kiosk failures, did not demand that Ford produce evidence. He told Kromm to apologize. That is the UAW’s role: not to fight the company, but to manage the workforce on the company’s behalf.

This will not change through appeals to the bureaucracy or through elections that the apparatus controls. The corporatist partnership between the UAW and the auto companies is a class alliance against the workers, part of the broader war drive of American imperialism.

Workers must take power into their own hands by forming rank-and-file committees, independent of and opposed to the union bureaucracy. Against the authority of management and their UAW overseers workers must assert their own authority through the use of their collective strength. These rank-and-file committees must unite workers across departments, plants and industries to halt victimizations, monitor line speeds and enforce health and safety standards, including the right to refuse to work under unsafe conditions.

12. IBEW apparatus shuts down Philadelphia PECO strike as deadly heat wave and storms cause mass power outages

Despite mass public support for the striking workers, the union apparatus quickly shut the strike down after three days, having reached a paltry tentative agreement.

13. Sri Lanka: Negombo Prison riots leave at least 20 people dead

At least 20 prisoners were killed and nearly 100 people, mostly prisoners, were wounded on July 6 in clashes that erupted at the prison in the coastal town Negombo. It is a grim reminder of past prison massacres in Sri Lanka’s history.

The carnage came just one day after an earlier clash at the same facility claimed two lives on July 5, bringing the death toll from the unrest to at least 27. Seven of the deceased were prison officials.

A number of the seriously injured were transferred to the National Hospital in Colombo for specialist treatment, while others were treated at Negombo Hospital. While the government says it has begun investigations into the riots and the causes of the deaths, available evidence indicates that at least some inmates were killed by gunfire. Dr. Pushpa Gamlath, director of Negombo Hospital, told Agence France-Presse: “There are some victims with gunshot injuries, some with cuts and severe bruises.”

According to Prisons Commissioner and Media spokesperson A. C. Gajanayake, the official account is as follows: Violence first erupted on July 5 between remand prisoners and convicted inmates after the exposure of an alleged prison drug-trafficking network orchestrated by an underworld-linked trafficker. Although the unrest was temporarily contained, clashes resumed the following morning during breakfast. Authorities claim that the inmates attacked prison officers and attempted to breach the main gate, prompting officers to use what they described as the minimum force necessary to restore order.

This version of events is being uncritically regurgitated by the corporate media, despite serious gaps. It does not explain how a supposedly controlled situation on the first day erupted into a deadly clash despite the presence of significant security forces, including members of the notorious Special Task Force (STF) who had been brought in to “control” the situation. In fact, the STF and Sri Lanka Police, under successive governments, have a well-documented history of provocation—deliberately or recklessly triggering violence in prisons and communities—followed by lethal crackdowns, systematic cover-ups, and near-total impunity for perpetrators.

*****

A video widely circulated on social media showed a prison officer outside the closed main gate firing through a narrow opening toward the area where the clashes were taking place. Questioned about the footage on July 7, Acting Commissioner General of Prisons Prasad Hemantha Kumara defended the officer’s actions, claiming the shots were fired to prevent a catastrophic prison breach and to protect officers trapped inside. His remarks make clear that prison officers and security forces deliberately opened fire to disperse prisoners gathered near the main gate.

Angry relatives, including mothers and wives of prisoners, most of them poor villagers, denounced the government and police for failing to protect the prisoners and for refusing to give any information.

Justice Minister Nanayakkara sought to justify the use of lethal force by claiming that inmates had attempted to “sabotage the smooth functioning of prison operations” after the government had “taken stern action to prevent drugs and other illegal contraband from entering the prisons.” He pointed to the destruction of a body scanner and CCTV cameras during the unrest.

This narrative functions as a political cover for the killings, folding them into the government’s escalating “war on drugs.” 

*****

The claim that prison massacres result from inter-gang violence or drug-related conspiracies is a well-worn tactic of the Sri Lankan state. When 11 inmates were shot dead at Mahara Prison in November 2020, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government blamed psychiatric medication, drug dealers and shadowy conspirators. Prison Reform Minister Sudarshini Fernandopulle ludicrously invoked “an invisible hand which activated suddenly.”

*****

The Sri Lanka College of Psychiatrists was compelled to issue a statement debunking these fabrications, noting that the claimed connection between psychiatric drugs and violent behavior was “without any rational basis.” The government’s story was a lie from start to finish, designed to obscure the fact that prison guards and STF officers had opened fire on unarmed inmates demanding COVID-19 protections.

Sri Lanka’s prisons are overcrowded, under-resourced, and resemble a living hell, creating conditions in which tensions can easily erupt into clashes. Negombo Prison, built to accommodate about 900 inmates, currently holds nearly 2,400.

The severe overcrowding has also heightened the danger of infectious disease outbreaks. On July 5, alongside the unrest, a group of women prisoners climbed onto the rooftop to protest a dengue outbreak and demand treatment for about 20 infected inmates. Essential medicines were unavailable, and infected prisoners had reportedly not been isolated. In a video circulated on social media, the women appealed for urgent medical care. Pro-government media, however, falsely portrayed the protest as support for one of the rival prisoner factions.

Overall, Sri Lanka’s prisons—built to accommodate just 11,762 inmates—now hold more than 42,000, over four times their intended capacity. In its 850-page 2021 report, the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) documented conditions in which prisoners are forced to sleep standing, defecate into shopping bags, and survive on food that, as one inmate stated, “even cats and dogs” would reject.

The overwhelming majority of prisoners come from the poorest layers of society, with many held on remand simply because they cannot afford bail or legal representation. Around 75 percent of Sri Lanka’s prison population consists of remand prisoners awaiting trial. 

*****

The Negombo killings follow prison riots and massacres at Mahara in 2020, Welikada in 2012, Anuradhapura in 2011, and Kalutara in 2000. They are the logical expression of a government that has strengthened the architecture of a police state since taking office in 2024 and is responding to increasing popular unrest with brutal force.

14.  Hypocritical condemnation from US Pacific allies over Chinese missile test

A chorus of criticism from the US and its allies in the Asia-Pacific has followed China’s testing of a ballistic missile in the Pacific Ocean on Monday. 

Few details of the test itself are available. Senior Captain Wang Xuemeng, a spokesman for China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) navy, confirmed that a Chinese nuclear submarine had launched a strategic missile carrying a dummy warhead which “accurately landed within the predetermined sea area” in the Pacific.

Wang described the missile test as routine, adding: “It complies with international law and international practices and is not targeted at any specific country or target.” China’s state-owned Global Times cited Chinese defense experts as saying the test was likely of the JuLang-3—the country’s most advanced submarine-launched missile.

The immediate reaction of US military allies in the region has been censure even as the Trump administration accelerates the decade-long preparations for war with China through a vast military build-up and a strengthening of alliances and bases throughout the Indo-Pacific.  

*****

Barely mentioned in the outpouring of criticism in the political establishment and media throughout the region is the fact that the US military regularly conducts ballistic missile tests in the Pacific Ocean. Two launches have taken place just this year. On March 3 and again on May 20, an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) was launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California into the Marshall Islands region. 

By comparison, China has only ever conducted three missile tests into the Pacific Ocean—in 1980, 2024 and the latest this week.

In addition to the cacophony of criticism of China, the media is replete with speculation by various security analysts as to the military significance of Monday’s test—the first of a submarine-launched missile into the Pacific. Their chief concern is the expansion of China’s nuclear capability. In reality, however, the US nuclear arsenal dwarfs that of China in size and sophisticated delivery systems. 

15. Australia: What professional staff face at Western Sydney University

The professional staff enterprise agreement proposed by the trade unions at WSU is even worse than the academic staff version, laying the groundwork for further destruction of jobs and conditions.

