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Lawsuits filed against four IPD officers for excessive force during 2019 Commons arrests – The Ithaca Voice

ITHACA, N.Y.A federal lawsuit naming four Ithaca Police Department officers as defendants has been filed, alleging that their arrests of two people during an infamous incident in April 2019 constituted a use of excessive force.

IPD officers Benjamin Buck, Zachary Dorn and Gregory Herz are all named in the suit, which was filed in July in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, as having used excessive force. Officer George DuPay is also named as a defendant, with the suit alleging he engaged in use of excessive force and failure to intervene. The suits were originally filed in July 2022.

In total, two lawsuits were filed, one each on behalf of Rose DeGroat and Cadji Ferguson, both concerning the pairs arrest on April 6, 2019, after an altercation on the Ithaca Commons. DeGroat was charged with two counts of second-degree attempted assault, an E-level felony, and a misdemeanor of resisting arrest initially; those charges were then lowered to misdemeanors, re-upped to felonies after being put before a grand jury, then eventually dismissed. Ferguson was acquitted on charges of disorderly conduct. The situation and its fallout prompted a press conference with Tompkins County District Attorney Matt Van Houten and then-Ithaca Police Department Chief Dennis Nayor.

The full depot of videos that were released by the City of Ithaca in the weeks after the incident can be viewed here.

The suits call both arrests unlawful and claims that both Fergusons and DeGroats treatment during the arrest was a Constitutional violation. It asks for at least $500K in damages for pain and suffering, punitive damages against each officer, an injunction against the officers from engaging use of excessive force and failure to intervene, attorneys fees and any other reward the judge decides.

Both Ferguson and DeGroat were taken to the ground by Ithaca police as they responded to a fight involving Ferguson and a third party on the Commons. Ferguson was tased, while DeGroat was taken down and then tased and pinned down, in part by her head, by three officers after she tried to intervene on Fergusons behalf (more details of the incident below).

When dismissing DeGroats charges in October 2019, Judge John Rowley stated this about the IPD officers involved in the arrest: Ithaca Police officers overreacted to the initial situation [] The police made no effort to defuse the situation or to simply separate the men while the conflict was sorted out. Rowley also called the snap decision to tase Ferguson inexplicable and the officers actions regrettable.

The police department conducted an internal review at the time, eventually determining that the police did not violate any procedures and would not be punished.

Contacted through their attorney, Ed Kopko, DeGroat and Ferguson did not respond to a request for comment. IPD Deputy Chief Vincent Monticello and Ithaca City Attorney Ari Lavine also did not respond to requests for comment. This story will be updated if any of them do respond after publication.

Ithaca Police Benevolent Association President Thomas Condzella offered a statement in reaction to questions about the suit. He said that the union stands behind each of the officers involved, saying they were all acting in good faith and trying to bring order to a rapidly evolving, chaotic and dynamic situation using only limited information available to them at the time. They are being represented by the City of Ithaca, with additional legal support from the PBA if necessary.

Condzella confirmed that the officers will remain on active duty, at least for now, while the lawsuit plays out. He blamed divisiveness and former Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick for the tension surrounding the incident and for fomenting an anti-police agenda locally.

Had [the officers] simply done nothing, or taken more time to gather additional information before intervening in the out of control drunken brawl, they would have then been criticized for not acting fast enough, Condzella said. As Ithaca Police Officers continue to move forward in partnership and collaboration with our community towards meaningful police reforms, we all alsocontinue to try andrecover from the divisivenessof the past, this case is another unfortunate example of that.

The winding saga played out for much of the summer and early fall of 2019. After videos of the arrests began circulating on social media and in news reports, most notably in the Cornell Daily Sun, the City of Ithaca released body camera footage from the responding officers as well as surveillance footage from Commons cameras.

The body camera footage (all videos are available at the aforementioned city video depot) shows a chaotic scene as the bars let out on the Commons around 1 a.m. on April 6, 2019. It displays that there was clearly an altercation between Ferguson and another man, identified as Joseph Ming, that transpired after Ferguson felt Ming was acting suspicious toward Ferguson and his group of friends, which included DeGroat, according to the suit. One aspect that became crucial in the later criminal trials was that Ferguson initially claimed Ming had touched one person from the group sexually and nonconsensually; Ferguson later acknowledged he wasnt actually sure if there had been any contact between Ming and the unidentified person.

Regardless, Ferguson and Ming proceeded to fight in the middle of the Commons, with police stationed at the west end of the Commons running to interrupt the situation taking place about 100 feet away. They did so by running at the pair, with Herz grabbing his taser and pointing it at Ferguson while yelling for him to get on the ground. Herz trips, then after returning to his feet fires the taser into Fergusons back and Ferguson is brought to the ground by another officer, identified as DuPay.

Thats when a clearly panicked DeGroat tries to intervene on behalf of Ferguson, striking one of the police officers at least once before she herself is quickly taken to the ground. The most jarring portion of the video is when an officer uses his knee for an extended period of time to pin down DeGroat by her head while she is being handcuffed.

In trying to build the case that DeGroats and Fergusons Fourth Amendment rights were violated, the suit alleges that each named officer when seizing, arresting, and acting with force against [DeGroat and Ferguson], acted under color of law by using the authority vested in him by virtue of his employment with the Ithaca Police Department and that not only were the arrests illegal, but the manner by which Ferguson and DeGroat were arrested was excessive and unnecessary.

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Lawsuits filed against four IPD officers for excessive force during 2019 Commons arrests - The Ithaca Voice

SF police and car thefts: What they can and can’t do to help you – San Francisco Chronicle

As a crime reporter in San Francisco, I should have known better than to park my car under an overpass near the Hall of Justice, a nice stroller visible in the back seat.

And it couldnt have hurt to check that I didnt drop my keys onto the ground next to the vehicle as I scrambled to pay the meter and run to a court hearing.

Alas, the predictable outcome: As I sat in court taking notes, my phone vibrated with a text from my partner, Miguel, from our Oakland home. His phone was in communication with our Subaru Outback, which was moving.

The alarm of the car went off was it you???

I tried to respond but had no cell service in the granite-clad building. By the time I walked out of the courtroom a few minutes later, Miguel was frantic. The texts came tumbling out.

Please tell me you are in the car cause if not our car got stolen. What is going on??? So the front door is ajar now? I just hope you are ok.

My first text back to Miguel was a profanity.

That afternoon, I joined a growing category of San Francisco crime victims: Those who report a theft while simultaneously tracking what was stolen through location-based technologies such as Bluetooth and GPS.

The Subarus alarm had apparently sounded because the thief used the key rather than the key fob to unlock the door. Now, Miguel could see the location of the car through the MySubaru app.

Simultaneously, he could view the location of our car seat, which wed outfitted with an Apple AirTag in case of our childs abduction, and the location of the car keys, which also had an AirTag to prevent me from constantly misplacing them.

Standing in my now-vacant parking spot, I called 911. I told the police dispatcher that Miguel was tracking everything from Oakland.

Can someone please help me?

Megan Cassidys vehicle was stolen and then damaged.

That afternoon, May 19, was chaotic and humiliating, but it also presented a unique opportunity. For the first time in my career, I would be able to view my beat from the inside out.

