Against the Market Economy: Advice to Venezuelan Friends

by Robin Hahnel
Monthly Review
January 2008

Robin Hahnel is professor of economics at American University in Washington DC and currently visiting professor at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon. This article is adapted from a speech the author gave at the Ministry for the Communal Economy in Caracas, Venezuela on July 13, 2007, attended by both their employees and employees from the Ministry of Planning and Economic Development.

Robin Hahnel was a guest of the Centro International Miranda in Caracas for its July 2007 Workshop in Socialism and Human Development. During his stay, we arranged for him to speak at the Ministry for the Communal Economy. This ministry not only oversees and supports the significant Venezuelan cooperative sector and provides training in the principles of cooperation but has also moved recently to develop “socialist enterprises,” which work closely with communal councils. Since one of the principal goals of these organizations is to attempt to avoid the infection of the market, Robin’s talk was oriented toward providing them with important weapons for the battle of ideas. It will be obvious, however, that his demystification of the wonders of the market can be a weapon not only in the Venezuelan struggle but in the movement for liberation globally.

- Michael A. Lebowitz (October 31, 2007)

I am here to salute you – because you are attempting to do what nobody has ever succeeded in doing before – help autonomous groups of workers and consumers plan their interrelated activities democratically, equitably, and efficiently themselves. You have already created the elements of what you call the “social economy” – worker-owned cooperatives, communal councils, municipal assemblies, participatory budgeting, subsidized food stores, health care clinics, and nuclei of endogenous development. Now you want the cooperatives and communal councils to display solidarity for one another rather than treat each other as antagonists in commercial exchanges. And sooner rather than later you want the benefits of this kind of participatory, socialist economy to encompass the entire economy and all Venezuelans.

Putting to bed the trappings of NZ's colonial past

by Pete

A new constitution would be interesting to contemplate. It would probably go hand-in-hand with New Zealand becoming a republic, but that discussion would involve what we replaced the existing inadequate arrangement with. It's definitely about time that the British Crown was ditched as a controlling influence over Aotearoa/New Zealand.

While some may call for the retention of the Treaty of Waitangi - I don't see this as really necessary either. It would be more useful to put to bed such trappings of New Zealand's colonial past.

A new constitution might include mandatory state control of vital infrastructure and resources, along with nationalisation of key assets such as ports, communications, transport facilities. State provision of health and education resources and abolition of the user pays mentality should be included, as well as consideration of military training for those not employed or in training.

UNITYblog has asked the question: Do we need a new constitution for Aotearoa? If you would like to have your thoughts on this issue posted on UNITYblog send to editor@unityblognz.com

See also:

People’s Procession to Parliament

From 20 September to 4 October, a People's Procession to Parliament will carry the hugely popular petition to scrap GST on food through the towns and cities of the North Island from Kaitaia to Wellington. The petition to date has gathered over 15,000 signatures.

As we stop at each town we will be gathering more signatures, so if you live in the area be sure that you are there so that your voice and opinion is heard! We'll be delivering the petition to the steps of the Beehive.

Our goal is to force Parliament to finally stop ignoring the voice of the people who are clamouring for a fair tax system which doesn't penalise New Zealanders for providing themselves and their families with the necessities of life.

If you feel you can help make the People's Procession to Parliament a success in your town contact:

Grant Morgan
procession organiser
021 2544 515
grantmorgan@paradise.net.nz

Visit the RAM website for more details and updates: ram.org.nz

The People's Procession Itinerary:

Saturday 20 September
● Kaitaia
● Kerikeri

Sunday 21 September
Leg 1:
● Kawakawa/Moerewa
● Kaikohe
Leg 2:
■ Dargaville

Monday 22 September
● Whangarei

Tuesday 23 September
Leg 1:
■ Warkworth
■ Orewa
Leg 2:
● Wellsford
● Helensville

Wednesday 24 September
● Greater Auckland

Thursday 25 September
● Greater Auckland

Friday 26 September
● Greater Auckland

Saturday 27 September
● Greater Auckland

Sunday 28 September
Leg 1:
● Huntly
● Hamilton
Leg 2:
■ Tauranga
■ Whakatane

Monday 29 September
Leg 1:
● Tokoroa
● Rotorua
Leg 2:
■ Gisborne

Tuesday 30 September
Leg 1:
● Taupo
● Wanganui
Leg 2:
■ Napier
■ Hastings

Wednesday 1 October
Leg 1:
● Fielding
● Palmerston North
Leg 2:
■ Dannevirke
■ Masterton

Thursday 2 October
Leg 1:
● Levin
● Porirua
Leg 2:
■ Upper Hutt
■ Lower Hutt

Friday 3 October
● Wellington

Saturday 4 October
● Gathering at Parliament

Small parties lose their gloss, giving National a big lead

by Auckland union activist

According to recent poll results Labour remains steady, but National has gained at the expense of the smaller parties.

While Labour's support has not moved down, Labour has failed to capture the imagination of new grassroots voters for their centrist politics.

And their chances of governing again are slipping as voter support for the smaller parties, particularly the Greens, appears to be weakening.

In my opinion where the smaller left leaning parties have failed, is by becoming captured by the Labour government, dragging them to the right. This happened most spectacularly in the past with the Alliance, and now we see the same process occurring with the Greens.

This has obviously made them indistinguishable from Labour to grassroots voters.

Potentially the People's Procession to Parliament, which will be delivering the message to the politicians that people don’t want their food taxed, could tap into the mood for change for the left.

RAM, a people’s movement, which will be standing a full list of candidates for the party vote and a number of electoral candidates, could be an attractive option for grassroots voters disillusioned with the other parties.

To beat National we need RAM to succeed.

See Nat's Romping Ahead from the Dominion Post, 16 August 2008.

Visit RAM's website http://www.ram.org.nz/

A revolutionary constitution based on Tikanga Maori

UNITYblog has asked the question: Do we need a new constitution for Aotearoa? If you would like to have your thoughts on this issue posted on UNITYblog send to editor@unityblognz.com

Our first response to the question is from Penehamine Netana-Patuawa.

Tena koutou katoa. E mihi ana ahau i te Matua nui i te Rangi. Ko Mahuhu ki te Rangi te waka. Ko Ngati Whatua raua ko Te Roroa nga iwi. Ko Taita raua ko Waikaraka nga marae. Ko Maunganui te maunga. Ko Kaihu te awa. Ko Waipoua te ngahere. Ko Omamari te moana. Ko Raroa toku Papa. Ko Betty toku Mama. Ko Penehamine Netana-Patuawa taku ingoa. No reira tena koutou tena koutou tena no tatou katoa.Any written constitution must be revolutionary in nature.

The word revolution can be divided into two parts: Revolve; Evolution. Each part is separate, yet linked. Revolve, to turn completely around. Evolution, to progress and change.

Thailand: Free transit services by bus, rail launched to help low-income earners

from MCOT, Malaysia
1 August 2008


A new Thai government-sponsored package containing six measures designed to assist the low-income public, including both free bus and train fares for six months, was launched on Friday.

Acting State Railway of Thailand (SRT) governor Thawil Samnakhon said on Modernine TV Friday morning that he expected the free rides which are now being offered on third-class and non-air-conditioned trains would increase the daily passenger volume between 15-20 per cent as compared to previous ridership.

Assessment of traffic routes which are most heavily used by travelers will be conducted so that the SRT could increase its services to cope with passenger demand, he said.

The SRT is expected to lose about Bt250 million in revenue, Mr. Thawil said, but the government will help pay for the losses.

Meanwhile, Pinet Puapattanakul, director of the state-run Bangkok Mass Transit Authority (BMTA), said his agency had already prepared 800 buses for to serve the increased volume of Bangkok passengers.

Mr. Pinet said bus services would remain unchanged although the bus agency does not collect fees. Service assessment will be made this week which could be used for improving bus services in future.

