20) New Issue of Rebel
Youth on Sale
(The following article
is from the
April 16-30, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income rate; for
U.S. readers - $25 US per year; other overseas readers - $25 US or $35
CDN per year. Send to: People's Voice, c/o PV Business Manager, 133
Herkimer St., Unit 502, Hamilton, ON, L8P 2H3.)
People’s Voice is proud to announce that the latest issue of Rebel
Youth, the magazine of the Young Communist League of Canada, has just
rolled off the press. Printed by union labour, this issue features
unique content found in few other English-language publications of the
Canadian left, let alone youth and student publications - articles by
high school students about local fight-backs, discussion on the Quebec
elections, and an interview with Omar Khadr’s sister, Zaynab Khadr.
Several articles are in French.
As the main editorial says, issue number seven (counting back from when
the magazine began republishing in 2004) comes at an extraordinary
critical moment for the youth movement in Canada, and globally. We are
happy to reprint the editorial:
The economic crisis young workers and students are confronting today is
casting a dark shadow onto the future of our generation. The
crisis has been made worse by decades of social blood-letting -
cutbacks, privatization, and general impoverishment of our class. User fees, such as tuition fees, have
appeared like a like a plague of boils across the face of society.
This is outlined in articles like H. Abdul’s piece about the
privatization of education in Alberta, “Winnipeg’s Injustice System”
about police brutality in the North End by RY Manitoba, and Betsy
MacDonald’s story about violence against women. It is also reflected in
our accounts of aboriginal student resistance, as David Tymoshchuk’s
“Lift the Cap” discusses, and Jamie Campbell’s reporting on the high
school Drop Fees struggle. And with Zig Zag’s and Javier Davila’s
features (two articles we’re pleased to reprint with permission) the
capitalist state’s idea of a solution is exposed: money-wasting
corporate mega-projects - or joining the military.
Any glance at the news headlines says “welcome to rough times.” Some
may turn to “get rich quick” schemes like that which Primerica
corporation offers and Tony Marcy contrasts with a union drive. Still
more may be seduced by the most vile currents in Canadian society,
racist or homophobic ideology - see Jeff Tomlinson’s “Fighting Hate in
Durham.” What do we do about it?
In the final analysis, we think it comes down to fight or flight.
Flight? Well, we mean the idea that working people, youth and students
should just “suck it up.” Try to ride out the recession. It is one
thing to be forced to take concessions, but this outlook supports
adopting a line of concession. Mr. Jack Layton, leader of the New
Democratic Party, recently said it’s the “courage of the Canadian
people which makes our country strong” and that kind of courage
“workers will need to take a pay cut so your friends at the plant can
keep their job” (Toronto Star, Jan. 23). He courageously chose the
Toronto Board of Trade, an association of the foremost bodies of
monopolists, bankers and financiers in Canada, to deliver this message
to workers.
We think however that there is a demonstrated willingness by youth and
students to voice loud and noisy opposition to the direction we’re
headed. Take the massive Palestinian solidarity protests against
Zionist Israeli and Israeli Apartheid Week. This different approach is
also discussed with Chevy Philip’s article about youth joining the
Communist Party in Japan, the commentary on the BC election, and the
page two photograph from Greece. YCL General Secretary Johan Boyden’s
article on the economic crisis calls for a youth alliance that can
shift the power of big business by unifying all students and young
people who are suffering the consequences. “We didn’t make this crisis, and we’re not
going to pay for it!” should be our slogan.
No matter how great and ferocious our opposition from the capitalist
class, fight-back is the way forward. We can’t be tired now, as
campaigners, as youth activists, as the left and progressive movement.
In closing, we are very happy to present here an interview with the
sister of Omar Khadr, who has been misrepresented and vilified by the
capitalist media in Canada and internationally. There is considerable
optimism that Omar can come home because of the election of US
president Obama, about whom we present two opinions by S.J. Bracken and
T. Walkom for debate and discussion.
And, of course, our usual culture section continues with Soul, Hip Hop,
lots of Punk reviews - and even Bilal Awami's way to kill time with
music on your call-centre phone.