In recent months, Ive spoken to many theft victims who were able to pinpoint the location of their luggage, bicycles and other stolen goods.

While this technology has been around for years, police say its spread particularly Apples introduction of the AirTag last year to compete with products like the Tile tracker and the Galaxy SmartTag has prompted a boom in calls for help like mine.

As the Washington Posts Heather Kelly wrote in an article in October, after tracking down her stolen Honda Civic in San Francisco, Apples marketing for the AirTag focuses on misplaced items and makes no mention of crime, theft or stealing in any of the ads, webpages or support documents. But in reality, the company has built a network that is ideal for that exact use case.

Tony Maozholds a gps tracker by his truck in San Francisco, Calif., on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022. Maozs truck has been stolen multiple times.

Kenny Franks holds a gps tracker next to his luggage which was stolen and later recovered in San Francisco, Calif., on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022.

Left: Rony Maoz holds holds a GPS tracker by his truck, which has been stolen multiple times. Right: Kenny Franks holds a GPS tracker next to his luggage which was stolen and later recovered. Top: Rony Maoz holds a GPS tracker by his truck, which has been stolen multiple times. Above: Kenny Franks holds a GPS tracker next to his luggage, which was stolen and later recovered.

Recent stories have documented similar recoveries in Memphis, Atlanta and Seaford Rise, a suburb of Adelaide in Australia.

In San Francisco, a city rife with gadget-lovers and plagued by high property crime, the technology would seem to be a game changer. But in reality, situations like my stolen Subaru can often be mired in unforeseen complications.

The response by police has at times been thwarted by legal constraints for example, an officer generally cant enter a home just because the Find My iPhone app says your cell is inside and at other times by what victims say feels like apathy.

Police officials say the reality is that a stolen phone, bike or even car is not as high a priority as a violent crime, so cops dont always have time to get involved and stay involved.

The result can be maddening for victims armed with case-cracking evidence. And while police say they always advise these victims against following their valuables into potentially dangerous situations, many people told me they felt they had no choice but to go cowboy.

Looking back at Miguels texts from May 19, its easy to see how the specter of danger immediately enters the equation.

Be careful!!!!! It says the car is on! There could be someone in the car. MEGAN DO NOT CONFRONT ANYONE.

Ill admit, the possibility of vigilantism had crossed my mind. But the SFPD jumped on our case, even though it had no idea I was a member of the media.

After I reported the Outback stolen from the street outside the Hall of Justice, I connected the dispatcher to Miguel, who relayed the cars path, turn by turn, in real time.

At about 4 p.m., seven blocks from where I stood, the car stopped.

Kenny Franks with his luggage that was stolen and later recovered in San Francisco.

A little more than two weeks earlier, on May 3, Kenny Franks didnt spot his suitcase at baggage claim at San Francisco International Airport. He figured it must have been misplaced by the airline, because an AirTag he had placed inside the luggage showed it was still tracking from SFO.

Franks filed a report with Alaska Airlines and left the airport about 7 p.m.

So when Franks saw the bag travel across town about 15 minutes later, he was disappointed to learn that an airline employee wasnt delivering it to him. Rather, a thief was on the move.

Franks called police, and in multiple calls, he said, dispatchers instructed him to fill out a police report rather than try to retrieve the bag on his own.

Franks submitted a report at San Franciscos Northern Station on Fillmore Street, but despite officials insistence, told police he would seek to retrieve the luggage with or without them. A dispatcher, he said, eventually agreed to send officers to a Super 8 motel on Lombard Street where the luggage seemed to have landed, and advised Franks to wait and not confront anyone.

When the officers showed up, Franks pointed them to the room from which his suitcase was locating. The cops knocked on the door. A man who answered the door demanded a search warrant, and the officers left, explaining to Franks that they couldnt enter without one.

Franks who eventually got the bag back after it was emptied and discarded said he understood and that he empathized with the fact that they have violent crimes going on that they also need to respond to.

If one of them had gotten hurt because of my silly luggage, I would have felt bad about it, he said. But it was very, very frustrating. I feel like there could have been more done.

I also spoke to Kate Stoia, a Noe Valley resident and candidate for District Eight Supervisor, and her husband, Rony Maoz, who resorted to following his stolen truck around for hours last September.

Because it had been stolen twice before, Maoz had by then equipped it with a tracking device made by a friends startup. Driving another car, Maoz followed the signal and found the truck in the India Basin neighborhood. He called 911 and told a dispatcher he had eyes on the vehicle.

But when officers arrived and tried to pull over the suspect with lights and sirens, he sped off, police told Maoz.

Because of the inherent risks of high-speed chases, city policy doesnt allow them in many circumstances. And Maoz said he was told by officers that they didnt have time to keep following the suspects digital trail as he drove around the city. But if the man got out of the car, they told him, please call again. Help would be on the way.

So Maoz spent the day in a cat-and-mouse game. Every time the suspect parked, he said, he would call the police, who would say officers were responding and then the man would take off again.

Ultimately, the thief abandoned the truck and Maoz got it back.

Rony Maozs truck has been stolen multiple times.

Most of the people I interviewed for this story stressed that the cops they dealt with were polite and professional.

But Stoia and other victims also described what they characterized as a defeatist culture in the ranks, with officers blaming prosecutors, policy, state laws or time constraints for not performing what seemed to be standard police work.

Though most of the victims ultimately got their property back, they often did so by putting themselves at risk. Almost everyone I interviewed said its only a matter of time before a property-crime victim goes rogue and meets a tragic fate.

The thing that is problematic is ... this cannot lead to vigilantism, right? But eventually it will, Stoia said. One entity needs to have a monopoly on the use of force. And if they dont use it responsibly, people are going to take action.

According to one person, this is already happening.

The man, who spoke on condition that I not identify him, said he traced his stolen bike to tents under a freeway on Division Street, but was told by police that they couldnt respond until the next day. So he committed a crime of his own.

The thing that is problematic is ... this cannot lead to vigilantism, right? But eventually it will.

I went out with a baseball bat, he said. Found it and trashed the guys tent.

Officer Kathryn Winters, a San Francisco police spokesperson, said police strongly discourage anyone from confronting a suspect over stolen property.

The best thing they can do is stop and meet with us, Winters said. If their items are tracking, then we can take over the investigation.

However, Winters said, unless the victim reports a serious crime like an accompanying robbery or assault, rather than a relatively low-level theft, police dont always have the resources to dig in.

And if the item tracks from inside a residence or hotel room as in Kenny Franks case Winters said Fourth Amendment protections require police to get a warrant.

Theres a very high probable-cause standard that we have to meet to be able to get a judge to sign off on it, Winters said. And if we simply just say its tracking to this location, unfortunately a lot of times thats just not good enough for a judge.

Car theft victim Tyler Smith experienced still further limitations. When his Chevy Spark was stolen from the Mission District on April 8, he reported to police that he was tracking it via the cars OnStar system. He said police instructed him to go to the location and call them back when he spotted the vehicle.

The tracking app led Smith to a homeless encampment under a South of Market freeway overpass.

It was a tiny one-way road, Smith said. I was pretty sketched out.

