Archive for the ‘Communism’ Category

East Bay Legislator Foiled In Effort To Remove Ban On Communists … – CBS San Francisco Bay Area

May 19, 2017 7:22 PM

SACRAMENTO (CBS SF) Rob Bonta is an East Bay assemblyman who thought he was introducing a simple bill.AB 22 would have removed part of California law that bans communists from working in state government.

While it hasnt been enforced in about 50 years, Bonta quickly learned that when it comes to communism, legislation is not that simple.

When asked if he was now or had ever been a member of the Communist party, Bonta replied with a laugh, Yeah, of course not.

But tell that to people on Facebook who wrote things like Rob Bonta wants communism in California!

Currently, California law says it is cause for dismissal to be a member of the communist party. But Bonta says its already meaningless

Thats because in 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a federal law barring members of the communist party from working in a defense facility. It said, the inhibiting effect on the exercise of first amendment rights is clear. So Californias law would also be unenforceable.

My original intent was this would be a technical cleanup bill, said Bonta. Take [out] unconstitutional language clearly deemed unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court off of Californias law books. It turned into for some communities to be much more than that.

When it came time to present the bill on the floor of the State Assembly, some Republicans were strongly opposed.

Communism stands for everything that the United States stands against, said Travis Allen (R-Huntington Beach). Were for freedom, were for justice. Were for democracy. Were for the rule of law. And communism is none of these things.

Bontas Democratic colleagues also had concerns and several didnt vote for the bill.

And then there were the Facebook posts dozens of them targeting Bonta with virulent criticism.

Go to a communist country if you want communism, read one. Stop communism, Stop Rob Bonta, read another. You are a traitor with all us soldiers.

In the end, Bonta decided the effort to clean up the law wasnt worth the pain it was causing veterans and Vietnamese Americans, so he pulled the bill

There have been experiences in certain communities experiences with communist regimes that are incredibly negative and very painful, said Bonta. So there were some vocal folks from those groups who came forward and you know, that spoke to me.

Bonta said he has no interest in re-introducing the bill, but that he will continue to talk to the offended groups to make sure they understand his intention was not to invite communists into state employment.

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East Bay Legislator Foiled In Effort To Remove Ban On Communists ... - CBS San Francisco Bay Area

South Vietnamese Defeat Communism in California – Breitbart News

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Earlier this month, Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) proposed AB 22, which passed the State Assembly on a narrow vote, over the objections of Republicans, particularly those representing the Vietnamese community in Southern California.

On Wednesday, according to the Associated Press, Bonta announced he was shelving the bill and apologized to veterans and people who fled the communist regime in Vietnam.

TheSacramento Bee quotes Bontas apology, which specifically mentioned the lobbying efforts of Californias Vietnamese community: Through my conversations with veterans and members of the Vietnamese American community, I heard compelling stories of how AB 22 caused real distress and hurt for proud and honorable people. For that, I am sorry.

Bontaspress statement added: I appreciate the candor and heartfelt expressions of concern. As a member of the State Assembly and throughout my career as a public servant, I know that listening is just as important as speaking. I have worked to bring communities together and promote the values of justice, inclusion, equity and opportunity.

Assemblyman Travis Allen (R-Huntington Beach), who had opposed the bill from the beginning,was quoted by the Associated Press as saying: This bill is blatantly offensive to all CaliforniansCommunism stands for everything that the United States stands against.

The withdrawal of the bill leaves intact state law that defines communism as a national threat: This world-wide revolutionary movement is predicated upon and it is designed and intended to carry into execution the basic precepts of communism as expounded by Marx, Lenin, and Stalin.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He was named one of the most influential people in news media in 2016. He is the co-author ofHow Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

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South Vietnamese Defeat Communism in California - Breitbart News

Winning Design for Victims of Communism Memorial Unveiled – The Epoch Times

OTTAWAA Canadian memorial to those who suffered and died under the yoke of communism came a step closer to fruition with the unveiling of the winning design for the monument on May 17.

