Against the Current No. 211, March/April 2021
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Transition, Trauma, and Troubled Times
— The Editors -
Health Care Inequalities, Racism and Death
— Malik Miah - Support Kshama Sawant
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Detroit Police, Image and Reality
— Dianne Feeley -
What About the Shootings?
— Dianne Feeley -
Analyzing the 2020 Election: Who Paid? Who Benefits?
— Kim Moody -
The First Fourteen Days
— Kim Moody -
"No One Is Coming to Save Us"
— Kit Wainer interviews MORE activists Shoshana Brown, Ellen Schweitzer, Mike Stivers & Annie Tan -
Puerto Rico's Multi-layered Crisis
— Rafael Bernabe -
White Supremacy and Labor's Failure
— Cody R. Melcher interviews Michael Goldfield - On Socialist Feminism
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Second-Wave Feminism: Accomplishments & Lessons
— Nancy Rosenstock -
A Socialist Woman's Experience
— Suzanne Weiss - Reviews
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A First-Generation Disability Story
— Brenda Y. Rodriquez -
In the Imperial Crosshairs
— David Finkel -
The Deadly Metabolic Rift
— Tony Smith - In Memoriam
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Gabe Gabrielsky: A Radical Affirmation
— Promise Li - Gabe Gabrielsky: A Few Facts
A DELAYED RULING by the Washington State Supreme Court will determine whether a recall petition campaign against Seattle City Council District 3 representative Kshama Sawant is allowed to proceed. Sawant, first elected in 2013 as an at-large member and then as District 3 council member in 2015 and 2019, is a member of Socialist Alternative and outspoken supporter of a $15/hour minimum wage, renters’ rights, a city tax on Amazon, and the Black Lives Matter movement.
In her reelection campaigns, Sawant has defeated candidates backed by corporate powers including Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, one of the world’s two richest men. The recall effort launched in 2020, ostensibly by one Ernest Lou who calls himself “a bleeding heart liberal,” is believed to be backed by a few big capitalists including developers. The pretext is Sawant’s allegedly “improper” behavior, such as opening the doors of city hall to a mass meeting of BLM protesters.
Sawant appealed to the state Supreme Court after a lower court ruled that the recall petition could proceed on the basis of four (out of six original) charges.
The decision has been pending since the first week in January. If allowed to proceed, recall petitioners would need some 10,700 signatures, 25% of the votes cast in the previous District 3 election, to get on the ballot.
Kshama Sawant was the first socialist elected to Seattle City Council in 97 years, and deserves the support of everyone on the left.
March-April 2021, ATC 211
In her reelection campaigns, Sawant has defeated candidates backed by corporate powers including Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, one of the world’s two richest men. The recall effort launched in 2020, ostensibly by one Ernest Lou who calls himself “a bleeding heart liberal,” is believed to be backed by a few big capitalists including developers. The pretext is Sawant’s allegedly “improper” behavior, such as opening the doors of city hall to a mass meeting of BLM protesters.
Sawant appealed to the state Supreme Court after a lower court ruled that the recall petition could proceed on the basis of four (out of six original) charges.
The decision has been pending since the first week in January. If allowed to proceed, recall petitioners would need some 10,700 signatures, 25% of the votes cast in the previous District 3 election, to get on the ballot.
Kshama Sawant was the first socialist elected to Seattle City Council in 97 years, and deserves the support of everyone on the left.
March-April 2021, ATC 211