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Socialism and Mamta Banerjee marry in TN, Communism and Leninism attend – The News Minute

After the invite went viral on social media on May 8, the wedding drew a lot of attention.

A couple named Socialism and Mamta Banerjee tied the knot on June 13 in Tamil Nadus Salem district, after their wedding invite recently went viral on social media. The wedding was held in the presence of Communism and Leninism, who were the brothers of the groom. Since the invite went viral on social media on May 8, what was supposed to be a small event, drew a lot of attention from people everywhere and the media. A Mohan (52) is the father of the three brothers, and is currently the Salem district secretary of the Communist Party of India (CPI). He had previously contested on a Peoples Welfare Alliance ticket from Veerapandi constituency in the 2016 Assembly elections.

According to reports, he made the decision to name his sons after the ideologies he supports, namely, Communism, who is the first son working as a lawyer and Leninism and Socialism who are the second and third sons respectively, and together run a silver anklet manufacturing unit. Though Mamta Banerjee, now married to Socialism, is a distant relative and lived in the same village, the union between the two was unpredictable even for the family as Mamtas family members are Congress supporters (West Bengal Chief Minister Mamta Banerjee began her political career with the Congress party). Mohan shared with the media that he has been active in politics since he was an 18-year-old. He had worked in CPI alongside his father and grandfather in the party, planned protests and eventually chose to become a full time member of the party.

I was deeply disturbed when people said Communism is dead after the Soviet Union was divided into many countries. Although at the time, I was unmarried, I decided to name my children to reflect my admiration for the ideologies I hold dear, said Mohan. Speaking to TNM, he further said, I am not surprised that my children followed in my footsteps. They have been involved with party work and have admired the political ideologies since an early age. Despite their professions, they continue to be my strong hands in party work living up to their names.

When asked about the attention that the family has received from people, Mohan said, Since the invite went viral, I must have received over 500 calls. Now I get close to 150 calls per day. I get calls from Dubai and other places wishing the couple over their marriage. Although we are still surprised by the turn of events, my daughter-in-law is particularly elated. We are happy for the wishes.

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Socialism and Mamta Banerjee marry in TN, Communism and Leninism attend - The News Minute

Biden’s Increase in Government Spending Won’t Touch Capitalists’ Power – Jacobin magazine

Joe Bidens turn to supporting large-scale government spending, after rallying the Democratic Party establishment to defeat Bernie Sanders in the primary, has stunned much of the Left. After signing a $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill, he is now advancing an additional $1.7 trillion infrastructure bill, to be spent over the next eight years. These bills include far more than the base level measures necessary to address the pandemic or to simply repair highways and bridges. Surprisingly, Biden has sought to expand the definition of infrastructure to include spending on elderly care, housing, schools, childcare, and other social programs.

This level of social welfare spending goes beyond anything weve seen in the neoliberal period. Obamas stimulus, enacted immediately after the 2008 crisis, amounted to $831 billion. All the social programs funded through these bills would make the United States a kinder and more civilized place to live.

So its understandable that the Left, still stinging from Sanderss defeat, has been put on the back foot by this offensive especially as Biden initially seemed to show an unexpected willingness to eschew bipartisanship (although even this limited boldness is fading with time).

While impressive, this spending will still leave the measly US safety net well behind even the least generous European welfare states. And Biden has not embraced the core left demand for universal health care nor aggressively supported a $15 per hour minimum wage. Despite his campaign promises and the explicit support of a broad range of congressional Democrats, he also refused to support lowering the Medicare eligibility age, expand benefits, or even allow the program to negotiate lower drug costs with pharmaceutical companies. Likewise, his green measures come nowhere near what is needed to address the climate emergency.

But the problem with Bidens stimulus bills is not that they will fail to bring about social democracy in the United States, nor that they arent big enough. Simply calling for more spending, given the size of the bills and the stark contrast with Republican reaction, is not sufficient.

For socialists, social democracy, and reforms within capitalism alone, are not the goal. Socialists struggle for reforms to improve the lives of working-class people, as well as to build the capacity and organization to fundamentally transform society to move toward a democratic economic system organized to meet human needs rather than serving private profit. Bidens spending does little to move us toward that goal.