Smith said he shuffled by his car quickly, trying to peer inside.

But then (police) kept asking me questions like, Can you see whos in it? What do they look like? Can you confirm the plate? Smith said. I was like, No! I walked by, I saw it was there, and I cant believe I had to do that.

As Smith waited anxiously around the corner, he said, police arrived within about 20 minutes.

The officers and Smith approached the car again. They opened the door to find people living inside. The officers politely asked the occupants to leave, Smith said, and didnt attempt to question them.

They said they werent sure who stole the car just because those people were in it doesnt mean that they stole it, Smith said. So they couldnt do anything.

Anas Gragueb also became her own sleuth after her electric bike was swiped from her apartment buildings garage last year, and she tracked it to an encampment near City Hall.

She said she begged a dispatcher to send help, but was told there was no guarantee.

I felt like, if thats not a moment in my life where Im justified in calling the police the moment where I know Im going to be faced with somebody whos committed a crime, when are the police going to be useful?

So Gragueb borrowed her wifes bike and rode alone to the address, where she came upon a man doing drugs on the pavement next to a row of slick new bikes. Gragueb had promised her wife she wouldnt approach anyone, so she rode a little farther along, until she saw a group of construction workers.

Im so sorry, she said she told them. But theres my bike. Its right there. Im scared to go. I dont see it, but I know its there. Would you mind just being next to me while I ask questions and ask for my bike back?

Gragueb had an image of the suspected burglar on her phone, taken from her garages security camera footage. The construction workers, she said, recognized the man as someone who had vandalized their site, and one offered to escort Gragueb back to the scene.

After a brief confrontation with the suspect, Gragueb said, she spotted the tip of her bike wheel peeking out from under a tarp. With the construction workers assistance, she carried it back to the construction site and called police, who ultimately arrested the suspect.

I felt like, if thats not a moment in my life where Im justified in calling the police the moment where I know Im going to be faced with somebody whos committed a crime, Gragueb said, when are the police going to be useful?

Winters said she wasnt able to track down information on these specific incidents, but said, anecdotally, that they appeared to illustrate some of the complexities of such investigations.

Within 10 minutes of putting Miguel in touch with police, allowing him to relay information about our stolen Subaru, I received a call back from a dispatcher. Police officers had found my car, unoccupied, about four blocks away from where I had left it.

An officer waited at the location for me to arrive, and stood by as I surveyed the damage. Some of the contents of my car littered the street, including my infants tiny floral sneakers.

The stroller was gone, but the car seat which is admittedly tricky to remove was spared. Nothing else of value was there in the first place, but that didnt stop the thief from making off with a car charger and some pennies he cut out of a soda can that we shake to stop our dog from barking.

And in the few blocks of his joyride, the thief also managed to sideswipe something sturdy enough to dislodge my bumper. Im still working that out with insurance.

I got the car towed, because the officer couldnt wait for my partner to arrive with the spare keys. He also didnt want to leave me there alone, in case the thief came back. I understood.

Before we parted ways, the officer did a quick search for my keys, which were tracking from the same block. He poked his head into a tent and talked to a few apparent witnesses, but said the keys might have been inside a nearby building and, if so, he couldnt go in.

I felt relieved and thankful for the officers swift response.

The next day, Miguel and I returned to the scene. The keys, or at least the AirTag affixed to them, seemingly hadnt moved since the day before. We debated asking police to escort us, but figured they probably had better things to do.

A group of people was smoking on the curb. We feared what might happen if we sent a signal to the tracker and it beeped from inside someones pocket. We tried anyway and played dumb, saying wed dropped or keys in the area. Had anyone seen them?

Fortunately, the alert instead led us to a tree. There were the keys, hanging from a branch.

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SF police and car thefts: What they can and can't do to help you - San Francisco Chronicle

The Dangers of Socialism: Is It Coming to America? – Charisma Magazine

As an Alabama high school student, I was chosen to travel to the Soviet Union for the People to People international student exchange program, as part of the first delegation from my home state. It shocked me to see the oppression and hopelessness of the people and their lack of choices and freedoms that most Americans take completely for granted.

That experience, at such a young age, shaped my worldview and deepened my love and appreciation for the United States. After three long weeks in a communist country, when our plane touched down at John F. Kennedy Airport, the first thing a few of my travel companions and I did was get down on our hands and knees and kiss the ground! I had never been so grateful to be an American.

So why should you as a Christian care about this, and how does socialism deviate from Christian values?

For a start, socialism destroys religious freedom. It destroys creativity, innovation and ingenuity. Today, most Americans do not know the history of the death and destruction communism caused in the twentieth century. Most American college students can answer correctly when asked how many Jews died in the Holocaust. They know it is six million people because they have learned this in our schools, through popular movies, stories like The Diary of Anne Frankand because of ongoing campaigns from organizations like the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, the Holocaust Museum, and others, who remind Americans about this history.

But if you ask the average American how many victims communism has claimed, very few would respond with the correct answer. Some sources report that it is over 100 million.

Many young people today seem to be confusing socialism with social justice, even though the two are completely dissimilar. Socialism in most countries does nothing to help the poorit often actually creates more poverty!

The people who fought for our country to establish the freedoms we enjoy today suffered enormous hardship. Many of them died fighting to protect our religious freedom especially. If you are a Christian, the choice that faces you is not whether you are willing to fight for what you believe. Instead, it is this: Do you want to fight right now while it may be uncomfortable and unpleasant, but you will be fighting to preserve what freedoms we already have? Or do you want to wait and fight later to regain what we had before we lost our freedom?

Long hours volunteering on a campaign, giving up a little extra money each campaign season, taking time out of your busy schedule to attend town hall meetings and dealing with the unpleasant nature of politics pales in comparison to what people who fought in the Revolutionary War and other battles for freedom endured. Never before in our nations history have we been so close to adopting a way of life that will eventually lead to everything we hold dear being completely stripped away. Socialism is a political and economic system with roots in the ideas of Karl Marx. In socialism, the government owns all means of generating wealth, but individuals can own property. It is often thought of as the period between the overthrow of the capitalist system and the implementation of communism.

Communism is the full implementation of government control and exists when there is no class, no money and no private ownership whatsoever. The government runs everything, and all property is communally owned. All one needs to do is look at how their local US Postal Service office or their DMV operates, and then imagine that style of service applied to every single aspect of life. It is beyond imagination how anyone could think that this would improve things in our country. If the United States were a communist country, the iPhone would most likely never have been invented because all of the government regulations and lack of incentives would most likely have stifled someone like Steve Jobs and the rest of his teams creativity.

Under free-market capitalism, there is free competition and no government regulation or interference. Entrepreneurship, hard work and innovation are incentivized, and people are free to own property.

The recent rise in socialism coming from the fringe Left should be deeply troubling to all because at its core, socialism is about replacing God with government and freedom with tyranny. America is the greatest land of opportunity the world has ever known because Americans are free to practice their own beliefs, speak their own minds, protect their own lives, pursue their own dreams and enjoy the fruits of their own labor. Socialism directly opposes the American dream.