All six measures are being implemented from Friday, except for the reduction of excise tax on fuel which began July 25. The measures are aimed at boosting the Thai economy, which has become sluggish due to soaring oil prices, and also to assist the poor and low income wage-earners.

The measures concerned are cuts in excise taxes on fuel, postponing an increase in prices for liquefied petroleum gas used by private householders and the free use of tap water by households using less than 50 cubic metres per month. The government will absorb the cost.

The other measures are the free use of electricity of less than 80 units per month by households, with the government shouldering the expense, while for households using less than 150 units per month the government can pay half the bill, free travel on 800 ordinary buses operated by BMTA on 73 routes within Bangkok and its outlying areas, and free travel on third class railway carriages.

Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej has said the measures will cost the government about Bt46 billion (US$1.4 billion).

NBR, Robert Fisk, the media and Tuhoe

by Auckland union activist

The National Business Review (NBR) attempt to belittle international prize winning journalist Robert Fisk for meeting with Tuhoe activists at a Glen Innes Marae, indirectly labeling him a traitor by calling him "Beirut Bob", a clear reference to such names as, Hanoi Hanna, or Tokyo Rose.

However the NBR seems to target most of its bile at the rest of the New Zealand media for daring to stray from the anti-terror script and accuses them of "rapturous media sycophancy".

Coming from one of the Washington's biggest war on terror sycophants in this country, it is, excuse the pun, a bit rich even for the NBR.

Realising they may have lost this particular media battle,"Pity the nation" is the NBR's final bitter comment.

Obviously the NBR are uncomfortable with any journalistic spotlight being shown on this particular scab on New Zealand's recent history, and would be far happier if their pro-war right wing journalism was the only voice allowed. The NBR berates the rest of the media here for not obeying the unwritten rules of self censorship that the 'International War on Terror' demands.

See NBR's article Fisky business (15 August 2008)

UNITYblog Question: Do we need a new constitution for Aotearoa?

UNITYblog is going to begin asking regular questions on important political, social and ideological issues. We will be posting the answers we receive up on UNITYblog.

The goal is to generate some lively and intelligent debate that will help us understand the world today and what we need to do to make the transition away from the market towards a human centred society.

The first UNITYblog question is:

Do we need a new constitution for Aotearoa?

If so, what might a new constitution look like? And how do we go about achieving a new constitution?

Your answers can be any length, short or long. Send to editor@unityblognz.com They can be anonymous, or provide a name and how you wish to be identified.

All contributions must comply with UNITYblog policy of not posting sectarian, silly or personal content.

I look forward to your responses.

In solidarity,
Vaughan Gunson
UNITYblog editor
email: editor@unityblognz.com
ph/txt: 021-0415 082


See also

Bolivarian University of Venezuela: Five Years of Alternative Education and Social Transformation


from Bolivarian News Agency (ABN), Caracas
2 August 2008

This institution has a student registration of 189,000 students in its main branches and the so-called municipal villages (satellite classrooms); 2,900 technicians have graduated between 2006 and 2007. At the end of the first semester of 2008, a further 1,900 students graduated.

The Bolivarian University of Venezuela (UBV, Spanish acronym) has reached its fifth anniversary working for an alternative paradigm aimed at building new forms of social interaction.

Russel Norman: speech to parliament on FTA with China


This trade agreement between New Zealand and China fails to protect the sovereignty of the democratically elected Government of New Zealand, and it places significant restrictions on the future ability of the New Zealand Government and Parliament to pass regulations to protect the people and environment of Aotearoa New Zealand.

There are many reasons why the New Zealand Government should not have signed this preferential trade agreement with China, not least of which is the fact that New Zealand signed this agreement while China was involved in the murderous oppression of the people of Tibet. It is also of grave concern that this agreement has no binding labour or environmental standards. The lower wages and standards in China will effectively be a non-tariff barrier to fair trade, giving corporations that pollute or pay inhumane wages a competitive advantage over those that do not.

