Archive for May, 2017

Liberals Enraged About Canada’s Plan to Build ‘Victims of Communism’ Memorial – Heat Street

The city of Ottawa, Canada will erect a large, bronze memorial to honorthe victims of communism. The $3 million project is expected to be completed in 2018, and was planned by the countrys former Conservative government.

Despite the fact that the monument will memorialize tens of millions who died over the last century (Stalin, for instance, is believed to have killed more people than Hitler. Similarly millions of Chinese died in Maos Great Leap Forward), someon the left are peeved about the new monument. The tankies are out in full force, demanding a memorial for the victims of capitalism, colonialism and the United States, instead.

Reddits Canada community erupted in a heated argumentin the comment thread under the news of the memorial.

I meant a government going after another political ideology, one user wrote. Thats McCarthyist-era. Its like whoever thought this up just fell asleep in 1960 and woke up today and doesnt understand why people arent still rallying against communists anymore.

Should we be creating a memorial to capitalism as well? wrote another. The British East India company (one of the early multinationals) killed an estimated 10 million Indians over ten years.

Whelp, just goes to show you that even a memorial honoring the death of millions will still have complainers.

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Liberals Enraged About Canada's Plan to Build 'Victims of Communism' Memorial - Heat Street

Fighting Communism in California – Accuracy In Media

In February, California senator Janet Nguyen (R-Santa Ana), the countrys first Vietnamese-American state legislator, whose district includes more than 100,000 people of Vietnamese descent, wasremovedfrom the Senate chamber after objecting to the lionization of deceased former state assemblyman and senator Tom Hayden, acommunist collaboratorduring the Vietnam War. Nguyen was born in Saigon a year before the city fell to the North Vietnamese forces in 1975 and legally immigrated to the United States with her family four years later, settling in southern California.

When the posthumous lionization began of Haydens service of almost two decades in California state government, Nguyen was distressed. She knew Hayden as someone who had aided and given comfort to the communist enemy in her country of origin. She felt compelled to express the sentiments of her heavily refugee-populated district, whose families had suffered greatly because of North Vietnamese brutality. The community blames the U.S. anti-war movement for undermining the war effort and contributing to the eventual victory of the North Vietnamese communists.

During the Vietnam War in the 1960s,Hayden, a prominent and vocal voice for the North Vietnamese communists, had organized a campaign with Jane Fonda, John Kerry, and Ted Kennedy to cut off American aid to the existing government of South Vietnam and cooperate with the Vietcong and Khmer Rouge. Hayden traveled to southeast Asia numerous times during the conflict to strategize with the enemy on defeating Americas anti-communist plan. When reports came to light that American soldiers were being tortured in communist captivity, he proclaimed the reports to be propaganda. Hayden and Fonda notoriously weakened the morale of American POWs by participating in broadcasts for the North Vietnamese in which they accused American troops of war crimes.

After Haydens passing October 23, 2016, the California Senate held a ceremony five months later on February 20, 2017, honoring his service to the state legislature. California Democratic Party chairman John Burton praised the former senator as one of the great visionaries and as a guy with a lot of courage. President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles) crowed, He dedicated his life to the betterment of our state and our great country through the pursuit of peace, justice and equity. Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara)applaudedHayden for his street activism against the Vietnamese war.

These undue accolades proved to be too much for Nguyen, who is aware of the truth regarding Haydens anti-war pursuits. She left the chamber and, later, unsuccessfully attempted to gain approval to recess the session later in the week in remembrance of the one million Vietnamese who died because of the war and to speak about Haydens actions in Vietnam.

Although refused permission, Nguyen returned to the Senate four days later and gave her statement anyway, speaking first in Vietnamese and then English.

Mr. Hayden sided with a communist government that enslaved and/or killed millions of Vietnamese, including members of my own family, she said. Mr. Haydens actions are viewed by many as harmful to democratic values and hateful toward those who sought the very freedoms on which this nation is founded.

