Turn your nearest bank into a hospital

Here’s something useful you can do on Saturday instead of shopping, getting over a hangover or DIY. UK Uncut has made this helpful video showing how you can turn your local bank into a hospital. They have even provided a way of finding out where it’s happening near you but they probably won’t mind if you just go ahead and do it with some mates.

 

This is an emergency. The welfare state is in peril. Under the guise of ‘efficiency’ and ‘reform’, this government is plotting to cut the NHS and sell off what’s left. Andrew Lansley has claimed the government is in a ‘listening exercise’ about the proposed NHS ‘reforms’. But despite widespread outcry from doctors, nurses and the public the government isn’t listening to anyone apart from private healthcare lobbyists.

Let’s make Lansley listen. We want to keep our healthy NHS and fix our broken banking system. Whilst the NHS is being dismantled, the banks that caused this crisis in the first place have been left untouched. Reckless gambling, obscene bonuses and a global financial crisis are symptoms of a disease that requires a drastic intervention.

The banks are due a check-up. On Saturday May 28th, join UK Uncut’s Emergency Operation and transform your local high street bank into a hospital. Tell the government to leave our NHS alone; it’s the banks that are sick.

Turn HSBC into a hospital, fill Natwest with nurses, get bandaged in Barclays and operate in RBS. As usual, it’s up to you to organise an action in your area – so talk to your friends, your local union branch and anti-cuts group and then list an action on our website. All the resources you’ll need will be on our website, including a flyer to tell the public about the NHS emergency. Get organised, get creative and let’s make Lansley listen: leave our NHS alone and cut benefits to bankers.

See you on the high streets.

Travellers lower than worms for Brighton Greens

imageThere may have been a bit more liberal guilt and hand-wringing than you might have got from the Tories but the decision by Brighton council puts the town’s Green Party in an invidious position.

Twenty five traveller families have been evicted from their site to facilitate the transfer of slow  worms and lizards to allow construction work to proceed. The decision was taken at an emergency council meeting. The Tories would probably have evicted the families and scattered salt on the site killing the worms and saving a few quid in the process. The Green Party spokesperson councillor Pete West, presumably choking back the tears at the worms’ plight, said “the reptiles could only be moved in spring, which was why the action was being taken now.”

Joseph Jones, from the Gypsy Council said: “The idea of slow worms taking priority over people – it is amazing really to think animals take priority over people.” You can’t help feeling that a settled community would not have been dealt with in the same way, a point Jones reinforced:

“Gypsies and travellers are the lowest on anyone’s welfare agenda. They have the lowest health and education outcomes and have the most problems in achieving standards of human rights.”

Not just that. They were not even an alternative site before the eviction.

Caroline Lucas has not put a foot wrong since getting elected to Westminster. This decision by her party, which is the largest on Brighton council, rather gives the impression that they are not all as radical as her. It makes them look like a bunch of anti-traveller reptiles. Let’s hope others in the party have something to say on the matter.

More on this here.

Unite and PCS to coordinate action

image Two million workers in the UK joining together can fend off savage attacks on working people and their families.

That will be the message from Len McCluskey, general secretary of Unite, the country’s biggest union when he addresses the conference of the Public and Commercial Services Union, one of the country’s largest public sector unions and whose workers are at the front line of government cuts today (Friday May 20th).

Both unions will today sign a historic accord committing to coordinated action in workplaces up and down the country, in the first instance to defend support services in Ministry of Defence bases and prisons, areas already in the frontline of coalition cuts.

Unite says that as part of the strategy to stop the cuts it is prepared to ballot its members for coordinated industrial action.

Len McCluskey will warn that government’s ideological mania for outsourcing puts services at risk while pensions’ proposals could impoverish hundreds of thousands as the government raids workers’ retirement pots.

Such is the severity of the coalition assault on jobs, wages and the welfare state, prodded on by an ascendant business lobby, workers must become similarly organised if they are to save jobs, communities and services – and coordinated industrial action to make the government see sense cannot be ruled out.

