Archive for February, 2017

Knights for Socialism Hold Self-Defense Clinic to Bash The Fash … – KnightNews.com

On Sunday, the University of Central Florida Knights for Socialism held an event titled Self-Defense Clinic: Boxing to teach students to defend themselves and BASH THE FASH, under a Donald Trump presidency.

According to the Knights for Socialism event page, the clinic is being held in response to the record number of hate crimes against Latinos, Immigrants, Muslims, Women, the LGBTQIA+ community, Jews, African Americans and other minorities since the rise of Donald Trump and other Alt-Right Neo-Nazis.

Chairman of the Knights for Socialism, Sophomore Dylan Tyer has stated that these events are crucial and that he himself has been threatened here at UCF.

I have gotten threats [at UCF], Ive been told Id be shot by a right-wing death squad. Ive been told as a protestor, as someone who organizes mass actions and protests that I should be run over, gas chambers, you name it. Its absolutely disgusting; there are really people on this campus that are really honestly sociopaths, Tyer said.

During the event, local amateur fighter Adrian taught the group how to properly throw a jab and followed by giving everyone a chance to put on a pair of boxing gloves and test their skills. Participants enjoyed the experience and felt that they really learned something.

I think this is a useful skill to have. Like if you are out somewhere and someone tries to hurt you. But other then that I think its something to add to your repertoire, freshman Physic student Joe Walsh sad.

Though this event was classified as a public event on Facebook, This event is open to everyone and anyone, EXCEPT REPUBLICANS, was written in the about section.

Conservatives at UCF expressed concern about being excluded from the event.

I think the organization needs to revue the UCF Golden Rule if they want to continue to be an official organization on campus, Chairwomen of the College Republicans Karis Lockhart said.

Their exclusive and divisive language on their Facebook event goes against the UCF Golden Rule and what UCF stands for. The event goes further to prove that they do not want to have an educated discussion about the issues, as they much rather host an event that blatantly excludes fellow Knights that have a different politically ideology than them, Lockhart said.

Tyer believes these concerns about Republicans being excluded are unwarranted.

There are people who say in response to the rise of SJWs (Social Justice Warriors) that they are going to start conceal carrying on campus, which is blatantly illegal. Thus, I dont think any concerns about us are warranted, Tyer said.

This was The Knights for Socialisms first of many planned self-defense seminars. If you are interested in hearing more about Knights for Socialism or attending there next self defense clinic, you can follow Knights for Socialism on Facebook for details.

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Knights for Socialism Hold Self-Defense Clinic to Bash The Fash ... - KnightNews.com

Knights for Socialism hosts ‘Leftist Fight Club,’ trains to ‘bash’ others … – Washington Times

A group known as the Knights for Socialism hosts a self-defense clinic for teaching members how to bash so-called fascists.

The educational watchdog Campus Reformreported Monday on the existence of a University of Central Florida group designed to teach socialists how to BASH THE FASH at Leftist Fight Club: The Rumbles at Lake Claire.

This event is open to everyone and anyone, except Republicans, the groups Facebook invite for a Feb. 5 session read. Ladies: The Commander in thief is a sexual predator and rapist. He has normalised sexual assault and it is expected that sexual violence against women is going to skyrocket in the next 12 months.

The groups promotional material includes a cartoon of a masked Captain America punching white nationalist Richard Spencer, along with a woman kicking a Nazi in the stomach.

Kick their Axis. Stop the alt-right, one image reads.

The rhetoric echoes protesters and an unidentified New York University professor captured on video Feb. 2 outside an event featuring conservative pundit Gavin McInnes.

Youre protecting the Nazis! You should kick their a**! You should! the professor yelled at the New York Police Department as well as other profanity, Reason reported Feb. 3.

Mr. McInnes, who was pepper-sprayed by a protester as he attempted to enter a building on campus, is not a Nazi or a white supremacist.

Knights for Socialism responded Tuesday to critics as news of its group spread.

More crybaby republicans whining about being excluded. So who are the snowflakes again? the group said on its Facebook page.

Its blatantly hypocritical for right-leaning students to complain about needing a safe space when liberals suddenly show an interest in self-defense, Reason wrote in an op-ed published Monday. Instead of whining about not being included in Leftist Fight Club, conservatives should challenge liberals to fully commit to the principle of self-defense and embrace the Second Amendment.

UCF officials told Campus Reform that they are looking further into the group.

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Knights for Socialism hosts 'Leftist Fight Club,' trains to 'bash' others ... - Washington Times

Left populism: An attack on socialism by the Argentine pseudo-left … – World Socialist Web Site

By Andrea Lobo 8 February 2017

The pseudo-left news web site La Izquierda Diarioput out by the Trotskyist Fraction of the Fourth International (FT-CI), whose main section is the Socialist Workers Party (PTS) in Argentinais calling for left populism in response to the coming to power of right-wing governments utilizing populist demagogy, as in the case of new US administration of Donald Trump.

