Apr 6, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

 1. This week in history: April 6-12

  • 25 years ago:
Autoworkers in South Korea beaten by police
  • 50 years ago:

Deng Xiaoping stripped of positions in CCP

  • 75 years ago:

    US President Truman dismisses General Douglas MacArthur

  • 100 years ago:

Assassin lightly wounds Mussolini  

2. Trump’s threats to destroy Iran and the breakdown of American democracy

On Sunday, US President Donald Trump issued a profanity-laced rant on Truth Social vowing to destroy Iran’s civilian infrastructure in a series of war crimes.

“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F****n’ Strait, you crazy b******s, or you’ll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah.”

*****

The invocation of Allah—the name for God used by Muslims—in a message on Easter Sunday threatening to send the population of a predominantly Muslim country to “Hell” is an overtly Christian fascist statement, giving the war the coloration of a crusade.

The president of the United States is threatening to destroy the power grid and bridges of Iran, eliminating the basis of civilized life for 90 million people. These are statements of total criminality, within the framework of an illegal war of aggression.

Trump operates completely outside the framework of international law, of democratic conventions and basic legality. His statements and actions are a testament to the total breakdown of American democracy under the pressure of extreme inequality, endless war and spiraling social, economic and political crisis.

The overwhelming majority of the American population is disgusted by and opposes Trump’s illegal war against the people of Iran. They rightly see him as a criminal and a gangster.

But this raises the question: How, amid overwhelming popular opposition, after millions marched against the government on March 28, can this gangster regime remain in power?

The answer lies in the character of the nominal political opposition. The Democratic Party’s response to Trump’s statements has focused on the president’s personality and mental state. “These are the ravings of a dangerous and mentally unbalanced individual,” Senator Bernie Sanders wrote Sunday. Senator Chris Murphy called Trump’s remarks “completely, utterly unhinged.” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Trump is “ranting like an unhinged madman on social media” and threatening “war crimes.”

Trump’s statements are indeed both criminal and insane. But the Democrats’ response is characterized by political impotence. Five weeks into the war, no congressional committee has held a public hearing. No resolution condemning the war has been brought to a vote. No investigation has been opened.

*****

The rise of Trump to the heights of American politics is a reflection of the historical bankruptcy of the entire social and political order. Trump is, as World Socialist Web Site International Editorial Board Chairman David North wrote April 2, an embodiment of a criminal underworld that has come to power. His language expresses “the essential character of a social layer that has become habituated to criminality and no longer feels compelled to apologize for it.”

This oligarchy has amassed its wealth not through productive labor, but through fraud, speculation and theft. Its social physiognomy is epitomized by the Epstein scandal, which exposed—if only in part—the integration of high finance, state power and sexual blackmail in the operations of the American ruling class. The same networks of privilege, corruption and impunity that surrounded Epstein uphold a political system in which criminality is not an aberration, but a method of rule.

Trump did not arise out of nowhere. He articulates, in unvarnished form, a broader ruling class policy. His genocidal threats mark a new stage in a decades-long escalation of US imperialist criminality: Bush’s invasion of Iraq on fabricated pretexts; Obama’s global drone assassination program conducted outside democratic or legal restraint; Biden’s arming and funding of Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

The same ruling class is waging all-out war on the working class at home. On Wednesday, Trump told a White House Easter lunch audience that the government could not afford daycare, Medicaid, Medicare or Social Security because it needed the money to wage war. He called these vital programs on which tens of millions depend “little scams,” and said the federal government had one job: “military protection.” His proposed budget requests $1.5 trillion for the Pentagon—a 44 percent increase—paid for by gutting domestic spending.

Again, the Democrats oppose any popular mobilization because a movement from below would immediately raise these broader issues. Trump’s profanity-laced threats to obliterate Iran’s civilian infrastructure expose more than his personal depravity. They reveal the breakdown of democratic institutions themselves. There is no mechanism within the existing political institutions to seriously oppose him, and the regime has declared it will not accept any constraints on its actions.

Opposition cannot be entrusted to the Democratic Party. It must be developed as a class movement. Workers and young people must organize independently—in workplaces, across industries and across borders—against the war, against the destruction of social programs, and against the capitalist system that produces war, dictatorship and social inequality.

3. Danish pseudo-left lines up with European imperialism against US over Greenland

Opposition in Denmark and across Europe to the Trump administration’s brutal persecution of immigrants and political opponents, aggressive “America first” militarism, and push to establish a dictatorship is widespread.

Large sections of the Danish population have expressed particular outrage at Trump’s repeated threats to seize Greenland, an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark. Trump has made clear that controlling the world’s largest island is part of his agenda to dominate the Western hemisphere in preparations for world war with China and other US rivals.

*****

Opposition to imperialist war and plunder can only come from the international working class. Workers in Europe and the United States have no interest in backing one or another contending party in the imperialist redivision of the world now underway. While differences between the predators flare up from time to time, these always revolve around the question of who will control the distribution of the spoils of imperialist conquest. However, all of the European and North American imperialist powers are determined to deploy the most brutal forms of violence to secure their interests.

Workers in Denmark and throughout Europe require the program of world socialist revolution and political independence from all factions of the ruling class to put an end to imperialist war and the capitalist system that gives rise to it. The only political movement with a decades-long record of struggle in defense of these principles and against all anti-Trotskyist tendencies, like the Pabloites, who have repudiated them is the International Committee of the Fourth International. This is the movement that workers and young people ready to fight the resurgence of imperialist war and barbarism must now build in Denmark and internationally. 

4. United Kingdom:  Resident doctor appeals for a unified fightback against Starmer government threats

NHS FightBack spoke with a resident doctor in London, Sophie, about the upcoming six-day strike which begins on April 7, across the National Health Service (NHS) in England by 50,000 members of the British Medical Association (BMA).

This marks the fifteenth strike since March 2023 in the battle for pay restoration, with wages in real terms 20 percent lower than in 2008. Last year’s action also raised demands to tackle the jobs crisis facing tens of thousands of resident doctors, who make up half of all NHS medical staff.

The strike opposes a 3.5 percent pay award for this year confirmed by the Labour government—below RPI inflation standing at 3.6 percent and expected to rise sharply due to the war on Iran.

Doctors have also faced down threats from Prime Minister Keir Starmer demanding they suspend the action and vote on the connected deal drawn up in closed door talks between the BMA resident doctors committee (RDC), led by Dr. Jack Fletcher, and Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

Streeting’s “generous offer”—in addition to real terms pay cut—is a new contract tying progression through the pay scales with “productivity gains” claiming an average increase this year of 4.9 percent. An additional 4,500 speciality posts over three years has been touted as “progress” when 50,000 resident doctors face unemployment this year.

On Thursday, Starmer confirmed that 1,000 additional speciality posts had been withdrawn for this year following the ending of his 48-hour ultimatum to suspend the action and vote on the deal.

As NHS FightBack stated, the RDC had no mandate for a deal which abandons resident doctors core demands. Fletcher withdrew from talks last Wednesday after the government confirmed that the time span for pay progression would be spread over three years rather than implemented in 2026/27.

Fletcher insists there is still a pathway to a settlement with a government using coercion and threats and mounting a media witch-hunt smearing resident doctors are “reckless” and “absurd”.

NHS FightBack asked resident doctor Sophie to respond. 

5. Book review: American Midnight: The Great War, a violent peace, and democracy's forgotten crisis

Adam Hochschild’s American Midnight: The Great War, A Violent Peace, and Democracy’s Forgotten Crisis uncovers the massive World War I-era attack on civil liberties and the violent repression of labor, socialists and immigrant communities carried out under the liberal Democratic Party administration of Woodrow Wilson. 

Hochschild’s vivid, engaging account of the political subordination of the society to the needs of a ruling class waging an imperialist war deserves a wide readership. The crimes it documents, including attacks on immigrants, imprisonment of thousands for political speech, systematic use of torture, state-sponsored terrorist violence and naked profiteering, are central to an understanding of the rise of the United States to leading imperialist power—all the more timely given the return of these forms of repression under the fascistic Trump administration in the twilight of American imperialism. 

Hochschild (King Leopold’s Ghost; Spain in Our Hearts) opens the book with the paradox around which the narrative is organized. The US entered World War I, as Woodrow Wilson claimed, to “make the world safe for democracy,” and yet the war became “the excuse for a war against democracy at home.” More striking still is the scale and severity of the repression that intensified after the war had already ended. This, American Midnight shows, was directed against organized resistance in the working class. 

It is a history, Hochschild observes, “not marked by commemorative plaques, museum exhibits, or Ken Burns documentaries.” The author offers American Midnight as a corrective to a sanitized official memory in which the heroism of the “Great War” simply dissolves into the libertinism of “the Roaring Twenties.” In this, he has succeeded.

*****

American Midnight deals with a period rich in critical political and strategic lessons for the working class, extracted and explained in the great contemporary writings of Lenin and Trotsky. Among these was the insistence that there was no “progressive faction” of the ruling class. In the age of imperialism, Lenin wrote in State and Revolution, it is “political reaction all along the line.”

It was probably not Hochschild’s intention to support Lenin’s crucial point. His book offers no specific class analysis; the word “imperialism” appears only once. Perhaps unable to approach the significance of his own findings, the author limply concludes his book by calling for vigilance in defense of “America’s version of democracy.”

But whatever his intentions, Hochschild’s honest and lifelike account completely destroys the myth of a “Golden Age” of liberal reformism. Wilson sought to drape American imperialism in the mantle of “Progress,” democracy and freedom. But his response to organized working class resistance against inequality, repression and nationalist propaganda was to level the most ruthless attacks on democratic and social rights ever waged.

It must be stressed that this attack came at the near apogee of American capitalism, when it was still on the rise. Today, the American ruling class, led politically by the fascist Donald Trump, is utterly bankrupt—both morally and financially. In its unprovoked attacks on Iran, its support for the Israeli genocide in Gaza, and in aiming for the destruction of virtually all that remains of working class living standards won in the hard struggles of the last century, it has shown it is prepared to carry out crimes today that would put those of the 20th century in the shade.

When Hochschild writes that what is needed is “above all, a vigilant respect for civil rights and constitutional safeguards, to save ourselves from ever slipping back into the darkness again,” one is prompted to ask the question: From whom will come a commitment to social equality and democratic rule?

The answer to this question is the international working class, which can and must mobilize to fight this lawlessness and cruelty with the higher principle of social equality, for the expropriation of the oligarchy and the establishment of genuinely democratic forms of rule. The struggle for socialism is not just politically necessary, but remains the only humane, decent and emancipatory path left.

6. UCLA reports expose explosive growth of student homelessness in Los Angeles County

Two recent reports by the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) on student homelessness in Los Angeles County constitute a devastating exposure of the social reality confronting millions of working-class families.

The reports, titled “Rising Numbers, Fading Resources” and “Hidden In Plain Sight,” provide a detailed statistical and qualitative portrait of a system incapable of meeting the most basic human needs, above all the right to stable housing and education.

The growth of student homelessness is extraordinary. Between the 2022-23 and 2023-24 school years, the number of homeless students in Los Angeles County surged by 28.4 percent, a rate that far exceeds both state and national increases. More than 61,000 students were officially identified as homeless.