Among the first areas earmarked for possible common action by Unite and the PCS are the Ministry of Defence, the prison services and government drivers.  The accord will begin to take effect next month when Unite’s members at key MoD bases respond to strike action by PCS members on June 30th, including a show of support expected by hundreds of workers at one base, Donnington.
Ahead of this, Unite will assemble representatives from around 100 key MoD bases to discuss strategic responses to threats to the support both unions’ members provide to the army, navy and Royal Air Force with industrial and direct action by workers both a possibility.

Len McCluskey will also urge the union movement to redouble its efforts, following on from the massive march against the cuts in spring this year, to communicate the alternative to the coalition’s deception that horrific attacks on public spending are the only response to the global economic downturn. 

Addressing the PCS conference, Len McCluskey, Unite general secretary will say: “The alliance – the unity – between Unite and PCS can and must be a major force for progress. We face challenges greater than for a generation.
“This Con-Dem coalition has thrown down the gauntlet to the entire working class and to everyone who believes in a civilised society.  Its aim is to dismantle everything and anything of our social gains which Thatcher may have not got round to in the 1980s.

“Working people – our families, our communities – did not create this crisis.  Our public sector, supporting the most vulnerable in our society, did not create this crisis. Nor did our pay, our pensions, our services.

“We did not create it. And we are not going to pay for it.

“This agreement between PCS and Unite starts to spell out the basic elements of a progressive and socially just economic alternative to the government’s plans.  And it commits our two unions to  dispel the myth that there is no alternative to the Cameron-Osborne strategy.

“We  will build up to still broader action, if needs be, later in the year. To be absolutely clear, we will be balloting our members, coordinating our actions with yours and with other unions and building broad and effective community support to stop this government’s agenda in its tracks.”

Some 28,000 Unite workers are employed at MoD bases around the UK, including those at Plymouth, Bristol, Lossiemouth and Kinloss.  The workers provide a range of support services to the armed forces, from vehicle maintenance to guards for the bases. They also represent the MoD firefighters who are threatened with the possibility of being outsourced to a private sector provider.  Without these workers, many bases will be non-operational.
A similar situation exists within the prison service where Unite represents some 3,000 ancillary workers essential to the safe running of the prisons.

The socialist case for Scottish independence

Scottish Socialist PartyOver 150 years ago, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels called on the working class of all countries to unite and fight for a socialist world writes Alan McCoombes.

At a time when there were no telephones, no cars, no aeroplanes, no TV and no radio, their internationalist vision represented an extraordinary feat of historical imagination.
In today’s world of the internet, satellite TV, high speed air travel, global capitalism and the World Social Forum, the philosophy of socialist internationalism no longer looks like a utopian flight of fantasy.

But what does socialist internationalism mean in practice?
“Imagine there’s no countries, I wonder if you can; nothing to kill or die for, a brotherhood of man,” sang John Lennon in his celebrated radical anthem.

Such a world may well be built sometime in the distant future by generations who are not yet born. But how do we begin to move from here to there? And how do we apply the principles of socialist internationalism to the 21st century world that we live in?

There are three key questions the Left has to address. We may not reach agreement on the answers, but even to ask the questions would at least be a step forward.

First, does socialist internationalism mean that we are striving to replace capitalist globalisation with socialist globalisation? Are we aiming to build gigantic socialist mega-states? Or should our more immediate goal be to build socialism from below – a socialism that is based on decentralisation, diversity and voluntary co-operation?

Linked to that is a second question. Should socialists be in favour of larger, broader states under capitalism? Is bigger always better? Do large-scale multinational states unify and strengthen the working class or can forced unity from above sometimes aggravate national conflict and resentment?

The third question revolves around the process of change. Will socialism be achieved as the product of a single big bang, a simultaneous, world-wide revolt of the working class and the oppressed? Or, because of differing national conditions and traditions, will social change be more fragmented and disjointed? Will it tend to develop at local and national level first, before spreading outwards?