This populist strategy is anti-socialist and has disastrous implications for the working class in Latin America and elsewhere. The FT-CI calls for a more radical populism than the one espoused by pseudo-left parties in Europe, namely Podemos and Syriza. The betrayals of the latterimposing the EU austerity diktats and blocking the emergence of an independent political alternative for the working classhave been central in disorienting and demoralizing workers and paving the way for the political right.

On December 2, the Spanish section of the FT-CI published an article titled The working class, the left, and right-wing populism. It began by favorably quoting Owen Jones, the columnist for the Guardian, who claims that university students and the middle class on the left need their own form of populism, ultimately to defend their own material interests using the support from sections of the working class. Adopting Joness approach and referring to Podemos, the FT-CI calls for a populism that proposes more radical measures.

Referring to Trump voters, Owen writes: True, some will be racists and misogynists beyond redemption, but others have the potential to be peeled away if the lure is attractive enough. Similarly, the FT-CI shuns the more privileged sectors of the employed working class who voted for Trump and, they claim, are responsible for the attacks on minority groups.

The FT-CI article states: In the first place, it is necessary to clarify that the North American working class is composed not only of white heterosexual men between the ages of 45 and 60, who were those who voted in the majority for Trump, together with a large layer of the middle class. The working class of the United State is made up as well of marginalized youth, women, Latinos, Arabs, Afro-Americans, gays, lesbians, etc.

This is a demoralized petty-bourgeois outlook that rejects the objectively revolutionary role of the working class in capitalist society, reducing workers to a disparate social layer whose outlook is determined by a collection of racial, gender and sexual identities.

The populism of the Argentine pseudo-left aims at demonstrating a predisposition to alter the status quo and not to administer it, in the words of two of FT-CIs main theorists from Argentina, Emilio Albamonte and Matas Maiello. They combine radical phraseology and identity politics for this purpose.

The FT-CI emerged from a split in the early 1990s out of the International Workers League (LIT-CI), a group formed by Nahuel Moreno from Argentina, who left the International Committee in 1963 to join the Pabloite United Secretariat. In the documents later explaining their split from Morenoism, the FT-CI explain that they still adhere to his politics prior to the 1980s, including his nationalist and opportunistic adaptations to Peronism and Castroism.

Seeking to follow the same overall path of Syriza, currently in power in Greece, and Podemos, with 71 elected legislators and several mayors in Spain, the FT-CI tries to cover up their class interests and their abandonment of any semblance of a socialist program.

The December 2 article congratulates the sectors in Podemos and Izquierda Unida that have started to address the need to strengthen the struggle in the streets and the demands of men and women workers. In another article on December 1, Clase contra Clase, the web site of the Spanish section of the FT-CI, praises Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias as one of the main forces behind this leftward turn. In Iglesiass own words, the key slogans for this have been to go back to the streets and make Podemos look like the people.

In an interview published on December 28, Albamonte declared that the FT-CIs response to the polarization that is happening towards the right and left within the ruling class, out of the 2008 crisis, has been to develop a party of tribunes of the people, referring to Lenins use of the term in What Is to be Done?

According to Albamonte, Lenins idea of tribunes meant for workers not to have only a corporatist or syndicalist thought but for them to talk to other sectors of the exploited and oppressed and do what Gramsci called hegemony, which he defines as talking to women, talking to youth, talking to workers without collective agreements, to the most precarious, to the newly hired, and leading them in struggle.

The FT-CIs use of Leninist jargon to justify a supra-class, anti-socialist populist movement is preposterous. Lenin carried out a decades-long struggle against populism in works like What the Friends of the People Are and How They Fight the Social Democrats and ruthlessly exposed its role in blocking the development of socialist consciousness in the working class.

Albamontes party of tribunes, like the party of the 99 percent, seeks to subordinate the interests of the broader mass of workers in Latin America to the attainment of a more favorable redistribution of wealth from the richest 1 percent to the more affluent sections of the middle class.

FT-CI and Podemos both cite the writings of the late Argentine postmodernist and post-Marxist academic Ernesto Laclau and his intellectual and personal partner, Chantal Mouffe. In a 2014 obituary for Laclau, Iigo Errejn, number two of Podemos, explains that Laclaus neo-Gramscian school of thought aims at solving the irreplaceable need forgenerating imaginaries that can unite and mobilise people. This power is hegemonythe joining-together of fragmented groups and neglected demands that become a political us with a will to power.

Rejecting the existence of the working class and of the objective socioeconomic basis for socialism, Laclau contrasted a supra-class us to a them, who are held responsible for whatever problems exist. In a December interview with the Nation, Mouffe said: The task of the left is to construct a people based on the equivalence of the demands of workers and those of the feminists, civil rights, and different movements.