Advocates for socialism see Christianity as a threat and therefore believe it must be silenced, canceled and eliminated. Socialism has been tried all over the world and has never worked, but somehow people keep getting deceived into adopting this approach. The truth is, in socialist countries, most people of faith suffer tremendously. One of the greatest ways they suffer is by having God stripped out of everything.

Right now, in America, socialism is on our doorstep. As one major donor at a fundraising event recently said to me, My husband and I can either get involved in politics now and give away some of our money to help get the right kinds of candidates elected, or we can wait, hold on to our money and then risk our kids having nothing to inherit. If our country gives in to full-scale socialism or communism, the government could easily come in and just take it all! This may sound extreme, but for anyone who remembers what happened in Cuba when Castro took power and converted them to full-scale communism, or if you have studied places like Venezuela, there are horror stories of things just like that occurring.

We as Christians and people who love God, love our country and love the very things that make life precious must rise up. We must choose God over government and faith over fear. If not now, when? If not us, then who?

The preceding is excerpted from chapter 13 of Terri Hasdorffs book, Running Into the Fire (Charisma House, Sept. 2022). For more information on Running Into the Fire, or to order the book, visit shop.charismamag.com.

Terri Hasdorffis a former congressional candidate and an executive-level leader with over twenty years experience in government and politics. She began her career in 1991 in what is now called the White House Office of Public Engagement, where she had the honor of working with faith leaders from across the country. She later served on Capitol Hill for six years, then ran for a seat in the US House to represent Alabamas second congressional district. She has a bachelors degree from Samford University, is a graduate of the senior executives program at Harvard Universitys John F. Kennedy School of Government and is currently in the executive MBA program at Oxford University.

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The Dangers of Socialism: Is It Coming to America? - Charisma Magazine

The revival of German militarism and the fight for socialism – WSWS

These remarks were delivered by Christoph Vandreier to the Seventh National Congress of the Socialist Equality Party (US), held from July 31 to August 5, 2022.

Vandreier is the national secretary of the Sozialistische Gleichheitspartei(SGP), the German section of the International Committee of the Fourth International.

Read the full report on the Congress and the resolutions adopted at it.

I am very pleased to bring to this Congress the revolutionary greetings of the Socialist Equality Party in Germany. The Congress is a truly international event. Not only because we have large delegations from all sections and groups, but above all because this Congress is based on an internationalist perspective that arms the working class around the world and guides the work of all sections.

That the Congress is dedicated to our unforgettable comrade Wije Dias is a testament to this perspective. As Comrade David North noted, Wijes life represents the historical depth of our world party. Starting from the struggle against the betrayal of the LSSP, the RCL/SEP based its work on the historical and political principles of the International Committee. This can be seen in the extremely strong statement of the Sri Lankan comrades intervening in the explosive situation and giving leadership to the working class based on these principles.

This is the essence of what we have called the fifth phase of the development of the Trotskyist movement. Our historical principles intersect with the growing class struggle internationally. And as Comrade David North put it, the more intensive the class struggles break out, the more significant is it to base our party on our historical heritage.

Every single report on the extremely strong resolutions showed how we are basing our analysis on exactly this heritage, a very fundamental understanding of our epoch and a decades long analysis. All the central issues we were discussing over the last days are fundamental features of the development in every country in the world.

As far as the pandemic is concerned, Germany is a hotspot of the BA.5 wave. Infection rates, hospitalization and death rates are rising rapidly, clinics are at their absolute limit as thousands of doctors and nurses are down due to infection. Even the Minister of Health, Karl Lauterbach, is warning of a collapse and catastrophic development, but at the same time has thrown all protective measures overboard. The government is pursuing a deliberate policy of mass social murder and destruction of the public health system.

While millions of workers are threatened with death and illness in order to increase the profits of the banks and corporations, radical real wage cuts are being organized with inflation. The same nurses that fought two and a half years at the forefront against the pandemic are getting now wage cuts by 10 to 20 percent!

All social spheres are now subordinated to the war against Russia. In Germany, natural gas prices have tripled. And now the government has also passed a law introducing an additional levy to protect the profits of the energy companies. Workers are to be forced to freeze in order to be able to wage the war against Russia.

Under these conditions, Comrade Will Lehmans campaign is also arousing great interest among German workers. This is because the trade unions have completely backed the war policy and are enforcing the wage cuts and price increases against the workers. With the war against Russia, the German Labor Front is also coming back.

In point 15 of the resolution against imperialist war we declare, The conflict with Ukraine has provided German imperialism with an opportunity to implement the largest rearmament campaign since the collapse of the Nazi regime.

This is very true. Seventy-seven years after the unconditional surrender of the Wehrmacht, German tanks are rolling again against Russia. By tripling the military budget, the ruling class in Germany is pursuing the declared goal of once again building the largest military power in Europe. All restrictions imposed on Germany after the greatest crimes in human history are being stripped away and the whole society is being militarized.

The same arms companies that supplied the total war and earned their profits with forced labor and in the concentration camps are now again multiplying their production and mass-producing weapons for the war against Russia. After the German government has already delivered weapons worth 600 million euros to Ukraine so far, an additional 100 self-propelled howitzers worth 1.7 billion euros are now to be sent.

We had already shown in 2014 how this return of German militarism goes hand in hand with the trivialization and ultimately the justification of the crimes of German imperialism. This has been more than confirmed. The falsifications of history by Professors Mnkler and Baberowski, which we pointed out and fought against, are today the official government line.

For example, the Social Democratic Chancellor Olaf Scholz has called the Russian invasion of Ukraine a war of extermination and a breach of civilization, terms that were so far in Germany exclusively used for the Eastern Campaign and the Holocaust. Using these terms for the war in Ukraine is an incredible trivialization of the Nazi crimes. The daily newspaper taz even claimed in an article that Stalin had planned the Second World War before Hitler had even come to power. The old Nazi lie of a preventive war and thus the justification of the war of extermination is now being revived in the house paper of the Greens.

With our struggle against this falsification of history, we have linked ourselves to the historically deeply rooted opposition to war in the German working class. This was only possible on the basis of the decades-long struggle of the International Committee for the Defense of Historical Truth and the struggle against subjective-idealist ideology. Based on this, the SGP is the only party in Germany today that opposes militarism and arms the working class with a socialist perspective. As Johannes pointed out yesterday, the Greens are the most aggressive pro war party today and also the left party and its pseudo-left satellites are supporting the war against Russia.

As comrades have already explained, the same applies to all central questions of political development. Our World Party is the only political tendency that has a progressive answer to war, mass social murder in the pandemic and to the danger of fascism.

This is also the reason why the German state is waging its furious campaign against us under the banner of anti-communism. The Verfassungsschutz, the German secret service, makes it clear that it views the SGP and ICFI as the standard bearers of contemporary Marxian socialism, as comrade David North put it in his opening report to the SEP (US) Summer School in 2019. They put us on the list of extremist organizations because they understood that our program has the greatest objective significance.

The government justified naming the SGP explicitly because we agitated against nationalism and militarism and argued for an egalitarian, democratic and socialist society. It developed an argumentation that declared any criticism of the state organs, and especially of the army and the secret service, to be anti-constitutional and illegal. Two courts have since blessed this scandalous revival of the Nazis Gesinnungsjustiz, which is why we have now filed a constitutional complaint.