For those who subscribe to the ‘bigger is better’ theory of internationalism, multinational states such as the United Kingdom represent historical progress. Whatever the social costs, the Act of Union and the destruction of the Scottish Gaedlltacht after Culloden paved the way for the rise of large-scale capitalism and the emergence of a powerful British working class. Any attempt by Scotland or Wales to break free of the United Kingdom today would be regressive step.

Logically the same arguments should be applied to the development of the European Union. Those trying to push forward towards a European superstate represent historical progress; while those Swedish and Danish trade unionists and women’s organisations who successfully campaigned against the euro were putting their own narrow interests above the greater historical project of internationalism.

Moreover, socialists in Canada and Mexico – and the rest of Latin America too, for that matter – should be advocating union with the United States of America on the grounds that such a continental state would unite hundreds of millions of working people from the Amazonian jungle to the Arctic Circle. After all, a manual worker in Toronto or Guadalajara has more in common with a worker in a Detroit car factory than with a Canadian banker or a Mexican landowner.

Unfortunately, all historical evidence illustrates that forced unity from above tends to inflame national division rather than eradicate it. The European Union, for example, rather than cementing international harmony has become a breeding ground for suspicion and division between nations.

The tides of anti-European resentment now surging through Scottish fishing communities are likely to foreshadow more widespread discontent as industrial communities in ‘Old Europe’ become increasingly pitted against the sweatshop economies of ‘New Europe’ after enlargement.

Swapping the Union Jack for the Saltire would not rid Scotland of inequality, low pay, pensioner poverty and the other problems inherent in any capitalist economic system. But it would allow normal class politics to develop more naturally than ever before.

Especially since the 1960s nationalism – in its broadest sense – has permeated every pore of Scottish political life. There are times when it has played a progressive role, for example magnifying the intensity of the campaign against the Poll Tax.

More frequently it has acted to deflect attention away from the real source of Scotland’s problems. Independence in and of itself won’t rid Scotland of these problems, but it would at least clear the way for politics to be fought out on the basis of ideology and class rather than on the basis of nation.

An independent Scotland would also mark an important democratic advance. From the 1980s onward, the Scottish labour and trade union movement spearheaded the battle for devolution.

Whatever the shortcomings of the Scottish Parliament, it has marked an important democratic advance, opening areas such as health, education, transport and the environment to public scrutiny and democratic accountability for the first time ever.

Yet there remains a democratic black hole at the heart of Scottish society. On the big decisions that really matter power is retained at Westminster, an institution which now has a virtually built-in, centre-right majority.

It is Westminster which will decide whether nuclear weapons remain on the Clyde, whether Scottish soldiers are sent to kill and die on behalf of George Bush, whether Thatcher’s anti-trade union laws remain on the statute books, whether pensioners should continue to be paid a pittance, whether the rich should continue to pay some of the lowest rates of taxation in the world, whether the minimum wage should be raised from its existing pitifully low level, whether asylum seekers should continue to be locked out of our empty, depopulated land.

A further reason why the Left should back independence is that the break-up of the United Kingdom would weaken capitalism and imperialism internationally. In Scotland, support for the union has always gone hand in hand with support for imperialism. Even today, the official title of the Tory Party in Scotland is the ‘Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party’.

The old British Empire has long gone but Britain continues to play a key role on the world stage as the staunchest ally of the US in its drive to conquer the resources of the planet for multinational capitalism.

The departure of Scotland from the United Kingdom would mean more than just the loss of a big chunk of territory. Scotland is a vital cog in the western military machine, with vital nuclear submarine and air bases. More than 80 per cent of all European Union oil reserves are in Scottish waters, while Edinburgh is the fourth finance centre in Europe.

The tearing of the blue out of the Union Jack and the dismantling of the 300 year-old British state would also be a traumatic psychological blow for the forces of capitalism and conservatism in Britain, Europe and the USA. It would be almost as potent in its symbolism as the unravelling of the Soviet Union at the start of the 1990s.