The winner, titled Arc of Memory, was created by Toronto architect and artist Paul Raff and his team.

The $3 million cost of the memorial, whose full name is the Memorial to the Victims of Communism Canada, a Land of Refuge, will be shared between the federal government and Tribute to Liberty, the charity spearheading the project.

The chair of the group, Ludwik Klimkowski, said in an interview that finally having a design decided on is a major step forward and hes pleased with the jurys choice, calling it intriguing and interesting. He himself was one of the judges.

Canada has been shaped significantly by communist repression, Klimkowski noted. In particular, Canada opened its arms to people from around the world seeking refuge from the pain and suffering inflicted by evil communist regimes.

Arif Virani,parliamentary secretary to Heritage Minister Mlanie Joly

As many as eight million immigrants, descendants of immigrants, came from countries oppressed by communism, he said.

Raff said that approximately 100 million people worldwide lost their lives and suffered under communist regimes.

There have been murders, there have been rapes, there have been people stripped of their possessions, their privacy, security, liberty, their communications, and freedomthis is not something we accept, he said.

This is something we need to commemorate, recognize, and call it for what it is.We have an opportunity and we are doing it now through a creative vision and a physical memorial to express that, and that our heart goes out to the victims.

Toronto architect and artist Paul Raff and his team created Arc of Memory, the winning design for the victims of communism memorial. (NTD Television)

Consisting of 4,000 bronze rods configured into a gigantic arc, the winning design is intended as a dynamic living calendar that would commemorate moments of suffering and injustice that eventually resolve into reflection and gratitude, according to a Canadian Heritage press release.

It features two curving wall-like metal frames totalling 21 metres in length and almost 4metres in height. The walls support the bronze rods, which are densely arranged along 365 steel fins, each pointing at a unique angle of the sun to denote every hour of every day over the span of a year.

There are more than 4,000 daylight hours in a year, and so every moment the entire calendar year is made visible and tangible, is given a sort of form, so that any moment in history, the anniversary of that can be identified, Raff explains.

This is the moment that the Berlin Wall fell, this is the moment that tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square, on this day in history.That is when it happened.Through anniversaries, that is how it keeps these memories alive.

The winner was chosen from a shortlist of five designs, the theme being the flight from oppressive regimes to the openness and democracy of Canada.

The announcement of the winning design wasmade at the Canadian Museum of Historyby ArifVirani, parliamentary secretary to Canadian Heritage Minister MlanieJoly.

I am confident that this design will honour the millions ofCanadianswho fled injustice and suffered under repressive communist regimes. This memorial will be a tribute both to those who fled and to theCanadianswho welcomed them into our beautiful country, Virani said.

The victims of communism memorial will sit in a corner of the Garden of the Provinces and Territories near Parliament Hill in Ottawa. (Gerry Smith/NTD Television)

The memorial will be built on a site on the west side of the Garden of the Provinces and Territories in downtown Ottawa. Construction will begin this year and is scheduled to be completed sometime in 2018.

This being the year Canada celebrates its 150th birthday, its a fitting time for construction to start on the memorial, Klimkowski said.

For a lot of immigrants like myself who came to this country, the Memorial to the Victims of Communism gives them an opportunity to say thank you to their fellow Canadians, especially during this year, the 150th birthday of Canadian history.

Raff said the memorial will serve as a reminder to future generations of the crimes of communism.

To commemorate the victims is to carry forward a message to future generations about the reality, the historical reality, of whats happened and what continues to happen, in a way that is striking and emotionally compellingstriking for them, for future generations.

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Winning Design for Victims of Communism Memorial Unveiled - The Epoch Times

Communism in Words – Jacobin magazine

My dads love of foreign languages began when he gave up bus-conducting and crossed the Channel to fight Franco and become a communist. In Catalonia, a fighter told him that if the International Brigaders had known Esperanto, they might have had more success. When someone at a party school called Esperanto petty-bourgeois then the line he was shocked and disappointed. He told me later, Hes wrong; its a good idea. Its communism in words. One day, everyone will speak it.