Our complaint is not a defensive act and is certainly not based on illusions in the Federal Constitutional Court. Rather, with our complaint, we are going on the offensive and putting the Verfassungsschutz on trial. We put ourselves at the forefront of the struggle against the radical right-wing conspiracy in the state apparatus and the return of fascist methods.

The ruling class is turning to authoritarian and fascist forms of rule all over the world because its policies of war and social attacks are met by enormous opposition in the working class. The fight against fascism is therefore inseparably linked to the fight against war, the pandemic and the social attacks. The only way to defend democratic rights is to mobilize the international working class on the basis of a socialist program.

This perspective is now very concrete. The class struggle is developing rapidly, and the interventions of our party are of the greatest objective importance. These interventions must be based on our living historical principles and experiences in order to actually bring to bear the objective power of the working class. This congress is without any question an essential step in this direction.

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The revival of German militarism and the fight for socialism - WSWS

Socialist Feminism || The CWI & Socialist Feminism Redressing a Checkered History – International Socialist

The Socialist Party in Ireland took a turn towards radicalising left-leaning, feminist youth in the early 2010s, as well as a growing abortion rights movement, including through our leading female and LGBTQ members initiating ROSA Socialist Feminist Movement on International Womens Day, 2013. Rather than consciously rejecting weak spots in our tradition, our approach emanated from applying ourselves to a concrete development and utilising every tool available to us: looking again at theoretical contributions on Marxism and gender oppression; drawing lessons from previous feminist waves; developing out a strategy to build the movement that could win abortion rights; consciously seeking to build the socialist feminist wing of the growing pro-choice movement in order to cohere both a working-class, struggle-based feminism in opposition to liberal feminism, and also to draw around us those radical youth and working-class women and LGBTQ people from which we could build the forces of revolutionary socialism.

In hindsight, this was a changed approach in our tradition a necessary one. The Socialist Party in Ireland and its forerunner, Militant, have a history of taking principled stances in opposing all forms of discrimination, and taking initiatives such as inviting gay rights speakers to Labour Youth summer camps in the 1980s that were attended by many hundreds; standing up to anti-choice groups like SPUC, and being part of abortion rights protests, all at a time when it was unpopular to do so. However this work was mostly reactive, piecemeal and not sufficiently rooted in a socialist feminist perspective. This is evident in a review of decades of Militant and Socialist Party Conference documents, rife with frequent omissions in relation to socialist feminism a deficiency evident in our late decision to positively embrace the term itself, done at a Socialist Party Conference in the early 2010s.

In 2018, a major dispute broke out in the Committee for a Workers International (CWI), with the central leading body, the International Secretariat (IS) launching an attack on the Irish section, the Socialist Party, on account of its socialist feminist work, in spite of, and perhaps because of, the success of the ROSAs intervention into the abortion rights movement. A major internal dispute enveloped the CWI, with a minority who remained loyal to the IS splitting away in 2019, with the majority renaming the organisation as International Socialist Alternative (ISA).

The IS and the executive of the England and Wales section had much crossover. Throughout the CWI, there was never a uniform approach on socialist feminism, with some sections having a decades-long proud tradition of knitting it into all aspects of its work. This review will make reference in detail to the England and Wales section of the CWI both because of its importance in the Trotskyist movement, but also because its political approach was reflected inside the IS across the decades. In a shameful example of its current trajectory, the minority around Peter Taaffe and Hannah Sell that split away the refounded CWI is open to coalescing with the increasingly transphobic George Galloway.1

The roots of the very worst attitudes displayed at the height of the bitter dispute that enveloped the International in 2018 namely a thinly-veiled, myopic and conservative suspicion of feminist struggle at the heart of the IS can be traced back over decades. The congenital deficiencies in the CWI related to a Marxist approach to womens oppression have expressed themselves in our theory, perspectives and practical work in different ways over our history.

During the 20182019 dispute, the ex-members wrote that there was a grain of truth in the post-feminist idea that women were on the verge of winning equality in many countries. This proposition, as well as being imbued with crass insensitivity to the prevalence of gender-based violence in every country in the world which has been a vital driver of the feminist wave that has emerged since the 2010s, seems to at least be pointing away from the idea that gender-based oppression and capitalism are so intertwined that the latter has to be dispensed with to begin to end the former.

In departing in some way from the foundational point that capitalism is utterly incapable of ending gender-based oppression, or using formulations that implied being anything less than crystal clear on this question, did represent a departure from our tradition on behalf of the IS Majority. Rather than representing some qualitative change in their position, however, this departure was a product of the lack of a systematic, integrated and serious approach to our socialist feminist work over decades.

Womens oppression is part and parcel of capitalism. Hence feminist movements and struggle have been a feature of capitalism throughout its history. The development of capitalism heralded opportunities for women to organise in struggle, as well as developing new ways in which womens and LGBTQ oppression would manifest itself and be reproduced. In contrast to feminist ideas or concepts, Hal Draper located the first examples of women organising for feminist demands as taking place in tandem with the French Revolutions upswing from 17891793, and above all in its left wing.2 A crucial part of the liberatory potential for women contained in the onset of capitalism was tied to that of the working class as a whole. It was precisely the creation of the working class, a social force with the power to be capitalisms gravedigger, which allowed for the possibility of socialist change and the elimination of the material basis for all exploitation and oppression.

In our history and tradition in the CWI, the contribution of Engels has been correctly highlighted. In a taboo-busting and extraordinarily enlightened contribution for its time, Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State made a number of contentions that generally hold up, including backed up by more accurate anthropological research and findings that have become available since Engels time.3 The central thesis: that gender-based oppression didnt always exist and therefore was not immutable and could be ended, was and remains vital. Citing the beginning of class-divided societies linked to developments in agriculture circa 10,000 years ago as the world-historic defeat of the female sex, Engels claimed that the primitive communism of early hunter-gatherer societies show that the model of the patriarchal family, including monogamous marriage (with the emphasis being with the womans monogamy), was not the natural way of things but was a socially-imposed means to pass on private property through a male line.

Understanding the connection between the beginning of gender and sexuality-based oppression and class-divided societies means understanding that a society without classes where the economy is socially owned and democratically planned could be one without oppression; making the socialist struggle inextricably linked to the struggle for womens and LGBTQ freedom and vice versa. This is a key foundation of a Marxist analysis of gender-based oppression and formed the central plank of the analysis of the CWI throughout its history.

However, even on this question, there was a lack of deeper engagement. For example, Marxs notebooks from later in his life, which were not published until after Stalins death, writings that were the subject of many debates and discussions on the left regarding socialist feminism, were not really considered or delved into in the CWI tradition. This work from Marx illustrated a heightened sensitivity to different questions of oppression, to their importance as an impetus for class struggle, and how important it was for socialists to take the right approach in order to be able to build a united class struggle. These writings also gave an insight into the ongoing discussions, collaboration and fine-tuning of political analysis and positions of Engels and Marx over decades as opposed to there being some final word in one text on womens oppression.4 Engels himself did a number of revisions of the Origin text as more information became available to him one could not credibly argue that the spirit of this was the tradition embodied in our theoretical work on womens oppression throughout the CWI.