Regretfully, Senator Nguyen didnt get far with her statement, as she was chastised for being out of order, had her microphone cut off, and was ultimately removed from the California Senate floor. The following weekend, over 100 local Vietnamese Americans, who felt that the memory of their lost loved ones and the brutal assault on their country had been disrespected, attended arallyin support of the senator and her right to speak out against Haydens actions.

A week later, recognizing the public relations implications of dragging a Vietnam war refugee from the state Senate floor, de Leon attempted an apology that essentially excused Nguyens removal for violating chamber rules by citing thetimingof her remarks. However, this response appeared disingenuous, given that Nguyen was denied permission to speak and, instead, told to either post her comments online or provide them following adjournment, an apparent violation of Senate rules.

In May, once again, Nguyen was forced to act on her anti-communist beliefs whenAssembly Bill 22was introduced by California assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-San Francisco). The legislation amended an existing statute for removing a public employee who is knowingly a member of the Communist party or member of an organization that advocates the overthrow of the Government of the United States or of any state by force or violence. Essentially, the bill would allow communists to work legally in California government. On May 10, the billpassedthe Assembly and was headed for a Senate vote.

Constituents from Nguyens district, often referred to as Little Saigon, were up in arms about A.B. 22. Many had lived under communist oppression and strongly protested the measure. With district support, Nguyen promptly launched a petition to oppose the legislation. Plans were readied in the local Vietnamese-American community to send protesters to Sacramento.

Claiming that his bill didnt endorse communism or encourage communism, Bonta maintained that he was protecting peoples rights and following constitutional precedents that made it illegal for government to fire employees due to their political affiliations, a claim that rang hollow for Nguyens constituents.

For now, it appears that Sen. Nguyens efforts and those of the community she represents succeeded in thwarting plans to allow those espousing communist ideologies to work in California government. On May 18, Bonta announced withdrawal of the bill and apologized to veterans and those who fled the communist regime in Vietnam. Nguyen must be commended for her valiant quest to stand up in the face of acclaim for a traitorous communist collaborator and for her actions to stop legislation that would have normalized communist ideology in the Golden State.

Guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views of Accuracy in Media or its staff.

Janet Levy, MBA, MSW, is an activist, world traveler, and freelance journalist who has contributed to American Thinker, Pajamas Media, Full Disclosure Network, FrontPage Magazine, Family Security Matters and other publications. She blogs at http://www.womenagainstshariah.com

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Fighting Communism in California - Accuracy In Media

Socialism Is So Hot Right Now. Thank Bernie Sanders. | HuffPost – HuffPost

WASHINGTON Consider the Bernie Bro (Wellus actuallius), an aggressive subgenus of Sen. Bernie Sanders supporters.

In the year since Sanders lost the Democratic primary, members of this species have been pushed out of their native habitat and forced to migrate to new ecosystems. Some nested down in social media, encroaching on classmates Facebook posts and female journalists Twitter updates with condescending diatribes about Slavoj iek. Others made their way to the hostile environs of Donald Trumps campaign, finding sustenance in the idea that there was no difference between the Republican and Democratic nominees for president. Still more found their way to your dinner table, nourishing themselves on ponderous expositions of neoliberalism, where and how they refill their beer growlers, and why Bernie wouldve won.

Herds of other Bernie Bros, however, have staked out a far more hospitable environment: the Democratic Socialists of America, or DSA. For the uninitiated, DSA the inheritor of the American Socialist Party, co-founded by Eugene Debs and instrumental in the progressive reforms of the early 20th century is a chapter-based national political advocacy organization that crusades for policies such as a higher minimum wage, safer working conditions and universal health care.

DSA openly uses the big, bad, scary s-word that countless Republican consultants have used to smear Democrats over the years. And despite decades of efforts to stigmatize it, socialism is kind of in right now.

This was partly fueled by Sanders underdog presidential campaign he identifies as a democratic socialist but caucuses with the Democrats in the Senate as well as by an economic recovery that has left many working people in the dust, experiencing a growing sense of disillusionment with the Democratic Party.

