Top Secret: A Practical Plan to Save the World
** This article appeared in TruthOut December 15, 2014 **
What if there was a way to address climate change, halt police brutality, heal the environment, end unemployment, take the profit out of exploitation and racism, and put an end to endless war? It stands to reason that the powers that be would do all they could to keep it from us. Those who profit from the violence, injustice and destruction all around us have every incentive to obfuscate, misrepresent and undermine anything that might threaten their privilege.
Well it turns out there is a concrete, eminently practical way to build a better world. But don’t expect to read about it in the New York Times or the Washington Post. Don’t look for it to be featured on network TV news. It’s called A Bill of Rights for Working People and it’s detailed below.
The BRWP is more than just a set of ideas; it’s an action plan. As more and more people come to realize that solving any one of the big social or economic problems we face will require a complete system overhaul, the BRWP outlines how to get it done.
This plan is rooted in our nation’s best democratic traditions. If embraced and adopted by unions, students and organizations of all types fighting for justice and social change, we would be well on our way to ending the nightmare that modern capitalism has wrought. We would, in fact, be turning a corner, leaving behind humanity’s adolescence and taking the first steps along the path that leads to a just, rational world. We would, at long last, put ourselves on course to realizing the full potential of our species and our planet.
A version of the BRWP was first introduced by Peter Camejo and Willie Mae Reid in their 1976 campaign for President and Vice-President of the United. The version presented here has been substantially edited and updated.
What if there was a way to address climate change, halt police brutality, heal the environment, end unemployment, take the profit out of exploitation and racism, and put an end to endless war? It stands to reason that the powers that be would do all they could to keep it from us. Those who profit from the violence, injustice and destruction all around us have every incentive to obfuscate, misrepresent and undermine anything that might threaten their privilege.
Well it turns out there is a concrete, eminently practical way to build a better world. But don’t expect to read about it in the New York Times or the Washington Post. Don’t look for it to be featured on network TV news. It’s called A Bill of Rights for Working People and it’s detailed below.
The BRWP is more than just a set of ideas; it’s an action plan. As more and more people come to realize that solving any one of the big social or economic problems we face will require a complete system overhaul, the BRWP outlines how to get it done.
This plan is rooted in our nation’s best democratic traditions. If embraced and adopted by unions, students and organizations of all types fighting for justice and social change, we would be well on our way to ending the nightmare that modern capitalism has wrought. We would, in fact, be turning a corner, leaving behind humanity’s adolescence and taking the first steps along the path that leads to a just, rational world. We would, at long last, put ourselves on course to realizing the full potential of our species and our planet.
A version of the BRWP was first introduced by Peter Camejo and Willie Mae Reid in their 1976 campaign for President and Vice-President of the United. The version presented here has been substantially edited and updated.
* * *
Preamble
In
1776, American colonists revolted against British tyranny to shake off
the vestiges of feudalism and the English monarchy, and to lay the
foundations for American capitalism.
Today we are ruled by a new tyranny. Industrial
and financial barons govern by the rule of profits, denying us the
basic democratic and social rights we need for “life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness.”
America is in a deepening crisis. Real unemployment hovers around 12%, or more than 29 million people. The quality of life for the majority is going from bad to worse, and the present system offers no hope for improvement. Meanwhile, the Wall Street bailout and open-ended military spending ensure that the lion’s share of our national wealth continues to be funneled to the richest few at the very top.
No
rational economic system would have built-in, periodic crises where the
majority suffers as a result of worker productivity having risen to the
point where more food, more goods and more services can be produced than can be sold at a profit. Yet this is what we are told to accept as “normal” under capitalism. Breakdowns, shortages, layoffs, outsourcing, offshoring, soaring prices—each week it’s harder to get by. Suffering the most are those at the bottom of the ladder—Blacks, Latinos, Native Americans and other doubly oppressed people.
Endless War
There is no end to wars—one following another. After World War II came Korea and then Vietnam. Most recently, the US has been waging war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Ukraine and Syria. There
are also the many proxy wars undertaken by US client states with US
weapons, including the recent Israeli military slaughter in Gaza.
Huge stockpiles of atomic weapons are a constant reminder of the threat of nuclear war.