16. WSWS begins posting highlight clips from webinar on the American Revolution

On June 25, the World Socialist Web Site hosted an extraordinary panel of eminent historians at a webinar to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the American Revolution.

The full webinar, “The American Revolution and Its Place in History: From the War Against Monarchy to ‘No Kings,’” can be accessed at wsws.org/1776.

Here is one clip:

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

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

Jul 7, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. National Guard soldiers kill 20-year-old Tyrin Johnson in Memphis, Tennessee

Two Tennessee National Guard soldiers shot and killed 20-year-old Tyrin Johnson in downtown Memphis early Sunday morning, July 5, the latest and deadliest result of the Trump administration’s military-police occupation of the city.

According to the official account given by Memphis police and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI), officers responded shortly before 4:00 a.m. to reports of gunfire near Ida B. Wells Avenue and Union Avenue. Police claim that Johnson was seen carrying a handgun and fleeing on foot. National Guard soldiers assigned to the Memphis Safe Task Force joined the pursuit. Police allege that Johnson turned toward the soldiers with the weapon, after which two Guardsmen opened fire, striking and killing him.  

*****

The killing of Johnson is not an aberration. It is the direct product of the Memphis Safe Task Force, established by Trump in September 2025 as part of his drive to normalize the deployment of soldiers and federal police in American cities.

Trump’s order created the task force to carry out “hypervigilant policing,” “aggressive prosecution” and the “large-scale saturation” of neighborhoods with law enforcement personnel. In reality, the occupation of Memphis has nothing to do with fighting crime or protecting the population. It is aimed at normalizing the deployment of armed soldiers in urban areas, suppressing protests and strikes and intimidating the working class.

The task force includes the U.S. Marshals Service, FBI, ATF, DEA, Homeland Security Investigations, ICE, the Tennessee Highway Patrol and local police agencies. As of Sunday, 1,450 National Guard soldiers were assigned to the Memphis Safe Task Force. All soldiers assigned to the task force are deputized by the U.S. Marshals Service on the day they join.

This is at least the fifth violent incident involving the Memphis Safe Task Force since October 2025 in which TBI investigators have been summoned. Of those five investigations, four involved shootings, two were fatal and one involved a person being run over. 

*****

The shooting in Memphis took place during a weekend of police-state spectacle across the country. In Washington D.C., the Trump administration’s July 4 “Freedom 250” celebration turned the National Mall into a militarized zone, with fences, closed roads, screenings and heavy police and Secret Service presence.

On the other side of the country, police in Newport Beach, California, arrested 402 people during July 4 celebrations, after social media posts reportedly drew large numbers of juveniles and young adults to the beach. More than 350 officers from Newport Beach and 17 regional law enforcement agencies were deployed to clear the area after an “unlawful assembly” declaration.

The hypocrisy is glaring. Young people using social media to meet up at the beach and set off fireworks are treated as a criminal threat requiring mass arrests, mounted police and regional mobilization. But the Trump administration’s militarized Independence Day spectacle, complete with security checkpoints, military occupations, closed streets and a massive fireworks display, is presented as a celebration of “freedom.”

The Trump administration is spearheading the creation of a police-military dictatorship. But it is doing so with the cooperation of the Democratic Party. Memphis Mayor Paul Young, a Democrat, did not request the National Guard, but after Trump and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee ordered the deployment, the mayor chose to collaborate with the task force rather than mobilize political opposition to it. The city of Memphis is not part of the lawsuit challenging the deployment.

Young has repeatedly sought to present this collaboration as a pragmatic effort to steer the federal occupation toward “violent crime.” In an interview with WKNO last October, Young said, “What we were told as this was beginning is that this surge is going to be about violent crime... If there are individuals that have issues with documentation and status that are a part of any efforts around violent crime, then certainly they would be turned over to ICE.”

Young’s collaboration was so open that then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem held up Memphis as a model following the killings of Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis during federal immigration operations, which triggered mass protests and calls for a general strike. “I’ll point to the city of Memphis, which is where there is a Democrat mayor in place,” Noem said. “He worked with us and our federal law enforcement officers, and we saw murder rates drop by 50 percent because of that partnership.”

Young responded by insisting that Memphis was not collaborating with ICE on immigration enforcement, while admitting that the city had worked with federal agencies through the Memphis Safe Task Force on “violent crime.” This distinction is a fraud. The task force itself includes DHS agencies like ICE and operates within the same federal-police framework used by the Trump administration to terrorize immigrants, suppress protests and accustom the population to armed militarized patrols in American cities. 

*****

The killing of Tyrin Johnson is a warning. Once soldiers are deployed on the streets under the pretext of fighting crime, they will inevitably be used as an armed force against the entire population. The official claim that Johnson “turned” with a weapon must be treated with the utmost skepticism. The police and military have lied countless times after killing civilians, and in this case they have not even claimed that Johnson fired at them. 

The demand must be raised for the immediate release of all body camera footage, surveillance footage, radio traffic and reports related to the killing of Johnson. The names of the Guardsmen who fired must be made public. But the issue goes far beyond one investigation.

The Memphis Safe Task Force must be disbanded. The National Guard and all federal police agencies must be withdrawn from Memphis and every city in the country. The police, the immigration Gestapo and the military apparatus used to enforce inequality, deportations and the waging of imperialist war must be abolished. 

2. US conducts massive RIMPAC joint naval drills

Throughout this month, the US and 29 other nations are taking part in the biennial Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) naval exercise in and around Hawaii. The largest joint maritime drills in the world, RIMPAC 2026 takes place as part of Washington’s longstanding preparations for war against China.

The RIMPAC exercise began on June 24 and will last through July 31. According to the US Pacific Fleet website, the forces deployed to Hawaii include 32 surface ships, five submarines, 206 aircraft, and more than 30,000 personnel. Land forces from 15 nations are also taking part.

The aircraft carrier, USS Theodore Roosevelt, is leading the exercise alongside a contingent of other US warships, including destroyers, cruisers, submarines, and an amphibious assault ship, among others. This includes the USS Charlotte, the attack submarine that in March carried out a war crime by sinking an unarmed Iranian frigate, killing 84 of its personnel.

US allies in the Asia-Pacific are also playing leading roles, which includes Japan as the war games vice commander and South Korea as the maritime component commander. Canada is commanding the air component of the exercise.

Other key US allies in the war preparations against China taking part include Australia, the Philippines, and New Zealand. Israel, which is carrying out the genocide in Gaza, devastating Lebanon, and taking part in the US war against Iran, is also participating.

China is not taking part, though Beijing had previously been invited to join the exercise in 2014 and 2016. It was disinvited in 2018 over rising territorial disputes in the South China Sea that had been stoked by Washington and its allies. 

*****

RIMPAC takes place without Washington directly mentioning China, and claims the world’s largest maritime drills are not aimed at China. Instead, RIMPAC “provides a unique training opportunity for allies and partners to strengthen their collective capabilities and promote a free and open Indo-Pacific region.”

In reality, the phrase “free and open Indo-Pacific” is regularly trotted out to justify the ramping up of tensions with Beijing. Numerous longstanding territorial disputes exist in the East and South China Seas. However, in the past 15 years, the US has deliberately stoked tensions, encouraging countries like the Philippines to belligerently confront China, while accusing Beijing of “aggression” as the pretext for its own military build-up throughout the region. 

*****

Rather than the “free and open Indo-Pacific,” Washington’s goal is the control of oceans, sea lanes, and choke points throughout the region. This has become all the more critical following the debacle in the US war on Iran, where the Trump administration has failed to achieve the objectives of US imperialism and Iran successfully closed the Strait of Hormuz. 

*****

Beijing is well aware that RIMPAC is preparation for war against China. China Military Online, the official English-language news site of China’s military, stated in a July 6 article, “This year’s exercise is not only unprecedented in scale, but also features a stronger emphasis on major-country competition in both its strategic orientation and tactical arrangements, warranting close attention and vigilance.”

