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08/07/2010

Historic gathering advances anti-capitalist outlook

Betsey Piette

More than its predecessor in Atlanta in 2007, the U.S. Social Forum in Detroit June 22-26 reflected the growing awareness that although the struggles at home and internationally have many fronts, they share a common enemy — capitalism.

marched June 25 to the Chase bank to make
the links between the struggles at home and
abroad during the Social Forum in Detroit. " border="0">

Activists of many nationalities and ages
marched June 25 to the Chase bank to make
the links between the struggles at home and
abroad during the Social Forum in Detroit.
WW photos: Bryan G. Pfeifer

The growing need to unite in an anti-capitalist movement brought an estimated 20,000 people to Detroit from all over the U.S. and around the world. Overwhelmingly these forces were youth, people of color, women, workers and the oppressed.

USSF participants had over 1,000 workshops to choose from, which featured such issues as the crisis of capitalism; climate justice and sustainable resources; displacement and migration; political repression and the prison industry; organizing efforts for labor; international struggles; housing, education and health care; racism and gender equality; culture; and political movements on the left, as well as how to deal with the right wing.

Workshops also addressed solutions, ranging from the struggle for more democratic rights to the fight to build a socialist world, with examples of how this is being done in Latin America, notably in Cuba and Venezuela.

Many of these workshops were organized and led by students and youth, and the broad representation of people of color was evident throughout daily events.

Detroit: Devastated but gracious host

Several workshops offered the opportunity to learn about the struggles against foreclosures and plant closings in Detroit from organizations leading these movements like the Moratorium NOW! Coalition to Stop Foreclosures, Evictions and Utility Shutoffs.

Tours of Detroit’s abandoned and vandalized neighborhoods caused by epidemic foreclosures and evictions were organized, although just a drive down Woodward Avenue exposed many empty lots as well as vacant and boarded-up apartment buildings and churches. Several USSF-goers stayed at the St. Regis Hotel, which offered discounted rates, only to learn that this historic building is also facing foreclosure. Detroiters whom delegates met expressed their appreciation for the attention the Social Forum brought to their devastated city.

Special thanks should be extended to the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization, whose members staffed the USSF office and handled many organizing tasks. Congratulations to Maureen Taylor and Marian Kramer, leaders of this organization, for their hard work in pulling off this dynamic event.

Words and deeds, solidarity

Those attending the social forum could, in addition to workshops, take part in People’s Movement Assemblies organized around geographic regions as well as broader struggles for economic and social justice. The theme-focused PMAs drew large numbers of participants and went into depth on issues, including strategizing around tactics for movement building. Some led to direct actions during the USSF.

Plenary sessions designed to bring together everyone attending the forum were held in the evenings in a cavernous space in Cobo Hall. The sessions started June 23 with a focus on movements in Detroit as the epicenter of the economic crisis. “From National to International” was the theme of the June 24 plenary, which covered the effects of neoliberal policies at home and abroad.

The final evening plenary on June 25 featured speakers addressing alternative solutions. A highlight of this panel was the address by Amenothep Zambrano, Executive Secretary of the ALBA Permanent Commission, who presented a comprehensive explanation of why capitalism only leads to more economic and social crises and why movements to build socialism such as the ones taking place today in Venezuela and throughout Latin America offer a viable alternative. (ALBA is the Spanish acronym for the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas.)

The Social Forum also included direct actions. In addition to the spirited opening day “We Have a Dream” workers’ march and rally on June 22, restaurant workers at the Andiamo Restaurant and their supporters organized an action in Dearborn on June 24 to demand $125,000 in stolen wages and just treatment on the job for the mostly immigrant workforce.

On June 25 a demonstration organized by the Moratorium NOW! Coalition, the Farm Labor Organizing Committee, and the Spirituality and Religious PMA drew 1,000 protesters. They marched to a Chase bank to link the struggles against evictions and foreclosures in Detroit with the fight of migrant workers at R.J. Reynolds in North Carolina, where Chase is Reynolds’ bank.

On June 26 at a rally called by the Zero Waste Detroit Coalition and organized through the Environmental Justice PMA, several hundred people gathered at the Detroit Public Library for a march to the world’s largest incinerator. This polluting monstrosity, owned by Covanta, is located in a residential neighborhood across from a public school. Participants included residents, environmental activists, union members and youth, many carrying eight-foot sunflowers with slogans reading “Clean air,” “Good jobs” and “Justice for all.”

Throughout the five-day gathering, participants also attended cultural performances, movies and social gatherings, including massive impromptu dance parties, and they browsed at literature and book tables where lively discussions were held.

The 2010 U.S. Social Forum was an important step in uniting and defining the movement needed for the workers and oppressed to successfully fight against capitalism. It will stand as an historic event in building that movement.

http://www.workers.org/2010/us/ussf_0708/

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