Sunday, February 16, 2025

 Posted in Cuba News February 15, 2025

CCDS: The Middle East Wars and United States Imperialism



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The Committees of Correspondence For Democracy And Socialism (CCDS):

The Middle East Wars and United States Imperialism

By the CCDS Peace & Solidarity Committee

Feb 10, 2025 

 

We in CCDS believe there can be no moral, ethical, or ideological justification to excuse the brutality and modern-day barbarity of US supported Israeli actions in Gaza since October 2023. 

Palestine is first and foremost a settler occupied land where Zionists, assisted by western colonial and imperial powers, imposed a colonial set of social relations on its majority Arab Muslim peoples. This majority prevailed from the 7th century to the mid-20th century. Then, prior to the state of Israel being declared the Nakba began, that is, clearing the land of Arab Palestinians. 

In the 1890s A World Zionist Organization was formed with the overt intent of creating a Jewish homeland in the Palestine region along the lines of a Jewish nation state. But why Palestine, and not any other place? A long Jewish historical association with the land of Palestine, and a firmly established religious and social strife involving Christianity would provide the emotional bonds and a powerful symbol to anchor a Zionist political ideology with global reach and appeal. 

The UK, which held the mandate to govern Palestine, gave the green light to the Zionist project through the Balfour Declaration. In 1947, in the face of years of terrorizing violence directed at Muslims by Zionist settlers, and an alarmingly increasing resettlement of Jews in Palestine, the United Nations recommended the partition of Palestine into two states. At that time, only 1/3 of the land’s inhabitants were of Jewish background.

On May 14, 1948, David Ben-Gurion, the Executive Head of the World Zionist Organization and the chairman of the Jewish Agency in Palestine, declared the establishment of a new state of Israel. Palestinians and Arab neighbors viewed this as an occupation of the residents’ historic land. And the first Middle East war between the new Israel supported by the UK and the US, and Arab states ensued. 

During, and under the cover of this war, the Zionists intensified the Nakba which has taken various forms over the decades. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced from their homes, villages, towns, and country to bring us to a Jewish majority on the ground today.

Subsequent wars followed in 1956, 1967, 1973, 1982, and intermittently from the 1980s to today’s brutal, genocidal war on the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank. These wars supported by the West emboldened Israel to extend its territory both within and beyond its borders. Israel occupied the West Bank, Gaza, the Old City of Jerusalem, the Sinai Peninsula, and the Golan Heights. Through settler and state sanctioned violence Palestinians were terrorized and cleared off their lands; villages and towns replaced by new Jewish settlements and the territory of Israel expanded. 

These wars, then and now, have been waged by Israelis, with unconditional Western support, against Palestinians and neighboring Arab states. The deeply embedded issues fueling this inimical void are two-fold:

Internally: the legitimacy of the state of Israel; the dehumanizing apartheid and racist policies towards Palestinians; the control and weaponizing of energy, water, airspace, and movement to impose a pervasive repressive regime over Palestinian lives; the transformation of the lived reality of the Palestinians into a veritable open-air prison; a draconian military justice system curtailing civilian life; and an on-going unrestrained settler violence as a prelude to settlement expansion and ultimately the removal of the Palestinian people. 

Externally: Palestine is centered in a web of geopolitical interests. Control of the region's oil economy is vital for Western corporate and cartel capitalism’s global economic hegemony. So is Palestine’s geopolitical location along a historical bridge connecting Western Europe and North Africa to Asia. Israel also features prominently in the US led capitalist empire’s quest for control of the territory and its resources from the Red Sea to the Adriatic Sea and control of the Mediterranean Sea. For these Western interests, Israel is the vital outpost to ensure geopolitical control. It performs the role of destabilizer and attack force.

Various organizations like the Palestine Liberation Organization, Hamas, and Hezbollah emerged to challenge and resist the Israeli state and its land expansion over the last fifty years. The United States, Britain, France, the former Soviet Union, and neighboring Arab states have all played significant roles in the development of this conflict. 

Emerging from World War II as the most powerful economic and military power on the globe, the United States cultivated a special relation of support for Israel that refuses to falter even in the face of starkly evident genocidal actions against humanity. Israel has the most powerful military in the region suited up with the latest in military technology and weapons from the US; is a nuclear power and boasts a powerful global intelligence network. The United States, through finance; technology and intelligence sharing; military support; and its veto privileges in international institutions, has aided and abetted every aspect of this abominable state.

