BASICS Issue #25

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BASICS Free Community Newsletter Artwork: Noaman Ali

THEY DON’T DESERVE OUR VOTE! LET’S ORGANIZE! •

INTERNATIONAL WORKERS’ DAY MARCH AND RALLY Sunday, May 1, 1pm - Christie Pits FREE COMMUNITY FESTIVAL April 30, 12-5pm SEE PG 4 & 8 FOR DETAILS

BASICSnews.ca

Ford’s Move to Privatize Social Housing Special TCHC Housing Issue: • An Appeal to TCHC Tenants >>PG. 1 • Ford’s City Hall Moves to Attack Social Housing >>PG. 2 • TCHC Tenants: Watch out for ‘Public Interest’ >>PG. 2 • Bill 140: Opening the door to TCHC privatization >>PG. 3

What is to be done? effectively An Appeal to TCHC Tenants City-Wide can launch a massive

Shafiqullah aziz TCHC Resident, Cataraqui As the current situation with TCHC unfolds – Bill 140 threatening to throw open the door to the privatization of social housing, the firing of all members of the former TCHC board, the approval by Ootes to sell 22 units, with a one-man TCHC board occupied by Case Ootes, among many other actions – it is clear that the working class tenants of TCHC housing are being bombarded from all sides by provincial and municipal governments. So the question arises, what should we do about this? What

should the working poor TCHC tenants do about the possible privatization of the management and ownership of their homes? The answer lies in the tested, tried, and true method of grass-roots community organizing, led by tenants, for tenants, and to the benefit of the greatest amount of tenants as possible. Not only is this one of the only methods that can be effectively used by tenants throughout the city, it is by far the strongest. What does grass-roots community organizing actually mean? It basically follows the idea that we as tenants, as individuals separate from any existing NGOs or governmental bodies,

DUDLEY LAWS

1934-2011 Dr. Chris Harris a.k.a.Wasun When I reflect on the life of my comrade and elder, Dudley Laws, two words come to mind: professional revolutionary. One of the reasons I have become so dedicated to the revolutionary struggle to transform Canadian society is because I worked so closely with Dudley from 2000 to 2009. In the tradition of Marcus Garvey, Harriet Tubman, and Malcolm X, Dudley was an extraordinary figure, a monu-

mental historical personality of Black working-class origin. Dudley was a Black Garveyite leader who dedicated his life to the struggle for the liberation of all African people in the PanAfrican world. As a Jamaican emigrant to London, England in the 1950s, Dudley was an anti-racist, fighting white supremacist groups, such as the Teddy Boys, in the streets. The Teddy Boys were a fascist gang responsible for the 1958 Notting Hill Race Riots against Caribbean immigrants

campaign to bring the threat of privatization of our homes to a grinding halt. There are many ways that this may come about, and the key principle here is to empower ourselves to take control of matters that will directly affect our lives. Currently there are approximately 165,000 tenants living in TCHC housing, and with numbers of this size, there is a lot of progress that tenants can make by working together in one large, united collective. Essentially, tenants would reach out to their neighbours, family and friends who all live in TCHC housing to stop the possible privatization of our homes.

This approach must be used in as many communities as possible throughout the city. Spreading the word by going door to door, carrying conversations with community members, posting agitational materials throughout your neighbourhood, urging tenants to join in the struggle to keep our homes from being privatized are all tactics that may be used to gain support and solidify the power of the tenants. These efforts and strategies must be guided by an organization whose general membership and leadership is comprised of TCHC tenants. Here are some guidelines to think about for the creation of such an organization: 1. The organization must have >> continued, Pg. 3

to “keep Britain White.” As an immigrant to Canada in 1965, he became a leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Toronto during the Canadian Black Power movement. In the late 1970s and 1980s, Dudley will forever be remembered as the man who single-handedly took on the Metropolitan Toronto Police force in solidarity with hundreds of African-Canadians and our allies in other oppressed communities. Thanks to Dudley’s leadership of the struggle against police brutality in Toronto, there was a significant decline in the number of police shootings and murders of civilians in the 1990s. Despite the recent escalation of the police murder of civilians, particularly Black working-class youth in the past five years, new youth-led organizations, inspired by Dudley’s example, have emerged to challenge police brutality in Toronto, including Justice4Alwy, BASICS, and Toronto InPDUM (International People’s Democratic Uhuru

Movement). Dudley’s contribution in the struggle for African-Canadian liberation was in part his recognition that the struggle must continue through the youth. That is why he dedicated the last decade of his life to mentoring Black Action Defense Committee (BADC) youth activists such as myself, so we could carry the struggle forward. From 2008 to 2009, Dudley implemented a weekly discussion group at the BADC office called “Intellectual Discussions” to help facilitate the “Battle of Ideas” necessary to cultivate vanguard leaders who could continue the anti-racist work to which he dedicated his life. I remember how during Intellectual Discussions we would argue over the legitimacy of U.S. President Barrack Obama. Dudley maintained a more bourgeois Black-Nationalist political outlook throughout his life, so he ended up supporting the election of Obama, whereas I was against Obama, a pro-

BASICS #25 APR / MAY 2011

May 2, 2011 Federal Elections

Can Voting Bring Real Change?

When in power, provincially or federally, the three main electoral parties have led anti-worker offensives and have disregarded Indigenous peoples’ treaty rights. All these leaders support the wars in Afghanistan and Libya. By voting for different shades of antipeople parties, are working-class Canadians just legitimizing a bankrupt political system?

Louise Jones As the election nears, Canada’s three major parties (in Anglophone Canada) all claim they’ll take action that will help workers and their families. But the track record of these parties tells a drastically different story. The Conservative Party One of the first things the Harper minor>> continued, pg. 6

We need a universal childcare system Manena D.

When today’s families struggle to make ends meet, the option of having a stay-at-home parent is a luxury that is almost extinct. There are 3.1 million children under twelve years old with mothers in the paid workforce in Canada. “A lot of women in the non-profit sector have been laid off recently. And the cuts that Ford is making to public sector workers will predominantly affect women” says Carolina Crewe, mother >> continued, pg. 7

No to NATO war in Libya Steve da Silva

As Canadians approach yet another Federal election, here’s another central issue that won’t be featured in the debates amongst the contenders for control over the Canadian state: Yet another imperialist aggression against a sovereign country. On March 21, 2011, as the four parliamentary parties braced themselves for an electoral campaign, all the parties found unity around the bombing of Libya. In fact, >> continued, pg. 2 >> continued, pg. 5

BASICS is a community media project that requires your involvement to grow. We the people will never see a newspaper that speaks honestly about our interests until we the people build and control that media! We are a people’s organization. Write with us, distribute with us, join us! For more information, contact: E-mail: basics.canada@gmail.com Web Site: BASICSnews.ca


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