RIMPAC is far from the only US-led exercise taking place. Two additional exercises took place just as RIMPAC was beginning, Resolute Dragon 2026 and Valiant Shield 2026.

Resolute Dragon is an annual bilateral exercise with Japan, this year running from June 20 to June 30. The drill took place in Okinawa and Kyushu in the East China Sea involving 9,000 troops. The biennial Valiant Shield drill involving 10,000 troops began June 22 and ended on July 1, taking place in the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and Japan. Tokyo was closely integrated in the planning and execution of Valiant Shield for only the second time.

Japan is playing a key role in the war preparations against China. Under far-right Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Tokyo has threatened war with China over Taiwan, ramped up military spending to 2 percent of GDP, and lifted a ban on the export of lethal military weaponry. Tokyo is also expanding intelligence gathering operations.

Takaichi’s threat of war over Taiwan is significant, as the island is a major red line for Beijing, which considers it a rogue province and part of China. Conscious that Taiwan could be used by the US as a military staging ground against the Chinese mainland, Beijing has stated it will use force to reunify the island if Taipei declares independence. For this very reason, Washington and Tokyo, in conjunction with the administration of Lai Ching-te in Taipei, have stoked tensions over the island, attempting to goad Beijing into firing the first shot.

That Taiwan’s own war games are taking place at this time is not a coincidence. In recent weeks, Taiwan held its Immediate Combat Readiness Exercise from June 22 to 26, which involved 100,000 troops. It is also holding the Joint Defense Exercise beginning on July 13 and Han Kuang, the largest annual exercise for the Taiwanese military, beginning on August 5.

When asked recently during a legislative hearing if any US personnel were taking part in these military exercises, Hsieh Jih-sheng, the deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence, refused to comment. However, he added that the US-led exercises throughout the region were evidence that Taiwan is “definitely not alone.” American troops have been stationed in Taiwan for several years, supposedly in a training capacity.

3. With the World Cup final approaching, is now the time for New York transit workers to prepare a strike?

More than a month-and-a-half after their contract expired on May 16, 40,000 New York City subway and bus workers remain on the job with wages frozen as the cost of living continues to spike. The Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 100, which claims to be “at war” with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) over the agency’s draconian wage offer and demands for healthcare givebacks, is seemingly content to drag out the process for months or even years.

Meanwhile, the eyes of the world are on New York. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is by some measures the largest sporting event ever hosted in North America. The New York/New Jersey region is among the tournament’s principal venues, culminating in the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 19.

While New York City transit workers don’t directly provide transportation to the stadium, ticket holders depend on public transit to get to the stadium because of FIFA’s decision to ban parking at tournament venues. Beyond that, the World Cup is a major political undertaking—from Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s frequent World Cup public relations stunts to President Donald Trump’s self-appointment as the chair of the tournament’s organizing task force. The hosting of the event is intended to showcase prestige, economic strength and international standing, while masking social realities beneath a veneer of unity.

As such, enormous public and private resources have been mobilized for the 39-day event, with FIFA projected to rake in $13 billion in revenues. Meanwhile, public transit and other vital everyday services in the host cities face sustained disinvestment.

New York City transit workers keep the city moving during the World Cup, whatever the human costs. This past week’s dangerous heat wave, with outdoor temperatures exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius) and many subway stations higher still, is just one of the many hazards workers face on a daily basis. And for this, they are being offered a pathetic 2 percent wage increase annually. The MTA is demanding workers pay 50 percent more for healthcare premiums and increased co-pays for hospital visits.

With the World Cup final approaching in less than two weeks, the question naturally arises: is now the time for transit workers to exert their enormous leverage and prepare a strike?

The World Cup itself, while followed by billions worldwide, including in New York City, is an event covered in corruption and political reaction. FIFA is widely despised, hated for its corruption and profit-taking. The 2026 World Cup has set a new low, with seemingly every aspect of the organization tailored to extract the most profit and advance a reactionary political agenda.

The unprecedented decision to reverse a suspension of USA forward Folarin Balogun following a direct intervention by Donald Trump is only the latest obscene spectacle. The list also includes: the farcical “FIFA Peace Prize” awarded to Trump last December; the dynamic pricing of tickets, which has surged prices to thousands of dollars, limiting attendance only to the wealthy; the implementation of commercial breaks midway through each half of all games for the first time in the sport’s history; the travel bans preventing fans from several World Cup nations from attending matches; and the deployment of ICE to US stadiums. 

*****

The official narrative notwithstanding, the World Cup organization in New York-New Jersey reflects the stark class divide that pervades every aspect of society. An offensive by transit workers, bringing New York City to a halt at the very moment it is front and center before a global audience, would bring this real character of society to the forefront. And it would garner immense support from workers in New York and around the globe who similarly confront a crisis of affordability, increased exploitation and a political system that serves the wealthy. 

A strike would immediately place transit workers in conflict with both political parties, including Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul and Mayor Mamdani. No doubt they would attempt to make full use of the Taylor Law to try and break it. But nothing has ever been won without a struggle.

Transit workers have a long history of defying anti-worker and anti-democratic laws, including a sit-down strike in 1937 at a Brooklyn Rapid Transit (BRT) powerhouse, which led to the establishment of the TWU and major walkouts in 1966, 1980, and 2005.

Union officials, however, have refused in advance to organize a fight. In 2008, Transport Workers Union Local 100 signed a statement forswearing the right to strike.

*****

The TWU bureaucracy is deeply integrated into the political establishment, mainly via the Democratic Party. After years of groveling to Governor Andrew Cuomo, TWU Local 100 endorsed his successor, Kathy Hochul, for election in 2022, and the International funneled tens of thousands to her campaign. TWU boss John Samuelsen has of late been desperate to distance himself from Hochul, and two TWU locals endorsed her Trump-backed Republican challenger Bruce Blakeman. Samuelsen, meanwhile, was appointed to a committee on Mamdani’s transition team.

The fight to beat back the demands of the MTA and win raises that are necessary to live will not come from any element of the trade union apparatus or the Democratic and Republican Parties. The World Cup presents a major opportunity to seize the initiative. The money for a decent contract clearly exists. What is required is the organized collective power of the working class to take the struggle into their own hands, independent of the trade union functionaries and politicians. We urge transit workers to act now to build rank-and-file committees at every depot and yard so as not to let the opportunity pass. Fill out the form below to get involved. 

4. New Zealand media glorifies man who died fighting in Ukraine’s fascist Azov Brigade

On July 5 the New Zealand Herald revealed that Sam Haines, a 22-year-old man from Auckland, was killed last December while fighting in Ukraine as part of the fascist Azov Brigade’s International Battalion.

The article and an accompanying 15-minute video report are pro-war propaganda. They exploit Haines’ death to glorify the US-NATO imperialist proxy war against Russia. The Herald portrays Haines as a hero, effectively encouraging others to follow his example, and whitewashes the Azov Brigade, a neo-Nazi organization that plays a major role in Ukraine’s armed forces. 

The Putin regime’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 was reactionary, rooted in Great Russian nationalism and serving the interests of the Russian oligarchy—but it was provoked by three decades of NATO expansion and relentless US encirclement of Russia.

The European powers, led by Germany, Britain and France, are now committing vast sums to their own militaries in preparation for direct war against Russia. New Zealand and Australia are supporting this imperialist war with funding, equipment, and training for Ukrainian forces.

New Zealand’s corporate media is seeking to condition the population to accept greater involvement in the war against Russia and deeper integration into US-led preparations for war against China. 

*****

Ukraine has suffered hundreds of thousands of casualties and the military is desperate for new cannon fodder. The Kiev government says around 2 million Ukrainians are evading the draft and more than 200,000 soldiers have deserted their positions—a massive level of civil disobedience which points to widespread opposition to the war.

