Videos from Solidarity's Educational Conference

November 14-15 in New York City, Solidarity held a successful conference featuring engaging talks on a number of topics. Click here to view these videos from "Their Crisis, Our Movements"

- Crisis of Capitalism, Challenge to the Movements (David McNally, New Socialist Group)
- The New Imperialism and The Global Fightback (Vivek Chibber, Christy Thornton, Jonah McCallister-Erickson)
- The State of Resistance in Communities & the Workplace (Normahiram Perez, Steve Downs, Penelope Duggan)
- Race and National Liberation Under Obama (Glen Ford, Lalit Clarkston)

Against the Current

Published bimonthly since 1986, AGAINST THE CURRENT is a Solidarity-sponsored analytical journal for the broad revolutionary left. The January/February issue begins with an editorial on the road from Copenhagen with a second editorial on Obama's war in Afghanistan. Articles include Bushra Khaliq on how climate change adversely effects women in the Global South, Adaner Usmani on the official narrative about Pakistan, Micah Landau and Rene Rojas on the 11-month Stella D'oro strike and Malik Miah on how the recession has disproportionately impacted African Americans. ATC 144 features "African-American Struggle, Yesterday and Today" with Derrick Morrison on Post-Katrina New Orleans and a number of reviews by activists and scholars.


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International Viewpoint is the monthly English-language magazine of the Fourth International. IV is a window to radical alternatives world-wide, carrying reports, analysis and debates from all corners of the globe. Correspondents in over 50 countries report on popular struggles, and the debates that are shaping the left of tomorrow.

Buttons to Build the Movement

Order these eye-catching buttons to spread the demand for social and economic justice. If you don't have paypal, email us!


Reads Bail out People, not Wall Street!. Around the edge, these 2 1/8" buttons read "Free Health Care," "Defend Public Services," "Living Wage Jobs," "Free Higher Education," "Troops Home Now," "Rebuild the Gulf Coast," and "Affordable Housing."

Bright orange 1 1/2" buttons boldly demand: "Bring the Troops Home Now!" Wear one everywhere to start a conversation about why US occupation can never be a force for liberation, and people's needs should come before the massive military budget.

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Produced during the massive immigrant rights demonstrations of 2006, these 2 1/8" buttons read, in Spanish and English: ¡exigimos Paz, Legalización, y Trabajos para Todos! we demand Peace, Legalization, and Jobs for All!

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Solidarity depends on the generous contributions of its friends and allies to continue its work. Please consider giving!

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Blocked Reform: Obama After 200 Days

The Obama presidency, contrary to the hopes of many, has not produced a big political space for the left, let alone “a seat at the table.” Most visibly, it has been the right wing that succeeded in seizing the initiative, in some truly grotesque ways that have thrown a real light on the deep paranoia and straight-up white racism that persists in this society, and on the ways it can be opportunistically pandered to and manipulated.
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Regroupment & Refoundation of a U.S. Left

As part of the preparation for our 2008 Convention, members of SOLIDARITY have begun a political document describing some perspectives for socialist renewal in the twenty-first century. We welcome responses to this initial draft of the document. Some of the themes here have also been developed in Solidarity's Founding Statement and our 1997 pamphlet, “Socialist Organization Today.”

New Pamphlet: Hell on Wheels

New from Solidarity! Long time transit worker activist Steve Downs has written a pamphlet charting the twenty year story of New Directions, a rank and file caucus in New York City's transit union that he helped build and develop - including the challenges of keeping the rank and file democracy movement alive after New Directions won control of the local.

Read an interview on Zmag.org
Read a review and order your copy today!

From Abortion Rights to Reproductive Justice

New from Solidarity's Feminist Commission, this leaflet responds to the right wing attack on reproductive freedom and argues that the movement must go beyond "pro-choice" to true reproductive justice. This socialist and anti-racist feminist agenda would take up issues such as access to health and child care, forced sterilization, and the division of "productive" and "reproductive" labor.
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On Hunger and Capitalism

— Dan Jakopovich

“…This type of wretchedness is an abstraction for us white people. Regardless of how much we see it around us, we cannot truly understand what poverty is because we do not suffer from it. At least not as much as the Indian peasant woman I met once in Bolivia. This peasant woman had four bowls of rice and five children. She gave each of her four oldest children a bowl but not one who was sitting in a corner.  I asked her: ‘Why don’t you feed this child?’ She answered: ‘That one is the weakest, the youngest and in any case will be the first to die. I do not have enough food for all five so I have to choose, and I will not feed the one who will die first.’” — Participant at the Dialectics of Liberation Conference, London, 1967

ON SEPTEMBER 11, 2001, approximately 35,000 of our brothers and sisters died from what is perhaps the worst possible cause of death — starvation. A decade after the 1996 World Food Summit set the goal of cutting the rate of hunger in the world by half, today approximately 854 million people are still starving, which is a great increase in comparison to the 842 million in the year 2000 (Food and Agriculture Organization, The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006).

The Nobel prize-winning Amartya Sen, as one of many, stresses that world hunger is not caused by a shortage of food but by unequal distribution (see, for example, Amartya Sen, Why Half the Planet is Hungry, Observer, June 16, 2002). Here are some basic facts on the realities of hunger under capitalism:

* It is estimated that the poor countries pay nine times more to the rich than the assistance that they receive is worth, so for instance poor countries paid 77 billion dollars to rich countries from 1990 to 1997. Largely as a result of this, poor countries focus on the export of products to foreign markets while the domestic population starves — and while the United States and European Union ruthlessly destroy enormous food surpluses in order to protect market prices.

* According to some estimates, 13 billion dollars would be needed annually to eliminate hunger, while the United States spends approximately 600 billion dollars annually on the military.

* The situation is deteriorating the most in sub-Saharan Africa. The life expectancy in Botswana, for example, has dropped to the pre-1950 level — only 39 years. The life expectancy in Swaziland today is below 33 years. (CIA World Factbook)

* Every day, more than 30,000 children die from generally preventable diseases such as diarrhea, acute respiratory infections, measles or malaria, which are very successfully treated or have been eliminated in the richer countries. The danger is much greater for malnourished children.

* Tens of millions of little girls have been killed in India, China and other countries where economic interests, gender inequality and social backwardness have made murderers out of their parents and relatives. Three million people die of AIDS each year, including children, although anti-retroviral drugs in rich countries have transformed this disease from acute to chronic.

* According to data from the World Health Organization, millions of people are dying every year from lack of drinking water and over a billion people do not have access to clean water. Poor people generally cannot finance the desalinization of the immense seas and oceans. In the meantime, private companies have begun to privatize water, including rainwater.

* According to Anti-Slavery International, there are still approximately 27 million slaves in the world, although some put this figure at as high as 200 million.

* Jean Ziegler, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, has confirmed that the rate of malnutrition among Iraqi children in 2005 had doubled since the beginning of the invasion of Iraq and the victory over Saddam Hussein in 2003. “The silent daily massacre by hunger is a form of murder,” stated Ziegler.

In Iraq over 500,000 children under the age of five had already died in consequence of the sanctions against Iraq prior to the invasion of 2003 (UNICEF), and about 1 million people in total, according to Denis Halliday, the former UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq who resigned in protest.

* Year upon year, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Oorganization states in its report, that approximately 6 million children under five years of age are dying from hunger annually. Meanwhile, Forbes’ annual list of billionaires shows that the 300 richest families in the world possess over 50% of the world’s wealth.

Capitalism continues “to resemble that hideous, pagan idol who would not drink the nectar but from the blood of the slain.“ (Marx)

ATC 133, March-April 2008

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