MARXIST FORUM: A People's Constitution for Aotearoa?

Over the last two decades the Treaty of Waitangi and the “principle of partnership” between Maori and the Crown has been progressively worked into NZ’s constitutional framework.

But both Labour and National have made it clear, through actions such as the seabed and foreshore legislation and opposition to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, that the principles of the Treaty have secondary status to the power of the state. This has led many to the conclusion that the “partnership” is one-sided.

In the latest Socialist Worker quarterly UNITY, Vaughan Gunson puts the case for a new “people’s constitution”, based on the principles of humanity, ecology, co-operation, equity and democracy. Such a constitution would only come about through a mass movement of Maori and other grassroots people. See A People's Constitution for Aotearoa?

Daphne Lawless, editor of Unity, will examine the debate on constitutional change and look at the process of forming a new people’s constitution that has taken place in Venezuela. Could such a process happen in NZ?

WHEN: 2pm, Sunday 31 August

WHERE: Socialist Centre, 86 Princes St, Onehunga, Auckland


For more details phone 634 3984 or email office@sworker.pl.net

A People's Constitution for Aotearoa?

Could the Treaty of Waitangi be incorporated into a re-founded people's constitution of Aotearoa?

by Vaughan Gunson
from UNITY journal
July 2008

Last year the United Nations produced a Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People which had been 24 years in the drafting. It was finally presented to the UN General Assembly to be ratified. The vote: 143 for and only 4 against. The countries that opposed this reasonable, but far from radical, declaration were the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.

Maori in this country were outraged. Dr Pita Sharples, Maori Party co-leader, said it was “shameful to the extreme, that New Zealand voted against the outlawing of discrimination against Indigenous People; voted against justice, dignity and fundamental freedoms for all.”

The reason Helen Clark’s Labour government gave for voting against the declaration was that the definitions of self-determination extended to the exclusive control of territorial resources. This, they said, threatened the sovereignty of the nation state. Echoing claims made by former National Party leader Don Brash in his infamous “race speech” of 2004, the government claimed that the UN declaration was “discriminatory” and could see “separatist minorities breaking up countries”.

Continue

Federico Fuentes on the regional elections in Venezuela

Hear Federico Fuentes, Green Left Weekly correspondent in Caracas, speaking on community radio about the lead up to the regional elections this November in Venezuela, and the prospects of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV). Go to http://links.org.au/node/561

Rumblings of industrial unrest spark warnings for National

by Matt McCarten
from
NZ Herald
3 August 2008

Something is stirring among the workers. I can't quite put my finger on it yet, but if National does win the next election I don't think it will share the same passive relationship Labour's had with New Zealand's working poor.

I'm sure this has a lot to do with the fact Labour introduced four weeks' annual leave, effectively abolished youth rates, brought in the Working for Families package, raised the minimum wage by $3 in the last term and generally gave workers more legislative protections.

But it seems although the economy is weakening, workers' expectations are not. Employers have had a great couple of decades in which industrial power has been in their favour. It's been up to the current Government to pass pro-worker policies, largely with the support of the Greens, Maori and New Zealand First parties.


The Beijing 2008 Olympic Logo

Australian Climate Activists Plan Week of Protests


Call issued by the organising committee for the July 5 Climate Emergency rally in Melbourne

Climate change is already occurring, much faster than the world’s scientists have predicted. Recent data including the very real possibility of the arctic sea-ice melting by September this year demonstrate that this is a climate emergency.

We are concerned that the Australian government’s proposed Emissions Trading Scheme will be full of loopholes and by the government’s own admission will allow emissions to continue rising for some years. We believe such incremental measures are unacceptable: We need greenhouse emissions to start to fall immediately and sharply.

To begin to solve the problem we need action on many fronts including:

  • No new coal;
  • Massive public spending on renewable energy;
  • More public transport not new freeways;
  • End logging of old growth forests.

We call for a national week of protests across Australia at the Spring Equinox, in the week beginning September 21. This week of action can highlight the summer melt of the Arctic ice and other worrying signs that demand urgent measures to de-carbonize the economy from state and Federal governments.