In the very period of Israel’s genocide, between October 2023 and October 2024, the US provided Israel with $17.9 billion, and devastating bombs that make a mockery of nuclear scares. The US provides Israel with enough military material to defend itself from any other country’s intervention. And today, the US president openly advocates for the total disappearance of Palestinians in Palestine to be replaced by others from or favored by the US. We therefore hold the United States equally culpable for all of Israel’s crimes against humanity. The United States is also deeply enmeshed in the expansionist drama unfolding in Syria. Even further it is involved in imperialist regime change and secession programs in many parts of the world.  

Today, pro-Israel lobby groups in the United States support continued military and economic aid to Israel. Israel, with United States support, opposes serious negotiations with the legitimate Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza. That the countries of the world, for multiple and strategic reasons, have not been able to militarily intercede in this genocide in Gaza may result in a hardening of Israeli opposition to any serious negotiation in the aftermath of signing a temporary cease-fire. Israel and the pro-Israeli United States appear untroubled by the global tide of criticism from the real international community and its demand for a just peace.

We in CCDS believe there can be no moral, ethical, ideological, or other justification to excuse the brutality and modern day barbarity of US supported Israeli actions in Gaza since October 2023. This is first, a crime against Palestinians; then it is a crime against all of humanity - a crime against all of us. We condemn the actions of the US for its complicity and partnership in Israel’s genocidal actions. 

We call on our fellow US citizens and residents, institutions, and political organizations to stand firm against the genocidal and expansionist actions in Palestine and beyond. 

We demand in the name of peace, justice, democracy, and freedom for all the world’s peoples, 

·    an end to Israeli support 

·    an end to legislative endeavors to curtail just criticism of Israeli actions

·    an end to imperial designs 

·    an end to regime change

·    an end to our military presence around the world

·    an end to hybrid wars

·    an end to support for terrorists and assassins 

Let us stand for a just and shared future for all in the world. 

 

 

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Why Migration

Harry Targ

 


(“The vice president’s speech in Munich, expressing support for far-right, anti-immigration parties and criticizing suppression of conservative voices, was a global extension of his core political themes.”  Mchael C. Bender, Vance Shocks Europe With a Message That He Has Long Promoted at Home” New York Times, February 14, 2025)

People migrate from one place to another for a variety of reasons. A good part of that migration has to do with international relations, national economies, and the increasingly globalized economy. Literally millions of people have moved from one geographic space to another in the twenty-first century, in most cases for reasons of physical fear or economic need. Two prominent causes that “push” people to leave their communities and homeland relate to “hybrid wars” and neoliberal globalization.

Hybrid wars refer to the long-term policies of imperial powers to systematically undermine political regimes that pursue policies and goals that challenge their global hegemony. Over long periods of time imperial powers have used force, covert operations, supporting pliant local elites, and funneling money to disrupt local political processes. If targeted countries still reject outside interference the imperial power uses force to overthrow recalcitrant governments. In the 1980s all these tactics were used by the United States to crush revolutionary ferment in Central America. Of course, the US hybrid war strategy has been a staple of United States policy in the region ever since President Franklin Roosevelt declared the policy of “The Good Neighbor.”

Neoliberalism  refers to the variety of policies that rich capitalist countries and international institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization have imposed on debt-ridden poor countries. These policies require poor countries to cut back on public services, deregulate their economies, reduce tariffs that protect their own industries and agriculture, and in other ways insist that poor countries open their economies to foreign investment and trade penetration. The impacts of neoliberalism have been to impose austerity on largely marginalized populations. Their agriculture and industries have been undermined by subsidized agribusinesses from the Global North and global investors. Since the initiation of neoliberal policies in the 1970s gaps between rich and poor nations and rich and poor people within nations have grown all across the world, with a few exceptions such as China.

In sum, people everywhere have experienced the creation of repressive regimes and economic policies that have shifted vast majorities from modest survival to deep poverty. (Susan Jonas once wrote that the Guatemalan people lived more secure lives before the arrival of Spanish colonizers in the fifteenth century than ever since). The globalization of the economy, increased violence and repression within countries (largely involving United States interference), increasing income and wealth inequality and poverty, and the rise of repressive regimes everywhere, has led to massive emigration. Some estimates indicate that 37 million people left their home countries (some 45 countries) between 2010 and 2015 for humanitarian reasons.