I loved this idea of a universal language. Its inventor designed it to be simple, and I learned it in just three months. In 2011, the Catalan Esperanto Association invited me to give a eulogy commemorating the International Brigadiers at their memorial in Montjuc Cemetery. They wanted it in the form of a tribute to my father, so I gave it in Esperanto.

In the early twentieth century, revolutionaries embraced this language, seeing it as a tool to build international solidarity. Esperanto faded along with many of those hopes as it faced decades of attacks from fascist and Communist states alike, but its legacy is worth preserving.

Leizer Ludwik Zamenhof (18591917) created Esperanto to be a global second language. A Lithuanian Jew, Zamenhof grew up under Russian occupation and amid the tensions between Jews, Catholic Poles, Orthodox Russians, and Protestant Germans. He identified miscommunication as the main cause of this trouble.

First, Zamenhof tried to create a standardized Yiddish to unify Jews across the Russian Empire. In the end, he abandoned it in favor of a universal language, whose name means the hoping one.

Underlying this project was Zamenhofs interna ideo, the belief that the language did not represent an end in itself but a step toward world peace and understanding.

He published his Fundamento de Esperanto in 1905, striving to maximize simplicity, efficiency, and elegance. The grammar has just sixteen rules, the spelling is phonetic, the nouns are genderless, and the verbs are regular and uninflected. He tested and expanded it by translating the Bible, Shakespeare, Moliere, and Goethe.

Esperanto shares some features with Yiddish and Ladino, Jewish lingua francas that had once helped erase borders. Some studies identify a Yiddish influence, though Zamenhof never mentioned one.

Esperantos vocabulary poses a problem for twenty-first century internationalists, because it comes solely from European languages. Aficionados have invented other constructed languages (conlangs), like Lingwa de Planeta, that include non-European words, but Esperanto continues to dominate the field.

Other conlangs like Ido, Interlingue, and Interlingua have remained tiny but resilient, but only Esperanto has truly stood the test of time. Today, just under one million people know a little of the language, and ten million have studied it. It has a stable but de-territorialized speech community.

The League of Nations supported the idea of an auxiliary language, and in 1954 UNESCO gave the Universala Esperanto-Asocio (UEA) consultative status. Various Protestant and Catholic denominations have tolerated the use of Esperanto as a liturgical language. The founder of the Bahai Faith supported the idea of a conlang; some of its followers favor Esperanto while others prefer Interlingua.

Critics call Esperanto artificial and acultural. But the distinction between natural and artificial is hard to maintain in the case of languages. Pidgins are also artificial, arising at an identifiable time and place, but many evolve into creoles, indisputably natural languages. Many states standardize and legislate their official languages. Language reformers invented much of the phonology, morphology, grammar, and vocabulary of modern Chinese. And writers often shape and reshape their mother tongues, as a glance at Shakespeares neologisms foul-mouthed, swagger, bedazzle demonstrates. If words adjudged possible can become actual words, possible languages can become actual languages.

Further, Esperanto does not lack culture. Some two thousand denaskuloj, or native speakers, have been raised in it, thus creolizing it. More than one hundred periodicals appear in it, and there are thirty thousand Esperanto books and several full-length feature films.

Zamenhof designed Esperanto as a second language to supplement, rather than supplant, ethnic languages. Today, the UEA has more than 15,000 members in 121 countries and holds annual world congresses. Attendance has remained fairly constant in recent years 1,252 attended the Slovakian congress in 2016, 2,698 that in France the previous year. However, its individual membership is falling.

Given its internationalism and pacifism, Esperanto attracted anarchists, socialists, and communists. Fascist regimes recognized its revolutionary potential and suppressed it.

In World War I, the UEA declared its neutrality, and the pro-war press reviled Esperantists as national traitors. Some eventually compromised with nationalism.