We were highly visible in the Sanders campaign, Joseph Schwartz, a DSA national vice chair and professor of political science at Temple University in Philadelphia, told HuffPost. Schwartz said DSAs growth began to accelerate as the Sanders campaign picked up steam in mid-2015,and has continued since Trump took office.

DSA has rooted itself in the millennial psyche with astonishing speed. A quiz posted on Reductress earlier this month was titled, Is He Into You, Just a Friend, or Trying to Get You to Join the Democratic Socialists? Comedian Rob Delaney regularly promotes the groupon social media. And that rose emoji you keep see popping up on Twitter? Its likely a reference to both DSAs logo and that of Socialist International, the global consortium of socialist organizations. Along with #resist and #NeverthelessShePersisted, the rose emoji has remained one of the more enduring social media trends since last November.

The real massive influx was starting with the day Trump was elected, Schwartz recalled. Many people want to fight back against Trump, but they also realize that the centrist, pro-corporatist views of the Democratic Party are partially what gave rise to him.

Universal History Archive via Getty Images

DSA officials say their member rolls shot up from around 8,500 on Election Day to about 21,000 as of early May, and theyre getting upwards of 10 requests a week to help open new chapters. New members are overwhelmingly young and tech-savvy, thanks in no small part to the groundwork the Sanders campaign laid by bringing millions of young people into politics.

This engagement was on full display at a May Day rally in Washington, D.C., earlier this month. Around noon, some 100 or so activists from a variety of progressive organizations gathered in a small park in D.C.s Mount Pleasant neighborhood. Making small talk near the obligatory drum circle were around 10 members of DSAs D.C.-area chapter, nearly all of whom had signed up to join DSA on or after Election Day.

DSAs contingent was one of the largest on hand, but was nearly all white and male contrasting sharply with the rest of the crowd, which was far more diverse and representative of the neighborhoods large Salvadoran community. The DSA attendees who spoke with HuffPost said they had joined DSA since November and were first drawn to it through the Sanders campaign.

Ever since Trump won, I think people have been feeling very scared and want to do something, and DSA is a great organization to channel that, said Nick from Poughkeepsie, New York, who declined to give his last name. I had an awakening during Sanders campaign. I was monitoring the growth of all these organizations and saw that DSA was gaining all these members and felt like DSA spoke to me.

James Mathias, 25, from northern Virginia, had previously volunteered for Barack Obamas first presidential campaign and later participated in the Occupy Wall Street movement. After voting for Sanders in the 2016 primary, he voted for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in the general election. While he wasnt wild about Clintons policies, he felt compelled to vote for her out of political necessity, given Virginias swing state status.

Mathias said political realism drew him to DSA and that he has yet to experience the organizational or political disappointment he did with Occupy and Obama.

Each time, I kind of drifted in and out, because both of those things petered out, either literally or philosophically, Mathias recalled. Occupy wasnt focused on engaging with existing political structures. DSA is focused on building power for political ends. I really see a bias for action and not shying away from political structures.

Indeed, DSA doesnt fashion itself as a vehicle for high-level political office most of its members who have run for office have run in municipal elections but rather as Americas largest Socialist organization, per its website. This isnt a wishy-washy expression of being (The Socialist International was in our hearts all along!), but an acknowledgement that its foundational work is in lending organizational support to candidates from other parties and organizations whose policies align with its agenda.

This includes other liberal advocacy organizations and economically progressive politicians like Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Sanders.

DSA didnt endorse Clinton in the 2016 general election, but its chapters actively organized a Dump Trump movement targeted at the Republican nominee. That left open the possibility of voting for Green Party nominee Jill Stein or even Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson, but DSA officials told HuffPost they expected a large number of their supporters would back Clinton.

Despite DSAs often antagonistic attitude toward the Democrats, Democratic officials say theyll happily accept DSAs support whenever its willing to offer it.

We welcome the help of groups across the country who are fighting to defeat Republicans and elect progressive leaders that stand for the same values that make our party so great, DNC spokeswoman Xochitl Hinojosa told HuffPost in an email.

