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Peace and human rights: one fight

May Day and after, the issues connect

2006 marchers in Fresno, with Spanish banner 'America, we are your conscience, we demand residency'

Photo by Mike Rhodes

Protesters at a 2006 march in Fresno for immigrant rights hold banner demanding amnesty.

By Kevin Akin

Immigrant workers made up most of the crowd in some cities at anti-war demonstrtions in February 2007. Peace activists have been involved in planning and supporting demonstrations for immigrant and labor rights, particularly since the massive rallies on May Day in 2006, and have been involved in planning the May Day rallies in cities across the country in 2007. Increasingly, organizers of marches and vigils are using slogans that connect the struggle against aggressive wars abroad with the struggle for amnesty, legalization and labor rights for immigrant workers at home.

This combination of slogans is not an accident, but results from a real connection between the two struggles, for peace and for human rights. The Republicans in the White House and the Democrats and Republicans in Congress who keep voting to fund Bush's imperial wars also serve the corrupt corporations that profit by division of working people into native and immigrant, "legal" and "illegal," and from divisions by age, gender, language and race. The same corporate owners benefit from war and from exploitation of immigrants. To divide the working class, well financed reactionaries mobilize anti-immigrant fanatics like the Minutemen. An artificial crisis has been created around immigration, serving as a distraction from efforts to unite workers to gain higher wages, increased benefits, and improved safety through union organizing.

P&F sign 'Shut Down The War Machine'

Photo by Debra Reiger

This Peace and Freedom Party sign is carried in current demonstrations.

Under legislation adopted by both Republicans and Democrats, there is one quick path to citizenship -- joining the U.S. military to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. A disproportionate share of the U.S. casualties in these wars are non-citizens who have enlisted to gain legal status and citizenship.

According to polls, including the carefully-phrased and twisted polls commissioned by reactionary media corporations, the general population overwhelmingly opposes Bush's wars. A large majority of citizens also support changing immigration policy to welcome those who are working in the United States. But the Republican and Democratic Parties do not represent citizens, they represent their corporate bankrollers.

The Peace and Freedom Party, representing only working people, was the first party on the ballot to endorse the May Day 2007 rallies for peace and immigrant and labor rights. Continuing the linked struggles for peace and human rights, Peace and Freedom Party candidates will be running for federal and state offices in 2008. Meanwhile, the party's activists continue to work for peace, and for amnesty, legalization, and full labor and human rights for immigrants. Join them!



May Day rallies held across U.S.A.

As of press time, we have learned of May Day rallies in small and large cities around the country. Some emphasize immigrant rights, some emphasize peace, but most are centered on both issues.

All also mark International Labor Day, a holiday celebrated worldwide in honor of workers, and in memory of the martyrs of the successful 8-hour day strike on May Day 1886 in the United States.

Hundreds of other rallies are expected in smaller cities and towns. In some places, there will be Cinco de Mayo rallies with similar themes on the following Saturday, and rallies, vigils and marches will continue through the summer.

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