Thousands of foreign nationals are reportedly fighting in Ukraine’s military. Haines is the sixth New Zealander confirmed to have died in the war. 

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The Herald states that Haines enlisted in the Azov Brigade “within weeks” of arriving in Ukraine in January 2025. The newspaper mentions in passing that Azov was founded as a militia in 2014 and attracted “controversy because of its early far-right associations,” before being integrated into the country’s armed forces following Russia’s invasion. 

In reality the Brigade remains a neo-Nazi organisation. When Haines joined, its commander was Denys Prokopenko. Before joining Azov in 2014, Prokopenko was a member of the White Boys Club, a neo-Nazi fan club of the Dynamo Kyiv soccer team. Its Facebook posts have included photos of graffiti with their organization’s name alongside the number “88,” the neo-Nazi code for “Heil Hitler.”

The Azov Brigade celebrates Ukraine’s Nazi collaborators, including Stepan Bandera and Andriy Melnyk, leaders of the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), and Roman Shukhevych, head of its armed wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). These forces took part in the war of extermination against the Soviet Union, the genocide of Jews and the mass murder of at least 100,000 Poles.

The positions advanced by Azov and other far-right groups have been adopted by Volodymyr Zelensky’s regime, whose glorification of the OUN and the UPA as national heroes recently provoked a diplomatic crisis with Poland.

Zelensky’s corrupt, kleptocratic government has postponed elections and outlawed opposition parties. Anti-war activists have been imprisoned, including the socialist Bogdan Syrotiuk, whose organisation, the Young Guard of Bolshevik Leninists, called on workers in Russia and Ukraine to unite against both oligarchic regimes in order to end the war. These facts are buried by the New Zealand media.

The Herald’s video report features an interview with an unnamed American soldier in Azov’s International Brigade, who praises Haines’ combat skills and describes the unit as a “brotherhood” in which fighters develop “powerful” bonds. The video includes combat footage taken by members of Azov for propaganda purposes, which carries a watermark of the brigade’s “National Idea” symbol—a variation of the Wolfsangel symbol used by the Nazi SS. We are also shown Haines’ coffin emblazoned with the same symbol as he is buried in New Zealand.

Sam Haines’ mother told the Herald: “He found his tribe. They loved him. They cared for him. I think he felt understood there.” His father declared that after learning of his son’s feats on the battlefield “I am in awe of him.”

The Ukrainian military’s foreign recruiting department could not have hoped for a more glowing endorsement of the Azov Brigade.

The death of Sam Haines raises many disturbing questions. Why was it only reported after an eight-month delay? How many other New Zealanders are fighting in Ukraine and are there more deaths that have not been reported?

Who exactly were the Americans who apparently encouraged Haines to go and fight in Ukraine? Are there recruiters for the Azov Brigade operating in New Zealand?

The Herald’s brief mention of Haines’ enrollment in Massey University’s Defence Studies program also raises questions. What exactly did he study and how did it influence his decision?

 *****

The shocking revelation that a young New Zealand man was able to join a fascist brigade in Ukraine and was killed in battle has not prompted any statements of concern from anyone in the media, academia or the political establishment. The National Party-led government and the opposition parties, Labour, the Greens and Te Pāti Māori, are all silent.

This is because the entire political establishment supports the US-NATO proxy war. The last Labour government, backed by the Greens, sent military aid to Ukraine and deployed NZ troops to Britain to train Ukrainian conscripts. The pseudo-left International Socialist Organisation, which supports Labour and its allies, is openly aligned with US and European imperialism against Russia.

The state-owned and corporate media have effectively banned any criticism of the war. In 2023, when the journalist Mick Hall reported on the Ukrainian government’s promotion of fascists, he was hounded out of his job at Radio NZ, smeared as a “Russian agent” and investigated by the intelligence agencies.

Nor is there any dissent among academics. When Victoria University of Wellington hosted a Ukrainian nationalist exhibition in 2022, which promoted the Azov Battalion, downplayed the Nazi Holocaust and glorified Bandera and the OUN, the event attracted zero criticism outside of the WSWS.

The Herald’s war propaganda must be taken as a sharp warning by workers and young people. As the war in Ukraine continues to intensify, along with the US confrontation with China, New Zealand’s ruling class is preparing to escalate its involvement. With Labour’s agreement, the government is planning to double military spending and wants to rapidly increase recruitment into the armed forces. A minor imperialist power, Wellington is determined not to be excluded from the violent carve-up of the world’s resources and markets.  

5. As they escalate war against Russia, imperialist powers greenlight Erdoğan’s police-state crackdown

In preparation for the 36th NATO Summit in Ankara on July 7–8, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government has declared war on basic democratic rights in Türkiye.

The Erdoğan government has implemented a de facto state of emergency in the capital and detained hundreds of people. The aim is to suppress the widespread opposition to the gathering of political criminals, headed by US President Donald Trump, who are waging a war of aggression against Iran, have made the genocide in Gaza possible and are creating the risk of a nuclear conflict in the war against Russia in Ukraine. Events in Ankara are the sharpest expression of the turn by the ruling classes worldwide toward war and dictatorship in the face of the insoluble crisis of the global capitalist system.

The Ankara Governorate announced a 13-day ban on demonstrations and press statements covering the period from June 28 to July 10. Over the weekend, more than 100 people were unlawfully detained during home raids conducted in 18 provinces. On Sunday evening, police attacked an anti-NATO march in Ankara and detained more than 100 people. Dozens of left-wing media outlets and organizations had their social media accounts suspended. This comes on top of the hundreds of detentions and more than 200 arrests in previous weeks.

Imperialist war abroad, in which the Turkish ruling class participates in pursuit of its own interests, and police-state repression against social opposition at home are two sides of the same coin.

The massive assault on basic democratic rights in Türkiye has the approval of American and European political and media institutions. Located at a crossroads connecting Asia and Europe, the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, Türkiye is viewed as a key ally in the plans of all the imperialist powers—led by the United States—to wage war, dominate the Middle East and carry out the violent redivision of the world. It is considered critically important not only in terms of the war against Russia and Iran but also the war preparations targeting China, including disrupting the projects like the Belt and Road initiative. Erdoğan is also continuing to hold refugees fleeing the imperialist wars in Syria and Afghanistan in Türkiye on behalf of the European powers.

Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025 has accelerated the crackdown on the political opposition in Türkiye. Ekrem İmamoğlu, mayor of Istanbul, the largest city in Türkiye, and the Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) presidential candidate—selected by 15.5 million voters—has been in prison since March 2025. Since then, police raids have been carried out on dozens of CHP-run municipalities. Shortly before the summit, the CHP’s elected leadership was removed from office by court order, and several more mayors—including Ali Ercan Akpolat, mayor of Adalar—were arrested. Erdoğan is neutralizing the CHP, which emerged as the leading party in the March 2024 elections, through a political coup. All of this has been met with deafening silence in NATO capitals.

The presidential dictatorship Erdoğan has built with the approval of Washington and the European capitals serves as a model for governments grappling with the same crisis. Trump, who is signaling his intent to overturn or cancel elections and imprison his opponents, is following in Erdoğan’s footsteps. While Trump praises Erdoğan at every opportunity, the Democrats and their media mouthpiece, the New York Times, are tacitly endorsing this repression in Türkiye. 

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The summit’s official agenda makes clear that this will be a summit aiming to expand rearmament and imperialist war. The Defense Industry Forum on July 7 is being attended not only by Ukraine but also by NATO’s Asia-Pacific partners (Australia, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea) and the Gulf States. The agenda thus extends beyond Russia—against which NATO has been waging a proxy war since 2022—to preparations for continued aggression against Iran and war against China. 