One of the ironies of world history is that capital in the form of investments, trade, the purchase of natural resources, the globalization of production, and military interventions have been common and necessary features of capitalism since its emergence in the sixteenth century. But, paradoxically, and except for the global slave trade and selected periods of history, the movement of people has been illegal. (Sometimes branding migrants as “illegal” has been a device to cheapen their labor). The idea of national sovereignty has been used to justify categorizing some human migrants as “illegal.” If capital is and has been legal, the movement of people should be legal as well. It makes no sense, nor is it humane, to brand any human beings as “illegal.”

In sum, the expression of fear, outrage, and lack of sensitivity for those who have been forced to migrate by Vice President Vance reflects a cruelty and lack of humanity that is central to United States foreign and domestic politics. And he, and his administration, are becoming allied with those Europeans who share his ideology.

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

REMEMBERING “STAR WARS” OR “THE STRATEGIC DEFENSE INITIATIVE”

 Some Fantasies Never Die, particularly if they are profitable.

Harry Targ

(Alan MacLeod / MintPress News Donald Trump has announced his intention to build a gigantic anti-ballistic missile system to counter Chinese and Russian nuclear weapons, and he is recruiting Elon Musk to help him. The Pentagon has long dreamed of constructing an American “Iron dome.” https://scheerpost.com/2025/02/11/the-pentagon-is-recruiting-elon-musk-to-help-them-win-a-nuclear-war/)

In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan was instituting a military budget that in total was greater than all US military expenditures from the founding of the nation until the 1980s. Military doctrine, in accordance with the huge increase in military spending, shifted from maintaining a capability to deter aggression from other nations, particularly the former Soviet Union, to the development of a first strike capability, that is to be able to strike an enemy first. This shift in policy was coupled with the president claiming that the former Soviet Union constituted an “evil empire,” one that had to be pushed back, weakened, and destroyed.


As part of the reinstitution of a New Cold War with the Soviet Union, after a decade of détente, Reagan announced in a dramatic speech the development of the new Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), which became known as the “Star Wars” program. The president claimed that the United States could develop a space-based defensive shield that could protect North America from any attack from a foreign power.

SDI became a boondoggle for the military/industrial complex. Especially universities saw the project as a source of significant increases in revenue. However, large sectors of the scientific community declared that Star Wars was wasteful and technologically impossible to achieve. (Many Purdue University professors signed a petition promising not to accept any Star Wars funding).

Along with its lack of feasibility, most strategic analysts questioned the President’s claim that SDI was merely a defensive weapon. They argued, in the context of Reagan’s hostile rhetoric about the Soviet Union and the claim that the US could achieve physical protection from attack, that the Soviets would perceive SDI as an offensive weapon. They might conclude that the United States was developing a defensive shield so that it might choose to launch a first-strike against the Soviet Union.

The military doctrine of “deterrence,” dominating military thinking on both sides of the Cold War for years was that neither power could afford to launch a first-strike attack on the other because the second-strike response would be so devastating that functioning societies in both countries would be destroyed. Former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara aptly labeled this doctrine Mutually Assured Destruction (or MAD). In short, with SDI, an enemy of the US could believe that they might be attacked at any time. Consequently “Star Wars” was profoundly destabilizing, increasing the possibility of nuclear war.

Twenty-six years later, President Trump declared that the United States henceforth would recognize that space should be the site for military preparedness to defend national security. To achieve this goal the US Space Force would lead the way (Gregory Niguidula, “Trump’s Space Force is a Strategic Mistake,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, January 21, 2019). In the National Defense authorization Act of 2020, Congress approved the idea of establishing a new sixth branch of the military, the United States Space Force.

Meanwhile, the United States in 2025 continues to have over 800 military bases of various sizes around the world and military programs with almost 40 countries, sometimes including private military contractors. The United States also pursues what VJ Prashad calls “hybrid wars,” economic sanctions, covert operations, and ideological campaigns against so-called “authoritarian” states.

Perhaps most threatening from the standpoint of increasing the probability of war is a dramatic increase in verbal hostilities toward China. The rhetoric has been coupled with warnings from influential think tanks that the United States, “the world’s leading democracy,” was falling behind Chinese in influence, power, economic capabilities, and mostly technological advances. In addition, the Obama Administration declared that the United States was pivoting its security concerns to Asia. Trump and Biden have moved US ships to the South China Sea, sought an alliance with Asian nations against China, and recently President Biden signed a naval agreement with Australia.

