Published bimonthly since 1986, Against the Current is a Solidarity sponsored analytical journal for the broad revolutionary left. The July/ August ATC begins with an editorial on the two Obamas--the one whose approach fills voters with expectations that U.S. policy can be different, and the centrist Democrat that Obama's record suggests he is. Jack Rasmus writes about the new phase of the economic crisis, Nomi Prins comments on the housing mess and Lesley Gill discusses implications on the transfer of the Colombian paramilitaries to U.S. custody. Jeffery Webber's review essay takes up the themes of Socialist Register 2008: empire, religion and liberation, particularly in Latin America and the Middle East.


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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.

Protests against Pakistani government: Over 3000 activists and supporters of the Labour Party Pakistan took part in rally at Lahore June 6 against the ongoing neoliberal policies of the present Pakistan People’s Party government.
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A Historic Long March That Fell Short: Farooq Tariq reports on "Lawyers’ leadership on the road from resistance to reconciliation".
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Pakistan: Corruption in Privatization:There has been massive corruption during the eight years of the Pervez Musharraf-Shoukat Aziz period (1999-2007). While the regime has claimed the privatization process key to economic development, the reality is that it was a total disaster.
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Burmese Cyclone: Wave of Burmese solidarity forces regime to retreat on cyclone, by Marc Johnson



"Venezuela: the Referendum and the Revolution" collects four contributions reflect a partial cross-section of the rich and complex discussion taking place in the Venezuelan and international left just before and immediately after the narrow defeat of the Constitutional referendum in December 2007.

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Hell On Wheels: Success & Failure of Reform in TWU 100

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 a review and order your copy today!

Elissa Jane Karg Chacker, 1951-2008

Elissa Karg Chacker, a longtime member of Solidarity and previously the International Socialists (IS) in Detroit, died Sunday, May 11 from injuries suffered in an accident a week earlier. Riding her bicycle home after a Solidarity meeting, she was struck by a car and never regained consciousness.
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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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Detroit Politics Embroiled

— David Finkel

DETROIT IS A city entangled in a chain of interlocking crises, all the way from the world economic crisis, to deindustrialization in America, down to the regional and local levels of the housing market hemorrhage and a tidal wave of utility cutoffs in poor people’s homes. Some 40,000 Detroiters now are without water — the most shocking example, perhaps, of daily life in a city on the brink.

The most important fight taking place in Detroit right now is the strike at American Axle, reported in this issue by Dianne Feeley. But the most widely publicized is undoubtedly the “series of unfortunate events” embroiling the administration of the once-popular “hip hop” Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. It has sharply divided the African-American political class, the clergy, and business forces — generally pitting those who benefit from the mayor’s clientelist-patronage practices, including quite a few white businessmen, against those who are shut out, and splitting local Democratic forces.

The point at which Kilpatrick’s corruption went outside the bounds of normal urban political cronyism was reached when he cost the city about $9 million in payouts to police officers he had fired as their investigation threatened to expose a now-notorious sexual relationship between the mayor and his chief of staff, Christine Beatty. Both Kilpatrick and Beatty face multiple felony charges of perjury, obstruction of justice and official misconduct for various acts that took place in the course of covering up their affair.

The 36th District Court judge assigned to the preliminary examination in the criminal case has political and social connections to the mayor, as do the other judges on that bench, leading to rounds of litigation and appeals on whether he and all of them should be recused — and so on it goes.

Seven of the nine City Council members voted for a resolution calling on the mayor to resign. The Council also voted not to hear his presentation of the annual budget. This followed a “state of the city” address in which Kilpatrick publicly insulted City Council President Kenneth Cockrel Jr., and shocked a live television audience by stating “I have never in my life been called n_____ as many times as I have in the last 30 days.”

Lurking behind the semi-comical aspects of the escalating scandal is a stalled, and possibly deliberately sabotaged, investigation of the murder of Tamara Greene, an exotic dancer who is said to have performed — and been violently assaulted — at a rumored (though officially denied) wild stag party at the mayoral mansion years ago. It is impossible at present to determine the validity of widespread suspicions that she was gunned down to cover up the incident.

Mayor Kilpatrick and his family (including his mother, Rep. Carolyn Cheeks-Kilpatrick, D-MI) have close ties to the Shrine of the Black Madonna, the center of Detroit Democratic politics. Its leadership is spearheading the campaign to shield the mayor by claiming that the impetus for his removal is racist. Not only is the mayor’s substantial patronage machiner on the line, but the political prestige and clout of the Shrine.

All factions in the city’s politics were present at the Detroit NAACP’s annual Freedom Dinner, where over 10,000 people turned out to hear a brilliant address by Jeremiah Wright. The event was a remarkable affirmation of the community’s love for Wright and his message, yet factional tensions simmered: The mayor got precious face time by embracing Rev. Wright on the dais, but Wright in his speech made no mention of Kilpatrick.

There is no indication that either the political or legal tangle — which has pro- and anti-Kilpatrick factions battling it out in the African-American press, talk shows and competing rallies — will end anytime soon, possibly affecting attempts to mobilize Democratic voters in November.

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