We ask climate change campaign groups and networks and all environmentally concerned organizations across Australia to work together for a coordinated and effective week of public protest around these themes.

Solar Power Breakthrough


by Environmental News Service (ENS)
5 August 2008


Within 10 years, homeowners could power their homes in daylight with solar photovoltaic cells, while using excess solar energy to produce hydrogen and oxygen from water to power a household fuel cell. If the new process developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology finds acceptance in the marketplace, electricity-by-wire from a central source could be a thing of the past.

Latest UNITY journal: ‘Tino Rangatiratanga mo te Ao Katoa. Self-Determination for the Whole World’


CONTENTS

5 Editorial: More than “kia ora”
DAPHNE LAWLESS, editor of UNITY

10 Marx, Engels and Lenin on the national question
NORM DIXON, Democratic Socialist Perspective (Australia)

27 Thirty years since Bastion Point
ROGER FOWLER, RAM co-organiser

34 Culture matters
PAUL MAUNDER, playwright

44 The Maori Party in their own words

51 Why Socialist Worker supports the Maori Party
GRANT BROOKES, Socialist Worker (New Zealand)

59 RAM endorses the Maori Party
OLIVER WOODS, RAM candidate for Auckland Central

61 RAM’s Indigenous Charter (draft)

65 Tuhoe: a long history of resistance
Dr RAWINIA HIGGINS, Victoria University of Wellington

80 Back in the mists of fear
MOANA JACKSON, author

83 October 15th: the colonial context
from http://www.october15solidarity.info/

85 Venezuela: from indigenous resistance to solidarity and liberation
LISA MacDONALD and LARA PULLIN, Australian Venezuela Solidarity Network

95 A people’s constitution for Aotearoa?
VAUGHAN GUNSON, Socialist Worker (NZ)

116 Australian government forces Aborigines off their land
JAY FLETCHER & PETER ROBSON, Green Left Weekly (Australia)

119 Feedback: contributions from Ondine Green, Vaughan Gunson, and Peter de Waal

To purchase a copy for $5 contact Len, email organiser@sworker.pl.net or phone (09) 634 3984

There are four issues of UNITY journal published a year. Postal subscription inside NZ $25 for one year. Offshore fastpost $NZ40. Make cheque out to 'UNITY'. Send to Socialist Worker, Box 13-685, Auckland, New Zealand.

Why doesn't the EPMU's Work Rights Checklist include the right to strike?



EPMU national secretary Andrew Little. His lips are sealed on NZ workers being denied their most basic right: the right to strike.




by Auckland union activist

The EPMU have released their work rights list. This list, which the EPMU describe as a basic checklist, omits the most basic of all work rights. I have read this list carefully, and missing even from the footnotes and small print, is the right to strike.

This is amazing, as the EPMU has been recently hammered because of the restrictions of the right to strike in defence of their members at Air New Zealand and Fisher & Paykel.

I wonder why on earth this basic right of workers, which is enshrined in the UN charter of workers rights, has been glaringly omitted from the EPMU’s Work Rights.

This omission raises some serious questions of the EPMU leadership.

Did the EPMU leadership leave out this most basic of work rights from their list because the EPMU leadership think that the right to strike is not an important work right? Do they really think workers and unions can make any gains, or even defend themselves, without the right to strike?

Is the EPMU leadership comfortable with the ban on strikes in the ERA?

Or is this omission because they don't want to embarrass the Labour Party, who have refused to repeal the restrictions on the right to strike which were at the heart of the ECA, and have instead increased the restrictions on the right to strike?

At some level I think the EPMU leadership probably believes in each one of these reasons for not championing the right to strike. But the most important one is the last.