Observers of the international scene regard these developments in US/China relations, over the last three administrations as profoundly destabilizing, perhaps a “New Cold War.” Of course, the most horrific possibility is escalation from conventional to nuclear war. Therefore, it is in this context that the creation of a sixth branch of the military, the United States Space Force, and its growing penetration of major domestic institutions, including universities, is troubling.

This new branch of the military, seeking legitimacy and the expansion of its own power and resources, is embedding itself in what could be called the military/industrial/academic complex. And, from the standpoint of universities, which are experiencing declining financial resources, new space-oriented research constitutes a vital source of revenue paralleling that provided by the dubious Star Wars program of the 1980s.

So from “Star Wars” to the “Iron Dome” profits soar and the danger of nuclear war increases.


From "Dr Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" a movie 1984 film      

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNC0YwuGLqg
     

        General Turgidson:

Mr. President, we are rapidly approaching a moment of truth both for ourselves as human beings and for the life of our nation. Now, the truth is not always a pleasant thing, but it is necessary now make a choice, to choose between two admittedly regrettable, but nevertheless, distinguishable post-war environments: one where you got twenty million people killed, and the other where you got a hundred and fifty million people killed.

President Muffley:

You're talking about mass murder, General, not war.

Turgidson:

Mr. President, I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed. But I do say... no more than ten to twenty million killed, tops. Uh... dependent on the breaks.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Theorizing About Social Movements and Activism

Harry Targ

(This was part of an essay that was written a decade ago. Thie issues and debates still matter)

 

    The Rag Blog

 Social Movement History 

Social movement activism has spread like wildfire across the entire globe over the last decade. One group of scholars studied “protest incidents” in over 80 countries from 2006-2013. They found 840 protests in these countries with at least half motivated by demands for economic changes and democratization. A centerpiece of movements from Greece to Chile, to Spain, to Canada to the United States has been outrage against neoliberal policies (sometimes referred to as “austerity” policies). Fundamentally these policies involve shifting wealth from the vast majority to the tiny minority. In the United States, the Occupy Movement introduced an accurate metaphor for this transformation: the one percent versus the 99 percent. Moral Mondays movements in over a dozen states in the South and Midwest emerged as one large-scale protest against the imposition of austerity and the weakening of democratic institutions.

David Harvey, a political theorist, has posited a “co-revolutionary theory” about social movements. He argues that because there are so many problems in so many different locations in society political activism can and must start anywhere. If one is at a university or elsewhere in the education system struggles over “mental constructs’ matter. If persons are engaged in or near the electoral arena targeting politicians must be done. Work in the corporate sector, the media, government institutions are all sites for the application of political pressure and organizing. What needs to be remembered however is that all the separate struggles are interconnected and that activists need to understand how each struggle relates to every other struggle. Also, victory in one place and time does not mean that the goals of struggle have been achieved. In the end, Harvey argues that the interconnected crises relating to class, race, gender, homophobia, war and peace, and the environment are intimately connected to the capitalist system.

Further, activists debate the utility of political engagement around elections and legislation compared to mass movement activity. Some progressives have proposed as a solution to this dilemma, developing an “inside/outside” strategy. The inside/outside strategy argues for pursuing electoral work, electing candidates who might act on the people’s behalf, and lobbying to secure legislative victories, even if such efforts cannot solve the panoply of economic, environmental, war, racial and other problems that are faced. Electoral and legislative work, however, needs to be supplemented by “street heat;” building a mass movement that can be mobilized to publicly demonstrate its outrage and its demands for change. The outside strategy might include creating a large, disciplined organization with resources that can respond to and lead the mass movement of people for change. It is through the outside strategy that politicians can be forced to carry out the will of the people.

Rev. William Barber ten years ago through his “fusion politics” approach incorporated all of the above thinking. Fusion politics, he said, emphasizes the need for progressive groups to work together in coalitions, in partnerships, in common organizational fronts to bring the energy of all groups together. Ruling classes or power elites do not respond to change unless masses of organizations and people come together to make demands. 

The 99 percent do not have the material resources- the money, ownership of media outlets, influence over education and police power-to bring about change. All they have potentially are their numbers. And the fusion politics model is about mobilizing masses of people, developing effective and democratic organizations, and applying people power all across the political and economic map.