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The run-up to the summit was marked by Trump’s demand for a rapid increase in military spending and by disagreement over the future of NATO’s war against Russia. US officials claim that the front in Ukraine has “frozen.” While the European powers seek to escalate the war with strikes deep into Russian territory, Trump—meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Ankara on July 8 and conducting telephone diplomacy with Russian President Vladimir Putin—is pursuing a separate deal profitable for the United States. Far from reducing militarism, this inter-imperialist rivalry is accelerating it.

The trillions being poured into rearmament are being extracted from the working class through deep cuts to health, education, pensions and wages. Türkiye, which has NATO’s second-largest army, increased its military spending by 7.2 percent over the previous year and by 94 percent over the past decade. This increase came amid a massive cost-of-living crisis, a significant decline in real wages and pensions, rising taxes loaded onto the backs of the working class, and tax breaks and incentives for big business.

The European powers seeking to provoke a direct NATO war against Russia are likewise attempting to finance their rearmament programs through enormous social cuts. This is accompanied by moves to reintroduce conscription. Because these measures—opposed by workers and youth—provoke growing resistance, the ruling classes everywhere are resorting to police state measures. The transformation of Ankara into a fortress with some 70,000 security personnel, together with the wave of preventive arrests, is a concentrated expression of this logic.

This turn is even more naked at the center of world imperialism. On July 3 at Mount Rushmore, Trump delivered a fascist speech—characterized by the WSWS as “anticommunist hysteria and the conspiracy for dictatorship”—declaring war on socialism and branding political opposition as the enemy within. This anticommunism expresses the fear of the financial oligarchy in the face of the threat rising from the working class.

The ruling classes’ fear of social revolution is not unfounded. The same spiral of militarism and social austerity is fueling an ever-growing wave of class struggle worldwide. This year, Türkiye has witnessed significant signs of an independent workers’ movement; from warehouse workers to miners, from shipyard workers to teachers, sections of the working class have launched important struggles independent of the official trade union confederations. Energy, railway and hospital strikes in the United States, general strikes in Italy, and mass military desertions in Ukraine are the international signs of this upsurge.

The criminalization of opposition to war is a NATO-wide phenomenon. The NATO-backed Zelensky regime has imprisoned the Ukrainian Trotskyist Bogdan Syrotiuk for more than two years on charges of “treason,” because he fights for the unity of Russian and Ukrainian workers against the war and opposes both the Zelensky and Putin regimes. His detention is being extended even though three separate expert reports have refuted the charges. Behind the Zelensky regime that imprisons Bogdan and the Erdoğan regime that jails anti-war activists and political opponents in Türkiye stand the imperialist powers. 

These events also expose the failure of bourgeois opposition parties, such as the CHP, which, amid mounting repression appeals to the very same NATO powers for “democracy” and “social peace” and pledges to be a better ally than Erdoğan to deliver on their promises. In Türkiye and across the world, no faction of the bourgeoisie can consistently oppose imperialist war and defend democratic rights. That requires a frontal assault on the wealth and power of the ruling class. 

6. Everything Is Great!: Carsie Blanton and the Burning Hell call for the overthrow of capitalism

The official celebrations of the 250th anniversary of American independence cannot hide the deep disgust that masses of Americans feel toward the entire political system. In President Donald Trump, many see the embodiment of an oligarchy waging criminal wars, eviscerating democratic rights and engaging in brazen lying and self-enrichment. Expressions of this opposition in popular culture are unfortunately still uncommon.

A noteworthy exception is Everything Is Great!, the recent album by singer–songwriter Carsie Blanton and Canadian indie band the Burning Hell. These sharp and funny songs take aim at the financial oligarchy, US imperialism and fascism. They not only call for the overthrow of capitalism but also look forward to a future of peace and equality. This positive attitude provides a welcome contrast with the despair that predominates among those who lean “left,” whether they are artists or not.

Since her debut album Ain’t So Green (2005), Blanton, who hails from Luray, Virginia, has steered clear of major labels and remained independent. Folk, country, jazz and Tin Pan Alley have all influenced her music. Some critics have compared Blanton with John Prine and Loudon Wainwright III.

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The Burning Hell, which originated in Peterborough, Ontario, is a loose collective centered on Matthias Kom and multi-instrumentalist Ariel Sharratt. Besides being a songwriter, Kom holds a PhD in ethnomusicology. He favors imagined narrators and gentle irony. The group’s songs often deal with work, community and the environment from a nonsystematic, broadly leftist perspective. Like Blanton, the band pursues a do-it-yourself ethic. 

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The title track begins the album with lazy acoustic guitar strumming as Kom calls Blanton from Canada to make sure she’s okay amid the current political turmoil. With a country lilt, Blanton exhibits forced optimism while acknowledging that “they’re shootin’ people lining up for bags of flour” and “nobody wants to talk about what you should do if your government is starting World War III.” The song functions as an indictment of the ruling class and a satire of complacent, ineffectual liberals.

But a seriously false note arrives in the line, “Everybody knows Luigi was right.” Luigi Mangione is suspected of the December 2024 murder of Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare. Though this act reflected mass anger at the corporate oligarchy, individual terrorism has no progressive outcome. It not only fails to provide political clarity or leadership but also serves as a pretext for the ruling class to increase repression. It expresses the politics of despair and frustration, not the outlook of a confident, broad-based socialist movement.

Despite such steps backward, the songs on Blanton’s album generally capture, usually in a humorous way, popular anger at war, exploitation and inequality. Peace and Freedom” mocks official denunciations of political violence (including one by Senator Chuck Schumer) while cataloguing the Tomahawk helicopters, military bases and nuclear weapons at the government’s disposal. “Price of Eggs” satirizes the idea that change can be achieved through elections. Instead, “[We’re] gonna turn the one into the zero percent.”  

Especially effective is the spare, minor-keyed “Private Equity,” which describes “A bottomless hunger to monetize / Every second of our previously worthless little lives.” Blanton sings about investors buying nursing homes and cutting the wages of immigrant workers who have fled US-backed coups. Finance capital is “driv[ing] up the price of the housing stock” and “buying the school and the TV show” to convince us that “there’s no point in fighting it.” Blanton draws out the last note of the song with a delicate, sinister curl.

Significantly, the album ends with four songs that strike a sustained note of optimism. The gentle “Live, Laugh, Love” urges, “No matter what anybody tells you, / If we work together, we can overthrow capitalism.” “Minor Characters” imagines an intimate, oceanside celebration after a successful uprising against the police.

 
Carsie Blanton and  Burning  Hell - The War to End All Wars

The strongest of these final songs is “The War to End All Wars.” Leaning into her Southern accent and singing from a fictional near future, Blanton recalls joining an armed insurrection against Washington. “I try to tell the children, / But they don’t believe a stitch, / How we used to kill and die / To make more profit for the rich.” The album closes with a folk song set in a world at peace. “I’m a weary arms dealer, / And this world ain’t mine no more,” sings Kom.

From a musical perspective, Everything Is Great! is as enjoyable as it is unassuming. The musicians’ nonchalant approach almost obscures the songs’ stylistic diversity. More significant and refreshing is the fact that the musicians (mostly Blanton) address urgent social and political issues directly, intelligently and from an unabashedly left-wing perspective. These songs are pointed and amusing, and many may find them to be a balm during this time of acute crisis. 

The album’s humor has its limitations, however. At times it is too gentle, at times too knowing. Blanton and Kom sometimes seem more like preachers before a choir than toughminded social critics. And as welcome as the anticapitalist and antifascist lyrics are, they also raise political questions. The fantasies about disposing of individual CEOs coincide with exhortations to mobilize the working class. At moments, one fears that the musicians’ perspective might not be so far from that of the petty-bourgeois liberals they lampoon.