See EPMU’s Work Rights Checklist

Solar Power to the Masses



Solar cells getting better and cheaper fast as oil prices soar, soon it will cost as much to get electricity from the sun as from the grid, and distributed small scale generation is the way ahead.
- Dr. Mae-Wan Ho




ISIS - Institute of Science in Society
Press Release
31 July 2008

Solar tops the world’s new renewable energies

As oil prices soar, solar power has been undergoing a boom, along with other renewable energies, which attracted more than US$100 billion investment last year in new power and heating capacity, manufacturing plants, research and development. Investment in solar power capacity and manufacture amounted to US$31.3 billion, while US$33. 4 billion was invested in wind.

Australia & NZ face worse crisis than America

by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
from The Telegraph
31 July 2008

The world's financial storm has swept through Australia and New Zealand this week amid mounting signs of contagion across the Pacific region.

Many fear the economic party in Australia will end badly Financial shares were pummelled in Sydney on Tuesday after investor flight forced National Australia Bank (NAB) to slash a £400m bond sale by two thirds. The retreat comes days after the Melbourne lender shocked the markets by announcing a 90pc write-down on its £550m holdings of US mortgage debt, an admission that it AAA-rated securities are virtually worthless.

In New Zealand, Guardian Trust said it was suspending withdrawals from its mortgage fund owing to "liquidity difficulties in the market". Hanover Finance - the country' third biggest operator - last week froze repayments to investors. The company said its "industry model has collapsed" as the housing market goes into a nose dive. Some 23 finance companies have gone bankrupt in New Zealand over the last year. It is now clear that the Antipodes are tipping into a serious downturn.

Continue at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/07/30/cnoz130.xml

One million names on US government "terrorist" watch list

by Jerry White
from World Socialist Web Site
17 July 2008

One million people including large numbers of American citizens are on the US government's so-called terrorist watch list, according to the American Civil Liberties Union, which held a Washington, D.C. press conference earlier this week to mark the ominous milestone.

Fastest growing party registered by Electoral Commission


RAM media release
30 July 2008


Yesterday the Electoral Commission agreed to register RAM - Residents Action Movement. (See EC email below.)

RAM is the fastest growing party in New Zealand. We have gained 3,000 members since late February 2008, when RAM decided to switch from being a Greater Auckland local body coalition to being a countrywide people's movement that contests parliamentary elections.

On average, RAM has gained 150 new members every single week since we decided to go countrywide. Not even the Big Two parties, Labour and National, can claim this recruiting success.

"At our RAM tables, the grassroots are telling us how worried they are about meeting their bills, and also how upset they are that both Labour and National are only looking after the rich people," said Grant Morgan, chair of RAM.

RAM will be fielding a long party list in the 2008 General Election as well as standing in a significant number of electorates.

RAM has issued our Ten Commandments - ten policy priorities - which offer immediate "common sense" improvements in the lives of grassroots people.

Heading the Ten Commandments is our call for GST to be removed from food. RAM's GST-off-food petition has already attracted 20,000 signatures. We will be taking the petition to MP's in a two-week People's Procession to Parliament in late September/early October.

"The People's Procession to Parliament will be a chance for the grassroots to get a fairer taxation system as well as having their voice heard in the election campaign, which is usually dominated by spin from the big political machines," said Grant Morgan.

For more information, contact:

Grant Morgan
Chair of RAM - Residents Action Movement
021 2544 515
grantmorgan@paradise.net.nz


See RAM's TEN COMMANDMENTS

Jonathan Neale's ‘Stop Global Warming–Change the World’

Reviewed by Roy Wilkes
from Climate and Capitalism
July 29, 2008


Two years ago, George Monbiot published Heat, a ground-breaking book which armed a generation of activists with the technical and scientific know how to fight climate change. Jonathan Neale’s new book starts in a similar vein, by explaining the science of climate change and by showing that the technology already exists to prevent it or at least to prevent catastrophic abrupt climate change. Climate change as such is already with us, and hitting the world’s poor first and hardest.