The us and them for the FT-CI are clearly reflected in their class outlook and political record. Like Podemos and Syriza, the politics of the FT-CI reflect the interests of layers of the upper middle class, which have seen their material fortunes increasingly tied to those of the financial and corporate elites.

In Argentina, the percentage of households making more than $50 per day (purchasing parity) increased more than in any other Latin American country: from 6.1 percent to 28.3 percent between 2000 and 2012, according to a 2014 Inter-American Development Bank study. Today, the top 20 percent of income earners in Argentina receive about half of the total personal income.

After the 1998-2002 recession in Argentina, a fast GDP growth of 6.5 percent per yearmainly a result of a boom in commodity pricesallowed the ruling class to redistribute some of its income. However, today the bottom half of income earners still make less than the minimum and vital salary of about $500 per month. In the wake of the 2008 crisis, the top 20 percent grew even wealthier.

Facing a recession in Argentina and world economic stagnation, these forces fear that the growth of their economic privileges will be undermined by increasing social unrest in response to the policies of right-wing President Mauricio Macri.

Their demagogic slogans like make the rich pay for the crisis, their focus on electing more legislators to the coalition they lead (the FIT) in the Argentine Congress, their appeals to the right-wing union bureaucracies and petty-bourgeois movements like Ni Una Menos to lead the struggles against the Macri administration all reflect their pro-capitalist politics and class orientation.

Errejn describes the Podemos program as the Latin-Americanization of southern European politicsnot to copy, but to translate its experience; in other words, they aim to carry out betrayals parallel to those of Pern and Allende, whose populismand that of other left nationalist movements like Castroism and Sandinismo, and the Pabloite tendencies that adapted to these forcesdisarmed workers in Latin America. The result was the absolute subordination of workers, peasants, and youth to the interests of US and European banks and corporations, under the rule of the repressive US-backed military dictatorships of the 1970s and 1980s that murdered, tortured, and disappeared hundreds of thousands across the region.

In order to confront the mounting social attacks and increasingly violent and widespread repression at a time of emerging extreme right-wing governments in the United States and Europe, workers in Argentina and in the rest of Latin America need to fight back on the basis of a revolutionary program of international socialism by building sections of the International Committee and opposing the efforts by pseudo-left forces such as the PTS and FT-CI to employ bourgeois populism in order to block the political independence of the working class.

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Left populism: An attack on socialism by the Argentine pseudo-left ... - World Socialist Web Site

University of Central Florida’s ‘Knights of Socialism’ group organizes … – The Global Dispatch

The Knights for Socialism group at the University of Central Florida (UCF) held a workshop Sunday to teach left-wing students how to BASH THE FASH with a Leftist Fight Club open to everyone but Republicans, according to a new report from Campus Reform.

In response to the record number of hate crimes against Latinxs, Immigrants, Muslims, Women, the LGBTQIA+ community, Jews, African Americans and other minorities since the rise of Donald Trump and other Alt-Right Neo-Nazis, Knights for Socialism has decided to host a series of self-defense clinics for anyone that wants to learn how to BASH THE FASH, asserts the Facebook event page for Leftist Fight Club: The Rumbles at Lake Claire.

This event is open to everyone and anyone, EXCEPT REPUBLICANS, the Facebook event page proclaims.

The article posts a photo promoting the event, withThe description explains that a local amateur boxer was on hand to teach basic hand-to-hand combat techniques at the self-defense clinic, in order to help the socialist students better protect themselves from potential hate crimes performed by those sympathetic to Donald Trump and other Alt-Right Neo-Nazis.'

This is the image from the screenshot:

There was actual sparring and physical contact at the event, which promoted fear among the women on campus.

Ladies: The Commander in thief is a sexual predator and rapist, the description warns. He has normalised sexual assault and it is expected that sexual violence against women is going to skyrocket in the next 12 months. Please join us! There will be other women there for you to spar against!

The organizers also imply that they are looking forward to unprotected sparring, remarking that We will have gloves and pads, no bare-knuckle yet ;).

After contact with the Republican group on campus, the site obtained an email exchange which alleges the administration will look into the event.

East Orlando Post reported on the event as well, adding more screenshots and confirming the Campus Reform report as the UCF officials are still silent on the matter. Check that out HERE

Brandon Jones - Writer and Co-Founder of The Global Dispatch, Brandon has been covering news for Examiner, starting and writing for several different websites including the diverse blognews site Desk of Brian. To Contact Brandon email theglobaldispatch@gmail.com ATTN: BRANDON

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University of Central Florida's 'Knights of Socialism' group organizes ... - The Global Dispatch

The Left’s Lame Tea Party Play – Daily Beast

Dont be sure liberals can replicate the right wings resistance to governmentor that it will benefit them if they can do it.