Moving Ahead in 2025 the Following Questions Remain

1.How do we organize locally and statewide, particularly in “red states”

2.How do we develop in our literature and public agenda the view that what we are struggling against is a forty-year program of austerity, redistributing the wealth and power from the many to the few. And how can we effectively show that our local struggles parallel those in other states and countries.

 3.How can we effectively link our theoretical understanding of history, much like Rev. Barber’s provocative discussion of the three reconstructions, to the concrete campaigns we are engaged in

4.How can we take the general worldview and discuss:

   -the threat to voting rights

   -racist police practices

   -the transformation of a 150-year tradition of public education   into for-profit charter schools

    -the deregulation of environmental controls at the very same time that fires, floods, draughts are increasing

    -the rationing of health care and the rising cost of medication

    -the use of state enticements to bring investors who create low wage jobs that worsen income inequality

    -the use of government to destroy the right of workers to form unions of their choosing and to honor the work of those unions to defend worker rights

    -the support for war and violence everywhere and the danger of nuclear war

 These are the substantive issues that we face, now with a brutal new billionaire racist oligarchy.

 -the proportion of work devoted to inside and outside strategies

 -the relative weight and autonomy to be given to national, state and community organizations

 -the connections between socialist, labor, environmentalist, peace, anti-racist, feminist, educational and other organizations

 - the relationship between the varying decision-making bodies, local organizations and issue committees  

 - finally thinking tactically such as relating to Gene Sharp’s 198 forms of non-violent activity.

https://www.brandeis.edu/peace-conflict/pdfs/198-methods-non-violent-action.pdf

Conclusion

The world is in turmoil. Protests all across the globe have some common origins, causes, and solutions. While communities have their own problems they are not too different from those elsewhere. The ongoing work must involve addressing the particular while being cognizant of the general, building coalitions of shared responsibility and respect, organizing people power from the centers of power to the  streets, and reconstructing institutions that serve, not oppress the people.

Monday, February 3, 2025

RACISM ON THE CAMPUS: THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES (A revised repost from November 15, 2015 and February 1, 2004)

Black History Month: Some Purdue Remembrances

Harry Targ

                          Journal and Courier photo

If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Frederick Douglass

The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line. W.E.B. DuBois

What a proud contrast to the environments that appear to prevail at places like Missouri and Yale. Mitch Daniels

All across the country students, black and white, hit the streets and the campus malls to protest racism; structural and interpersonal. One thousand students rallied at Purdue University on Friday, November 13, 2014 to show solidarity with students at the University of Missouri and to announce 13 demands they were making to address racism at Purdue; a racism that the university president says no longer exists.

Of course, nationally and locally the struggle for social and economic justice is historic. Rev. William Barber, leader of the Moral Mondays Movement, points to the “Three Reconstructions” in post-Civil War American history. The First Reconstruction occurred in the 1860s and 1870s when black and white farmers and workers came together to write constitutions and to create a new democratic Southern politics. The hope this first reconstruction raised for a truly democratic America was dashed by a shift to the right of the federal government, the reemergence of the old Southern ruling class, and the rise of a brutal violent terrorist organization, the Ku Klux Klan. Racist policies, coupled with terrorism, instilled formal racial segregation in the South and subtle forms of institutionalized racism throughout the rest of the country. (A later rendition of the KKK dominated Indiana politics in the 1920s. See for example the powerful book by Timothy Egan, A Fever in the Heartland).

The Second Reconstruction, Barber asserts, was inspired by the Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court decision which declared that segregated schools were unconstitutional. With militant sectors of labor, a grassroots Southern civil rights movement revived all across the country. In the 1960s, it culminated in civil rights legislation that outlawed racial segregation and guaranteed voting rights. Also, the “war on poverty” was launched. Shortly after these victories, the Republican Party presidential candidate Richard Nixon employed the so-called “Southern Strategy” to shift federal and state politics to the right. The forerunners of today’s Tea Party (and Trump supporting MAGA) rightwing reaction expanded their political power at the federal and state levels. (and Nancy MacLean documents how opposition to the Brown decision evolved into a vast and powerful rightwing network in the United States financed by the Koch Foundation and other wealthy rightwing people and foundations, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radican Right’s Plan for America, 2017).

Rev. Barber believes that, with the movement that elected President Obama, there emerged a Third Reconstruction. It featured the mobilization of masses of people--blacks and whites, men and women, gays and straights, blue collar and white collar workers, young and old, people of faith and those who choose no faith--coming together to reconstitute the struggle for the achievement of a truly democratic vision. This vision is of a society that is participatory, egalitarian, and economically and psychologically fulfilling.