If Socialism Fails: The Spectre of 21st Century Barbarism






"Humanity is facing the alternative: Dissolution and downfall in capitalist anarchy, or regeneration through the social revolution."






by Ian Angus
from
Socialist Voice, Canada
28 July 2008

From the first day it appeared online, Climate and Capitalism's masthead has carried the slogan "Ecosocialism or Barbarism: there is no third way." We've been quite clear that ecosocialism is not a new theory or brand of socialism — it is socialism with Marx's important insights on ecology restored, socialism committed to the fight against ecological destruction. But why do we say that the alternative to ecosocialism is barbarism?

Latin America’s struggle for integration and independence

by Federico Fuentes, Caracas
from
Green Left Weekly
26 July 2008


Commenting on how much the two had in common — same age, three children, similar music tastes — Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa said to Mexican President Felipe Calderon on April 11 that "perhaps we represent the new generation of leaders in Latin America".

He added, however, that one difference still remained: Calderon had still not become a socialist. "Being right wing is out of fashion in Latin America … Join us, you are always welcome."

Venezuela: Encouraging steps forward for union movement

Rank and file union members in Venezuela marching
in support of the revolution

by Federico Fuentes, Caracas
from Green Left Weekly
19 July 2008


"As a product of four weeks of meetings between the different currents in the National Union of Workers (UNT), together with important union federations, we have democratically decided, in consultation with the grassroots, that [on September 19-21] we will hold a national congress.

"By no later than February next year, we will go towards a transparent, democratic process of internal elections."

Hone Harawira on the FTA with China

Hone Harawira, MP for Te Tai Tokerau

24 July 2008

I tera wiki, i whakanuitia ana a Rererangi Aotearoa e te Minita Tapoi e Damien O’Connor, i te whakatuwheratanga o te rere-kotahi, mai i a Beijing, ki Tamaki Makaurau.

Last week, Tourism Minister Damien O’Connor was heaping praises upon Air New Zealand as they launched the first non-stop service between Auckland and Beijing.

E mea ana te minita, “he marea hokohoko tino nui ki Haina, mo ake tonu”.

“This very important long-term Chinese market” was how the Minister put it.

Rolling the Dice Once Again - in Iran

by Glen Ford
from Thomas Paines Corner

Tom Engelhardt, the prolific intellectual engine of the Nation Institute’s daily column TomDispatch, recently predicted that the Bush administration won’t attack Iran because…well, because they’re too sensible to launch such a mad enterprise. In a July 9 piece titled: “Why Cheney Won’t Take Down Iran,” Engelhardt acknowledged the many signs that point towards an air assault on the world’s fourth biggestoil exporter by the United States, Israel or both. “Given the Bush administration’s ‘preventive war’ doctrine,” wrote Engelhardt, “which has opened the way for the launching of wars without significant notice or obvious provocation, and the penchant of its officials to ignore reality, all of this should frighten anyone”.

RAM's TEN COMMANDMENTS

RAM, a grassroots people's movement, has released it's TEN COMMANDMENTS for the election campaign. These demands will be "common sense" to many grassroots people. All of the demands undermine the market.

RAM will be standing a full list of candidates for the party vote and will be contesting a number of electoral seats. RAM's membership has soared to over 3,000, making it one of the 5 biggest parties by membership in the country.

Because Labour & National are political twins (the LabNats) a vote for RAM will be a vote for a grassroots alternative to their market policies.

TEN COMMANDMENTS

1 Remove GST tax from all our food.

2 $2,000 ‘baby bonus’ to every mum.

3 Lift minimum wage to $15 an hour.

4
Offer first-home buyers a 3% interest state loan.

5 Free lunches in schools serving poor areas.

6 Free tertiary education plus a student living allowance.

7 Free & frequent public transport in our main cities.

8 Offer cheap solar panels to homeowners.

9 Restore to workers their free right to strike.

10 Enshrine the Treaty of Waitangi in a new constitution to guarantee the mutual rights of Maori & non-Maori.

An A5 leaflet has been produced for mass distribution. If you would like copies of the leaflet email RAM chair Grant Morgan grantmorgan@paradise.net

Go to RAM's websit