On Tuesday, Democrats voted lockstep against Betsy DeVoss for secretary of education. It was a sign that the party had moved toward a strategy of obstruction. It is an ironic tip of the cap to Donald Trump and the Tea Party. And it might be a big mistake.

Nothing succeeds like success. Whenever someone does something that works, the natural instinct is to replicate it. This happens in politics, business, and sports. Everybody plays Moneyball now.

Democrats have watched what the Tea Party and Donald Trump, respectively, pulled off, and now they want to seek revenge by mimicking the very tactics used by their adversaries. The problem is that (1) not everyone is positioned to do the same things, and (2) times and situations change. Sometimes fighting the last war works; other times, it doesnt.

Faced with a surprising loss, our carnal instinct is for crude revenge, a tit-for tat. But revenge is a dish best served cold. Many columns describe Democrats as becoming the party of no. To my knowledge, none of these columns were written by someone on the center-right, and that makes a certain amount of sense. It would be easy to suggest that what Im about to say is concern trolling. But what follows is sincere advice.

Before attempting to replicate what conservatives did, its worth asking if it is replicable. There are reasons to believe the techniques and strategies are not transferable.

First, the Tea Party was, as I have lamented, an anti-intellectual movement. Conversely, the Democratic base is full of people who listen to NPR. Whipping up the same kind of fervor that shunts the nuances of governing is unlikely to unify the left. A corollary to this is that a large portion of people on the left actually like government. So how do you get the left to unify around a shutdown tactic?

Second, politics is about choices, and copying Trumps tactics would deprive Democrats of a favorable contrast. Keep in mind, the fundamental choice may not always be left vs. right. Donald Trump has tried to make the choice about insiders vs. outsiders, and (to a certain extent) this strategy has worked. However, that was the last wara war he defined. Maybe the next election will focus on chaos vs. normalcy or incompetence vs. competence.

If that happens, Democrats would be foolish to abandon this unique selling proposition. Politics is about addition, and there could be demand for a rational and thoughtful party in 2020. Democrats would essentially abandon this emerging coalition by seeking to ape Trump.

Its hard to see how a race to the bottomthat serves to further weaken faith in institutions and governmenthelps the brand of big government. Instead, Democrats need to offer an alternative vision of how sensible, thoughtful, nuanced governance is the preferred alternative to Trumpism.

Even if liberals were to replicate everything that happened during the last eight years as Republicans resisted President Obama, theres no guarantee that it would end with a victory for their team. After all, Trump did lose the popular vote. It took a confluence of numerous external events for Trump to win. Adopting a radical strategy of reflexive resistancebased on the assumption that liberals will inexorably win the presidency in 2024seems like an unwise gamble.

But forget about winning back the presidency, there is no guarantee Democrats will even be able to replicate what Republicans did in 2010 and 2014. To be sure, Democrats won the 2006 midterms by essentially running as the party of no against a flailing George W. Bush administration. However, that was year six of his presidency, and the wheels had come off. What is more, while it is not unusual for a presidents party to lose seats in midterms, Democrats will be playing defense in 2018, defending several incumbent Senate seats in states where Trump won.

While whipping up the base is likely to increase midterm turnout, midterms typically skew much older and whiter than do presidential elections. This is all a long way of saying that while its possible Democrats could have good midterms, its a steeper climb.

Its one thing for Democrats to unite in opposition to Trumps cabinet picks; thats easy. What happens when the budget comes this spring? What if it defunds Planned Parenthood? Do Democrats force a government shutdown over that, or do they merely vote against it? There is extensive range between these two strategic decisions. The base will surely be clamoring for a shutdown, butagainthis is an off brand move for the Party of Government that might want to come to the rescue if Trumps chaos finally backfires. Warren Hardings return to normalcy offers us a model for winning after a period of turmoil.

Now, I have no illusions that liberals will heed my warnings any more than conservatives did. Just as Republicans were effectively leaderless for nearly a decade (between George W. Bush and Donald Trump), Democrats now find themselves without a de facto (or de jure) leader. Therefore, the initial instinct is to fight. The heart wants what the heart wants.

The first and most basic form of resistance is to take to the streets (just as the Tea Party did). Marches can be good for morale, but (with a few obvious exceptions) they are overrated in terms of change. The big Womens March was probably more about resolving intersectional racial tensions within the left (emphasizing its nonwhite leadership) than it was about winning the future.

Democrats have the chance to emerge as a serious and competent opposition party. However, scorched-earth tactics are not going to accomplish that goal. An economic populism that brings together working-class whites and African-Americans and Hispanics is within their reachbut the partys internal interest groups and actors each have a perverse incentive to stoke anger. Republicans spent a decade dealing with the tragedy of the commons problem. Now, it is the Democrats who are up at bat.

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The Left's Lame Tea Party Play - Daily Beast