In 1921, red and worker Esperantists founded the Sennacieca Asocio Tutmonda (SAT, the World Anational Association), dedicated to the international class struggle. We should recognize this as the first red-green party, as green is Esperantos color. The SAT admitted delegates from all left-wing parties and broke with the UEA, accusing it of capitulating to capitalism and betraying internationalism.

In its early years, the SAT was closely linked to the Soviet Esperanto Union (SEU). While some Soviet Esperantists wanted their organizations to welcome revolutionaries across the world, loyalty to Moscow became its hallmark.

The SATs idea of nationlessness appealed to some Soviet Esperantists, and the two groups collaborated. Eventually, however, the Soviets became critical of SAT communists for cooperating with other parties. In the late 1920s, the SATs members outside Russia broke away to form the Internacio de Proletaj Esperantistoj (International of Proletarian Esperantists), which followed the Moscow line. Marxist opposition to the idea of nationlessness and the SATs increasingly anti-Soviet line contributed to the split.

Anarchist Esperantists and others preached anationalism in Spains Civil War. During World War II, the SAT faced intense repression in continental Europe and, since 1945, has devoted itself mainly to publishing. Although it wanted to integrate Esperanto into social movements, the SATs greatest postwar achievement came with the magnificent monolingual Plena Ilustrita Vortaro (Complete Illustrated Dictionary, 1970), which set a new standard for the language.

Dictators of all kinds have tried to exterminate Esperanto, which Ulrich Lins called la danera lingvo (the dangerous language). Of course, states try to stamp out many languages, such as those spoken by despised minorities or rebel groups. Esperanto is particularly vulnerable to these attacks because it has never commanded a social base and its speakers are widely scattered.

Hitler saw Esperantists as enemies of the state not only because of their pacifism and leftism but also because of their Jewish founder. In Mein Kampf, he condemned Esperanto as a secret language, portraying it as a Jewish weapon.

Two years after Hitler seized power, the journal Der deutsche Esperantist stopped appearing. Martin Bormann attacked Esperanto as a Mischsprache a mongrel language. Heinrich Himmler disbanded its clubs, and Reinhard Heydrich began annihilating it. A pro-Nazi Esperanto organization briefly appeared, but the Nazis eventually suppressed that as well.

A few Esperantists joined the resistance, while others continued to meet secretly. Many died in concentration camps, where some continued to teach the language; others committed suicide. When Hitlers troops marched east, they shot Zamenhofs son; his daughters died in the camps.

Other fascist leaders followed Hitlers suit. Portugal and Spain banned Esperanto as a threat to language purity. In Italy, it survived until 1941, when Radio Rome ended its Esperanto broadcasts.

The Soviet Union violently suppressed Esperanto after years of tolerance and even encouragement. Most Soviet Esperantists welcomed the 1917 revolution and rebranded their language as the language of the international proletariat.

Some Esperantists allied with the Movement for a Proletarian Culture (Proletkult), arguing that a new culture demanded a new language. For a brief moment, it looked like Esperanto would be taught in schools and factories the long-awaited breakthrough seemed imminent. But, in 1921, when the Communist International set up a commission to investigate an international auxiliary language, it came out against Esperanto in favor of Ido.

Despite this, Esperanto continued to grow. The Soviet Union broadcast in the language and issued propagandistic postage stamps for it.

However, the language didnt fit into the transition from internationalism to socialism in one country. The SEU was closed down, and, in 193738, during the Great Terror, some of its members were imprisoned or executed because of the paranoid idea that the organization had become vulnerable to manipulation by foreign spies, Zionists, and Trotskyists. After World War II, Esperantists in Eastern Europe faced similar repression.

In the 1950s, survivors in Soviet-bloc countries denounced the Esperanto ban. After Stalins death, a controlled revival followed, and Esperantists skillfully utilized Moscows growing peace movement. They restored links to the UEA, and state subsidies began trickling in. Today Esperanto has a bigger following in Russia and Eastern Europe than in most other places.