The work of Clara Zetkin, who pioneered a working-class and socialist feminist approach via her work on the left-wing of the SPD in Germany, was not sufficiently highlighted in the CWIs tradition. Similarly, the work of female revolutionary leaders in seeking to establish an International Communist Womens Conference and elected leadership as part of the work of the Communist International, as well as the work of the Zhenotdel after the Russian Revolution, which sought to wage a struggle to further womens emancipation in every respect, were not sufficiently discussed or considered a central basis to our work.

The indisputable fact that women played a vital role in the Russian Revolution itself tens of thousands of women workers were the first to rise up during the February Revolution was a huge boost to the female cadre in the Marxist movement who were pushing for a revolutionary, working-class feminism. The Stalinist counter-revolution consciously sought to attack the gains made in the revolution, disorganising and demoralising the working-class womens movement. Trotsky details this in the chapter, Family, Youth and Culture in The Revolution Betrayed precisely because socialist feminism was as integral to the revolution as the attack on it was to the counter-revolution.5

While Engels contribution was of course brilliant and foundational, there were naturally many gaps that a number of academic Marxists have sought to fill. If central to womens oppression is the role of the traditional family and the passing of private property through a male line, what does this mean for the working-class masses who are property-less? If capitalism inherited womens oppression from previous incarnations of class-divided societies, how has it been reproduced and ingrained in different ways throughout capitalisms history? It was to the detriment of the CWI that we did not sufficiently engage in this theoretical struggle ourselves, as evidenced in weaknesses in our perspectives related to womens oppression and feminist struggle over the decades, but most clearly seen in insufficient attention to the special impact of neoliberalism on working-class and poor women something that is part of the material basis for the new feminist wave of the 2010s and beyond.

Some trends within the school of social reproduction theory (SRT) have made useful insights in relation to these questions. Those around the Feminism for the 99% pamphlet have played a role in popularising some basic left feminism namely the need for a conscious split from and opposition to bourgeois, establishment feminism and this has been informed by strands of SRT.6

The most pertinent idea behind SRT is that the oppression of women under capitalism is connected to the particular role that women, especially working-class and poor women, play in reproducing the labour force for capitalism. This reproduction of the workforce for capitalism is done via unpaid labour of poor and working-class women, especially in the domestic sphere, and also by elements of the capitalist state where women predominate as workers, such as schools and hospitals. By honing in on the particular role that women play as underpaid care workers and as unpaid carers under capitalism (something rooted in the ideology of the patriarchal family), which is vital to maintaining and reproducing capitalisms labour force from which surplus value is extracted, they succinctly and clearly sum up an inextricable connection between exploitation and oppression in capitalism. While you can find formulations that are in line with this insight in CWI material including from the 1990s, it mostly lacked the same precision.

If you scour the material of the CWI historically on women, there are a number of facts that present themselves, as well as some political themes. Firstly, its the lack of material that is striking. Gender oppression is absent from the founding documents of the CWI, written in 1970, an important year of the second feminist wave. The main theoretical journal of Militant, the Militant International Review, had only one theoretical article on womens oppression between 1969 and March / April 1994. The final issue in 1995 contained the only article on gay rights. Given that feminist mass struggles of the second wave, as well as the gay liberation movement, were contemporaneous to this material, the absence of comment and analysis of the same is telling.

If one goes back to the roots and early days of the CWI, particularly when one looks at the material of Ted Grant and the attitudes that lie behind this material, clear problems present themselves. This includes a dismissive attitude to struggles against oppression outside the labour movement. Unfortunately it also includes a suspicion of gay rights activism and even an implication that this is a petit bourgeois concern. Echoes of such crude economism and a patronising attitude to struggles against oppression is something that has persisted in the IMT (founded by Ted Grant and Alan Woods after the split in 1992) organisation over the decades.

Another feature you will find in early CWI material is a somewhat patronising and contradictory attitude in relation to working-class women. Its usually contended that they are a more backward section of the working class, which is capable in times of revolution of great sacrifice and radicalism, but whose role is perhaps questionable at other times.

The origins of the CWI were based on a necessary break with forces within the Trotskyist Left that had developed a wrong, disorientating perspective in the post-war period. Within the USFI, a position developed that at root placed a major question mark over the revolutionary potential of vital sections of the working class within the advanced capitalist countries, and in doing so, over revolutionary working class leadership and potential full stop. In this way, the USFI leadership not only looked to, but often tail-ended student, feminist and anti-colonial movements to try to fill the gap. In orientating to important social struggles, it failed to raise the revolutionary socialist programme, key to which is the need to link up with the organised working class, and the working class as a whole to build the social weight and power to make revolutionary change.

This approach had very serious real-life consequences for the socialist struggle. Notably, the organisation was ill-prepared for the working-class revolutionary general strike in May 1968 in France and failed to make the impact it could have in a revolutionary situation in a huge industrialised capitalist country in a year of revolution. The CWIs necessary foundations in rejecting this approach and perspective, however, failed to contain a readjusted Marxist perspective on questions of oppression one that was inextricably intertwined in the whole programme and perspective for working class consciousness, agency and power. This then tended to mean that the CWIs approach to anti-oppression struggles was characterised too much by what it was (correctly) rejecting, and not enough based on a developed and proactive Marxist analysis and perspective towards the same. This particularly pertained to issues of feminism and LGBTQ liberation.

Ted Grants appalling position on gay rights, while never the official position of the organisation, was later rejected in Militant and the Socialist Party, but this was done in a haphazard fashion. LGBTQ members were vital agents in pushing this. Helen Redwood, who was a founding member of the LGBT caucus in Britain and went on to become the national LGBT organiser, said about the same that, whilst we should be critical of the poverty of our earlier analysis and neglect of work on LGBT+ issues that left us trailing behind other organisations on the left, once LGBT comrades took the bull by the horns, in general, there was no block to the caucus developing this aspect of work. Nevertheless, how much more effective could our intervention have been into the exploding movements of LGBT+ people in the 1980s and 90s had this aspect of work been led from the top and integrated into our national perspectives and strategy.

Peter Taaffe did reference in a limited way some mistakes regarding the LGBTQ struggle in the past in an article in Socialism Today, and also in a defensive way in the Marxism in Todays World pamphlet. But this was not sufficient. Recognising mistakes should be done in a more systematic and political fashion in which the organisation is enabled and empowered to fully draw out lessons, or mistakes will be repeated.

While the IS frequently referenced Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM) an inspiring display of solidarity from the defining class battle that was the 19845 British miners strike but they never owned up to an uncomfortable reality, namely that one founding member of LGSM was in Militant and has stated that Id been in the Militant for 10 years though they didnt support or even acknowledge LGSM and had a very dismissive attitude on gay rights.7

Some of the economistic and dismissive attitudes referenced above are found in material well into the 1980s. For example in 1985 Ted Grant wrote in an internal bulletin: The American SWP exaggerates support for liberal middle class issues as womens liberation and gay liberation. It is of course correct to fight against any persecution of homosexuals and to work for equal rights for women. But it is necessary to fight for working class womens struggles and to concentrate on the working class issues as the main work of Marxists8 How callous when you consider the historical context, namely the heartwrenching discrimination and suffering that the gay community was being subjected to during the AIDS epidemic.