Environmental Destruction
Pollution
is threatening our health and destroying our environment—from the water
we drink, to the food we eat, to the air we breathe. Climate
change from the burning of fossil fuels presents humanity with an
existential challenge that our current profit-driven system is incapable
of addressing.
Representatives of Wall St and the Rich
Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats offer a solution. Both
are firmly in the pocket of their big business funders, and neither
party has any interest in challenging capitalism or otherwise rocking
the boat.
Well-schooled
in the art of “divide and conquer”, both parties pit white workers
against black, brown and red in the struggle for decent jobs, housing,
and education. They divert attention from their own
misdeeds by urging us to blame our problems on working people and the
poor from other countries, while the corporations they represent plunder
the resources of those same countries.
The message of the Democrats and Republicans is simply, “What’s good for large corporations is good for America.”
The Waltons, Kochs, and other super-wealthy dynasties
that own the two major parties and run the country think they were born
with rights that come first, no matter what happens to the welfare and
security of the rest of us. For the sake of profits, they
believe it’s perfectly justifiable to lay off tens of thousands of
workers, to destroy our environment, and to plunge the country into war.
Though
they have accumulated monumental fortunes, they are in fact a tiny
minority who should not be allowed to trump the rights of the American
people as a whole.
Existing Rights must be Defended and Extended
More
than 200 years ago, when our country won its independence from British
despotism, small farmers and working people succeeded in adding 10
amendments to the Constitution—the Bill of Rights. These were intended to help guarantee “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
Among these are:
- Freedom of speech, press, assembly.
- The right to a jury trial by one’s peers.
- The right to bear arms.
- Protection from unreasonable searches and seizures, excessive bails and fines, and cruel and unusual punishment.
The
Civil War—a veritable second American revolution—resulted in additional
amendments to the Constitution protecting the rights of the majority. These are:
- The ending of slavery.
- Protection from deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.
- The right of all male citizens, 21 years of age or over, to vote, regardless of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
In 1920 women won the right to vote, and in 1971 this right was extended to all citizens 18 and older.
These
rights were won through struggle, and frequent, bitter battles against
witch-hunters, racists, bigots, anti-labor forces and hostile government
agencies have been required to preserve them.
Even now, many of the principles in the original Bill of Rights have not been fully implemented and extended to everyone. Many Americans are still reduced to second-class status. Blacks,
Latinos, Native Americans, and other oppressed minorities continue to
struggle for equal opportunity in housing, education, and jobs. Preferential hiring and upgrading should be established to help achieve equality on the job. To gain equality, oppressed minorities have a right to live in the neighborhoods of their choice. They
have the right to decide where to send their children to school, even
if it means traveling to better, predominantly white schools.
For
non-English speakers, education, civil service exams, voting
instructions and ballots must be provided in their own language in order
to achieve equality.
For women, preferential hiring and upgrading, and equal pay for the same work are needed to gain full equality on the job.
These
democratic rights should be extended to everyone, including prisoners,
GIs, foreign-born workers, and youth; regardless of religion, ideology
or sexual preference.
All repressive legislation must be repealed. All
cruel and unusual punishment—including the death penalty, indefinite
detention, rendition, waterboarding and all forms of torture—must be
abolished.
As
the economic crisis deepens and big business tightens the squeeze on
labor, the elementary civil liberties of working people as a whole are
eroded. Government spying, surveillance, harassment and intimidation make a mockery of our rights to assembly and free speech. This is shown most clearly by the revelations of Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden and WikiLeaks.
Government interference infringes on the right of unions to organize, collectively bargain and strike. The Taft Hartley Act and all other anti-labor legislation must be repealed.
* * *
A Bill of Rights for Working People
Not
only is it necessary to fight back and reassert our existing rights, we
also need to broaden those rights to protect working people on the economic level and to protect against the threat of new wars, racism, and anti-labor initiatives. We need a new bill of rights to meet the present-day needs of the majority:
1) The right to a job.
2) The right to an adequate income.
3) The right to a free, quality education.
4) The right to free, quality medical care.
5) The right to a secure retirement.
6) The right of oppressed national minorities to control their own affairs.
7) The right to know the truth about economic and political policies that affect our lives.
8) The right to decide economic and political policy.