Chinese anarchists embraced Esperanto as an auxiliary language in response to a broader campaign by other activists to make literary Chinese easier to understand. Some Chinese Esperantists in Tokyo and Paris believed such a move would open China to the world while preserving its cultural essence. Others, more extreme, proposed abolishing the Chinese language altogether and replacing it with Esperanto.

While the Esperanto craze among Chinese overseas died down, supporters at home won over leading intellectuals, including Lu Xun. For them, Esperanto would build internationalism and bring enlightenment to citizens kept illiterate by the complexity of Chinese writing. Esperantists also participated in the movement that campaigned to latinize written Chinese.

Communists in China also learned Esperanto, and used it after the Japanese invasion to seek out foreign support for the resistance. The Japanese female Esperantist Hasegawa Teru also known as Verda Majo or Green May went to China and joined the Klara Circle, named to honor both Zamenhofs wife Klara and Marxist theorist Clara Zetkin. Hasegawa tried to interest Chinese women in proletarian Esperantist writing and urged her comrades in Japan to call for a world boycott of their country.

The new Communist government in Beijing rewarded the Esperantists for their role in language reform by letting them teach their language in state schools. As in the Soviet Union, this government support didnt last long. In the early 1950s, the Esperantists were suppressed, but they were later allowed back. They suffered again in the Cultural Revolution, like many Chinese people with foreign contacts.

In general, however, the Cultural Revolution promoted Esperanto. Radio broadcasts in the language increased, and the monthly magazine El Popola inio (Peoples China) and other Esperantist literature flourished. Courses were held to teach the language and train cadres to work in the radio station and publishing.

At one point, Beijings Esperanto Association counted up to four hundred thousand speakers, and even today students can study Esperanto in some universities. After Chinas opening to the world in the 1980s, however, numbers fell as other languages became available. Nevertheless, Chinese radio stations continue to broadcast in Esperanto.

Does Esperantism have a future, or is it too quixotic and utopian to survive? The decline of the labor movement in the West and the collapse of communism in the East removed its traditional supports. Is its best hope to survive as, in the words of linguist Ross Perlin, a cheerful diaspora that lives on at characterful classes and congresses where diehards for the interna ideo mingle with fearsome polyglots and hardcore language nerds?

Esperanto peaked in the early twentieth century, when global French was declining and English had not yet become truly global. English, now the worlds primary language, faces rising juggernauts like Chinese, Spanish, and Arabic. If English is knocked from its ascendancy, it might be by a Babel of competing mega-languages, allowing smaller languages including Esperanto to survive in the interstices.

Some linguists see the internet as the potential savior for languages endangered by these global killers, while others believe these languages need real-world analogs to survive. For Esperantists, a digital revival would align with the languages history.

Esperanto developed not through a physical collective but in non-territorial communities linked by letters, phone calls, and occasional meetings. Today, the internet is connecting new Esperantists through forums, social media, WhatsApp groups, and online dictionaries. This community attracts young people, at home in the digital world.

In the transnational and wired world, Esperanto is bouncing back. Younger speakers are abandoning the languages narrow, inward-looking model and updating how it is learned and used. With their youthful creativity, they are reaching out.

[emailprotected], a loosely organized youth collective, uses technology to provide free, instant access to Esperanto. Where once you had to go out of their way to meet other speakers, now they are a mouse click away.

Several hundred blogs promote Esperantist books, games, music, and humor. The languages Vikipedio already exceeds 215,000 pages. More than 100,000 learners use lernu!, the free multilingual Esperanto website set up by [emailprotected], and 750,000 use Duolingo. Today, more people are learning Esperanto than ever before.

This second Esperanto wave does not compete with the first. The traditional wing embraces the virtual wing, and digital Esperantists rely on the manuals, dictionaries, and literature created in the analog age. In the past, supporters promoted Esperantos logicality and predictability; these attributes suit the computer age.