Politically, it utterly separates out economic questions, the working class issues, from questions of oppression. It ridiculously implies that issues of oppression, sexual repression etc. are middle-class concerns. It fails to understand that the intersection of exploitation and oppression can be especially radicalising. Implicit is the idea of a defensive position on these issues that we oppose repression / oppression, but that we dont concern ourselves with proactive calls for increased freedom and liberation for the oppressed. This can be directly contrasted with a Bolshevik approach to fighting oppression thats exemplified in Lenins What Is To Be Done (1902). In raising class consciousness, Lenin advocates for all socialist worker activists to be tribunes of the people who speak up against all forms of injustice that the system metes out no matter what class is affected, in an effort to truly agitate against the system and build working-class agency, consciousness and power.

The notion that working-class women are a more backward section of the working class is evident in the 1985 British perspectives document that states that, conditions of life under capitalism are the cause of the political backwardness of women They try to find a road out of the problems of life under capitalism by building their own little nests, separate and apart from the struggle of the working class. But as soon as they come to realise the impossibility of opting out of the struggle under capitalism From this layer will come some of the best fighters.9 Its not necessary to spend time parsing this quote that sits so incongruously in any document in 2022. Suffice to say, actually reviewing where such attitudes derived from with a view to fully correcting mistakes so we can hone and refine our Marxist analysis and programme for today, is absolutely necessary.

Notwithstanding the above, the real experience of Militant in Britain in the 1980s still an outlier in terms of what Trotskyists achieved in building an organisation of thousands at the cutting edge of a high-pitched class struggle inevitably was far richer. Working-class women revolutionaries were forged in inspiring working-class struggles with strong socialist feminist elements, including the Militant-led 1983 Lady at Lord John strike in Liverpool against sexual harassment, and the seminal British miners strike. Increasingly, women in the regions intervened into the womens sections of the Labour Party, and began to organise themselves in Militant, including very importantly laying the groundwork for the establishment of a National Womens Bureau in the earlier part of the decade.

These factors were important precursors to the fact that from the 1990s, a more open approach was taken to socialist feminist initiatives. During the dispute with the IS Majority, the existence of the Campaign Against Domestic Violence (CADV) was held up, not only as an inspiring initiative from the past, but as proof that the IS and British NC Majority were beyond reproach on these issues. This way in which it was referenced actually spoke to the opposite their deficiencies; given that an initiative from a quarter of a century ago was all they could point to, albeit an important one.

There was also a certain dishonesty in how CADV was referenced. The truth is that this initiative emanated not from the IS or British EC but from women who were mostly outside the central leadership. Certain tensions over a protracted period that existed between the same have been documented by Margaret Creear, former national womens work coordinator and central organiser of the CADV, in her PHD.10 Details documented in her study speak to many of the strengths of Militant and the Socialist Party regarding socialist feminism, as well as the weaknesses.

Some of the most striking features of the campaign included the strong written material regarding intimate partner and family-based violence and its development into a significant broad-based campaign with annual conferences and many interventions into trade unions and communities. It also had a positive internal influence in the organisation, including pushing an internal code of conduct to challenge sexism and abuse as it may arise within the organisation, and its work was also the basis upon which the member who was designated as the national womens organiser was included on the Executive Committee (EC), albeit belatedly and probably reluctantly, according to the memory of some current ISA activists.

As well as the CADV initiative, the CWI took a necessary stance in the 1990s of rejecting so-called post feminism a neo-liberal concept that contended that equality was within the grasp of women if they strove to reach for it as individuals.

As a campaign of the 1990s, the CADV existed in a very different era to today. Any current socialist feminist campaign against gender violence would more easily be able to raise a broader socialist programme. This is because of the mood and consciousness of the working-class and young women who are unwilling to accept any vestige of sexism and oppression; who are already making links organically between different issues, from housing and homelessness, to climate crisis, to systemic racism, to state and interpersonal violence.

One interesting point to note is that in Sweden, the Refuse to be Called a Slut campaign was established in the Swedish section in 1998, also at a time of broader retreat of the labour movement, social struggle etc. It had a different orientation to CADV. It was a campaign in the schools against sexism. Like CADV, it was an initiative that broadened into a real and lively campaign that was led by CWI activists, but attracted quite a broad periphery. The key difference with CADV was the fact that it was primarily orientated to very young people, young women in particular teenagers in high school who wanted to fight against the sexism they experienced there.

In summary, centrally amongst key figures in the IS over decades certain weaknesses persisted in relation to a Marxist approach to fighting womens oppression. This was often not elaborated, but rather was indicated in a lack of political material, a lack of campaigning or internal initiatives, or when important initiatives were developed, for example the CADV, the fact that they were pioneered and pushed from outside the central leadership, with an often luke-warm reception followed by eventual acceptance of the facts on the ground of good work that had to be recognised.

Theoretical weaknesses will inevitably affect and limit an organisations analysis and points of action in the current. A low point for this was when the draft World Perspectives document for the December 2017 International Executive Committee (IEC) included nothing on gender oppression. This was the year that started with the womens marches on Trumps Inauguration Day which marked the single biggest day of protest in US history up to that point, as well as inspiring solidarity protests in cities and towns all around the world. It was the year that ended with the #MeToo social media explosion that reverberated amongst many different social layers across the world, becoming a slogan for workers fighting sexual harassment in their jobs, and is still an iconic reference point today.

This telling omission prompted Swedish delegates to propose a motion to affirm that all our perspectives documents should include analysis in relation to gender and sexuality-based oppression, consciousness and struggles. Fundamentally, if our perspectives analysis is a guide to action, the real test is to analyse how they fared in preparing us for the feminist awakening and waves of struggle of the 2010s onwards.

While there was some reference in material to the impact of the neoliberal era on working-class women, it was not sufficiently analysed such that points of action for our work were drawn out. In reality, for a period of decades, the roots of todays radicalisation and struggles have been expanding. These include: increased female participation in capitalisms workforce, e.g. in the past 30 years there has been a 20% increase in female labour force participation in OECD countries;11 the nature of increased female labour participation in the neoliberal era, e.g. increased women factory workers in the east, increased low-paid service sector workers in the west, where women predominate and the use of less organised, part-time, casual women workers is a means to increase exploitation; the neoliberal attack on already insufficient public amenities, meaning increased exploitation for workers in these sectors where women workers also tend to predominate, entwined with the knock-on negative consequences for women who continue to bear the brunt of unpaid care work; the effects of a certain ideological backlash from the 1990s against gains of previous feminist and labour mass struggles with a proliferation of sexist tropes in mass culture. Furthermore, the political consequences of the Great Recession itself: of increased polarisation, and a turn away from the political establishment, also contains the threat of the growth of the far right, posing a threat to women and oppressed groups but also potentially fuelling further radicalisation of them.