Yuri Gripas/Reuters

While a membership of 21,000 is still small as political entities go progressive advocacy group MoveOn.org touts over 7 million members, for example DSA members engagement has caught the attention of the progressive community. They showed up in large numbers at May Day rallies across the country this year, including a New York City rally that attracted well over 1,000 DSA members.

The people who are joining DSA are people who are extremely active, said Bob Master, a veteran labor activist and the co-founder and co-chair of the Working Families Party of New York. This gives the group tremendous leverage, Master said: Having a young, energized and tech-fluent base of volunteers is a welcome addition to any political coalition.

DSAs willingness to adapt to the current political framework and engage with other organizations has drawn plaudits from other progressive activist and organizations.

DSA has been an excellent ally, joining with our members in canvassing area businesses; they hosted a fundraiser party that raised $1,000 and helped us expand our operations, said Hannah Kane, an organizer at Many Languages One Voice, a Washington, D.C., immigrant community group that led the May Day protest. Theyve just been all-around excellent partners.

George Goehl, the co-director of Peoples Action & Peoples Action Institute, a Chicago-based advocacy organization, partly attributes DSAs rise to the Democratic Party and its constant tacking toward the middle and feeling like the answers to its problems lay in a more moderate, less-structural set of reforms.

We failed in the last election because we had a candidate who was unable to tap into the anger that people are feeling, echoed Master. The Democratic Party cannot limit itself to saying Trump is a bad guy because he fired James Comey. [It] has to speak to the growing sense of economic stagnation and diminishment.

Naturally, Democratic officials disagree with this assessment. Hinojosa, the DNC spokeswoman, said the party and its new chairman, Tom Perez, possess an unwavering commitment to workers and will continue to fight for working families on behalf of the Democratic Party.

DSA naturally draws comparisons to the Green Party, a fact that is not lost on DSA members or leaders. But DSA officials see major differences between the organizations particularly in the Green Partys complete separation from other political parties and what they see as the Greens inordinate focus on presidential elections.

Were more flexible in terms of tactics, said Schwartz. We prioritize doing social movement work, and we see electoral politics as coming out of that. The Green Partys emphasis on its presidential tickets, he added, is not an intelligent way to build an independent third party.

Green Party officials dispute that. In an email to HuffPost, Scott McLarty, media director for the Green Party of the United States, noted that the Green Party runs hundreds of candidates for local and state office every election cycle.

One of the main reasons we run presidential candidates is the support they give to state parties and to state and local candidates, added McLarty.

DSA has several challenges as its membership balloons, including what to do with all those new members. Although individuals unable to pay membership dues are still allowed to join, DSA relies on dues to maintain operations, which includes paying the salaries of the eight full-time employees in its national office. Right now, only two DSA chapters employ part-time employees, but DSA officials expect that number to grow considerably as large chapters in places like Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco continue to add members.

Activists outside DSA also say its imperative that the group not lose focus on its overarching mission, or let the Democratic Partys decidedly less-than-socialist views dilute its platform.

DSAs biennial convention in Chicago this August will be a major test of both its organization and focus. The groups 2015 gathering in Baltimore featured roughly 150 attendees, but organizers expect this years convention to attract 500.

Organizers hope to avoid what transpired at last years Green Party convention, which got so bogged down by ideologicalinfighting and poor planning that it ultimately devolved into one giant lightbulb joke.

Managing growth is really hard, and when organizations grow, its hard to stick with your principles, said Goehl. A little too much power or access can pollute things.

An arguably greater challenge for DSA is diversifying its ranks and combating the growing impressionthat it is merely a refuge for wayward Bernie Bros. Indeed, most DSA members interviewed for this article were white men.

DSA officials acknowledge that this overwhelming whiteness is inherently limiting. We have to make space for diverse voices, including from immigrant communities, said Schwartz. If we dont tackle things like mass incarceration, police brutality and the lack of economic opportunity for people of all races, we wont unite working people.

In addition to promoting an agenda that it believes appeals to communities of color, DSA officials argue that the groups focus on economic matters has the potential to appeal to female voters, who tend to back Democratic candidates and prioritize social welfare issues such as paid maternity leave and access to affordable health care.