This figure alone is staggering, but it captures only a portion of the real scale of deprivation. The rise reflects the combined impact of skyrocketing housing costs, the rollback of limited pandemic-era protections and the intensification of economic insecurity among working-class families.

Los Angeles County, with a population of roughly 10 million, is a region marked by extreme social inequality, with dozens of billionaires alongside vast layers of the population living on the brink of homelessness.

The UCLA reports underscore the link between student homelessness and social inequality. Latino students are disproportionately affected. English Learner students in some areas comprise up to half of the homeless student population.

These patterns reflect broader social conditions, including low wages, precarious employment and the vulnerability associated with immigration status in a system that systematically exploits immigrant workers while denying them basic rights.

*****

The educational impact is severe: over one-third of homeless students are chronically absent due to transportation barriers, frequent moves and unstable living conditions, disrupting both academic progress and social development.

Despite some districts implementing targeted interventions that produced limited improvements in test scores or dropout rates, homeless students continue to lag behind their housed peers.

Crucially, the second UCLA report shows that even these alarming figures significantly underestimate the scale of the crisis. Large numbers of students are excluded from official counts due to narrow federal definitions and inconsistent reporting. Those who are “doubled up,” temporarily living with other families because of economic hardship, are often left out, leaving tens of thousands of students experiencing housing instability effectively invisible.

This undercounting has direct consequences. Funding for programs that support homeless students is tied to identification rates; when students are not counted, they receive no assistance. The result is a vicious cycle in which the most vulnerable are systematically denied essential resources.

*****

Fear plays a decisive role. Many families avoid disclosing their housing situation due to concerns about immigration enforcement, child welfare intervention or social stigma. These pressures are particularly acute in immigrant communities, which comprise a significant share of Los Angeles County. Statewide data show homeless students are twice as likely to be migrants as their housed peers, underscoring the link between immigration status and housing insecurity.

Student homelessness is not the result of individual misfortune or isolated administrative failure, but the outcome of decades of policy decisions that have systematically prioritized the interests of the financial and corporate elite over the needs of the population.

Both the Democratic and Republican parties bear responsibility, as they have dismantled social programs while directing vast resources toward war, policing and the enrichment of the wealthy. Their claim that there is “no money” for education, housing or healthcare is exposed as fraudulent when billions are routinely allocated to military spending and corporate subsidies.

While the Trump administration gives crude and open expression to this logic, insisting that social needs be subordinated to war and national security, the Democratic Party has enforced the same essential policies in a more concealed form. This is particularly evident in California, a state dominated by Democrats for decades.

The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the second-largest in the United States, exemplifies this crisis. With a budget of $18.8 billion serving nearly 400,000 students, it is projecting an $877 million deficit for the 2026-2027 school year. This has already led to layoffs, program cuts and further deterioration of strained services. At the same time, city authorities are advancing plans to privatize aspects of homelessness management, turning social catastrophe into an arena for extracting profit.

7. ICE presence increasing at Michigan healthcare facilities

Michigan health care providers are now reporting that encounters with ICE are becoming routine parts of their practice, both near and within healthcare facilities. Routine checkups now include monitoring immigrant patients for a “basic fear of safety,” particularly young patients whose family members have been arrested by ICE. In addition to enforcement actions at health care facilities, there are increased reports of individuals injured by ICE during arrests being taken to hospitals and emergency departments, as well as a greater number of people requiring emergency care while in ICE detention.

On March 23, 2026, the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center and ACLU of Michigan sent guidance to more than 400 hospitals and providers in the state concerning the legal rights of immigrant patients. In this guidance, health care providers are reminded that both federal and Michigan state law, including The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, requires emergency rooms to provide necessary treatment to anyone presenting with an emergency medical condition, regardless of immigration status or ability to pay.

Thus, it is illegal to turn away or delay care to a patient based on their immigration status. Healthcare providers are further reminded that no law requires the affirmative disclosure of patients’ immigration status to law enforcement authorities. Such unauthorized disclosures run afoul of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) and the Michigan Medical Records Access Act if done absent a valid judicial warrant, court order, or subpoena. Administrative immigration warrants or subpoenas not signed by a judge are insufficient for this purpose.

The memorandum also advises that immigration officers are still constrained by Fourth Amendment bars against unreasonable searches and seizures, especially in the context of healthcare, where patients have reasonable expectations of privacy while being treated. This notice of patients’ legal rights is unfortunately required, as ICE officers have been explicitly instructed to disregard the Fourth Amendment and break into homes without a judicial warrant. 

A high percentage of workers in healthcare facilities in Michigan are also immigrants, compounding the issue of ICE enforcement at healthcare facilities. An estimated 29 percent of custodial and maintenance workers, and 9 percent of hospital workers overall are immigrants.

*****

The Trump Administration has devastated Medicaid through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is expected to end for 355,000 Michigan residents by 2028, including tens of thousands of immigrants. There are already widespread fears that Medicaid data is being turned over to ICE to identify undocumented immigrants.

The March 19, 2026 episode of “The Pitt” crystalizes how ICE’s expansion and its pressure on medical centers and healthcare workers transforms hospitals into instruments of state terror, with immediate consequences for both patients and staff. The episode in questions depicts masked ICE agents with a zip-tied detainee turning an emergency room into a detention area. This dramatization captures what Michigan healthcare providers are now reporting as reality: routine appointments and emergency visits are being policed and medical personnel are pressured to choose between patient care and collusion with ICE.

Tragically, this fictional scene is not hyperbole, but a reflection of current policy. DHS rescinded sensitive-location priorities, ICE has been ordered to operate aggressively in civilian spaces, and hospitals are reporting increased encounters, detainees injured by or under the watch of ICE, and healthcare workers themselves being terrorized.  

The effect is to intimidate entire communities into foregoing care, subcontract medical labor and records to an immigration-surveillance apparatus, and to deepen the fragmentation of the working class. Workplace defense is thus a necessity to resist deportations, medical neglect, and the commodification of healthcare in general, and an organized socialist response must be made to these ends.

8. The Wuhan “lab leak” fraud and the institutionalization of anti-science: An interview with Dr. Peter Daszak

In this interview, Daszak responds to the inaugural “Scientific Freedom” lecture held at the National Institutes of Health under the sponsorship of NIH Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, chosen for that position by vaccine denialist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. because he opposed any serious public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Daszak on what we face:

We are now closing the labs and organizations that existed to prevent the next pandemic. Emerging infectious diseases are rising exponentially. We estimate a median of 66,000 people in South and Southeast Asia are infected by bat coronaviruses every year, and that number is increasing above a straight line. Every single program that John Cohen described in his recent book on new approaches to pandemic prevention has been shut down by Bhattacharya. The next pandemic will emerge from another wildlife farm, market, or shipping port soon; that’s a statistical projection from published data. And what are we doing about it? We’re defunding scientists.

Dr. Daszak on now heading a non-profit:

As CEO of a nonprofit, you have a board, and many board members come from the private sector. For many, their involvement is genuinely aimed at doing good for the public and the planet. But sometimes you go to lunch with people who are just awful, people with money who want to tell you what to do with science, who see research as an asset to be deployed. We saw this in the Epstein files, with evidence that he had repeatedly met with networks of scientists. Unfortunately, wealthy people manipulating a scientific agenda for their own personal goals is part of the reality of how research gets funded in this system. It creates dependencies that have nothing to do with scientific merit.

But scientific funding through government agencies involves a far more open process, with proposals, independent review, goals, reports and publications. It also helps demonstrate that the lab leak obsession with the DEFUSE proposal is so erroneous. We couldn’t pursue the DEFUSE line of research without funding. You can’t characterize a series of bat coronaviruses 20 percent different from SARS without the $14 million budget ahead of time. Meanwhile Ridley faces no such constraints. He’s independently wealthy, writing nonsensical books and giving lectures at NIH is just a hobby for him. A book full of innuendo doesn’t need peer review or a funding agency. That asymmetry is part of the problem. Look at who is making money from this MAHA movement, writing books, promoting supplements instead of vaccines, gaining fame through podcasts. Science is a discipline that promotes truth and rejection of false hypotheses: you are supposed to be criticized, you are supposed to be wrong sometimes, you are supposed to update when the evidence demands it. These people operate with none of those constraints.

On doing good:

Scientists who work in areas that become political targets understand it viscerally. I would never have imagined, as a graduate student, getting into this kind of political fight over my work. You’re not trained for it. And when it happens, it is devastating; your livelihood, your mortgage, your career can be demolished. But underneath all that there’s a reason we become scientists, or medical doctors, or public health workers. We want to do good. If doing good means irritating powerful people to the point of attack, then you are still doing good. That must sustain you.

*****

A Marxist Conclusion by Benjamin Mateus of the World Socialist Web Site:

What Daszak provides, almost without realizing it, is a materialist account of how science functions under capitalism, not as the autonomous pursuit of truth by enlightened individuals, but as an activity structurally dependent on state funding, private donors, institutional relationships and political tolerance. He describes going to lunch with “people who are sometimes just awful” because a nonprofit cannot survive without them. He describes a $14 million grant proposal as the precondition for research that could have characterized the very type of virus that caused the pandemic. He describes watching Chinese scientific collaboration built over decades, producing data that flowed to US databases because the Americans had the gold standard, collapse in months as the political relationship deteriorated.

This is not what the liberalism-of-expertise worldview expects science to look like. In that worldview, science is insulated from power by the peer-review process, the self-correcting nature of the method, and the professional integrity of researchers. What Daszak describes is something quite different: a system where the integrity of individual scientists can be fully intact while the institutional conditions allowing them to work are subject to political determination from above.

That is why his conclusion, that this is a “temporary rupture” to be reversed by removing the Trump administration, falls short of what his own testimony requires. The COVID pandemic did not begin with Trump. The normalization of mass death, the subordination of public health to economic imperatives, the transformation of science into a political sport, these have been built across multiple administrations, parties and decades. Bhattacharya and Ridley are symptoms of a structural crisis, not its cause.

The Ridley NIH lecture is not primarily an act of scientific fraud, though it is that. It is an act of class politics: the deployment of institutional authorities to protect the ruling class from accountability for the pandemic’s catastrophic management, and to dismantle the public health infrastructure that costs capital money while serving the working class. The same logic that brings Ridley to the NIH podium brings Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to HHS and CDC, Andrew Wakefield’s ghost to ACIP and mass death to communities that can no longer afford protection from preventable disease.

*****

Public health infrastructure was not given to the working class by enlightened elites. It was won through organized struggle, under specific historical conditions, and it is being dismantled now because those conditions have changed. Peter Daszak, despite everything, believes truth will win out. So do we. The difference is that we believe truth requires organized political force to prevail and that force will not be found in an election cycle but in the working class coming to understand what is being taken from it, and by whom, and why.

9. US, Israel wreak further damage on Iran’s cultural heritage

The atrocious character of the American and Israeli war on Iran is apparent not only in the aggressors’ murdering of civilians but also in their attacks on Iran’s cultural heritage. The latter country’s near-total internet blackout and the proverbial fog of war make obtaining a clear picture of the ongoing vandalism difficult. Nevertheless, independent reporting indicates that at least 56 Iranian cultural sites have been damaged or destroyed.