Notwithstanding these reservations, Everything Is Great! says out loud what many Americans are thinking. It is no coincidence that the album has been released at a time of growing opposition to Trump and both political parties. The songs catch the listener’s attention and convince him or her that mass action against capitalism is not only necessary but also eminently possible. Blanton’s own career reflects the process of radicalization that is affecting workers and young people. But these radicalized masses must find their way to the socialist “genuine article.”

7. Prevent closure, defend every job at the Zalando logistics hub in Erfurt, Germany!

Zalando is slashing 2,700 jobs at its Erfurt logistics hub to boost profits—and the Verdi union bureaucracy is helping the company do it by haggling over severance pay instead of fighting to keep the facility open.

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It is not too late to organize resistance! Take the fight into your own hands now and organize yourselves in independent rank-and-file action committees! Wrest control of the negotiations from Verdi and initiate industrial action!

Verdi initially expressed outrage, denouncing the “ugly face of capitalism” and appealing to Zalando to “talk to the works council and union about ways to secure the site’s future.” From the outset, however, the Verdi apparatus never seriously considered the unconditional defence of all jobs. This is clear from the fact that it quickly made a “social plan”—that is, severance packages—its priority, while strictly refusing to call effective industrial action to defend every job.

As always in such cases, when the livelihoods of thousands of workers and their families are at stake, the unions appeal to “politicians”—in this case, the Thuringia state government. With its “Taskforce Zalando,” the state government has already ensured that the Federal Employment Agency opens an office directly at the site and has promised funds for “retraining measures.”

This is the mechanism through which masses of jobs have been permanently destroyed in recent years. It would be better described as a conveyor belt into unemployment. Everyone in Thuringia knows that comparable alternative jobs will never be created again. 

8. Trump calls FIFA chief to lift suspension on US player: Chauvinism and corruption permeate World Cup

President Donald Trump has personally intervened with FIFA President Gianni Infantino to overturn a one-game suspension handed to US forward Folarin Balogun, in an episode that lays bare, more crudely than at any previous point in the 2026 World Cup, the subordination of the most popular sports tournament in the world to the US financial oligarchy and Trump personally.

Balogun, the United States’ top scorer and Monaco’s leading striker this season, was sent off in the Round of 32 match against Bosnia-Herzegovina after a VAR review found he had raked his studs down an opponent’s leg and onto his ankle. Under FIFA’s disciplinary code, a straight red card carries an automatic one-match ban, applied without exception or appeal for more than 60 years of World Cup history. Balogun was set to miss Monday’s Round of 16 match against Belgium.

Trump, who had not been asked by the US Soccer Federation to get involved, called Infantino on his own initiative reportedly after the game Wednesday. By his own account, he did not initially understand why a red card should carry any further consequence at all. “I asked for a review because I didn’t think it was a foul,” he told reporters, adding that he “didn’t know what the hell a red card was” before making the call. That admission of ignorance did not stop him from declaring, in the same breath, “I’m the one who got them to overturn it.”

Behind the scenes, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and White House World Cup task force director Andrew Giuliani pressed Infantino directly, while lawyers coordinated with a hedge fund manager and US Soccer donor to prepare legal arguments contesting the VAR review, which were passed on to the federation. Days later, FIFA announced it was suspending the enforcement of Balogun’s ban for a “probationary period” of one year, citing Article 27 of its Disciplinary Code, a provision never previously used to nullify an automatic World Cup red-card suspension mid-tournament. 

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Trump found time for the Infantino call in between events marking the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. That same week, he delivered a speech in Medora, North Dakota, dedicating the $450 million Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, in which he dwelt at length on Roosevelt’s charge up San Juan Hill and the seizure of Cuba, Guam, the Philippines and Puerto Rico from Spain in 1898, declaring of that conquest, “they were all ours.”

The instinct to bend FIFA to Washington’s will over a soccer match and the nostalgia for imperial annexation fell squarely together in the would-be Fuhrer’s head as part of Independence Day events. This is a president for whom the affirmation of human equality in the Declaration of Independence must be recast as a celebration of American supremacy and aristocratic privilege over all concerns of society.

Political interference is by no means unprecedented in the history of the sport, though it has rarely been so brazen. Argentine dictator Jorge Videla visited Peru’s locker room ahead of a decisive 1978 group match Argentina needed to win by six goals; Argentina won 6-0. In 1973, FIFA gave Chile a forfeit victory after the Soviet Union refused to play a qualifier in the National Stadium, freshly used by Augusto Pinochet’s junta as a torture and execution center. In 1982, a Kuwaiti sheikh stormed the pitch to browbeat a referee into disallowing a legitimate French goal. Mussolini, who privately held the sport in contempt, used propaganda and pressure on officials to secure Italy’s 1934 title. In 1974, Zaire’s Mobutu Sese Seko allegedly threatened his own players with exile if they lost to Brazil by more than three goals; they lost 3-0.

What distinguishes the Balogun affair is its scale and brazenness: the direct, public, repeated intervention of the president of the world’s dominant imperialist power in the officiating of a world tournament hosted on his own soil.

The episode is riddled with contradictions. Balogun plays for the US team only because he was born in Brooklyn in 2001 when his Nigerian mother was unable to fly home to London while seven months pregnant. This was the result of birthright citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment that Trump’s administration is actively suing to abolish—not to speak of Trump’s travel bans targeting Nigeria and other majority-Muslim and African countries.

The president who mobilized the machinery of the US state to keep a Nigerian-American striker on the field is simultaneously working to ensure children like him are never recognized as citizens at all. Balogun, notably, has responded with more dignity than his own government, telling reporters he was conscious of “inspiring little kids” watching how “to handle things,” Meanwhile, US players themselves, on learning of the reversal, wondered whether the news was AI-generated. In this Twilight Zone of a tournament, no one would blink if Israel, which never qualified for the tournament, turned up in the semifinals.

None of this is incidental to Infantino’s FIFA. The federation he inherited emerged from the 2015 “FIFA-Gate” indictments, an FBI-led prosecution that toppled his predecessor Sepp Blatter over bribery charges tied to the Russian and Qatari World Cup bids, conveniently clearing the way for the “clean,” heavily lobbied selection of the joint US-Mexico-Canada bid over Morocco.

Infantino became Washington’s chosen instrument at the head of the world’s richest sporting body—one now facing a fresh criminal complaint filed in France by former UEFA president Michel Platini, alleging a conspiracy of false accusation that blocked Platini’s own path to the FIFA presidency a decade ago. Any US victory over Belgium will be permanently stained by this decision.

Host cities have welcomed visiting fans with real warmth, as hundreds of millions follow teams built increasingly from the ranks of immigrants and their children. That instinctive international solidarity and unity in sport and culture is precisely what the manipulation of FIFA by Trump and Infantino is designed to suppress beneath a fog of national chauvinism and rampant moneymaking.

The Balogun affair joins a growing catalogue: the exclusion of Iran’s team and staff from US soil under threat of bombing, the censorship of Haiti’s kit commemorating the defeat of Napoleon by the first successful anti-slave army, the airport interrogations and expulsions of African, Iranian and Arab players, referees, journalists and fans. Every one of these episodes exposes the same reality: a sport invented and sustained by the working class has been seized by a financial aristocracy and fused to the machinery of an increasingly fascistic state. 

9. Far-right Alternative for Germany holds party congress: Police violence and political support pave the way to government

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) presented itself as a future governing party at its party conference in Erfurt last weekend, as the fascist Wing faction, led by Björn Höcke consolidated its position on the party executive. This was only possible because representatives of the Christian Democrats (CDU), Social Democrats (SPD), Free Democrats (FDP) and Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) had previously held out the prospect of cooperation with the far-right party, and because a large-scale police operation hermetically sealed off the party conference from tens of thousands of counter-demonstrators.

