The Canadian state and its entire
imperialist project is in a general state of crisis. While this crisis
may have been accelerated by the current Coronavirus pandemic, its root
lies in the capitalist system itself of which Engels, one of the
greatest leaders the working-class has ever produced, said “In
every crisis, society is suffocated beneath the weight of its own
productive forces and products, which it cannot use, and stands
helpless, face-to-face with the absurd contradiction that the producers
have nothing to consume, because consumers are wanting.”
While the Imperialist ruling class attempts to lie and frame this
crisis as entirely the consequence of the Coronavirus pandemic, the
truth is this crisis, like all others, is rooted in capitalism’s
tendency toward overproduction. Capitalism had just exited its last
global crisis of 2008, as the current crisis hit proving Engels’ thesis
that “[capitalism’s] economic bankruptcy recurs regularly every 10 years.”
Even the capitalists’ own economists have been predicting a depression
for months showing the hollowness of the capitalists’ lie that the virus
is the root of the crisis.
This crisis is bound to be deeper and
more widespread than the last major crisis that began in 2008 with the
unemployment rate more than doubling itself from before the crisis as 1.5 million workers have already been laid off.
There is no doubt that the Coronavirus is a serious issue for the
working-people of the world, but we as revolutionary youth and students
must recognise that our enemies remain the same: Capitalism,
Imperialism, and Settler-Colonialism and not be blinded by the lies of
the ruling-class that we must unite as one regardless of class against
the virus as has been discussed in the Revolutionary Communist Party’s statement on the virus.
Working-class students are being affected
especially hard by this crisis. While many schools were slow to respond
to the spread of the Coronavirus initially, every major university
across the country has now closed its doors and moved classes online.
While these actions have undeniably helped curb the spread of the virus,
they have also severely disadvantaged working-class students many of
whom have already been struggling to afford the cost of tuition. While
most students from capitalist backgrounds are easily able to make do
with this change, many working-class students are struggling with these
changes. The sudden shift to online classes leaves those working-class
students who may not have access to computers at home or internet
connections sufficient for the online transition in a very difficult
place where they will be forced to pay more than they can afford for
their already overpriced tuition. The transition to online classes has
also been accompanied by a drop in the quality of education widening the
already massive gap between students and teachers. Many schools have
even realised that the quality of education has dropped massively and
have offered academic concessions such as pass/fail options on grades
and late withdrawal from courses. However, these concessions do not go
far enough for the working-class.
The most obvious effect of this
depression that most workers are facing are the massive layoffs and cut
hours. This affects the working-class’ ability to afford basic
necessities like food and housing and is the root of many of the issues
working-class youth and students are facing during this crisis. The
state is trying heavily to portray this as the result of the virus alone
while hiding the truth of the matter which is that the closing of the
job market and the current economic depression are both necessary
results of the capitalist system. While capitalist students may take a
small hit in not being able to find a job immediately, they will not be
affected as intensely as the workers whose chance at even finding menial
labour has now been shut off almost completely. The old state’s
attempts to provide aid have been complete failures with as many as 700, 000 workers being ineligible for EI benefits or the newly announced federal emergency funding with working-class students especially being ignored as their interests have not even been addressed by the federal government.
Working-class students have also seen
their housing come under attack. Some university residences have forced
students out of their homes entirely. The University of Concordia’s
response has been especially bad issuing an eviction notice to students
with just four days-notice. Working-class students living off campus are
facing housing difficulties as well as many workers are unable to pay
their rent due to mass lay-offs. Many working-class students live
paycheque-to-paycheque to begin with and with the loss of hours many are
unable to pay their rent leading to a large amount of evictions. The
old state has been slow to respond to this national housing crisis and
in many provinces such as Ontario the old state has explicitly sided
with the landlords in order to ease evictions. In B.C., a province led
by the NDP-Green government, the old state failed to offer any aid for
April with Premier John Horgan saying of the minimal housing aid passed
by the government that “We can’t guarantee it
will be in their pockets by April 1, [Tenants] have a relationship with
your landlord. Let’s hope that they’re good relationships, and you’re
going to have to find a way to work this out together.”
While landlords and capitalists have their housing secure during this
crisis the working-class are being forced to fend for themselves as the
old state makes its position clear as an organ of class warfare against
the workers.
Students graduating this year will be
graduating into an economic depression. This will exacerbate the already
bad situation that exists for working-class students in Canada which
can be read about in greater detail in our political report or the student section in the Partisan’s electoral boycott issue.
Businesses across the country are closing their doors and the old
state’s slow response means that many graduating working-class students
will be left jobless and without any source of income. While students
coming from capitalist backgrounds will largely be fine during this
depression and can rely on their families and the aid of the old state,
the same is not true of working-class students who have nowhere to turn.
As a result of the mass closure of
businesses, many students’ who require placements and coop programmes
are unable to obtain their required hours. Some programmes designed for
more capitalist or professional students that allow work from home are
still available but for many working-class students especially those
attending technical schools and colleges this is not an option and they
are being left stranded with no way to go forward as a result.
The old state will never stand up for the
workers against the capitalists, it is up to working-class
organisations like the Revolutionary Student Movement to agitate,
educate, and organise the working-class especially at times of crisis.
Around the country working-class youth and students are clamouring for
action. For this reason, the Revolutionary Student Movement is calling
for the organisation toward full tuition refunds for this past semester.
Working-class students are not getting what they have already overpaid
for and the universities are not providing for the fact that many
working-class students are unable to keep up with the drastic changes
resulting from the online transition. Working-class students must fight
for full refunds in the face of being overlooked by the universities.
The Revolutionary Student Movement must also recognise that the struggle
against landlords has quickly become one of the working-class’ main
concerns and join in this struggle to organise working-class tenants
into unions and toward rent strikes.
FIGHT FOR A FULL TUITION REFUND!
ORGANISE TOWARD A RENT STRIKE!
LONG LIVE THE REVOLUTIONARY STUDENT MOVEMENT!
No comments:
Post a Comment