Iranian officials say that over 131 museums, historical buildings and cultural sites have been damaged. This barbarity is assaulting not only Iranian culture and history, but also the heritage of humanity as a whole.

Gone

Many UNESCO World Heritage sites have been damaged. One, as we have reported, is Golestan Palace in Tehran, a royal complex and former seat of the Qajar dynasty with roots in the 15th century. This complex sustained damage from a direct strike, as well as blast damage. Another is Chehel Sotoun, a Safavid-era pavilion in Isfahan that dates to the 17th century. The UN recognizes these sites as containing “cultural and natural heritage around the world considered to be of outstanding value to humanity.” They theoretically enjoy legal protection under an international treaty, and the attacks on them underscore the Trump administration’s open contempt for international law.

More recently, the US and Israel have damaged Saadabad Palace complex, a former royal residence in Tehran. The complex was the home of the Qajar and Pahlavi shahs, including Reza Shah, who was installed through a coup executed by the United States and the United Kingdom. After the 1979 Iranian revolution, parts of the complex became public museums. The Green Palace, one of the three palaces in the complex, has been called the most beautiful palace in Iran.

Strikes also have damaged the Marble Palace, which was built in 1933 while the Pahlavi dynasty was in power. The palace stands on lands that belonged to Qajar princes, and Iranian institutions used it for almost 40 years. It has served as the headquarters of Islamic Revolutionary Committees, the offices of senior judiciary officials and the office of President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. It also has housed the Iranian National Jewels.

Teymourtash House in Tehran, which was owned by the first minister of court during the Pahlavi era, also has been damaged. Notably, the building incorporates Iranian, Russian and Indian styles of architecture. The mansion’s first floor houses a war museum with exhibitions dating from the Safavid era to the Pahlavi era. Like Saadabad Palace and the Marble Palace, Teymourtash House is not an isolated building but a museum network. Damage to these sites has thus affected archives, collections and the ability to conduct research.

Isfahan, Iran’s third-most populous city, has suffered multiple attacks. Damage has been confirmed at several sites inside the city’s heritage complex, within and around Naqsh-e Jahan Square. These sites include the Shah Mosque and Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, both of which date to the 17th century and are regarded as masterpieces of Persian architecture. Strikes have cracked the structures of these buildings, dislodged masonry and shattered decorative elements. 

In Kashan, the historic Fin Garden sustained damage to its pavilions and water features. The garden was completed in 1590, making it the oldest extant garden in Iran.

As terrible as the damage to these sites is, even more heinous is the destruction of Rashk-e Jenan, a site that housed the Isfahan Governor’s Palace. The centuries-old complex dated to the Safavid era, was renovated during the Qajar period and was known for its gold-decorated ceilings. With characteristic, Nazi-like savagery, the Israeli Air Force destroyed the site in a direct strike in March.

The US and Israel seek to destroy not only Iran’s cultural heritage sites but also its centers of knowledge and study. Dozens of universities and research centers have been struck, according to Iran’s Foreign Ministry. Among them are the Iran University of Science and Technology and Isfahan University of Technology. As they have done in Gaza, the Zionist state and its imperial sponsor seek to obliterate the accumulated knowledge that is the foundation of civilization and progress.

The fascistic government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also has used the war on Iran as a pretext for an invasion of Lebanon, where it seeks to create a “security zone” extending north to the Litani River. Rejecting all restraint, Israel is targeting the country’s civilian infrastructure and cultural heritage.

In March, Israeli airstrikes hit the vicinity of Lebanon’s ancient city of Tyre, which is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world. The airstrikes damaged the entrance to the Al-Bass archaeological site, which is centered on a 3,000-year-old necropolis. A museum under construction in that area had its windows blown out. The necropolis, the Roman-era triumphal arch, aqueducts and hippodrome were fortunately unscathed, but not because of any scruples on the part of Israel. Tyre was heavily damaged during Israel’s 2024 invasion of Lebanon.

Israeli strikes have also occurred within yards of major Roman temples at Lebanon’s Baalbek archaeological site. The large site encompasses the ruins of an ancient Roman town and is one of the most important Roman temple complexes in the world. It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1984. The remains of a formerly massive Temple of Jupiter are one of the main structures at the site, which also is home to a Temple of Bacchus.

There can be no doubt that these sites in Iran and Lebanon were struck intentionally. “The Israelis know everything. They know your shoe size ... and they know very well this is an archaeological site,” Nader Saqlawi, an official in Lebanon’s culture ministry, told the semiofficial Saudi newspaper Asharq Al Awsat.

Nor is the US acting out of ignorance. As we previously reported, UNESCO transmitted the coordinates of every protected site in Iran to the US and Israel. Both countries confirmed that they had received the information.

*****

Only a social order that has exhausted its progressive role and entered a stage of terminal decline could produce a malignancy like Trump, who himself is only the most repulsive symptom of an international crisis. The illegal imperialist war against Iran proves beyond doubt that capitalism can no longer preserve human culture, let alone allow it to flourish. For the sake of humanity, capitalism must be overthrown.

10. Sri Lankan workers and students discuss the US-Israel war on Iran and how to stop it

“If workers come together, they are like a bundle of sticks. If the sticks are separated, they can be broken. What we need to do is tie the rope—unite the working class.”

*****

The International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) will hold the second in a series of public meetings entitled “Stop the US-Israeli War on Iran!” on April 7 at 3:30 p.m at the Orient Institute of Education at Hindagala, near the University of Peradeniya in Kandy. We call on workers, youth and university students and teachers to attend.

Members of the SEP and the IYSSE have been campaigning among students, non-academic staff and academic workers at the University of Peradeniya, workers and youth in surrounding areas. Dozens of copies of the booklet titled “Stop the US-Israeli Criminal War on Iran!” were sold and thousands of leaflets distributed.

Students, lecturers and residents spoke to the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) condemning the war against Iran.

*****

Rosie, a third-year geography student at the University of Peradeniya, said that she does not believe the bankrupt politics of fake left parties like the Frontline Socialist Party, which peddles the myth that war can be stopped through futile appeals to the very imperialist powers who are waging war in defiance of international law.

Expressing her belief that working people have the ability to stop the war, she said, “The best example of such strength is the ordinary people—workers, farmers and youth—who rose up against the authoritarian rule of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa during the 2022 people’s struggle and forced him out of the country. In fact, workers are the ones who produce and distribute everything in the world. If they stop working, the world will stop. Accordingly, it can be understood that they have the ability to stop the war.” 

11. Union pushes through pay cut for New Zealand primary teachers

On April 2, just before the Easter holidays, the media reported that primary teachers in New Zealand public schools had voted to accept a two-year deal that will significantly reduce their real wages.

The agreement, covering over 30,000 teachers, consists of a 2.5 percent pay rise and a further 2.1 percent in January next year—well below the increase in the cost of living. Annual inflation last year was 3.1 percent and is expected to rise significantly this year; food prices increased 4.5 percent in the 12 months to February, and now fuel prices are soaring due to the US-Israeli war against Iran.

This is virtually identical to an offer the teachers rejected last December, in what the union NZEI Te Riu Roa called a “resounding” No vote. The union has not revealed how many people voted in favor of the repackaged offer.

This is the latest sellout imposed on workers who took part in last October’s one-day “mega strike,” involving more than 100,000 educators and healthcare workers across several unions. The strike—the largest in New Zealand since 1979, encompassing nearly 4 percent of the country’s workers—reflected widespread opposition to the National Party-led government’s austerity measures, which are starving hospitals and schools of funding.

The union bureaucracy, however, called the strike with great reluctance and refused to organize any further joint actions—let alone broaden the strike movement to encompass other sections of the workforce who face similar attacks. Instead, the unions moved to break up and isolate each section of workers in order to convince a majority that it was impossible to fight, and that they had no alternative to accepting the government’s attacks on their wages and conditions.

*****

This latest sellout comes on top of effective wage cuts imposed by NZEI and PPTA in 2023, following a mass strike against the then-Labour Party-led government. At that time, the NZEI joined the government in fraudulently presenting the deal, which failed to keep up with the cost of living, as a victory for teachers.

Labour and its allies the Greens, Te Pāti Māori, and middle class, pseudo-left groups like the International Socialist Organization and Socialist Aotearoa, which act as cheerleaders for the union bureaucracy, have remained completely silent on the pay cuts pushed through by the NZEI, PPTA and PSA.

Teachers and other workers are prepared to fight, but are trapped within organizations—led by well-paid upper middle class bureaucrats—which serve as adjuncts of the state and are opposed to any real fight against capitalism. 

*****

As long as these disputes remain isolated and under the control of the union bureaucracy, however, workers are destined for defeat. The pay cuts imposed on teachers and PSA health staff will be used by the government and the unions as a means to put more pressure on nurses, doctors and firefighters to accept the same deal or worse.

The ruling class is determined that workers must pay for the economic crisis, which is escalating due to the widening war in the Middle East. The government will ramp up its austerity program while funneling billions more dollars to the military—with the support of the Labour Party and the PSA—to prepare it to join US-led wars.

To fight this agenda, workers need new organizations that they control. The Socialist Equality Group calls on workers to rebel against the union bureaucracy by building rank-and-file committees in every school, hospital and other workplaces. These committees must be independent of the unions, Labour and all the capitalist parties. They must link up workers across the country, in the public sector and private industries, against the assault on jobs, wages and public services.

Through the International Workers’ Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, an initiative of the Trotskyist movement, workers in New Zealand should link their struggles to those of workers in Australia, and other countries who face the same attacks.

The assault on living standards and public services, including education, is inseparable from the militarization of society and the developing world war: these are all the products of capitalism, which is plunging the world into barbarism. What is urgently needed, above all, is the building of a new political party, based on a program to unify the working class and lead it in the international struggle for the socialist reorganization of society. 

12. UFCW preparing to sell out 3-week strike by JBS meatpacking workers in Greeley, Colorado

Even though the company has not improved its offer by a single cent, the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 7 has ordered 3,800 meatpackers at JBS in Greeley, Colorado, back to work, three weeks into a strike at one of the largest beef-processing plants in the United States.

In statements released Saturday, both the union bureaucracy and the company acknowledged that no new contract proposal exists. UFCW Local 7 announced that JBS had merely agreed “to resume contract negotiations” on April 9 and 10 and that “as such, workers will return to work for shifts starting at or after 5 am on April 7, 2026.”

Even as Local 7 President Kim Cordova claimed that the “fight will continue,” her statement admitted that workers are still seeking “a contract offer that protects them” and “pays them a livable wage.”

The company’s statement to the press was even more blunt. Reuters and the Associated Press reported that JBS had not changed its original offer. According to UFCW Local 7, JBS has insisted on wage increases of “barely 1.5 percent on average per year.” Workers on the picket line told the World Socialist Web Site the offer was 60 cents the first year and then 30 cents each year after that.

The proposal amounts to a real wage cut from a corporation that reported $415 million in quarterly profits on $23.06 billion in revenue, as rising fuel costs continued to erode workers’ incomes.