The venue and date of the party conference were chosen deliberately. Exactly 100 years ago to the day, on July 3 and 4, 1926, the first Reich Party Congress of the re-established NSDAP took place in nearby Weimar, at which the party reorganized itself following its temporary ban in the wake of the Hitler putsch and definitively pledged its allegiance to Hitler as Führer. 

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Overall, the party leadership remained very cautious about making policy statements at the party conference. This is a calculated move, as any statement on their actual programme would diminish their electoral prospects. The AfD presents itself as the “opposition” and an “alternative,” but in reality it is taking the federal government’s right-wing policies to extremes with the utmost aggression.

It was the only party to have called, as early as the Bundestag election campaign, for an increase in military spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product—a demand that is now being implemented by the federal government and all the other parties in the Bundestag. It welcomes the reintroduction of compulsory military service and the unprecedented rearmament drive, and is absolutely unequivocal in its commitment to German militarism.

Its Bundestag election manifesto envisaged a massive redistribution from the bottom to the top: tax cuts for top earners and corporations, the scrapping of social benefits and the further privatization of public services. It is no coincidence that it received support from the world’s richest man, Elon Musk. Like its friend Donald Trump, an AfD government would also enforce policies designed to enrich the wealthy and wage war by the most brutal means.

The AfD’s smear campaign against migrants also serves this purpose. When, as a result of rearmament and the enrichment of the wealthy, schools fall into disrepair, rents rise and hospitals are closed, the far-right party shifts the blame onto the most vulnerable in society—in order to protect the rich and build a police state against the working class. 

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To the extent there was any criticism of the AfD, it came essentially from the right. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) stated that sensitive information would be withheld from an AfD government—not because they are fascists, but because “their proximity to Putin cannot be overlooked.” The Greens’ deputy parliamentary group leader, Konstantin von Notz, also declared: “The AfD is Moscow’s parliamentary arm in Germany.” 

The right-wing extremists of the AfD are thus not being criticized for their horrendous rearmament plans, their attacks on social welfare or their schemes to enrich the rich, but because the party is not taking a sufficiently aggressive stance against Russia. The reason for this is obvious: all the established parties are in agreement with the AfD’s social and economic program. The AfD is the most brutal manifestation of the right-wing shift across the entire political establishment.

The Left Party’s call for the AfD to be stopped with the help of the governing parties, the CDU and the SPD, is therefore a disastrous political trap. At its last party conference, the party resolved to form coalitions with these parties in order to prevent the AfD from gaining ground. One might as well collaborate with the arsonist to put out the fire.

In fact, it is precisely the Left Party’s right-wing policies that have strengthened the AfD. Wherever the party has been part of government, it has, in the name of left-wing politics, supported the social spending cuts, rearmament and wage reductions that paved the way for the AfD....

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All parties that defend capitalism are moving ever further to the right. It is impossible to combat the rise of the fascists with them—they are part of the problem, not part of the solution. The Left Party, which votes in favor of rearmament in the Bundestag and wants to govern in Thuringia alongside the CDU, is part of the cross-party coalition for war and austerity.

The struggle against fascism is inextricably linked to the struggle against capitalism. The AfD is not a glitch in the democratic system, but the product of a system which, in the deepest crisis of its history, is destroying social programs, waging wars and eroding democratic rights. Anyone who wants to defeat fascism must eliminate the social conditions that give rise to it. 

10. Massachusetts nurses, home care clinicians plan largest healthcare strike in state history

More than 4,500 nurses and clinicians employed by Mass General Brigham (MGB), the largest private hospital system in Massachusetts, are set to walk out Wednesday, July 8, in what would be the largest strike of healthcare workers in state history.

The strike includes more than 4,000 registered nurses at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) in Boston and roughly 450 MGB Home Care clinicians in Greater Boston, including registered nurses, occupational and physical therapists, speech-language pathologists, social workers and dietitians. The Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) has called only a 24-hour walkout at BWH, while the much smaller Home Care unit is scheduled for a seven-day strike.

The strike vote at BWH was overwhelming. Nurses voted 2,798 to 12, or 99.6 percent, to authorize a strike, the largest such vote by nurses in Massachusetts history. The vote reflects years of anger over unsafe staffing, stagnant pay, higher health insurance costs and the erosion of patient care at one of the country’s best-known hospital systems.

MGB has announced that it will lock out BWH nurses for an additional four days, until July 13, claiming the more than 1,200 traveling nurses it is bringing in as strikebreakers require a five-day minimum commitment. This exposes the MNA’s strategy of a token one-day strike under conditions where management could predict the timetable, import replacement labor and then turn the hospital’s own lockout into a weapon against the nurses.  

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The Massachusetts walkout is part of a growing wave of struggles by healthcare workers across the United States this year. In January, 15,000 nurses at major New York City private hospital systems began an open-ended strike over pay, staffing and working conditions, with nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian remaining out for six weeks. Later that month, more than 31,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers in California and Hawaii began an open-ended strike over wages and staffing, including 22,000 nurses in Southern California.

Other strikes this year have involved nurses and healthcare workers at Providence facilities in California, MarinHealth in Northern California, University Medical Center New Orleans, MultiCare Yakima Memorial in Washington and St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago.

These struggles are rooted in the Wall Street domination of healthcare and the profit-driven subordination of patient care, which have produced sweeping attacks on hospital capacity, staffing levels, wages and working conditions, especially since the start of the [COVID] pandemic.

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MG’s claims of financial hardship do not withstand scrutiny. The system holds an estimated $35.8 billion in assets. For the fiscal year ending in September, it reported a $59.2 million operating gain and, boosted by investment income, a $2.4 billion net margin.

Earlier in fiscal 2025, in the quarter ended June 30, MGB’s bottom line reached $1.03 billion, driven largely by nearly $963 million in nonoperating gains. For the full fiscal year ending September 30, 2025, the system still reported a $59.2 million operating gain and $2.4 billion in net income.

Meanwhile, MGB’s 14 highest-paid executives took home a combined $35.9 million in fiscal year 2024. CEO Dr. Anne Klibanski alone received $8.4 million, more than 90 times the roughly $86,700 starting salary for a Brigham nurse. MGB also paid tens of millions of dollars to consulting, staffing and construction firms.

Management’s hypocritical claim that nurses’ wage demands would cost more than $90 million a year and push the system beyond the state’s 3.6 percent healthcare cost-growth target is a transparent attempt to make nurses pay for a crisis created by management. 

11. Australia: What the proposed enterprise agreements at Western Sydney University reveal

A closer examination of the enterprise agreements that the trade unions are trying to impose quickly at Western Sydney University (WSU)—as a model for wider use at Australia’s 38 other public universities—is uncovering the full extent of the attack on pay, jobs and conditions.

The details, such as expanded workloads, show why the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) rushed last week, in a truly anti-democratic fashion, to push through a small meeting an endorsement of its deal with the WSU management before its members had a chance to read the documents, let alone discuss and debate them.

What is happening at WSU is a warning to staff and students alike of the retrograde conditions that the NTEU and the other main campus union, the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU), are trying to inflict on them nationally, by separate enterprise agreements at one university after the other.

It shows the need for a unified struggle by university staff and students against the new wave of three- or four-year enterprise agreements, which will facilitate further pro-corporate and pro-military reshaping of the universities, on top of the 4,000 job cuts and restructuring under the Albanese Labor government over the past two years.

As the WSWS reported, in an NTEU online members meeting at WSU last Thursday, NTEU representatives bulldozed through a 45 to 18 vote, with 7 abstentions, to endorse its proposed 2026–2030 agreements for academic and professional staff—despite many objections in the Zoom chat to the short notice for the meeting, as well as what little was known about the content of the sellout deal.

The NTEU WSU branch president David Burchell boasted that the WSU branch was “leading the charge” nationally. The NTEU had released copies of the agreements only three days earlier, after five months of closed-door discussions with management and “approval” by the NTEU national leadership. That gave staff members totally inadequate time to read and properly review the agreements—which have more than 120 pages each.