The inadequacy of social democracy to meet human and ecological needs and even to win sustainable reforms is not merely a matter of speculation, but historical experience. In the decades following World War II, social-democratic parties around the world won important victories, expanding welfare states to include universal health care, pensions, unemployment insurance, and nationalizing some industries.

Yet by the late 1970s, it was clear that these parties couldnt effect a fundamental transformation in the social order. They became integrated with capitalist states, disciplining workers and limiting their horizons to what was possible within capitalism.

This had much to do with the fact that these social-democratic parties were top-down and bureaucratic, relegating workers to a passive role in activities like voting and knocking on doors. Once elected, party leaders would supposedly secure the best deal possible for workers. They remained firmly committed to a politics of class compromise, systematically marginalizing socialists and the Left as unserious. Such parties were incapable of cultivating the democratic capacities, creative energies, and organizational force of the working class that would be necessary to transition to socialism. Rather than struggling to democratize the state, they disciplined workers to accommodate its capitalist constraints.

Social democracy supposedly reduces the market dependence of workers, allowing them to fall back on social programs rather than take on underpaid or otherwise undesirable labor to survive. Yet social democrats also accepted the dependence on corporate competitiveness and private capital accumulation for maintaining the reforms they had won.

As a result, when the postwar boom crashed in the 1970s into a fiscal crisis of the state and corporate profitability crisis, social democrats saw little alternative to embracing cuts and restructuring. Such parties began a marked move to the right, and by the 1990s openly embraced market reforms through the neoliberal third way.

The only way we can hope to make permanent gains is by going further. Reforms within capitalism are vitally important for improving peoples lives right now. But the Left has to articulate a broader project which requires educating workers about the necessity of socialism, readying them for the challenges ahead, and building up a layer of activists and organizers prepared to demand more. Above all, this requires sober analysis of the limits of reforms and the scale of the challenges we face, to build the organizational strength, confidence, and cohesion of the working class to press for more fundamental social transformation.

The policies advanced by Biden today, helpful though they are in ameliorating some of the worst miseries average Americans are facing, wont help us do this. They do not open the way to challenge private ownership of capital, democratize the state, or shift the balance of class forces. Far from increasing popular awareness of the need to move beyond capitalism, and building the strength and independence of the working class, Bidens policies are calculated to avoid a confrontation with capital. Aside from some grumbling about his proposed tax increases which would not even fully reverse Trumps cuts business has reacted positively to his stimulus.

No doubt, this is partly because these programs do not include components that could inspire workers to become more active. The fact that working-class mobilization remains at a nadir is partly what makes such stimulus spending possible: there seems to be little reason to fear that workers will push up inflation with new demands.

Even the limited pro-union policies Biden has supported, such as the PRO Act, will require an organized and independent left to amount to more than very narrow supports for conservative and undemocratic unions. Sustained, organized struggle by socialists is needed for unions to become vehicles for building the class, rather than merely seeking gains for particular groups of workers.

Only a strong socialist left can lead a struggle for what Andre Gorz famously called, in a 1968 Socialist Register essay, non-reformist reforms. The challenge for socialists today is to connect the fight for universal health care to a longer-term struggle for a fundamental transformation of the political and economic system.

This requires more than simply proclaiming socialist bona fides. It entails a concrete commitment to building the working classs organizations, consciousness, and democratic capacities to eventually effect a socialist transition. Whether reforms can serve as the basis for a broader struggle is always a matter of what lessons are learned, and what capacities are developed, along the way. The fight for universal health care, therefore, must also be a struggle to democratize unions, develop community activist networks, and build a base for socialist ideas among workers.

The need for universal health care has become more obvious with the pandemic. But the public health crisis has also made it clear that this demand must be extended to encompass greater public control over pharmaceutical companies, which have racked up huge profits as a result of their ownership of publicly funded medical technologies. And the ecological emergency in the pandemics background heightens the urgency of transforming our political and economic institutions to allow for the democratic planning of what we produce and how we produce it.