1. Right to a Job
It is the elementary obligation of society to guarantee steady work for everyone. This can be done by the following measures:
An
emergency public works program should be launched to provide jobs
through building homes expanding mass transit, repairing infrastructure,
and constructing hospitals, parks, schools, and other social
necessities. Priority should be given to projects where they are most needed—especially in Black, Latino and Native American communities.
As
a first step, the huge sums necessary to pay for this program should
come from eliminating military expenditures, raising taxes on big
industry, and placing a 100 percent tax on all income over $1 million. At the same time, taxes for working people should be lowered.
As productivity has increased exponentially, the value produced by each hour of labor has skyrocketed. Data sources: www.bea.gov/national/index.htm#gdp, www.npg.org/facts/us_historical_pops.htm and www.multpl.com/united-states-population/table
Worker productivity has more than quintupled since the adoption of the eight-hour day in the early part of the last century. Up to now, any increase in productivity has been funneled to those at the top in the form of increased corporate profits. Instead,
these gains should be used to reduce working hours with no reduction in
pay, thus spreading the available work and achieving full employment.
When
owners threaten to move or close down plants, those plants should be
transferred to public ownership and reopened under workers control.
In order to assure economic independence for women, government financed child-care centers should be established. Maternity leaves with full pay should be granted. Women have a right to decide whether or not to give birth to children. This includes the right to abortion, contraception and protection from forced sterilization.
Workers
who are not U.S. citizens, including those without documents, have the
right to jobs and equal pay without fear of harassment or deportation.
2. Right to an Adequate Income
A guaranteed living wage is a basic right. As a protection against inflation, wages must be free to rise without government imposed limits.
To
offset price gouging in food, rent, gas, electricity, and other basic
necessities, wages must be protected with cost-of-living escalator
provisions so that wages increase with each rise in living costs.
Escalator
provisions should be pegged to the real rate of inflation, as
determined by committees set up by unions and consumer groups. This
would replace the dependence on the Labor Department’s Consumer Price
Index, which deliberately underestimates real price increases.
All
pensions, Social Security benefits, unemployment and disability
compensation, welfare, and veterans’ benefits should be raised to union
wage scales and protected with cost-of-living escalator provisions.
Small
farmers, who are gouged by banks on the one hand and squeezed by the
Big Ag on the other, should be allowed to make a decent living. They have a right to low interest, long-term government loans.
3. Right to Free Education
4. Right to Free Medical Care
5. Right to a Secure Retirement
4. Right to Free Medical Care
5. Right to a Secure Retirement
Education, health, and secure retirement should not be exclusive privileges of the rich. The health, welfare, education, and cultural enrichment of all citizens are the responsibility of society. These are rights that should be guaranteed to everyone.
Tuition, books, and living expenses should be furnished to all who want to attend public universities and trade schools.
Everyone,
from birth to old age, should be guaranteed government-financed medical
care through a full program of socialized medicine. The so-called “Affordable Care Act” is a sham, designed to bolster the profits of insurance companies. It should be replaced with full Medicare coverage for all. Medicare
should be expanded to eliminate all deductibles and copays, and to
include full prescription drug, dental and vision coverage.
All retired and disabled persons should receive government-financed benefits at full union wages.
Government-financed
programs should be instituted not only to provide care for people who
are ill, but for medical research and mass education about health and
preventative care.
Adult
educational and cultural programs should be vastly strengthened to
permit working people to develop themselves to the fullest extent
possible.
6. Right to Know the Truth about Economic and Political Policies That Affect Our Lives
Democratic
and Republican administrations claim that their foreign policy
decisions advance peace and democracy throughout the world. The Pentagon papers and revelations by Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden and WikiLeaks show that this is not the case. We have a right to know the full truth. Publish all secret treaties and agreements this country has made with other countries.
No secret diplomacy behind the backs of the American people!
Let the American people know the truth about U.S. support for dictatorships all over the world. Fully disclose all of the secret backroom deals masquerading as “free trade” agreements.
When corporations claim they can’t grant wage increases, they should be compelled to open their books to public inspection.
When
industries harm communities or the environment—as is the case with the
big energy and chemical companies—they should be transferred to public
ownership and reopened under workers control.
Expose
the threads that tie industry and agribusiness to the big banks,
transportation, retailing enterprises, government agencies, judges and
to Democratic and Republican politicians.