Access to the documents remains difficult, even for union members. As yet, non-union members and students have no access at all, even though the management may move swiftly to put the agreements to an all-staff ballot under the Fair Work industrial relations legislation.

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The proposed agreements would inflict another four years of sub-inflationary pay rises—this time averaging just 3.5 percent annually. This is way below the soaring cost of living, fuelled by the ongoing impact of the criminal US-Israeli war on Iran, which the Albanese government backed within hours of the attack being launched on February 28.

The agreements promise a 16.92 percent pay rise spread across nearly four years (March 2026 to January 2030), averaging 3.5 percent a year, when the Consumer Price Index (CPI) remains above 4 percent. 

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Both the professional and academic agreements provide for workload increases. Under the proposed academic agreement, academics can be loaded up by their departmental supervisors with extra teaching, beyond the nominal split in workloads of 40 percent teaching, 40 percent research and 20 percent university governance or community engagement. 

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For the thousands of sessional academics that WSU exploits to teach classes, there are no guaranteed casual conversions, unlike the 2022 agreement that purported to ensure 150 conversions over three years.

There is just a promised overall 25 percent reduction in the overall casual academic workforce, which was also promised but not met in 2022–25. Any former casuals will still be loaded up with heavy teaching loads of up to 70 percent of their working hours—only allocated 10 percent research workloads, rising to 30 percent in their third year. 

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Last August, the NTEU and CPSU struck a deal with the WSU management to allow its “Reset” restructuring to proceed, with the loss of some 187 jobs and the displacement of more than 600 professional staff.

Far from protection against further restructuring, the proposed agreements provide for a closer partnership and collaboration between the unions and the management in “Managing Change.” 

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The processes for misconduct charges and injury or ill-health assessments have been accelerated to give staff members less time to prepare and challenge victimisations.

“Misconduct” that can lead to disciplinary action is defined in sweeping terms. It can be “a breach of the University’s (unspecified) policy.” “Serious misconduct” that can lead to sacking can be conduct that causes “serious and imminent risk” to “the reputation, viability, or profitability of the University.” 

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The WSU Rank-and-File Committee is preparing a campaign for a “no” vote by all WSU workers, whether academic or professional staff, or union or non-union members, if and when the management puts the agreements to an all-staff ballot as required under the workplace laws.

This attack on university workers is occurring in a definite context. As we have documented, under its Universities Accord, the Albanese government is starving the universities of adequate funding, along with public schools, public hospitals, the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) and other social programs, while allocating hundreds of billions of dollars for AUKUS and other military expansions.

It is time to take a stand. For decades, the NTEU and CPSU have imposed one enterprise agreement after another in the universities, cutting wages in real terms, driving up workloads and assisting restructuring. This has not only affected university educators and all staff members, but also the students—left with larger classes, higher fees, narrower study options, less educational support, fewer services and greater restrictions on free speech.

University workers and students have to build new genuine democratic forms of organization—rank-and-file committees, totally independent of the trade unions—that will develop and fight for demands based on their needs, and those of working people and society as a whole, not the dictates of capitalist governments, the corporate ruling class and the plunge into war.

12. Geethananda Balasuriya Jayasekara (1955–2026): A fighter for Trotskyism

Geethananda Balasuriya Jayasekara

The last rites for comrade Geethananda Balasuriya Jayasekara, a longtime member of the Socialist Equality Party in Sri Lanka and its predecessor Revolutionary Communist League (RCL), known as Geetha in the party, were held on July 1 in Colombo.

Around one hundred party members, sympathizers and relatives took part. The funeral procession marched about a kilometre from the gate of the Borella Cemetery in Colombo, to the meeting hall, where the SEP paid tributes to comrade Geetha.

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The comrade died just two months before his 71st birthday on September 13. Joining the party in 1983, he dedicated four decades of his life to the international socialist perspectives of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) and the SEP, its Sri Lankan section. 

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The turning point in his political life was the influence of his elder brother, the late comrade Keerthi Balasuriya, the founding general secretary of the RCL and prominent international Trotskyist leader. He died prematurely of a sudden heart attack at the age of just 39 on December 18, 1987.

Geetha joined the Young Socialists (YS), then the youth movement of the RCL, in the late 1970s while still a student. He began studying Trotskyism and engaged in RCL political activities. He then joined the party in the early 1980s. At the time, he was working as a mathematics tutor, but later gave up tutoring in order to devote himself full-time to building the Trotskyist movement.

Geetha joined the party amid heightened class tensions. The rightwing United National Party (UNP) government of President J.R. Jayawardene systematically provoked anti-Tamil racialism to divide working-class resistance against its pro-market policies and the dismantling of social gains. An island-wide pogrom against Tamils in 1983 plunged the country into a protracted communal war against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The RCL took the lead in opposing the government’s Sinhala chauvinist campaign, military-police repression and reactionary war. Only the RCL/SEP called for the unity of Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim workers to demand the withdrawal of troops from the North and East of the island as part of a political struggle for socialism.

The party waged this political struggle courageously, in the face of violent attacks by thugs and police-military repression. Leading comrades were arrested, including the late SEP general secretary Wije Dias.

Geetha himself was attacked while he and two other comrades were campaigning against the war. Racist thugs aligned with the UNP government assaulted them in Kotahena, a multi-ethnic working-class neighborhood in Colombo, while they were selling the RCL’s Sinhala and Tamil language newspapers. All three were hospitalized.

Geetha took the lead in organizing campaigns at the meetings of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), Stalinist Communist Party and Nava Sama Samaja Party, to distribute party literature. When organizers tried to remove our teams, he courageously challenged them and defended the party’s democratic rights.

Comrades recalled that Geetha patiently educated them in the party’s Trotskyist heritage. He had a good knowledge of the ICFI’s Security and the Fourth International investigation into assassination of Leon Trotsky, co-leader of 1917 Russian revolution, and founder of the Fourth International.

Geetha sided with the ICFI’s defense of genuine Trotskyism in the 1985–1986 split with the opportunist leadership of the Workers Revolutionary Party in Britain. He was particularly enthusiastic about the launching of the WSWS in 1998 that vastly expanded the scope and reach of the ICFI.

Geetha was instrumental in the posting of articles in the Sinhala language on the WSWS. That work began in 2002 and ended three months before his death due to deteriorating health. He also proofread Sinhala-language articles and those translated into Sinhala from English. 

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Geetha was a very cultured person and was held in affection by party comrades for his humane disposition and readiness to assist whenever needed. His interest in the arts was influenced in part by his elder brother, Keerthi. He had a considerable knowledge of music and poetry, as well as the ability to sing. He particularly loved Beethoven’s symphonies and broadly appreciated Indian music and musicians. 

On one occasion, Geetha participated in singing the Sinhala version of the Internationale alongside prominent cultural figures, including the classical vocalist W. D. Amaradeva, the dramatist Dhamma Jagoda, and the late SEP comrade, Professor Piyaseeli Wijegunasinghe of the University of Colombo.

Geetha’s life stands as an example to all comrades and to all those in the future who will take up the struggle for socialism of what it means to be a Trotskyist fighter. His memory will last long in the party and the Trotskyist movement internationally.

13. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Demonstrations press for shorter workweek

Brazil:

Buenos Aires police attack striking science workers

Canada:

British Columbia nurses launch job action
 
Vancouver outside municipal workers step up strike actions 

Peru:

Native tribes protest illegal mining and drug traffic

United States:

Massachusetts transit workers strike over wage cuts and mandatory Saturdays
 
MyMichigan Health nurses in city of Alma on three-day strike
 
Workers at Woodward MPC in Niles, Illinois prepare for strike
 
Boston Harbor tugboat workers strike over wages
 
 

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.