It is no accident that big business and the conservative right in Scotland are fanatically pro-union. The break-up of the United Kingdom might not mean instant socialism, but it would mean a decisive shift in the balance of ideological and class forces. Political attitudes in Scotland are not necessarily any more left wing than in some of those regions of England which have huge working class concentrations, such as Tyneside, Merseyside or South Yorkshire.

But on a national scale, for close on half a century, the political centre of gravity in Scotland has been more heavily tilted to the Left than in England.

That is reflected, for example, in the fact that the Tories have never won an election in Scotland since the 1950s. Media pundits down south may have proclaimed Old Labour unelectable in the 1980s, but Old Labour beat Thatcher hands down every single time in Scotland.

In 2010 a Westminster Tory / Lib Dem coalition was elected and immediately enacted savage spending cuts while the 2011 Holyrood election saw an SNP government elected on an essentially left of centre social democratic manifesto.

The one legitimate fear expressed by left wing opponents of independence is that the unity of the trade union movement could be torn asunder. But that fear is groundless.

Generations after Ireland won partial independence, a number of British and Irish trade unions continue to organise on both sides of the border. There are many US-based trade unions organised in Canada. There is also close collaboration between the trade union movement across Scandinavia.

In today’s world of global corporations, trade union organisation will tend to transcend international borders, though that may well be accompanied by greater decentralisation within trade unions.

Independence is not a synonym for isolationism. In today’s globalised economy, it would be no more possible erect a new Hadrian’s Wall today than it would have been possible for Robert Burns to hop on board a transatlantic flight at Prestwick Airport.

Nor would anyone claim that it’s possible build a fully-fledged socialist society in a small country on the edge of Europe. But what we can do is push forward in a socialist direction, blazing a trail which others will then follow.

As a general rule, social and scientific progress is not achieved by waiting until all conditions have ripened to fruition. The Wright brothers didn’t wait until the jumbo jet had been invented before flying across the sands of Kitty Hawk. Nor did Fidel Castro and Che Guevara wait until the USA was ready to break with capitalism before leading a revolution in Cuba.

With the victory of a majority SNP government on May 5th 2011 there will be an independence referendum in the next 5 years.

That will be preceded with at least a year of wide-ranging constitutional debate on the history of the UK and its relevance today. For the Left, there will no hiding place.

Silence will not be an option. We will have to spell out where we stand. Do we stand with the forces of conservatism on the side of the Union? Or do we strike out courageously on the side of change through participation in the Scottish Independendence Convention that could eventually pave the way to a new, socialist Scotland?

A quarter of a million public servants to ballot for strike

More than a quarter of a million civil and public servants will ballot for a strike over cuts to pensions, jobs and pay, following an overwhelming vote at the Public and Commercial Services union annual conference.

Ballot papers will be issued from next week and the ballot will close mid-June, with the first action possible later that month. The union is working closely with education unions who are also balloting over pensions or have already voted and taken strike action, bringing the total to 750,000 union members.

Delegates speaking in the debate talked about how the coalition government’s policies are wreaking havoc on their livelihoods, their families and their communities, and pledged their commitment to campaign against all cuts.

The government’s slash and burn approach to tackling the budget deficit will throw hundreds of thousands of public sector workers out of work, impose a pay freeze on those that remain, axe vital public services, and undermine hard-won rights such as pensions and redundancy terms.

The government has already made it clear it will implement Lord Hutton’s proposals on public sector pensions, meaning civil and public servants will pay higher contributions and work longer for a lower pension.

The union wants: no detrimental changes to pensions or the civil service redundancy scheme; a strengthening of the Cabinet Office-agreed measures to avoid compulsory redundancies; and an end to the pay freeze and a fair pay rise for all.

The conference agreed to: hold a national ballot in defence of jobs, pensions and pay; and continue to work with other trade unions to co-ordinate action for maximum impact.

PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said: “Everything we have ever worked for is under threat – but we know there is an alternative and we are committed to fighting for it and, if necessary, striking for it.

“The economic crisis was not caused by our members’ jobs, pensions or pay and it is shameful and wrong that the coalition government is attempting to scapegoat them in its bid to slash and burn the welfare state.”

 

 

PCS ADC 2011: Wednesday 18 May from PCS Union TV on Vimeo.

Regime change in Libya and elsewhere

imageThe situation in Libya, which commenced as an uprising against the Gaddafi regime,  before escalating into a protracted civil war, has now descended into yet another  western-dominated impasse writes Roy Ratcliffe. 

The logic now unfolding in Libya is leading in the direction of an increasing western military presence in order, as in the cases of Iraq and Afghanistan, to achieve an externally implemented regime change. There is now no foreseeable way out for either a Libyan negotiated peaceful conclusion or a untainted Libyan victory in the present civil war. Europe and the west has now permanently, and perhaps purposefully, prevented these two possibilities. They are unlikely to cease their interference.  The interim regime, now in control of the anti-Gaddaffi forces has toured Europe and the US, making ‘friends’ of people, who were their enemies before the uprising and who will remain enemies, particularly of the working people of Libya, after any future regime change. Any new regime, emerging out of the current opposition, will already be tied hand and foot by ‘mutual’ agreements to the wishes of the US and Europe.

Europe and America, supplied arms to Gaddafi and assisted in the training of his military, police and security forces, knowing their true purpose was to keep control of economic, financial and political power and its uses. The unfolding logic suggests they will increasingly use their advanced military weapons to end the current stalemate, by attempting to physically eliminate Gaddaffi, as they did with Saddam and Bin Laden.  Physical elimination, by drone, laser-guided bomb, cruise missile or task force assassination, is likely because to put him on trial would reveal to the world a protracted spectacle and extended detail of just where, when and with whom he had economic and military dealings. With a resolution of the current stalemate, however this unfolds,  Europe and the US will of course supply any new regime with sufficient hardware and training for exactly the same purpose they supplied them to Gaddaffi.  This purpose will be to manage the economy, in the interests of global capital, whilst the new Libyan elite enriches itself -perhaps in a less despotic manner – and by IMF imposed necessity continues to restrict the level of well-being for the poor and working classes.

Those radical individuals in the coalition of anti-Gaddaffi forces, who went along with the naive invitation for the western powers to assist them, will learn, if they have not already, just what dangers such tainted assistance can bring. The enemy of ones enemy is not by any means always a friend. The present elites in the ex-colonialist and ex-Imperialist countries of Europe and North America, as with their predecessors are well versed in using a rhetoric of help and assistance to camouflage their own real agenda. It is an agenda which is still irremovably attached to the dominant economic and financial viewpoint of their respective countries elites. In order to maintain their wealth and privileges, global elites, under the system of capitalism, have to keep wages down and profits high.  This is so even in times of boom, but it is more so in the present period of downturn and depression. The present struggles of ordinary working people, in the middle-east and north Africa, for decent standards of living, and the contemporary struggle of working people in Europe and north America – to retain some semblance of such conditions – is a struggle against exactly the same institutional enemy.