Even by the low standards of the meatpacking industry, conditions in the plant are miserable. At least six workers died in the first year of the coronavirus pandemic and another died in 2021. Last year, a whistleblower filed a lawsuit alleging systematic safety failures. Haitian immigrants have filed suit against JBS, which they say lured them to the country with promises of work and housing only to cram them into overcrowded conditions with no water or electricity.

Workers should defy the back-to-work order under conditions where nothing has been secured. Instead, they should continue the strike under rank-and-file control. They should elect a new strike committee consisting solely of workers from the rank and file. 

*****

Around 80 percent of JBS workers are immigrants, and the strike is in defiance of Trump’s campaign to terrorize immigrants as part of his broader attack on democratic rights. More than 8 million people took to the streets on March 28 in the third “No Kings” protest against the Trump administration, indicating huge opposition to dictatorship and war. 

*****

This is one of the biggest strikes at a US slaughterhouse since the bitter Hormel strike in 1985-1986. For four decades, the UFCW has kept workers on the job as their wages and working conditions have been thrown back decades.

In that strike, when Hormel workers in Local P-9 rejected concessions and sought to expand their struggle, the UFCW bureaucracy placed the local under trusteeship and ultimately enabled a settlement ratified with the participation of strikebreakers and workers who had crossed the picket line. Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Governor Rudy Perpich deployed the National Guard against the strike, carrying out mass arrests.

The UFCW is trying to shut down the strike because of the possibility of it developing into a broader struggle, in other words, because of its strength. This is not the first time. Last year, UFCW Local 7 shut down and sabotaged strikes by Colorado grocery workers, sending King Soopers workers back with a “labor peace” agreement in a transparent attempt to keep them from striking the same time as Safeway workers.

The Greeley plant handles about 6 percent of total US beef slaughterhouse capacity, making these workers exceptionally powerful. The strike was beginning to exert real pressure because the workers occupy a strategic chokepoint in the food supply chain.

But the Greeley workers cannot defeat a multinational corporation by fighting alone. They need a broader strategy based on mobilizing in a class movement in defense of the strike, not only in the US but around the world, including Brazil and the two dozen other countries where JBS operates.

Rank-and-file committees, made up of trusted workers on the shop floor and entirely independent of UFCW officials, must be built to transfer control of the struggle from the bureaucracy to the workers themselves. Special efforts should be made to unite immigrant workers with their native-born brothers and sisters. 

The struggle at Greeley is part of a broader fight by the working class against corporate exploitation, dictatorship and war. Workers produce society’s wealth and hold enormous power, but that power can be realized only through a rebellion against the pro-corporate union apparatus and the building of new organs of struggle controlled by the rank and file themselves. 

13. Australia:  Labor government conducts police raids against anti-genocide protesters in Melbourne

The Labor Party governments in the Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales (NSW) are presiding over deliberately threatening and intimidating police raids to arrest protesters against the ongoing US-Israeli genocide in Gaza and the complicity of the federal Albanese Labor government.

Early on the morning of March 27, Victoria Police Public Order Response Team (PORT) officers in full combat gear conducted eight raids upon homes around Melbourne to detain eight women who had taken part in a March 6 protest outside the Victorian Trades Hall building. Because the police went to a wrong address, one of the women was raided and arrested on April 1.

Just a day before the eight raids, on March 26, heavily-armed NSW police commandos stormed the home of a woman who had joined the large demonstration at Sydney Town Hall on February 9 against the visit by Israeli President Isaac Herzog. She was dragged out of bed at 5 a.m. and handcuffed after the police smashed open her front door. At least four similar raids were mounted across Sydney.

These developments are a warning that the Labor governments, state and federal, are escalating their assault on anti-genocide and anti-war opposition as the US offensive intensifies and extends to Lebanon and Iran, with the political and material backing of the Albanese government.

The Melbourne raids targeted women who draped a statue of 1960s and 1970s feminist equal pay activist Zelda D’Aprano at the Victorian Trades Hall in an apron that said: “Difficult Woman.” They also painted this slogan on an adjoining path. That was first an allusion to how Prime Minister Anthony Albanese personally condemned and branded Grace Tame, a sexual assault victims’ campaigner, as a “difficult woman” after she chanted “Globalise the Intifada” at the February 9 anti-Herzog Sydney Town Hall rally. 

It was also an allusion to how the trade union bureaucracy had sacked and disowned D’Aprano, who had been a meatworkers union official, in 1969 after she chained herself to the federal Arbitration Commission building in Melbourne to call for equal pay for women.

Herzog had been invited by the Albanese government despite being named by a United Nations inquiry for inciting genocide against the Palestinians. The invitation was an open show of support for the US-backed Zionist regime, under the cover of mourning the December 14 Sydney Bondi Beach shootings, in which two alleged ISIS-linked gunmen killed 15 people. 

Aged between 34 and 71, the eight women were then taken to various police stations, where they were held for hours before being released on anti-democratic bail conditions. The charges include criminal damage to property, behaving in a riotous manner in a public place, marking graffiti on a residence without consent, recklessly damaging part of a registered place without a permit and refusing to leave a scheduled public place after a warning.

The bail conditions imposed on the women, now known as the Zelda8, include staying away from the Melbourne city centre, the usual location of political protests, not communicating with their co-accused and not speaking to the media. These bans last at least until October, when their court cases are first listed for mention.

*****

The police raids in Melbourne and Sydney take further the violent police rampage against the February 9 anti-Herzog protest in Sydney. The demonstration had been joined by about 10,000 people, as part of events across Australia that also involved more than 20,000 people in Melbourne, 5,000 in Brisbane and thousands more in other capital cities and regional centers.

Albanese and NSW Premier Chris Minns defended the police violence, underscoring Labor’s support for the US-Israeli crimes against humanity and intent to shut down opposition. The Minns government had invoked two sweeping anti-protest laws to ban the demonstration and hand the police expanded powers to suppress it.

*****

The international working class is the only social force that can stop war. Coordinated mass strikes across ports, logistics, weapons manufacturing and more broadly would bring the machinery of war to a grinding halt. That requires building new forms of working-class organization—independent rank-and-file committees—and a new socialist movement of the working class, in opposition to Labor, the unions and the capitalist system, which is plunging humanity toward barbarism. 

14. Writers Guild of America suddenly announces new contract with studios

On April 4, 2026, in the midst of Easter and Passover, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) announced a tentative agreement on a new Minimum Basic Agreement (MBA), nearly a month before the May 1 contract expiration. The WGA Negotiating Committee declared that the deal “protects writers’ health plan,” “builds on gains from 2023,” and “addresses free work challenges,” recommending it for ratification by the membership.

The so-called “early resolution,” hailed in industry publications as a success for “labor peace,” is in fact a preemptive capitulation designed to head off a broader confrontation between writers and the studios at a moment of escalating social and economic crisis.

The WGA has also emphasized a “multimillion-dollar” infusion into its health plan, which has suffered losses exceeding $120 million following the 2023 strike and industry contraction. But even taking this at face value, this is a temporary patch on a structurally underfunded system shaped by declining employment and rising costs.

The agreement’s reported AI provisions, including expanded “regulations” on the training of models on writers’ work, will fail to meaningfully protect jobs. The union’s reference to the “gains” of 2023 says more than it intends because that contract, pushed through in a sellout of an historic strike, has been followed by three years of huge layoffs across the entertainment industry.

The wage proposal is also reported as 5, 4, 3.5 and 3 percent over four years. This is totally inadequate to address soaring living costs, particularly in Los Angeles. 

The most striking feature of the contract is its timing. By reaching a deal nearly a month before the contract’s expiration, the union is trying to forestall strike action. This was done without even seeking a strike authorization vote from the membership. 

*****

Worst of all, the contract reportedly runs for four years, breaking from the traditional three-year cycle. This “de-synchronizes” the WGA contract from the SAG-AFTRA actors union, undermining the potential for coordinated industry-wide action and further isolating writers. Contract talks have been ongoing with SAG-AFTRA since late February.

The 2023 struggle mobilized tens of thousands of writers, along with SAG-AFTRA actors and performers, and won broad support across the working class, creating the objective possibility of a direct challenge to the domination of the entertainment industry by a handful of conglomerates. But the WGA leadership made no effort to unify writers with actors, directors, or crew members facing similar attacks. 

*****

The tentative agreement has been announced as the WGA itself is ruthlessly trying to crush a strike by its own staffers, who have been out since February 17. As of April 1, workers have been stripped of their employer-sponsored healthcare. “How can we demand fair treatment from the studios when our own organization treats its staff this way?” one writer asked in comments circulating among members.

Writers must demand full transparency, including the immediate release of contract details and adequate time for discussion, while opposing any attempt to rush ratification. The contract must be rejected, and screenwriters must turn out to the working class for support.

In Los Angeles, the capital of the entertainment industry, tens of thousands of educators and school workers are moving toward a strike on April 14. Within the entertainment industry, other sections of workers are also approaching decisive struggles. Contracts covering actors, directors and crew members are set to expire, raising the prospect of a broader wave of industrial action.

Above all, initiative must be taken by the rank and file. Rank-and-file committees, independent and democratically controlled by workers, must be built to organize a fight not only against the studios but the sellout bureaucracy. Such organizations can serve as the basis for uniting with other sections of workers, laying the foundation for a broader movement against corporate domination.

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

The sign says: "Peace for the world! Down with war!" 

Apr 4, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. “Left populist” Avi Lewis wins race to lead Canada’s social-democratic NDP

Lewis’ left posturing is all hot air. He supports the US/NATO war on Russia in Ukraine and has emphasized his determination to work closely with the right-wing NDP governments in British Columbia and Manitoba, which are close allies of the Carney Liberal government and staunch supporters of Ottawa’s rearmament drive. In his acceptance speech, he praised both McPherson and Ashton and vowed to promote party “unity.”

Lewis does not repudiate the pivotal role that the NDP—with the unions’ full-throated support—has played since 2019 in propping up the minority federal Liberal governments, as they have stampeded to the right. He merely argues that the NDP should be more assertive when it holds the balance of power in parliament, i.e., do a better job of justifying its support for the big business Liberals with “left” posturing.

*****

Lewis hails from the first family of Canadian social democracy. His father, Stephen Lewis, led the Ontario NDP for eight years in the 1970s and later served, under Brian Mulroney’s Tory government, as Canada’s UN ambassador. His grandfather, David Lewis, served as federal NDP leader from 1971 through 1975, and as federal secretary, chairman and national president of its predecessor, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF). The husband of the writer Naomi Klein, Avi Lewis also has deep connections with the pseudo-left in Canada and the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), which is a faction of the Democratic Party, one of the twin parties of US imperialism.

During the campaign, Lewis described his family background as representing “a history of struggle.” This tells one everything one needs to know about Lewis’ politics. The history of Canadian social democracy has never been one of class struggle, based on the independent political mobilization of the working class, but rather its suppression. The CCF/NDP has defended Canadian capitalism, striving to divert social opposition into efforts to “humanize” it through parliamentary reform and collective bargaining, while ruthlessly opposing revolutionary socialism.

*****

Like social-democratic parties the world over, the NDP has over the past four decades emerged as a right-wing, anti-worker party virtually indistinguishable from its Liberal and Conservative rivals. Its mild reformist program was junked long ago. 