Julia Griffin is a 21-year-old DSA member from northern Virginia who works in the service industry and who attended the May Day rally in Washington. She said her Christian faith helped draw her to DSA; she sees in socialism a helping-thy-neighbor ethos thats central to her religious beliefs.

After the election, I was so frustrated with the Democratic Party and so disappointed with everything that went on, I definitely needed to feel part of an organization that was actively working to make peoples lives better, said Griffin.

Ultimately, activists outside DSA say that if it wants to transcend its status as yet another outside group hoping to influence Democratic politics, itll need to establish itself as a real third party not only by notching some wins with local candidates, but also by enacting reforms once they take office.

If youre attracting working-class and low-income members, you got to deliver some tangible victories, said Goehl, of Peoples Action & Peoples Action Institute. He listed the establishment of local credit unions as an example of the type of policy reforms he believes locally-elected DSA members could achieve.

You can deliver a wide range of victories they can be electoral, they can be narrative, but they have to be tangible after a while, Goehl added. This is not theoretical to people; this is about having a place to live and having health care.

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Socialism Is So Hot Right Now. Thank Bernie Sanders. | HuffPost - HuffPost

Twitter’s savior may yet be a socialism network Breakingviews – Breakingviews

The $13 bln microblogging sites investors voted against studying whether to become a user-owned cooperative. It would be a smart solution for a company with lots of dedicated users but few revenue opportunities. Twitters sky-high valuation would need to drop considerably, though.

To access full Breakingviews.com content you must be a subscriber. Please use the following link to request a trial.

Source: REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

People holding mobile phones are silhouetted against a backdrop projected with the Twitter logo in this illustration picture taken in Warsaw September 27, 2013.

Breakingviews is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Twitter investors at the annual meeting on May 23 voted against a shareholder proposal that the company consider becoming a cooperative owned by users. Just 4 percent of owners backed the idea. The proponents argued it bring in new and reliable revenue streams, greater focus on the services long-term potential and more accountability in handling abuse.

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Tea Party member hopes to unseat Oroho in 24th District primary – New Jersey Hills

MOUNT OLIVE TWP. A member of the Skylands Tea Party hopes to defeat Sen. Steven Oroho, R-Morris, in the June 6 primary for the 24th District.

The challenger, William Hayden, 49, of Frankford, will be on the ballot with Oroho for the GOP nomination to represent the district in the November general election.

Assemblywoman Gail Phoebus, R-Morris, had planned to challenge Oroho for the Senate seat but later cancelled her campaign.

Hayden is vice president of the Skylands Tea Party and an 18-year employee of the state Department of Transportation. He has campaigned in opposition to Orohos vote and co-sponsorship of legislation that boosted the gas tax by 23 cents per gallon.

Oroho, a former Sussex County Freeholder, is serving his third term in the Senate. He is a certified financial planner with Stonebridge Capital Management.

Before entry into public office, Oroho worked in finance departments of York City firms, including Price Waterhouse, W.R. Grace and Company, and Young and Rubicam where he held the position of Senior Vice President of Finance.

GOP candidates for the two, 24th District Assembly seats include Nathan Orr of Branchville, David Atwood of Sparta, Assemblyman Parker Space, R-Morris and former state Labor Commissioner and Sussex County Freeholder Harold J. Wirths. Phoebus is not running for reelection.

Oroho is running on a ticket with Space and Wirths.

Democrats are fielding one candidate for Senate, Jennifer Hamilton of Sparta; and three Assembly candidates including Michael Pirog of Mount Olive, Kate Matteson of Sparta and Gina Trish of Blairstown. Matteson and Trish are running on a joint ticket.

Two Green Party candidates, Kenneth Collins, of Andover Township and Aaron Hyndman, of White Township, also are running for state Assembly.

The 24th District includes Mount Olive, all of Sussex County and 11 municipalities in Warren County.

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Tea Party member hopes to unseat Oroho in 24th District primary - New Jersey Hills