The system of capital is global and there is a ‘community of interest’ among the owners and supporters of capital. They are a global community, and faced with threats to their privileges, act like one.  This is why the political and military elites in one country help, or at least do not hinder, those of another country, in keeping down the ordinary people’s aspirations for a better deal under the present system. There are only two exceptions to this pattern. The first is in the case of a rogue leader or despot who, as a loose cannon, (such as Saddam, bin Laden, or Gaddaffi) threatens to de-stabilise the system in one way or another. The second, is in the case of a popular uprising turning into a revolutionary challenge to the existing order.  In both such latter instances, where the indigenous armed forces are too weak or potentially unreliable, then outside forces are invited in to support the regime.  The employment by the powers that be in Bahrain of Saudi special military forces in order to suppress ordinary people and ‘take-out’ the popular leaderships, has been now followed by the employment of Blackwater mercenaries by the United Arab Emirates. Despite barely plausible cover stories, such highly paid  mercenary forces are clearly employed, as they were in Iraq and Libya, to ruthlessly suppress any uprisings against the regime which hires them. In all these cases, the arms these mercenaries bear and the training they have received, comes from the advanced countries of Europe, North America and Israel. Yet because, they are employed by privatised capitalist concerns, they are not accountable to any pressure or institutional censure by ordinary people. They are thus able to commit any and every atrocity they feel desirable or which serves their and their sub-contracted employers nefarious purposes.

Against such powerful opposition from despotic regimes throughout the middle east and north Africa, and against the pro-capitalist political elite or the privatised profit-seeking mercenary enemies of humanity, the only force which can prevail anywhere, is that of the organised working classes. Their production of commodities and services, along with the surplus value they create in the process, is the foundation upon which all else, useful, trivial or detrimental is built.  The unique and essential position of the working classes in the global production and distribution of all the necessary commodities and services required for everyone, (including state and private armies) therefore, means they are the only ones who can seriously disrupt, dislocate or defeat the activities of those who seek to perpetrate crimes against humanity. The offensive and defensive actions of the people of the middle east and North Africa, will ultimately fail to deliver the lasting beneficial changes they desire, if the working classes are prevented or obstructed from taking a leading role in those struggles. The same is true of the defensive actions of the working people of Europe and North America.  In 2011, in the middle east and North Africa, the working class in general is trying to advance their wages and conditions, whilst in Europe and North America, again in general, they are trying to defend theirs. But both these current offensive actions and current defensive ones are part of the recurring war perpetrated against them by the international system of capital. We too, the working citizens of the world, blue-collar and white-collar, are in essence, a global community. We just have to learn to combat sectarianism, racism and sexism and begin to consistently act like one.  Meanwhile in regard to our present offensive and defensive struggles, it is worth recalling the following words of wisdom.

“At the same time, and quite apart form the general servitude involved in the wages system, the working class ought not to exaggerate to themselves the ultimate working of these everyday struggles. They ought not to forget that they are fighting with effects, but not with the causes of those effects; that they are retarding the downward movement, but not changing its direction; that they are applying palliatives, not curing the malady. They ought, therefore, not to be exclusively absorbed in these unavoidable guerrilla fights incessantly springing up from the never ceasing encroachments of capital or changes of the market. They ought to understand that, with all the miseries it imposes upon them, the present system simultaneously engenders the material conditions and the social forms necessary for an economical reconstruction of society. Instead of the conservative motto, “A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work!” they ought to inscribe on their banner the revolutionary watchword, “Abolition of the wages system!” (Marx. Value, Price and Profit.)

We deny all allegiance to this institution of royalty

imageElizabeth Windsor is scheduled to lay a wreath at the Dublin memorial to the 1916 revolutionaries. It’s fair to say that James Connolly would not be too happy with that idea and he was one of the rebellion’s leaders. Here is what he had to say on the occasion of a previous visit by the member of a caste that has  “fought every reform, persecuted every patriot, and intrigued against every good cause”.  It is pretty unambiguous and is a class based rejection of the institution.

As you are aware from reading the daily and weekly newspapers, we are about to be blessed with a visit from King George V.

Knowing from previous experience of Royal Visits, as well as from the Coronation orgies of the past few weeks, that the occasion will be utilised to make propaganda on behalf of royalty and aristocracy against the oncoming forces of democracy and National freedom, we desire to place before you some few reasons why you should unanimously refuse to countenance this visit, or to recognise it by your presence at its attendant processions or demonstrations. We appeal to you as workers, speaking to workers, whether your work be that of the brain or of the hand – manual or mental toil – it is of you and your children we are thinking; it is your cause we wish to safeguard and foster.