*****

With his reference to the “99 percent,” Lewis clearly walks in the footsteps of political charlatans like Bernie Sanders and the DSA’s Zoran Mamdani. This amorphous category, promoted by the proponents of pseudo-left politics, dissolves the working class into a broad milieu encompassing the privileged middle class and excluding only the very wealthiest sections of the ruling elite. It is tailor-made to pursue the material interests of the upper-middle-class—trade union bureaucrats, academics, and better-off professionals—whose incomes and wealth fall within the richest 10 percent of Canadian society. This layer—the “next 9 percent”—resents the political and economic power of the capitalist oligarchy, and would like to see it more broadly shared within the top ten percent. But Lewis, like Sanders and Mamdani, is above all intent on preserving the existing capitalist social and political order. He is bitterly hostile to any independent political movement of the working class. 

*****

Lewis sought in his acceptance speech last Sunday to give the impression that he would significantly alter the gaping levels of social inequality that have risen steadily over recent decades, irrespective of which party has held power at the federal level or in the provinces. “This is more than a rigged economy, it is a war on working people,” he declared. “It is immoral, it is un-Canadian and we cannot let it stand.” He pledged a “nation-building” exercise to strengthen the “care economy.”

In reality, glaring social inequality, monopoly and the domination of economic and political life by a super-wealthy capitalist elite have been at the heart of Canadian capitalism, since it rapidly expanded following Confederation and the dispossession of the native people of the West. They are as “Canadian” as maple syrup.

Today, millions of people rely regularly on food banks, and at least as many work in precarious jobs with no protection. To pay for war and the enrichment of the oligarchy, NDP-backed Liberal governments have cut health care, education, and other public services and social supports to the bone. Lewis’ clumsy attempt to present these organic features of Canadian capitalism as foreign imports is inseparable from his “left” Canadian nationalist perspective, which has been a hallmark of the petty-bourgeois “left” in Canada for well over 50 years. Portraying Canada as a “gentler” and “kinder” society than the rapacious Dollar Republic south of the 49th parallel, these forces work tirelessly to split Canadian workers from their natural allies in the working class of the US, Mexico, and internationally with fairy tales about “common Canadian values.” That Lewis sees himself firmly in this tradition was underlined by his positive reference in an interview with the DSA-aligned Jacobin to the “Waffle” faction in the NDP during the early 1970s, which advocated a “left” nationalist perspective bound up with more “independence” from American imperialism and was expelled by the party leadership.

This foul Canadian nationalist tradition has nothing to offer the working class. This fact has been powerfully demonstrated over the past 18 months, during which the trade unions and NDP have rallied round the ruling class’ “Team Canada” response to Trump’s trade war and annexation threats. While the union bureaucracies and NDP have been waving the Maple Leaf and preaching “national unity,” the ruling class, led by the Carney Liberal government, has dramatically intensified its class war assault. It has poured hundreds of billions into rearmament and war, implemented a new austerity drive, and eviscerated workers’ democratic rights, including the right to strike. 

*****

Predictably, representatives of the middle-class pseudo-left have weighed in with enthusiastic statements about the new opportunities opened up by Lewis’ leadership. Radical journalist Yves Engler, who met all of the conditions necessary to run for leadership but was arbitrarily excluded by the party top brass, urged “leftist supporters” to “pressure” Lewis to ensure “he upends the party bureaucracy while promoting socialist, internationalist and anti-ecocide policies.”

This is a bankrupt strategy that pseudo-left forces around the world have promoted time and again. It recalls the “left” cheerleaders in Britain of Jeremy Corbyn, who was swept into the leadership of the Labour Party with the backing of hundreds of thousands in 2015 on a program that sounded far more radical than Lewis’. Britain’s pseudo-left trumpeted the prospects of a new foreign policy more “independent” of the US and even suggested Corbyn could lead the country towards socialism through the Labour Party, a bourgeois party and staunch defender of British imperialism of more than a century’s standing. Yet during his leadership, Corbyn responded not to the “pressure” from groups like the Socialist Workers Party and Socialist Appeal (since rebranded as the Revolutionary Communist Party), but the Blairite right. He junked his purported opposition to British involvement in wars of aggression with his tacit approval of Labour’s support for Britain’s participation in the war in Syria, endorsed the country’s maintenance of nuclear weapons, and called on Labour local councils to enforce ruthless austerity in partnership with the Tory government. What’s more, Corbyn stood idly by as his supporters were systematically persecuted and expelled from the party on bogus “antisemitism” charges. He then handed the leadership over to the Blairite Keir Starmer, who now heads a government that is continuing austerity, prioritizes close relations with Trump, and has augmented Britain’s major role in the war on Russia.

The Socialist Equality Party insists that workers can only wage a struggle against capitalist austerity, inequality, and imperialist war through a decisive political break with the NDP and all political forces who claim it is possible to “reform” it or push it to the left. Workers need new forms of organization, rank-and-file committees, to lead a rebellion against the nationalist, pro-capitalist union bureaucracies, who work hand in glove with the NDP to suppress the class struggle. These organizations must intensify the class struggle on the basis of a socialist and internationalist program, uniting workers in Canada, the US, and Mexico in the fight for decent-paying, secure jobs for all, the defense of democratic and social rights, and an end to imperialist war and barbarism. The most urgent task to realize this perspective is the building of the SEP as the revolutionary leadership required by the working class in the struggles ahead.

2. Trump’s plan to fund world war through social counter-revolution

When Trump vows “Stone Age” destruction, this $1.5 trillion request is the financial mechanism for building the most technically advanced machinery to carry out a project of historical regression.

How is this to be paid for? Through a massive assault on the social rights of the working class. 

3. UAW presidential candidate Will Lehman calls for support for Nexteer workers

Nexteer Automotive workers in Saginaw, Michigan have delivered an enormous rebuke to the United Auto Workers bureaucracy by voting down a UAW-backed concessions contract by 96 percent. 

*****

Will Lehman at the UAW bargaining convention, March 27, 2023 

Will Lehman, a rank-and-file worker from Mack Trucks in Macungie, Pennsylvania who is running for UAW president in 2026, issued the following statement on the contract rejection by Nexteer workers:

Brothers and sisters at Nexteer,

Your 96 percent “no” vote rejecting the UAW’s sellout contract is a powerful and historic act. It shows that workers are not willing to accept poverty wages, tiers and endless concessions. It exposes the divide between the sentiment of the membership and the bureaucrats who thought it was good enough to bring back to you after “negotiating” behind closed doors. If your fight is going to succeed, it must be led by you, workers on the shop floor, those who are most committed to fighting the sellout, and are tied to your conditions on the shop floor.

A “no” vote is only the beginning. If the same officials who tried to ram through this agreement remain in control, they will do what they always do: Stall and delay, bring back the same deal under a different name and force revotes until they get the result they want.

You cannot leave power in their hands. Take control: form a rank-and-file committee. Workers must organize themselves independently. Form a Nexteer Rank-and-File Committee, made up of trusted workers from the shop floor, accountable only to you.

This committee must:

- Take control of all information about negotiations

- Ensure full transparency and democratic oversight

- Link up workers across all shifts and departments

- Establish direct communication with other plants

- Without this, your vote will be undermined.

Prepare for a real fight—prepare for a strike

If the contract has been rejected, that decision must be enforced. That means preparing now for strike action, organized by workers themselves—not controlled or shut down by the apparatus.

But this fight cannot be won in isolation. Appeal to Big Three autoworkers—break the divisions of dividing workers from each other. I appeal directly to autoworkers at GM, Ford and Stellantis:

You face the same conditions—tiers, rising costs, and endless concessions. The divisions between parts workers and assembly workers have been deliberately enforced by the UAW to weaken all workers. They must be broken. Nexteer workers are not separate from you—they are the front line of the same struggle.

I call on all autoworkers to take a stand:

- Refuse to handle scab parts produced during a strike

- Honor Nexteer workers’ picket lines

- Oppose any attempt to continue production based on their exploitation

Workers at GM Flint Truck Assembly, Ford Dearborn Truck, and Stellantis plants have enormous power. Used together, that power can shut down the entire system of exploitation.

Turn this into a broader movement. The companies are organized globally. Workers must be as well. Reach out to:

- Other parts workers

- Big Three plants

- Autoworkers in Mexico, Canada and beyond

And finally, the war abroad is connected to the war against the working class here at home. It is not the sons and daughters of the oligarchs who will be sacrificed for the illegal and criminal war in Iran, but our kids and in many cases, our co-workers.

President Donald Trump declared that the federal government should stop paying for daycare, Medicare and Medicaid, all of which, he indicated, must be sacrificed for the illegal and criminal war in Iran. Don’t send any money for daycare,” Trump says, because “we’re fighting wars.” He added that the federal government’s role was to “guard the country,” before dismissing Social Security, which serves more than 70 million people; Medicare, which covers about 68 million; and Medicaid and CHIP (the Children’s Health Insurance Program), which together cover more than 75 million people, including about 36 million children, as “little scams.”

Your struggle can become the starting point of a unified offensive of the entire auto working class. This is a fight for workers power At its core, this is not just about one contract. It is about who controls the workplace, the union and society. An apparatus tied to management and capitalist politicians or the workers? There are more of us than them.

4. Armed ICE officers remain at airports

On Wednesday, House and Senate Republicans announced an agreement on legislation to reopen the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) with the exception of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Border Patrol, a component of Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

Senate Majority Leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson said passage of the bill to partially reopen DHS, passed by the Senate on a unanimous voice vote on March 27, would be followed by a measure to resume funding of ICE and the Border Patrol by means of the budget reconciliation process. That legislative path bypasses the Senate filibuster rule, which requires 60 votes to pass a bill. As a result, Senate Republicans, who narrowly control the upper chamber, could pass a bill to resume funding of ICE and the Border Patrol by a simple majority, even if all Senate Democrats voted against it.

On March 27, following the bipartisan Senate vote, Johnson denounced the Senate measure and refused to bring it to a vote in the House. Both chambers then went on a two-week recess, with Congress scheduled to return on Monday, April 13.

But on April 1, President Trump posted a tweet on his Truth Social platform demanding that by June 1 Republicans deliver for his signature a bill to fund ICE and the Border Patrol, using the budget reconciliation process. A senior White House official said Trump would sign a separate bipartisan bill to fund the rest of DHS.

The political import of these maneuvers is that Congress will resume funding of Trump’s immigration storm troopers without any limitations on their police state methods. Despite their rhetorical calls for “reform” of ICE and CBP and their proposals for token restraints, the Democrats are fully and knowingly complicit in this conspiracy against the democratic rights of the American people.

*****

Hailing the March 27 Senate bill as a “victory” and concealing its real significance, Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said, “This agreement funds TSA, the Coast Guard, FEMA, CISA, strengthens security at the border and ports of entry, and keeps America safe.”

Not one Democratic office-holder denounced this exercise in cynicism and duplicity, including Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. They are all complicit. 

*****

The immediate pretext for passing the March 27 Senate bill was the chaos at US airports caused by the shutdown of DHS, which led to Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers going without pay for nearly a month. Thousands of TSA officers called in sick and hundreds resigned, resulting in long lines and flight delays.