Examination
of the financial books of the big corporations and trusts should be
done by committees made up of delegates from workplaces, unions,
cooperatives, farmers and organizations representing oppressed
minorities.
The Snowden documents have revealed a tiny bit of the secret spying, bugging, and harassment carried out by the government. They show how government policies are designed to work against the interests of working people.
We have a right to know the full truth. Let us see what the rulers really have in mind when they make the decisions that affect our lives. Open all police, FBI, CIA, NSA and Department of Homeland Security files!
7. Right of Oppressed National Minorities to Control Their Own Affairs
Blacks,
Latinos, Native Americans and other oppressed peoples have a right to
control the schools, hospitals, parks, and other institutions in their
communities. They have a right to determine how federal and state funds will be used in their communities.
The racist murders
of Michael Brown, John Crawford, Marvin Booker, Ezell Ford, Eric
Garner, Sean Bell, Amadour Diallo, Oscar Grant and others demonstrate
that police violence against Blacks and other oppressed minorities has
reached epidemic proportions.
To
end police brutality, completely remove the police from black, brown
and other communities of the oppressed and instead establish a security
force democratically selected and supervised by the people in those
communities.
8. Right to Decide Economic and Political Policy
The
small handful of extremely rich families who currently own key
industries, factories, mines, natural resources, utilities, and banks
manage them with only one aim: maximizing profits. To those at the top, the welfare and security of the majority is not a priority. This must change.
Take the war-making power away from the White House and Congress. Let the people vote in a referendum before the country is taken into any war or action involving military force.
We must have the right to say no to policies that can lead to nuclear holocaust and the end of humanity. We
have a right to say no to government stockpiling and testing of nuclear
weapons; to U. S. military bases throughout the world; and to the
support of puppet generals and military dictators.
Workers have the right to control their working conditions through their own democratically elected committees. They have the right to regulate the pace of work in the safest and least dehumanizing way. They have the right to have their own inspectors on the job. They have a right to control layoffs and whether or not plants will be shut down.
Workers have a right to determine that production will be for social needs rather than private profits. To
help achieve this, all major industries—from energy and transportation,
to food production and distribution— should be converted to public
ownership and managed under workers’ control.
All private utility monopolies should be converted into government owned utilities.
All
the banks should be nationalized and merged into a single government
bank. The concentration of the entire credit system in the hands of the
government will provide it with the necessary resources to institute
national economic planning.
A
national economic plan, democratically determined by working people,
should be implemented in order to put an end to the present anarchy and
breakdowns in the economy, and to ensure that natural resources and
productive capacity are used for the benefit of all.
Similarly,
a national economic plan under the workers’ management would end the
current scourge of poverty, and would institute effective environmental
controls—including the necessary conversion from fossil fuels to a
renewable energy-based economy. To achieve these goals, the colossal sums now spent for military purposes must be reallocated for social needs.
For a Workers Government
All
of this will only be possible, however, if the government itself passes
completely into the hands of the majority—the masses of working people.
When
the American colonists could no longer tolerate British rule, they drew
up their Declaration of Independence which stated “that whenever any
form of government becomes destructive of these ends [of life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness] it is the right of the people to alter or
to abolish it, and to institute new government laying its foundation on
such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them
shall seem most likely to affect their safety and happiness.”
Our present government of the few must be abolished and replaced by a workers government that will represent the majority. A workers government will guarantee democratic rights and implement this proposed Bill of Rights for Working People.
It
will immediately recognize the right of Blacks, Latinos, Native
Americans and other oppressed nationalities to self-determination. It will immediately denounce all colonial ambitions and grant full independence to Puerto Rico.
It
will adopt a policy of peace and friendship with peoples throughout the
world and offer economic, technical, medical and food assistance to
other countries, with no strings attached. It will dismantle all U.S. military bases abroad and stop U.S. interference in the internal affairs of other countries. Instead of supporting oppressors and dictators across the globe, it will offer aid to the struggles of the oppressed.
A workers government in the United States will be a tremendous inspiration to people all over the world. With
the knowledge that the mighty USA was a friend and no longer their
enemy, oppressed people everywhere will rise up against their own
oppressors and the entire world will be changed for the better.
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