Zamenhof thought Esperanto could remove the walls between ethnicities and accustom people to seeing their neighbors as brothers and sisters. These values humanitarianism, internationalism, socialism are needed more than ever today.

He likened the language, in a metaphor recalled by Esther Schor in her Bridge of Words, to a plank lying on a riverbank that at some future point people might use to build a bridge. While no big bridge is currently on the horizon, there seems to be no end to Zamenhofs sacred dream of one.

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Communism in Words - Jacobin magazine

Victims of Communism Memorial Group Tells Networks to Stop Whitewashing Crimes of Socialist Venezuela – Washington Free Beacon

Protestors and National Guard personnel face off during a demonstration against the socialist government of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro / Getty Images

BY: Elizabeth Harrington May 17, 2017 4:45 pm

The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation is asking major news networks to bring attention to the violent tactics being used by the Socialist regime in Venezuela.

Media attention on Venezuela has been sparse, as the country is on the brink, with a food shortage, an inflation rate as high as 800 percent, and violent crackdowns and the detention of thousands of protesters who oppose President Nicolas Maduro.

Four more people were killed yesterday, adding to the more than 40 dead and 750 injured since protests began in March.

Marion Smith, the executive director of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, sent letters to the heads of CBS, NBC, and ABC on Tuesday asking the networks to adequately cover the violence and failures of the socialist country, which he says is closer than ever to becoming a communist regime.

"Venezuela has descended into complete and utter chaos as a result of a brutal, socialist government whose citizens are starving under its tightening grip every day," said Smith. "Make no mistake, this is a humanitarian disaster and socialist policies are to blame."

Smith said Venezuela's Marxist experiment began in 1999 and has transformed the Latin American country from one of the most prosperous in the region into a nation that has no access to toilet paper.

"With each passing year, what was once one of the most prosperous countries in Latin America became poorer and poorer," Smith said. "What was once a free country became repressive. Those who tried to reform the failing policies of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela were brutally repressed, imprisoned, and even murdered."

Smith warned David Rhodes, Andrew Lack, and James Goldston, the presidents and chairmen of CBS, NBC, and ABC News, respectively, that Venezuela is creeping closer to becoming a communist dictatorship. Communist regimes have been responsible for over 100 million deaths in the past century.

"Communism has been tried in more than 40 countries, and each time results in the worst and widest scale human rights abuses known to man," Smith said.

Smith said his organization, which serves as an advocate fordissidents in China, Cuba, Venezuela, and around the world, would not stand idly by while Venezuela's crisis is whitewashed.

"We, the undersigned, will not tolerate the obfuscating or whitewashing of the crimes of the socialist regime in Venezuela and the actions of its communist ally, Castro's Cuba, which now reportedly has thousands of military advisers participating in the violent treatment and murder of unarmed protesters," Smith said.

"As the president of a major media outlet that reaches millions of people, you have a solemn responsibility to report the truth as it relates to Venezuela," he said.

"Please don't let your viewers down."

The major networks' nightly newscasts have made only brief mention of Venezuela this year.

ABC World News Tonight with David Muir has mentioned Venezuela in two segments, according to transcripts analyzed by the Washington Free Beacon. The latest occurred on April 20, during a story about Maduro's government confiscating a General Motors factory. The segment mentioned the violent protests, including that three people were killed in 24 hours alone.

World News Tonight also mentioned the food crisis in schools on Feb. 14, and Nightline did a special on Venezuela's "descent into chaos" that evening.

NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt did one segment this year on April 20. The segment noted, "People are hungry for democracy" and said that Maduro's socialist government had seized companies.

CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley also has only mentioned Venezuela once this year, on May 4. Pelley said the protests began after the socialist president tried to grab more power, but blamed the economic crisis on a drop in oil prices.

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Victims of Communism Memorial Group Tells Networks to Stop Whitewashing Crimes of Socialist Venezuela - Washington Free Beacon