The ever-present danger is that in focusing on winning particular reforms, the question of socialism is indefinitely postponed and becomes empty rhetoric. The threat of social democratization is also very real: rather than transforming the state, socialist parties and movements are more likely to be transformed by it. The immensity of the task of overcoming the constraints of capitalism and the disciplines of the state opens the way to accepting these constraints as immutable, while limiting our political vision to winning gains at the margins.

Recent attempts to build new left parties Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain, Bloco in Portugal illustrate these dangers clearly. Although they had promising beginnings and many good socialists remain within them, their transformative potential today seems to have been blunted. These experiences should serve as cautionary tales to the Democratic Socialists of America in the United States, and Momentum in the UK.

Even if decorated with socialist slogans, individual reforms can all too easily be seen as ends in themselves, rather than steps toward broader and deeper change. And there is nothing inherently radical about particular reforms. Universal health care can be a way for US corporations to socialize health care costs, or it could become a first step toward a larger progressive struggle. On its own, it does not pose a threat to the ruling class, except insofar as it serves to raise expectations and encourage workers to go further.

Social democracy says these expectations must conform to the limits imposed by capitalism and the capitalist state. Socialism seeks to use reforms as a springboard for a deeper and wider transformation.

Obviously, there is no guarantee that we will ever achieve socialism in fact, if were honest, we must acknowledge that the odds are against it. But it is only by maintaining what Leo Panitch referred to as our revolutionary optimism of the intellect in the face of uncertainty and defeat imagining a concrete utopia, thinking strategically, and creatively searching for openings from within our historical present that we have any hope of building a better future.

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Biden's Increase in Government Spending Won't Touch Capitalists' Power - Jacobin magazine

Right Wing Crazies & Libertarians Join In On Socialist Rally To Defund The Police With Hilarious Results – Free Keene

Defund the police rally in Keene, NH

A socialist led organization the NH Youth Movement has been rallying its troops across NH this past week in an effort to get cities and towns to defund their police forces. However the rally that was planned for Keene didnt go quite as the organizers expected.

While there isnt a significant socialist presence in New Hampshire there are plenty of socialists in surrounding states that from time to time muster up the occasional rally in NH through the busing in of left wing extremists. This is particularly easy to do in Cheshire with the county neighboring Vermont and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts being right next door plus students from out of town attending Keene State College.

A few days before the rally was to occur the Keene City Republican Committee Chair Anne L. Farrington got wind of the socialists organizing of a protest and rallied her opposition country-folk to attend a counter protest for the same time and date.

We want to show our support for law enforcement by coming out in strength to Back the Badge! The rally will be in Central Square tomorrow from 5:30pm-8:00pm. Please join us and bring friends who support our police!

Anne L. Farrington

This attempt at undermining the NH Youth Movements protest turned out to be as hilarious as one might have anticipated. Not so much because there were people shouting back and forth, but in that it appeared that the rally attracted all of one intentional NH Youth Movement member and another five or so socialists who just happened upon the Republicans counter-protest.

To make for an entertaining afternoon a handful of libertarians got together to join in on the fun making a few signs in advance of the event, saying things both opposing sides would theoretically agree with and disagree with at the same time, like Defund the pigs & end socialism. Is it a socialist protest? Is it a right wing protest? Who knows, but certainly the passerbys didnt quite follow what was going on with all the shouting from every side and direction. Both from protesters and from passing cars alike.

After numerous conversations with the right-wing nut jobs and left wing extremists it turned out that each side had a lot in common. Both the republicans and the socialists were in favor of socialist programs, but the agenda for which programs to fund and defund were different. The young socialists wanted to see free college tuition and police dollars redistributed to other social programs like housing the homeless. The counter protesters expressed a desire to continue funding social security and the police state.

What both the left and right failed to grasp was that the money doesnt exist to fund all of these programs. The use of violence and the state to take money from the populous only works up to a point before that theft becomes so great that it undermines the revenues that can be generated. This leads to a failure of the programs both sides are trying to fund through theft.

Now this doesnt mean that all parties cant get what they want, but the means by which those funds are raised must not be through the violence that is the state. The overhead of state mandated programs is significant, the inefficiencies great, and the ever increasing amounts undermining to the objectives of both sides.

