I stumbled across the following commentary by Howard Zinn while Google
searching for material on Wendell Phillips, who, besides being a
leader of the Anti-Slavery Society went on after the Civil War to
become an outspoken proponent of Ira Steward's Eight-Hour Movement.
The connection between the anti-slavery movement and the eight-hour
theory was discussed in a 1986 Labour History article by David
Roediger, "Ira Steward and the eight-hour origins of the eight-hour
theory." Phillips addressed the first convention of the Boston Eight
Hour League in 1870 and his speech was reported in full in the New
York Times of May 24, 1870. The anti-slavery society was the incubator
for the eight-hour, labor and women's equality movements in the US.

Sandwichman

Obama's Historic Victory
by Howard Zinn
http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/19384

"Those of us on the Left who have criticized Obama, as I have, for his
failure to take bold positions on the war and on the economy, must
join the exultation of those Americans, black and white, who shouted
and wept Tuesday night as they were informed that Barack Obama had won
the presidential election. It is truly a historic moment, that a black
man will lead our country. The enthusiasm of the young, black and
white, the hopes of their elders, cannot simply be ignored.

"There was a similar moment a century and a half ago, in the year
1860, when Abraham Lincoln was elected president. Lincoln had been
criticized harshly by the abolitionists, the anti-slavery movement,
for his failure to take a clear, bold stand against slavery, for
acting as a shrewd politician rather than a moral force. But when he
was elected, the abolitionist leader Wendell Phillips, who had been an
angry critic of Lincoln's cautiousness, recognized the possibility in
his election.

"Phillips wrote that for the first time in the nation's history "the
slave has chosen a President of the United States." Lincoln, he said,
was not an abolitionist, but he in some way "consents to represent an
antislavery position." Like a pawn on the chessboard, Lincoln had the
potential, if the American people acted vigorously, to be moved across
the board, converted into a queen, and, as Phillips said, "sweep the
board."

"Obama, like Lincoln, tends to look first at his political fortunes
instead of making his decisions on moral grounds. But, as the first
African American in the White House, elected by an enthusiastic
citizenry which expects a decisive move towards peace and social
justice, he presents a possibility for important change.

"Obama becomes president in a situation which cries out for such
change. The nation has been engaged in two futile and immoral wars, in
Iraq and Afghanistan, and the American people have turned decisively
against those wars. The economy is shaken by tremendous blows, and is
in danger of collapsing, as families lose their homes and working
people, including those in the middle class, lose their jobs, So the
population is ready for change, indeed, desperate for change, and
"change" was the word most used by Obama in his campaign.

"What kind of change is needed? First, to announce the withdrawal of
our troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and to renounce the Bush
doctrine of preventive war as well as the Carter doctrine of military
action to control Mideast oil. He needs to radically change the
direction of U.S. foreign policy, declare that the U.S. is a peace
loving country which will not intervene militarily in other parts of
the world, and start dismantling the military bases we have in over a
hundred countries. Also he must begin meeting with Medvedev, the
Russian leader, to reach agreement on the dismantling of the nuclear
arsenals, in keeping with the Nuclear Anti-Proliferation Treaty.

"This turn-around from militarism will free hundreds of billions of
dollars. A tax program which will sharply increase taxes on the
richest 1% of the nation, and will tax their wealth as well as their
income, will yield more hundreds of billions of dollars.

"With all that saved money, the government will be able to give free
health care to everyone, put millions of people to work (which the
so-called free market has not been able to do. In short, emulate the
New Deal program, in which millions were given jobs by the government.
This is just an outline of a program which could transform the United
States and make it a good neighbor to the world."
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