The above gives merely a glimpse into some of the processes happening over decades that have fed into feminist movements and consciousness of the 2010s and 2020s. Its also important to mention that the increased visibility and activism of the trans community has especially been a feature of the past decade. The brutal reality of capitalism and its inability to deliver basic rights, such as housing and healthcare; its racism that is tied so much with class; its destruction of the environment that threatens human life as we know it; are also all factors driving the material basis for a working-class feminism to emerge.

The CWI failed to sufficiently analyse the above processes and draw out a perspective from the same. We did not predict the scale and depth of the movements and consciousness that have emerged. In fact the minority that split away now, still called the CWI, continued to downplay and understate the movements even as the facts on the ground were already established. They were further impeded in their ability to see what was actually unfolding by their economistic tendency to dismiss the significance of the issue of gender violence. This issue, inextricably linked to the question of the right to bodily autonomy, has been a key theme in the global feminist revolt of the 2010s up to the present day, and will continue to be so. It is an extreme expression of gender inequality and oppression.

Without a sufficient analysis of what processes in capitalism meant for women, and most of all for working-class and poor womens lives and consciousness, there was inevitably a dearth of conclusions drawn either in terms of mapping out potential flashpoints for struggle, or in terms of concrete initiatives of the CWI linked to these. The success of ROSA in Ireland was a certain inspiration to launch Campaign ROSA in Belgium, an initiative that has made an impression in a growing feminist movement placing a working-class and socialist feminist approach in an influential position vis a vis other trends.

Had an international ROSA socialist feminist initiative been considered, even in 2016 alongside Campaign Rosa in Belgium, it would have anticipated the openness to anti-capitalist feminism and the strong consciousness for organising on an international basis that has been widespread in the movement, aiding the shaping of its socialist feminist wing, in opposition to liberal feminism.

An International Womens Bureau (IWB) structure was only established with the inception of the ISA. There was never such a structure in the CWI. Sometimes ad hoc meetings of women comrades were convened literally at the margins of international events during lunch breaks, or at unreasonably late hours after mammoth sessions of the official agenda had finished. This was emblematic of the low priority attached to the socialist feminist work on behalf of the IS members who were setting the agendas.

While members in Brazil were playing a lead role in the PSOL Womens Sector, a potentially important left plank in the PSOL party as a whole; while US members over the course of a decade were fine-tuning their thoughtful policies to fight sexism inside the socialist movement; while Russian members were testing out more and more socialist feminist initiatives as they were learning that female and gender-queer youth were some of the most open to fight and struggle against Putin there was no serious, collective drawing out of the lessons on an international basis.

From very early in the ISA, a conscious approach was taken to the question of waging a struggle internally to foster the most conducive culture possible for the full participation and political development of all members, with special attention given to supporting and assisting those members who suffer different forms of oppression, and with consciously reviewing and rejecting the lack of sufficient attention to the same in the CWI.12

A key part of this is raising the consciousness and understanding of our membership regarding all forms of sexism, harassment and abuse, and to build a zero tolerance approach to these inside our organisations, including codifying this in policies and procedures.

Weaknesses and mistakes made over the years on these questions of course cut across the engagement and development of female, LGBTQ and people of colour members. The struggle to thread socialist feminism and anti-oppression through all our work requires a conscious effort in every regard, including inside all our movements.

A noticeable trend when reviewing weaknesses in the CWIs history in relation to socialist feminism was the tendency to crudely separate worker and class exploitation from questions of oppression. As well as suffering exploitation and oppression as a member of the working class, the majority of working-class people on a global level will be affected by one or multiple forms of particular oppression, be it racial, gender or sexuality-based oppression, ableism etc. Of course their radicalisation will be affected by all of their experiences of being degraded, hurt and hemmed in by the system of capitalism.

Making a social revolution against the system will involve exploiting every fault line, agitating against every single cruelty and injustice that the system metes out and seeking to build a struggle and movement capable of drawing in the widest possible layers of the exploited and oppressed. Suffice to say the working class, if active, organised and imbued with a socialist consciousness, uniquely has the power to take down capitalism. The unpaid labour of workers is the source of all profits, and by withdrawing their labour workers can shut down the entire profit system. Making a revolution against capitalism will require seizing the key levers of the economy, and naturally workers concentrated in those industries have a strategic role to play, not only in disempowering the capitalist class but also in constructing a workers state.

The following quote from the England and Wales Majority in the Name Change Debate in 1996 is illustrative of a problem, however:

a Marxist organisation [needs] to recognise that it will be a mass movement of the working class, within which the industrial working class will play a key role, which will draw behind it those youth, blacks and Asians, lesbian and gay activists who are presently scattered in single-issue campaigns.13

Statements such as this are unfortunately guilty of failing to recognise the inter-connection of questions of exploitation and oppression for women workers, workers of colour etc. While purporting to argue the opposite, inherent in the quote is a denigration of struggles on questions of oppression. These are merely single-issue campaigns. These struggles and these oppressed layers will be drawn behind the industrial working class, were told. Even the insensitive use of this language is symptomatic of not really trying to win oppressed layers over to socialist and Marxist politics. Sections of society whove been systematically told to go to the back will not take kindly to any organisation that may display even a hint of such an attitude.

Fundamentally, though, in advocating for the key role of the working class, whats implied is a view that the most powerful sections of the working class are mainly male, presumably straight, maybe white etc. This was never true, and its certainly not true today. The most powerful sections of workers do of course particularly include industrial workers, whose labour contributes so directly to profits for the capitalist class. Millions upon millions of these workers are women, are migrants, are people of colour! Other sectors of the working class are also powerful retail workers, sanitation workers, transport workers, healthcare workers the latter not so much because of the direct role their labour has in creating surplus value, but rather because of the role that their labour plays in ensuring the reproduction of a healthy workforce for capitalism. Looking around the world at the working class today only serves to highlight how anachronistic this conservative view of the working class is.

Another unspoken attitude seemed to be a fear that anti-oppression struggles would be divisive within the working class, impeding the working class in building the type of united movement necessary. The opposite is true. Failure to fight sexism, racism, LGBTQ oppression as integral to the working-class and socialist programme would spell a failure to build the type of united class struggle needed. It will also allow liberal feminists to assume leadership positions in movements, derailing these struggles and neutering their potential. Of course, in the midst of working-class struggle, not to mention in the throes of making a social revolution against the whole system, every perceived wisdom and all existing prejudices and ideas will be called into question.

Perhaps the most brilliant and succinct elucidation of a Marxist approach to fighting oppression was given by Irish socialist James Connolly. He was speaking in 1915 about the suffrage movement, and imploring the whole labour movement to get behind it. Extraordinary human that he was, empathy and respect for those suffering oppression exuded from every fibre of his being, and was inextricable from his revolutionary socialism:

None so fitted to break the chains as they who wear them, none so well equipped to decide what is a fetter. In its march towards freedom, the working class of Ireland must cheer on the efforts of those women who, feeling on their souls and bodies the fetters of the ages, have arisen to strike them off, and cheer all the louder if in its hatred of thraldom and passion for freedom the womens army forges ahead of the militant army of Labour. But whosoever carries the outworks of the citadel of oppression, the working class alone can raze it to the ground.14

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Socialist Feminism || The CWI & Socialist Feminism Redressing a Checkered History - International Socialist