Trump exploited this situation to deploy dozens of armed ICE officers at airports across the country, supposedly to ease the crisis. This was a ruse. As the World Socialist Web Site wrote:

It is, rather, a further step in normalizing the use of armed federal agents and the military in civilian settings to intimidate and terrorize the population. It is a core element in the drive by Trump, and the corporate oligarchy that he represents, to dictatorship.

ICE at the airports is particularly sinister. It will be used to block not only immigrants from leaving the country but also political opponents of the government. It is the physical prefiguration of a police state.

*****

The ACLU warned that TSA has begun sharing traveler lists with ICE, “breaking from TSA’s past practice.” It advised citizens without legal status to “consider the risks of flying, including on domestic flights within the US.” 

The National Immigration Law Center on March 26 issued an updated alert titled “Community Alert: Immigration Arrests at Airports.” It stated that the TSA was “giving passenger information to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).” The alert continued: “This means people who don’t have legal immigration status or whose status is uncertain could be arrested or deported when they go through airport security in the United States.” Since being deployed, ICE has carried out immigration arrests inside airport terminals.

On March 27, President Trump ordered DHS to begin paying TSA officers, who began receiving back pay on Monday, March 30. By mid-week, the airports were back to normal, as TSA sickouts sharply declined. But Trump’s border czar Tom Homan and DHS officials have refused to say when, or if, the ICE officers will be withdrawn.

*****

In the face of this indefinite deployment of ICE goons at US airports, not a single Democratic speaker at the March 28 “No Kings” demonstrations, which brought out over 8 million people, called for their removal. That includes, once again, Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez, not to mention Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialists of America/Democratic mayor of New York, with two of the country’s busiest airports, Kennedy and LaGuardia.

Since then, only one Democratic lawmaker, Representative Shontel Brown of Ohio, has explicitly demanded the removal of ICE officers. In an April 3 press release, Brown called for ICE to leave Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.

This virtual silence is not accidental. The Democratic think tank Third Way issued an internal memo warning that “the slogan (abolish ICE) is simple, but politically it is lethal.” Senator Ruben Gallego of Arizona said, “The last thing we need to do, again, is to make the same mistake when it comes to ‘Defund the Police’ rhetoric… People want a slimmed-down ICE that is truly focused on security.” Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas said, “Abolishing ICE is not a good message for Democrats.” 

5. Spain’s Workers’ Revolutionary Current channels anti-war sentiment behind social democrats, pseudo-left parties and union bureaucracy

The Workers’ Revolutionary Current (Corriente Revolucionaria de Trabajadores—CRT), the Spanish affiliate of the Morenoite Permanent Revolution Current–Fourth International (PRC-FI), is calling for a “united front” with the trade union bureaucracy to put pressure on the Socialist Party (PSOE)–Sumar government to oppose imperialist war. This is a political mechanism for subordinating the working class to the very forces responsible for militarism, war and austerity.

It is being advanced under conditions of determined mass popular opposition to imperialist war. Across the globe, millions have taken to the streets in protest against the genocide in Gaza, expressing deep hostility to the crimes of the imperialist powers and their allies. In the US, this opposition has found expression in the “No Kings” demonstrations. The third round of protests last weekend drew an estimated 8 million, making it the largest single day of protest in American history. Demonstrations have been held internationally, involving workers, youth and students outraged by the ongoing slaughter in Gaza and the complicity of their own governments in the US-Israeli war against Iran.

Mass opposition is developing alongside a deepening global economic crisis. Workers in every country are confronting soaring inflation, rising costs of living, energy shortages and attacks on wages and social conditions. This is laying the objective basis for escalating class struggle.

It is under these conditions that middle-class organizations such as the CRT advance the “unity of left” with the trade union bureaucracy, seeking to contain and divert this emerging movement and prevent it from breaking with the parties of the capitalist state through the adoption of an independent socialist political perspective and leadership.

*****

A genuine anti-war movement requires the independent mobilization of the working class on an international scale, through the development of rank-and-file organisations in workplaces and communities, and the unification of workers across national borders against imperialism. This struggle is inseparable from the fight against capitalism. The alternative to war is not pressure on capitalist governments, but the conquest of political power by the working class and the reorganization of society on socialist foundations.

6. United Kingdom:  End the politically motivated prosecution of Dr. Rahmeh Aladwan!

Health workers protest in London in 2023

NHS FightBack calls for the dropping of all charges against 31-year-old Dr. Rahmeh Aladwan under the Terrorism Act (2000) and the Public Order Act (1986). The charges against the National Health Service (NHS) trainee surgeon, for opposing the genocide in Gaza, are a fundamental attack on all healthcare workers and their rights to freedom of political expression, protest and free speech.

Dr. Aladwan, of Palestinian heritage, has worked in the NHS for seven years with a spotless employment record. She has been targeted relentlessly by Zionist lobby groups and the British state, based on groundless claims that her opposition to Zionism and pro-Palestinian activism pose a risk to patient safety.

She was formally charged last week, after police arrived at her home in Gloucestershire and arrested her for breaching bail conditions. It was the fifth arrest of Dr. Aladwan, following an extraordinary campaign of intimidation and harassment led by Zionist lobby groups, police agencies and the Starmer Labour government.

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A growing number of NHS workers have been targeted for their opposition to the Gaza genocide:

Dr. Ellen Kriesels, a consultant pediatrician at Whittington Health NHS Trust, was suspended following her arrest in December 2025, over two social media posts criticizing Zionism.

Dr. Nadeem Crowe, an emergency medicine doctor, was suspended by the Royal Free London in August 2024, for posts expressing solidarity with Gaza and opposing the destruction of its healthcare system.

Dr. Rehiana Ali, a consultant neurologist with two decades of NHS service, was arrested again in February this year. After an interim suspension in December 2024 was lifted by the MPTS last July, a further complaint by the Campaign Against Antisemitism led to a new 18-month suspension.

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NHS FightBack does not endorse all of Dr. Aladwan’s views. Her claim that repression of pro-Palestinian activism in Britain and its support for the war on Iran reflect “Jewish supremacy” is disoriented and false. It inverts the relationship between Zionism and imperialism and obscures the class character of the British state. Israel would not exist, and its genocide in Gaza could not have proceeded for weeks, months and years without imperialism’s backing.

As David North, chairman of the International Editorial Board of the World Socialist Web Site, explained in a recent lecture on the Iran War: “the Israel-centric narrative detaches the conflict from any coherent historical, geopolitical, socioeconomic and class analysis of its origins, causes, and aims. It essentially abandons imperialism as an analytical framework.” If the central problem is Israeli influence, “then the solution is to remove that influence and replace it with a ‘good’ foreign policy that defends genuine ‘All-American’ [or British] interests. Foreign policy becomes a matter of hygiene—of purging a foreign contaminant from an otherwise healthy body politic.”

These are critical questions confronting all those seeking to oppose imperialism and Zionism. But the cynical claims that Dr. Aladwan’s views threaten patient safety are groundless. As she stated in response to such accusations, “No jew has been harmed by anti-genocide, pro-Palestine healthcare workers. We are not ‘Israeli’ or Jewish supremacists. We see everyone as EQUAL.”

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NHS FightBack calls on healthcare workers everywhere to take a stand. Publicise Dr. Aladwan’s case, challenge the wave of disinformation, protest outside the court and organise workplace meetings. Pass resolutions calling for the dropping of all charges and disciplinary proceedings and demanding her immediate reinstatement. The attack on Dr. Aladwan is an attack on the entire NHS workforce and must be fought on that basis. 

7. Where is America Going? Lively interest in book presentations with David North in Leipzig, Berlin and Nuremberg

At this year’s Leipzig Book Fair March 19-22, concerns and horror over the global political situation were palpable. The escalation of war in the Middle East and the danger of fascism in America have shaken the cultural world. While tens of thousands of readers, authors and publishers gathered in Leipzig, bombs fell on Iran and ICE agents patrolled American cities.

Against this background, it was of great significance that the new book by Mehring Verlag was published just in time for the fair, raising the key question that is moving millions of people: Where is America Going? Fascism or Socialism.

8. Berlinale Retrospective: A look back at the fall of the Berlin Wall—“Lost in the 90s”

The fall of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution of the Soviet Union were accompanied by a deafening triumphal cry about the supposed historic and final victory of capitalism. Socialism and class struggle were declared dead, while capitalism, it was predicted, would lead to peaceful, democratic, social development. Few could have imagined back then that a fascist politician like Donald Trump could rise to the top of world politics—and, of all places, in the country that presented itself as the embodiment of freedom and democracy.

Looking back at the films from that era casts the 1990s in a different light. The Berlinale, along with the Berlin Zeughaus cinema, had already screened, in 2009, a series of films about the fall of the Berlin Wall under the titles “Winter Ade” [“Farewell Winter”] and “Scheiden tut weh” [“Parting hurts”].

While the films from that era demonstrated illusions in “democratic” capitalism, this year’s selection was characterized by pictures of life highlighting the negative effects of the years following the fall of the Berlin Wall—social insecurity, existential anxiety, skepticism and pessimism about the future. The title “Lost in the 90s” can also be interpreted in terms of a loss of orientation and perspective.

To emphasize that this not only affected the countries directly involved in the transition, this year’s program included several international films from that era. For example, the American films Slacker (1990, Richard Linklater) and Party Girl (1995, Daisy von Scherler Mayer) help capture the mood of Generation X, while the New Black Cinema’s Boyz N the Hood (1991, John Singleton) and Bamboozled (2000, Spike Lee) attempt to address the prejudices and social problems faced by black people in big US cities.

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The German documentary In the Splendour of Happiness (1990, Im Glanze dieses Glückes, Helga Reidemeister, Johann Feindt, Jeanine Meerapfel, Dieter Schumann, Tamara Trampe) reflects the confusion and uncertainty in the face of the impending reunification of Germany. The film consists of interviews with East German citizens prior to the last People’s Chamber election in 1990, in which there is much talk of morality and the end of the “socialist utopia.” One interview delves extensively into the inner state of mind of a former Stasi [secret police] psychologist.

When a filmmaker interviews two workers at an auto plant and asks, almost accusingly, why they continue to work rather than resisting the Stalinist SED dictatorship, one of them remarks gloomily that he had always championed socialism. But the GDR (East Germany) had not achieved higher labor productivity compared to its capitalist neighbors—a necessity Marx had already addressed.

The worker raises a question that actually lay at the root of the GDR’s demise: the fact that the globalization of production had rendered futile the attempt at a nationally limited planned economy based on nationalization. The role of Stalinism and its reactionary nationalist policies—pursued by the SED regime as well as in Moscow and the Eastern European states, and directed against Marx’s international socialism—is not, however, addressed in the film.

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Shortly after German reunification, unemployment was rampant in the former GDR. The Border Guard (1995, Der Kontrolleur, Stefan Trampe) is a bleak film about Hermann, an unemployed GDR customs officer. While his colleague Rolf sells vacuum cleaners, Hermann continues to go to the abandoned facility, performing his old job every day, making his rounds, noting down unusual occurrences and necessary repairs (which are increasing). After “work,” he sometimes stops by a bar where the red-haired waitress, Inge, reminds him of his late wife. 