When the state gets involved a significant portion of the revenues generated are eaten up by the extraction of those funds from the populous and the overhead of management- not to mention corruption. When people are left to decide for themselves by comparison individuals pick the least expensive options which deliver the maximum benefit thus reducing costs and making such services affordable. Between competing offerings individuals can afford to pay for college when competition is left to run its course, government isnt handing out free money, and security (policing) doesnt cost six figures per employee. Lets end all of the social welfare programs: Police, education, health care, social security, corporate welfare, and so on, and then hand back the financial resources to the people by eliminating the taxes that make these programs perform poorly as only then will those dollars stolen be best and most efficiently utilized.

Check out the entertaining video with left wing extremists, libertarians, and right wingers all competing for air time in or surrounding the public square.

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Right Wing Crazies & Libertarians Join In On Socialist Rally To Defund The Police With Hilarious Results - Free Keene

Immigrant workers, allies embark on nine-day march to Madison to call for immigration reform in Wisconsin and nationally – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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A large caravan of protesters were sent off to Madison to the roaring sounds of Colombian drums and chants of si se puede (yes we can)in front of Voces de la Fronteras Milwaukee office Sunday.

Over the course of ninedays, a core group of eight to 10 marchers affiliated with Voces de la Frontera ismarching from Milwaukee to Madison to pressure the Biden administration to add a pathway to citizenship in the American Jobs Plan, a $1.9 trillion infrastructure proposal, and the state legislature to allow undocumented immigrants to get drivers licenses.

The group departed for their first stop, Waukesha, Sunday morning shortly after a rally that included speeches, music performances, face painting, and free COVID-19 vaccines.

Voces de la Frontera is not pegging its support for citizenship to any one particular proposal, though advocateswant to see it apply to broad swaths of the immigrant population besides just recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program or those with Temporary Protected Status.

A march led by Voces de la Frontera began a nine-day journey from Milwaukee to Madison. Immigrant workers and their children are expected to speak at the Capitol about the need to pass a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.(Photo: Julia Martins de Sa / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

On the last day of the march, June 28, marchers and other protesters plan tohold a rally at Olbrich Park in Madison before marching to the Capitol.

Voces de la Frontera is encouraging essential immigrant workers to take timeoffworkand take one of their buses to Madison to show the economic value and humanity of immigrants.

One of the marchers in the core group is Guadalupe Romero, an immigrantfrom Mexico whoworks in fast food andhas been in the United States for 31 years 10 years in Chicago and 21 in Milwaukee.

I have felt fearful being here without documentation ... I have the honor to march, to stand before the government so that they concentrate on the things that deny us immigration reform, Romero said. She spoke in Spanish; her words weretranslated by the Journal Sentinel.

She added that she is constantly fearful of a day where she will get stopped by the police and told she can no longer drive. Under 2005's federal REAL ID, states cannot grant driver licenses to people without Social Security numbers, effectively barring undocumented immigrants from obtaining them. The law took effect in Wisconsin in 2007.

Nevertheless, Romero said that she is bringing hope with her to Madison and is optimistic that government officials will listen to her calls for reform.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 16 states and the District of Columbia have enacted laws that allow undocumented immigrants to obtain driver's licenses anyways. Voces de la Frontera aims to pass a similar law through either the state budget or standalone legislation and have been fighting for it since at least the 2019 legislature session.

The core group of marchers includes not only essential workers like Romero, but also their children.

Eduardo Perea-Hernandez, the son of two Mexican undocumented immigrants, brought a large water bottle, gorditas, and a backpack full of clothes in preparation for the nine-day march.

He said he was marching for his parents, cousins, and friends who are undocumented. He added that the march was also about holding the Biden administration accountable for promises Biden made while campaigningto pass a pathway to citizenship.

He also noted that the marchs kickoff was intentionally chosen for Fathers Day to commemorate the sacrifice of immigrant fathers.

March organizers plan to make stops in other Wisconsin cities such as Wales and Sullivan onthe way to Madison.

Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Voces de la Frontera, hands out bandanas at the nine-day march kickoff on Sunday.(Photo: Julia Martins de Sa / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

The American Jobs Plan would likely have to pass using a fast-track procedure known as budget reconciliation, which allows senators to bypass the typical 60-vote threshold that most bills need to be considered. This process would mean that Senate Democrats could pass immigration reform without any Republican support.

We have no belief that we are going to get anything bipartisan, whether thats on voting rights or immigration. Elections wont matter if Democrats dont deliver on their promises for major reforms, Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Voces de la Frontera, said of the need to use budget reconciliation for immigration measures.

The White House suggested in April that Biden did not favor using budget reconciliation to pass immigration reform measures, instead backing a bipartisan path forward. Top Congressional Democrats such as Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer are open to the idea of using budget reconciliation to pass immigration reform.

Whether a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants can be included in budget reconciliation is a controversial subject. Critics say that the Byrd rule would cut extraneous, non-budgetary measures such as a pathway to citizenship from a budget reconciliation bill. Proponents say there is precedent for immigration measures to be included in such bills.

Allison Vasquez-Lovell, right, speaks to Ashanti Wilson, the Racine organizer for Voces de la Frontera, at the nine-day march kickoff on Sunday.(Photo: Julia Martins de Sa / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

Neumann-Ortiz said that they expect to know if a pathway to citizenship can be included in the American Jobs Plan in July. If it is able to be included in the infrastructure plan, then Neumann-Ortiz said that Voces de la Frontera will continue to sustain and grow the pressure. If not, then Neumann-Ortiz said that the next logical step would be to end the filibuster, which would also allow Democrats to pass immigration reform with just 50 votes.

The point is Democrats were elected, the majority of Latinos voted for them, not just as an anti-Trump, but to give the Biden administration a second chance to pass immigration reform that they didnt do under the Obama administration, Neumann-Ortiz said.

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Immigrant workers, allies embark on nine-day march to Madison to call for immigration reform in Wisconsin and nationally - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Holland event aims at mobilizing bipartisan approaches to immigration reform – HollandSentinel.com

HOLLAND Immigration reform in the U.S. is a hotly contested topic, one that often leads to polarization within the two major political parties.

The LIBRE Initiative is a nonprofit organization that aims to promote "small government" immigration solutions to benefit Latino immigrants. The group hosted an event in Holland, Tuesday, June 15, discussing how Americans and Latin Americansinterested in immigration reform can push their elected officials for compromise.

Daniel Garza, president and founder of LIBRE, spoke to a small group at Beechwood Grill in Holland about his support for the Bipartisan Border Solutions Act of 2021 legislation backed by Reps. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, and Tony Gonzalez, R-Texas, in the House and Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Krysten Sinema, D-Arizona, in the Senate.

The Act would bolster the amount of judges, case workers and enforcement staff at the border, while also creating four new permanent processing centers to address surges in migrants attempting to enter the U.S. at its southern border with Mexico. Both versions of the bills remain in their respective committees in each chamber.

Garza, a Republican who worked in the administration of former President George W. Bush, said by advancing common ground reforms, the U.S. can achieve progress toward re the current immigration system.

"Two extreme positions on immigration reform are untenable," Garza said. "We need to advance to a position where bipartisan reform can happen.

"... (Extreme positions) only represent a small portion of Americans. The majority of Americans support a common ground solution."

Garza said opening legal channels for those in Latin America looking to emigrate to the U.S. would create opportunities for immigrants to prosper in America. He noted migrant workers, like many in his family before they fully settled in the U.S. Garza said it's these types of people who work hard and contribute to the American economy, often creating opportunities for future generations of family members.

"A lot of my family moved on and up," he said. "Who replaces the folks who went on and up? Immigrants. We need legal channels."

Garza said he hopes Latinos feel empowered to use their voices to lobby their elected officials, no matter which party they belong to.

"These discussions are direct ways to bring the community to the elected official," he said. "Engaging the Latino community so they feel included. When they feel engaged, they feel encouraged to participate.

Contact reporter Arpan Lobo at alobo@hollandsentinel.com. Follow him on Twitter @arpanlobo.

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Holland event aims at mobilizing bipartisan approaches to immigration reform - HollandSentinel.com