The future of the working class requires that all political and social positions should be open to all men and women; that all privileges of birth or wealth be abolished, and that every man or woman born into this land should have an equal opportunity to attain to the proudest position in the land. The Socialist demands that the only birth right necessary to qualify for public office should be the birth right of our common humanity.

Believing as we do that there is nothing on earth more sacred than humanity, we deny all allegiance to this institution of royalty, and hence we can only regard the visit of the King as adding fresh fuel to the fire of hatred with which we regard the plundering institutions of which he is the representative. Let the capitalist and landlord class flock to exalt him; he is theirs; in him they see embodied the idea of caste and class; they glorify him and exalt his importance that they might familiarise the public mind with the conception of political inequality, knowing well that a people mentally poisoned by the adulation of royalty can never attain to that spirit of self-reliant democracy necessary for the attainment of social freedom. The mind accustomed to political kings can easily be reconciled to social kings – capitalist kings of the workshop, the mill, the railway, the ships and the docks. Thus coronation and king’s visits are by our astute neversleeping masters made into huge Imperialist propagandist campaigns in favour of political and social schemes against democracy. But if our masters and rulers are sleepless in their schemes against us, so we, rebels against their rule, must never sleep in our appeal to our fellows to maintain as publicly our belief in the dignity of our class – in the ultimate sovereignty of those who labour.

What is monarchy? From whence does it derive its sanction? What has been its gift to humanity? Monarchy is a survival of the tyranny imposed by the hand of greed and treachery upon the human race in the darkest and most ignorant days of our history. It derives its only sanction from the sword of the marauder, and the helplessness of the producer, and its gifts to humanity are unknown, save as they can be measured in the pernicious examples of triumphant and shameless iniquities.

Every class in society save royalty, and especially British royalty, has through some of its members contributed something to the elevation of the race. But neither in science, nor in art, nor in literature, nor in exploration, nor in mechanical invention, nor in humanising of laws, nor in any sphere of human activity has a representative of British royalty helped forward the moral, intellectual or material improvement of mankind. But that royal family has opposed every forward move, fought every reform, persecuted every patriot, and intrigued against every good cause. Slandering every friend of the people, it has befriended every oppressor. Eulogised today by misguided clerics, it has been notorious in history for the revolting nature of its crimes. Murder, treachery, adultery, incest, theft, perjury – every crime known to man has been committed by some one or other of the race of monarchs from whom King George is proud to trace his descent.

“His blood
Has crept through scoundrels since the flood.”

We will not blame him for the crimes of his ancestors if he relinquishes the royal rights of his ancestors; but as long as he claims their rights, by virtue of descent, then, by virtue of descent, he must shoulder the responsibility for their crimes.

Fellow-workers, stand by the dignity of your class. All these parading royalties, all this insolent aristocracy, all these grovelling, dirt-eating capitalist traitors, all these are but signs of disease in any social state – diseases which a royal visit brings to a head and spews in all its nastiness before our horrified eyes. But as the recognition of the disease is the first stage towards its cure, so that we may rid our social state of its political and social diseases, we must recognise the elements of corruption. Hence, in bringing them all together and exposing their unity, even a royal visit may help us to understand and understanding, help us to know how to destroy the royal, aristocratic and capitalistic classes who live upon our labour. Their workshops, their lands, their mills, their factories, their ships, their railways must be voted into our hands who alone use them, public ownership must take the place of capitalist ownership, social democracy replace political and social inequality, the sovereignty of labour must supersede and destroy the sovereignty of birth and the monarchy of capitalism.

Ours be the task to enlighten the ignorant among our class, to dissipate and destroy the political and social superstitions of the enslaved masses and to hasten the coming day when, in the words of Joseph Brenan, the fearless patriot of ’48, all the world will maintain

“The Right Divine of Labour
To be first of earthly things;
That the Thinker and the Worker
Are Manhood’s only Kings.”