One day she curiously tags along; he proudly shows her the old movie theater, where they watch old training films and get drunk. The next morning, Hermann suddenly arrests and interrogates her. He also arrests a young man who has stopped his car due to engine trouble, drawing his gun. He is clearly mentally disturbed. In the end, he burns his uniform and walls himself in at his old workplace.

The film’s most compelling protagonist is the abandoned, ruined environment that had once been his work location. It is a former border facility. The images evoke associations with the ruins of the large GDR industrial complexes that were suddenly shut down and left to rot. Workers had spent decades here, performing useful work. Within a very short time, everything that had made up their lives crumbled into worthless scrap. The film is also a document of the bewilderment that prevailed at that time.

*****

Wolf Vogel’s satire Sunny Point was made in 1995 on a shoestring budget by East and West German film enthusiasts. It criticizes the self-serving profit motives behind the “aid” for East German “brothers and sisters” and challenges the official narrative of a “Peaceful Revolution.” After its premiere, the film disappeared into the archives for decades. 

The story takes place in 1989, the year the Berlin Wall fell. Victor’s advertising firm “Sunny Point” in West Berlin is on the brink of ruin. So the former East German refugee decides to flee to the West once more, using a different name (his real one), to shake off his creditors and try to start over. Unfortunately, he chose the day the Wall fell, and is met with laughter when, after crossing the river Spree, he shows up soaking wet in a West Berlin pub as a “refugee.” He also has bad luck with the financial frauds he uses to oust his employees and make a clean getaway. In the end, Victor should be grateful he doesn’t end up in prison.

The sarcastic depictions of the small advertising firm’s struggle for survival are the most compelling. The employees, who would rather be filmmakers, must endure daily humiliating treatment from stingy, brazen clients and the bank.

In the freedom of the market economy, Victor is no freer than he was in the GDR. When he once refers to the German Basic Law in frustration, an acquaintance, amused by Victor’s naïveté, remarks that the Basic Law is an illusion; only contracts are real.

Following this lesson in capitalist reality, Victor sneers at the illusion of GDR citizens who had perhaps believed they had torn down the Wall themselves. “Special offers” lurk everywhere, their exorbitant prices amounting to exactly the 100-mark welcome bonus. East Berliners, who left everything behind at home, ride in taxis full of anticipation toward “freedom.” There, however, only primitive emergency shelters in gymnasiums await the new citizens.

9. Science is not neutral: The rubella vaccine and the attack on public healt (conclusion)

As Dr. Stanley Plotkin recently explained to the WSWS, the mid-century vaccinologist worked with severely limited tools: “At that time we had only two ways to make vaccines: attenuation of the agent or inactivation of the agent.” Plotkin chose attenuation—the Pasteurian principle of weakening a pathogen until it can stimulate immunity without causing disease. 

Plotkin executed this Pasteurian logic with mid-century precision but made one crucial departure from conventional practice: He chose to cultivate the rubella virus in human cells rather than animal substrates. Animal tissues—monkey kidneys, duck embryo cells—were notoriously prone to contamination with latent pathogens, including the cancer-associated SV40 virus that had contaminated early polio vaccines. 

There was a deeper scientific logic at work as well. Unlike most pathogens, rubella has no known animal reservoir—It exists exclusively in human populations and replicates most faithfully in human tissue. A virus with no animal host, Plotkin must have reasoned, should be attenuated in the cells it targets. Growing it through animal substrates risked producing a strain mismatched to the human immune system it needed to train. Human cells were not merely cleaner; for this pathogen, they were demonstrated to be scientifically correct. 

*****

The vaccine, however, ran immediately into regulatory resistance. Despite its demonstrated safety and immunogenicity, American regulators refused to approve RA 27/3 for a decade—a delay driven not by scientific evidence but by institutional prejudice against human cell substrates. The government’s Division of Biologics Standards, led by Roderick Murray, stubbornly favored vaccines grown in animal tissues, warning that human cell strains might harbor hypothetical cancer-causing agents—this from an agency that had authorized monkey kidney cells repeatedly shown to carry actual dangerous contaminants, including SV40.

While American regulators stalled, Plotkin’s vaccine was licensed and deployed across Europe, accumulating a decade of safety data. The impasse in the United States was finally broken by Dorothy Horstmann, a Yale virologist whose comparative field studies demonstrated conclusively that the animal-based rubella vaccines approved in the US failed to prevent reinfection at the rates Plotkin’s strain did. RA 27/3 produced higher and more durable antibody levels, better resistance to reinfection, and—critically—a stronger mucosal immune response in the nasopharynx, precisely where the virus first established itself. 

Horstmann’s data persuaded Maurice Hilleman, Merck’s chief virologist, to abandon his company’s duck-embryo formulation and adopt Plotkin’s strain. In 1979, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) finally approved RA 27/3, making it the standard rubella vaccine in the United States—10 years after it had been in use in Europe. 

*****

The great public health achievements of the mid-20th century—among them the elimination of rubella and measles in the United States—were not the natural, inevitable triumph of scientific progress. George Rosen’s foundational 1958 work A History of Public Health established what the dominant narrative of scientific advancement consistently obscures: that public health infrastructure is not an inevitable product of civilization but the accumulated, institutionalized expression of working people’s demand for a better life. 

Hospitals, medical science, vaccination programs—These did not descend from enlightened governance. They are the consequence of class struggle, the social product of the value generated by the working class and the long fight to direct that value toward human need. The threads connecting that struggle to its institutional results are invisible in the way that historical causation is always invisible to those who inherit its benefits without understanding its origins. Rosen restored those threads to visibility. When Thomas Jefferson wrote that “all men are created equal and possess inalienable rights to pursue happiness,” he was giving political expression to a social demand already being fought for from below. Public health was never a gift. It was a conquest.

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The COVID-19 pandemic and the ruling elite’s response to it across six years of normalized mass death demonstrated conclusively that Kennedy and Trump are not aberrant individuals who happen to hold power. The groundwork was laid across multiple administrations, parties and countries. The attacks on public health are the political expression of capitalism in terminal crisis—a system that can no longer afford even the limited concessions it once found expedient and that now deploys irrationalism as a weapon against the working class it can no longer pacify.

This has a founding American precedent, and as the nation marks the 250th anniversary of its independence, the contrast could not be starker. As Andrew Wehrman documents in The Contagion of Liberty, the fight against smallpox was inseparable from the fight for independence itself. Ordinary colonists—sailors, farmers, mothers and militia members—did not wait for authorities to protect them. They demanded inoculation from below, pressuring towns and assemblies to build public hospitals at collective expense, understanding that their individual vulnerability was a shared social condition. 

Generals Lafayette and Washington visit suffering troops at Valley Forge

On February 5, 1777, General George Washington ordered the mandatory smallpox inoculation of the entire Continental Army, establishing what historians consider the first mass immunization mandate in American history. For the revolutionary generation, liberty meant interdependence, not isolation—shared vulnerability required collective action. 

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It is this history that Plotkin now forgets—or rather, was never equipped politically to truly understand. The institutions he built his career within, and now watches being dismantled, were not the starting point of the story. They were a way station in a struggle that long preceded them and that their dismantling now demands be taken up again. The rubella vaccine did not emerge from the benevolence of capital or the wisdom of regulators. It emerged from publicly funded science, in a publicly supported institution, under historical conditions extracted from ruling elites by the organized struggle of working people. To despair at its dismantling without understanding that history is to mistake the institution for the struggle that produced it. 

*****

The explosive resurgence of measles in the United States is the leading indicator of a catastrophic collapse of MMR vaccination coverage. National kindergarten coverage has fallen to 92.5 percent, with 39 states now below the 95 percent threshold required to sustain herd immunity against measles—and with it, the coverage that also prevents rubella’s return. 

*****

This unraveling is greatly compounded on the global stage. The capitalist political establishment’s normalization of mass death across six years of the COVID-19 pandemic has paved the way for the abandonment of international public health cooperation. Today, 19 countries still lack a routine rubella vaccination program. Universal introduction of the vaccine in these vulnerable nations could prevent an estimated 986,000 cases of CRS between 2025 and 2055, sparing nearly a million children from preventable blindness, deafness and brain damage.

Yet this undertaking is now acutely imperiled. The Trump administration’s reactionary withdrawal from the WHO (World Health Organization) and the gutting of foreign aid infrastructure threaten to collapse the institutional framework required to deliver the vaccine to those who need it most, guaranteeing that the devastating toll of congenital rubella syndrome will continue for decades. The broader context makes this still more alarming: the military escalation now driving the world toward a third world war has historically been the condition under which epidemic disease spreads most rapidly, as the wartime rubella epidemic that swept through Australian army camps in 1939 and ultimately reached Gregg’s clinic in 1941 so grimly demonstrated.

*****

When Dr. Plotkin surveys the dismantling of the public health infrastructure he spent his life building, his outrage is unmistakable—and entirely legitimate. In his STAT News profile and in responses to questions posed by the World Socialist Web Site—he declined a formal interview but responded to written questions—he conveyed the same verdict: that the field’s achievements are slipping away, that vaccine nihilism is rising, and that he does not know how to counter it. Branswell’s reporting rendered that despair with skill and sympathy. But sympathy without historical/political analysis has its own political function. Together, the STAT profile and Plotkin’s own responses present a unified picture of defeat—moving, humane, and, from the standpoint of science and history, profoundly insufficient.

There is no dispute here about Plotkin’s integrity as a scientist or the magnitude of what his work achieved. On the immediate moral question his judgment is direct and unsparing. Confronting the ACIP’s elevation of “individual autonomy” over communal survival, he told the WSWS that to tell people they do not need to be vaccinated is to promote disease—foolish and immoral. But he does not address the political questions his own moral condemnation suggests.

Plotkin’s youthful idealism emerged during a period of rabid anticommunism and carefully managed concessions to the working class. The teenager, who read Arrowsmith and Microbe Hunters in the Bronx and grasped that science could be a social mission, came of age precisely as McCarthyism was conducting its systematic destruction of left-wing thought in American intellectual and scientific life. The postwar institutions he entered—the CDC, the EIS, the Wistar lab—had already been purged of the class-conscious traditions that had shaped an earlier generation of scientists and public health workers. 

The framework that could have given historical grounding to his enthusiastic embrace of medical science had been made systematically unavailable. What remained was a liberalism of expertise: science as a social good, delivered by enlightened institutions, contingent on nothing so uncomfortable as class conflict. When asked by the WSWS about the contradictions between public health and pharmaceutical profit, Plotkin defended the profit motive as the engine of American vaccine leadership—while its current demise is a contradiction that does not appear to register.

Pessimism of the kind expressed by Plotkin and amplified by STAT News is antithetical to science itself, and in particular to any serious understanding of how social progress has ever been made. It treats the working class as passive, as the object of policies handed down from above or withheld, rather than as the historical force that extracted those policies through struggle. The revolutionary generation that demanded inoculation from below understood what Plotkin’s own education taught him to forget: Science serving human life and the organized power of working people are not separate causes. They are the same cause. Do we accept defeat? The answer to the history that this article undertakes—and that Plotkin’s science deserves—is a resounding “no.” Not naive optimism, but the recognition that what was won through struggle can only be defended the same way.