The Struggle for Racial Justice at Purdue University

https://youtu.be/lMaQyMyQpDc?si=8OmrAB9LTrLGA5ri

The resurgence of protests on college campuses over the last decade, although narrowly focused, represents the contemporary form of the kinds of struggles for social justice Frederick Douglass talked about.  For example, on the campus of Purdue University, the struggle for racial justice has a long history. For the first 60 years of the twentieth century the African American population was less than one percent of the student body.  The numbers of African American students grew to a few hundred in the 1960s. And in the context of the Second Reconstruction and activism around civil rights and opposition to the war in Vietnam, some students organized a “Negro History Study Group” (which later became the Black Student Union). In 1968, to dramatize what they saw as institutional racism coupled with an environment of racial hostility, more than 150 Black students carrying brown bags marched to the Executive Building. At the building they took bricks from the bags. The bricks were piled up and a sign “Or the Fire Next Time,” was set next to the bricks. The students submitted a series of demands including the development of an African American Studies Program and a Black Cultural Center. 

The demonstration was dramatic. The demands clear. The justice of their motivation was unassailable. Administrators and faculty set up committees to discuss the protests. And in the short run, only minor changes were implemented, such as Purdue’s 1968 hiring of the first African American professor in Liberal Arts. 

One year later, after an African American member of the track team was castigated for wearing a mustache and his verbal response led to his arrest, Black students launched another protest march with more demands. This time the Administration and the Board of Trustees authorized the establishment of the Black Cultural Center, which today is an educational, social, and architectural hub of the campus. In 1973, Antonio Zamora, educator, accomplished musician, and experienced administrator was hired to lead the campus effort to make the BCC the vital embodiment of the university that it has become. One of the leaders of the 1969 protest, Eric McCaskill, told then President Hovde by phone during the protest march and visit to the Executive Building: “We are somebody. I am somebody.”

History of protests at Purdue shows 'another world is possible' https://www.purdueexponent.org/city_state/history-of-protests-at-purdue-shows-another-world-is-possible/article_51b69386-b15e-11ea-8b76-b31b38228621.html

Forty-six years later one thousand similarly motivated students rallied together on Friday, November 13, 2014 on the Purdue campus. They expressed outrage at the systematic violence against people of color throughout the society and the perpetuation of racism in virtually every institution. On the Purdue campus they protested the lack of full, fair representation of African Americans on the faculty and in the student body, a climate on and off campus that perpetuates racism, and the continuation of all the old stereotypes of minority students that has prevailed for years. They also shared their solidarity with the students of the University of Missouri and they made it crystal clear their disagreement with the statement by the Purdue University President that the Purdue campus was different.

The organizers provided thirteen demands including:

-an acknowledgement by the President of Purdue University that a hostile and discriminatory environment still exists at Purdue

-the reinstatement of a Chief Diversity Officer with student involvement in the hiring process

-the creation of a “required comprehensive awareness curriculum”

-the establishment of a campus police advisory board

-a 30 percent increase of underrepresented minorities in the student body and on the faculty by 2019-2020

-greater representatives of minority groups on student government bodies

Frederick Douglass was correct.  Progress requires struggle. DuBois is still correct about the twenty-first century as he was about the prior one: the problem of our day remains “the color line.” And many of those who observed, participated in, and applauded the organizers of protests in 1968, 2015 and today at Purdue recognize  that the struggles are long, the victories sometimes transitory, and each generation of activists is participating in a process of fundamental change that will move society in a more humane direction. The generations of Purdue students of the 1960s and the twenty-first century are linked in a chain for justice.


The Struggle Continues as the importance of DEI Becomes a Political Tool 

Today, the percentage of underrepresented students continues to be low and various programs of relevance to educating all students, including underrepresented ones, of the mixed history and culture of the United States are being threatened with extinction, But Purdue University continues its commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Programs and principles should be celebrated and supported. And, this month, Black History Month, we should remember and pay homage to those students, faculty, and staff who stood up for programs that have made Purdue University a more comfortable and intellectually vital place for everybody.

https://stories.purdue.edu/vice-provost-gates-aims-to-transform-campus-culture/

https://www.purdue.edu/diversity-inclusion/about-us/what-we-do.html

 

The Bookshelf

CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

Read Challenging Late Capitalism by Harry R. Targ.