10. US special forces launch rescue operation inside Iran after downing of US fighter jet

Iranian air defenses shot down an F-15E Strike Eagle jet over western Iran Friday, the first US aircraft shot down by Iranian fire since the war began. Following the downing, US special forces launched a rescue operation inside Iran to recover the pilot. Axios reported that “US special forces located one of the crew members and rescued him, alive, on Iranian territory.” The other crew member remains missing inside Iran.  

The rescue operation came as roughly 7,500 Marines from three Marine Expeditionary Units and a combat brigade from the 82nd Airborne Division’s Immediate Response Force arrived or were en route to the Persian Gulf, joining more than 50,000 US service members already in the region. The buildup points toward a ground invasion.

Following the downing of the aircraft, President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social: “With a little more time, we can easily OPEN THE HORMUZ STRAIT, TAKE THE OIL, & MAKE A FORTUNE.” Seizing Iran’s oil would require a ground invasion and occupation.

A second aircraft, an A-10 Thunderbolt, was shot down in a separate incident the same day. The pilot ejected over Kuwaiti airspace and was rescued. Two HH-60G rescue helicopters sent to recover the F-15E’s crew were also hit by Iranian fire, injuring US personnel aboard before returning to base. In all, four American aircraft were struck in a single day—the worst losses of the five-week war.

The shoot-downs came two days after Trump addressed the nation in a prime time speech in which he threatened to destroy Iranian society. “We are going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks,” Trump said Wednesday. “We are going to bring them back to the stone ages, where they belong.” He threatened to hit “each and every one of their electric generating plants,” and said he had not yet struck Iran’s oil only because doing so “would not give them even a small chance of survival or rebuilding.”

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Five weeks of bombing have killed more than 5,000 people, the vast majority of them Iranian civilians. More than 85,000 civilian structures have been damaged, including 64,000 homes and 600 schools. Between 3 and 4 million Iranians have been internally displaced. Iran’s 90 million people have been cut off from the outside world by a near-total internet blackout since February 28.

Thirteen American service members have been killed and nearly 370 wounded. Brent crude has surged more than 60 percent and gasoline has passed $4 a gallon. The war has cost at least $25 billion—and the administration is asking for more.

On Friday, Trump released the largest defense budget in American history: a $1.5 trillion Pentagon request for fiscal year 2027, a 44 percent increase. The budget cuts the Environmental Protection Agency by 52 percent, the State Department by 30 percent and NASA by 23 percent. It eliminates the National Endowment for Democracy. It cuts $73 billion from environmental, health and education research to pay for warships, missiles and a “Golden Dome” missile defense system. Jessica Riedl, a budget analyst at the Brookings Institution, said the purpose of the budget is “to push Congress to approve the largest defense spending increase since the Korean War.”

The war is expanding. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz announced that the Israel Defense Forces will demolish all homes in Lebanese border villages “like in Rafah and Beit Hanoun.” More than 600,000 Lebanese have fled their homes. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has called for making the Litani River Israel’s new northern border. 

11. Sri Lankan Tamil bourgeois parties support US-Israeli war on Iran

The main Tamil bourgeois parties in Sri Lanka have for the most part said nothing about the criminal US-Israeli war against Iran. But it is a silence to cover up their ongoing support for US imperialism and the major powers as is demonstrated by the handful of comments that have been made.

The island’s Tamils were subjected to a brutal communal war for nearly three decades in which tens of thousands were slaughtered by the Sri Lankan military in final months that led to the defeat of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009.

For many Tamil workers and youth, like their counterparts throughout the island and internationally, their sympathies undoubtedly lie with the civilian victims in Iran of the relentless US-Israeli bombardment. However, for the main Tamil party, Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK), the slaughter of Tamils is cynically used as the pretext to justify its failure to condemn, in reality tacit support for, the slaughter taking place in Iran.

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The entire political establishment is mired in reactionary communal politics, which is above all aimed at dividing the working class. Successive Colombo governments whipped up Sinhala supremacism that resulted in anti-Tamil violence, pogroms and ultimately civil war. The Tamil bourgeois parties promote Tamil nationalism and separatism in a bid to secure their own venal interests. In doing so they all align themselves with imperialism and its crimes.

The Socialist Equality Party has consistently opposed all forms of nationalism and chauvinism, defended the democratic rights of Tamils and called for the withdrawal of troops from the predominantly Tamil areas of the North and East. We do so on the basis of uniting the working class on the basis of a common fight for Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and Eelam.

We call on all workers—Tamil as well as Sinhala and Muslim—to oppose the US-Israeli war on Iran and the pro-imperialist policies of all of the country’s capitalist parties. Far from being “an initiative for world peace,” the war on Iran is one front on an unfolding world war already underway in Ukraine and being prepared against China threatening a catastrophe for humanity.

Only a unified anti-war movement of the international working class fighting for the abolition of capitalism and a socialist future for mankind can prevent that disaster.

We urge workers and students to participate in the public meeting titled “Stop the US-Israeli War Against Iran!” organized by the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (Sri Lanka) on April 7 at 3:30 p.m., at the Orient Educational Institute in Hindagala, near the University of Peradeniya.

9. South Korean factory fire investigation exposes indifference to safety

Two weeks since the deadly blaze in Daejeon, South Korea that killed 14 workers and injured 60 more at an auto parts plant, the investigation has revealed the complete disregard for safety that led up to the tragedy. These disasters are not unpredictable accidents, but are the result of capitalism’s relentless drive for profit at the expense of the working class. 

The fire took place on March 20 at a plant operated by Anjun Industrial, where workers produced 70 million engine valves annually for cars and ships, and was a key supplier for Hyundai and Kia Motors. The South Korean state went into damage-control mode as is typical in order to contain and suppress workers’ anger.

President Lee Jae-myung, who came to office last year pledging to reduce South Korea’s high workplace death rate, offered a pro forma apology, stating, “As workplace accidents continue to occur, I feel deeply sorry as the person responsible for state affairs.” He declared the government would “conduct thorough inspections of high-risk workplaces and ensure that safety-related systems are functioning properly.” In reality, as previously with such disasters, nothing will be done.

Investigators barred six executives from Anjun from leaving the country, including company CEO Son Ju-hwan and began to expose some of the dangerous conditions that existed at the factory. However, they focus blame solely on Anjun, giving the impression that the disaster was the result of individual negligence or corruption.

However, the unsafe conditions are the result of pressure of major corporations like Hyundai Motors in order to ensure the uninterrupted flow of components and thus profits. Hyundai’s chief concern following the fire was not the fate of the workers and their families, but obtaining a new parts supplier, one that will no doubt reproduce the same dangerous conditions elsewhere.

Hyundai encouraged and rewarded Anjun handsomely for doing whatever was necessary to be a reliable supplier. Sales flourished at Anjun in recent years, nearly quadrupling from 35.8 billion won ($US23.7 million) in 2005 to 135.1 billion won ($US89.4 million) in 2024.

Whatever punishment, if any, is meted out to Anjun and its executives will be purely for show, while the underlying production system that encourages dangerous practices will remain untouched.

*****

The reckless and dangerous operations at Anjun are not the exception but the rule around the world where workers are sacrificed in industrial slaughterhouses for profit. Regardless of its rhetoric, the Lee Jae-myung administration will take no genuine measures to improve workplace safety. 

12. Wave of job cuts in New Zealand

New Zealand is in a deepening social and economic crisis, marked by rising unemployment, mass job cuts and escalating poverty.

Official unemployment stood at 5.4 percent in December 2025, the highest level in over a decade, representing 165,000 people, which has undoubtedly increased in the past three months. In February there were 220,839 people (6.8 percent of the working-age population) on a Jobseeker Support benefit—more than the population of Wellington city—including those unable to work due to illness. In total, 424,155 people are on welfare, including sole parents and people with disabilities.

Unemployment has been rising since then Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr admitted in November 2022—during the previous Labour Party government—that the central bank was “deliberately engineering a recession” by lifting interest rates. The aim was to intensify the exploitation of the working class.

The US-Israeli war against Iran—which the National Party-led government supports—is further deepening the crisis. Annual inflation is 3.1 percent and is expected to go much higher. Food prices increased by around 5 percent annually, with rates, rent and electricity all rising significantly in recent years.

The social consequences are already severe. Food insecurity is widespread, with one in three households affected in 2025. One in seven children (169,300) are living in material hardship. Homelessness is increasing even as the government moves to criminalize rough sleepers.

The scale of job losses across the economy is extensive and accelerating, with food manufacturing, timber processing, construction and retail bearing the brunt. 

*****

Workers everywhere face a political struggle, not just against individual employers, but against the capitalist system itself. Workers are being thrown out of jobs in their tens of thousands, while those still employed face intensifying exploitation, insecure or long hours and declining real wages. This reflects the irrationality of production organized for profit rather than social need.

To stop mass layoffs and the closure of factories deemed unprofitable, workers should fight for public ownership of all major industries, under workers’ democratic control. What is required is nothing less than a struggle for the socialist reorganization of society.

13. Australian Labor government secretly sends SAS to join the war against Iran

Behind the backs of the Australian population, the Albanese government last month dispatched approximately 90 Special Air Service (SAS) commandos to participate in the escalating US-Israeli assault on Iran.

This secret deployment shows that nothing that the Labor government says about the war can be believed, including its repeated claims that it is not involved in the Trump administration’s barbaric offensive.

*****

The truth is that the Albanese government has been an active participant in the war from the start, including through the joint Pine Gap satellite surveillance and war targeting base in central Australia, the North West Cape submarine communications base and the embedding of Australian forces in the US military-intelligence apparatus.

That integration was underscored by the presence of three Australian naval personnel on a US nuclear attack submarine that torpedoed a defenseless Iranian frigate off the coast of Sri Lanka on March 4, claiming at least 87 lives. The Australian personnel were undergoing training under the auspices of AUKUS, the military pact with the US and the UK directed against China.

The SAS mobilization is occurring under conditions where the Trump administration—while also denying it will have “troops on the ground”—is ramping up US forces around Iran and President Trump has blatantly vowed to send the Iranian people “back to the Stone Ages, where they belong.”

In that nationally-televised address last Wednesday, Trump declared his government’s intention to annihilate an entire country—to level its cities, its power grid, its water supply, its hospitals and its industry, everything that sustains 90 million people.

Not a single member of the Labor government, from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese down, has uttered a word of condemnation of Trump’s vow, signalling again their readiness to fully support the US war, as they did within hours on day one, on February 28.

14.  Workers Struggles: Asia & Australia

Australia:

IT workers at DXC Technology in Victoria strike
 
Victorian disability support workers protest
 
Medical scientists in Victoria strike against wage cuts
 
Mobile crane workers at Prince Engineering in Portland, Victoria strike
 
Aurizon refuses to pay unionized rail workers
 
Queensland rail workers locked outIndia:  
Telangana ASHA workers demand increased minimum wage
 
Gujarat: Sanitation workers strike in Kheda pilgrimage center
 
Kashmir: Contract cooks in Srinagar’s Handwara town schools protest for better wages and equal pay
 
Himachal Pradesh: Outsourced workers protest in Shimla’s Chaura Maidan

New Zealand:  

Firefighters continue strikes 

Sri Lanka:

Doctors protest over transfer irregularities

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

The sign says: "Peace for the world! Down with war!"