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ГФ~! iwiiS.t.-U- i -- Ht-i " Мг1И vr ЛЛнм II May 11, 1977 I У1 IZ JUGOSLAVIJE... Vino PLUM BRANDY I, ft ft' ft) Is JS K? I П г J. Sto w ft 1Ift I i i; 8 il N $NM J ft !!i Л "People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones," Harry Bridges, longtime international president of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, declared in a union newspaper column as he took issue sharply with the clamor begun by the U.S. administration over the issueof "human rights" in the USSR. In his column, On the Beam, published in the February 25 edition of the ILWU paper, The Dispatcher and reprinted below, Bridges looks at the human rights issues from the workers' viewpoint and from his own experience. The column has special relevance in light of the decision last week by the U.S. State Department to deny visas to the Soviet trade officials who had been invited as fraternal guests to at-tend the ILWU international convention. The reason? "They are members of the Communist Party," the department said. "People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones." t think the full meaning of the proverb can be applied to how the (U.S.) is acting with respect to the so-call- ed dissidents from the Soviet Union. Judging from the reports in the public media, it would appear that the most important part of our foreign policies in dealing with other countries is this matter of dissidents operating in or coming from the USSR. One thing I notice about the Russian dissidents or defectors — there's not a single working stiff among them. They all seem to have been treated pretty well by their country in terms of education, good jobs and homes. And what comes through to me from what-- 1 gather they want, and of course what they are en-couraged to publicly demand by their supporters in this country, is to have the Soviet Union, its form of government, its economic and social system, made over to more closely resemble our way of life. What bugs me is that our government and our spokesmen on foreign affairs, all the way up to the president, in their seemingly holier-than-thoihattitu- de toward the USSR regarding the handful of dissidents seem to accept without questioning the notion that Soviet dissidents are not working for other countries or other political regimes. Here in the U.S. we have Vladimir Bukovsky speaking in Washington to the U.S. Com-mission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. What does Bukovsky want the U.S. to do about the political life, internal affairs and government institutions of the USSR? Why, he wants us to demand that the Soviet Union admit teams of American ob-servers to inspect Soviet prisons, prison camps, and hospitals. How about that as a demand from us, where U.S. foreign policy is one whereour union can't even have an official Soviet trade union delegation come as observers and fraternal delegates to our in-ternational convention coming in Seattle! Another of Bukovsky's demands is that there should be official contacts and recognition between "western groups" and such Ukrainian, Lithuanian and other nationalist groups which have sprung up in the USSR. Regarding such groups, our HARRY BRIDGES challenges memories should not be so short as to not remember that when Hitler and the Nazi war machine laun-ched the invasion into the USSR, slaughtered hundreds of thousands of civilian men, women and children, the Nazi butchers received help from such reac-tionary Lithuanian and Ukrainian nationalist sources inside the USSR. And while our spokesmen are doing so much bellyaching about how the Soviet dissidents are treated inside their country, I don't see why we, at least I mean some of us who have kept track of such things — should forget our own government's sordid record when it comes to dissidents — and I don't mean war criminals. How about the Smith Act trials of about 20 years ago? Wasn't the main charge against the members of the U.S.A. Communist Party officials and members hauled into court, tried, and convicted of being agents of Soviet Communism and Moscow, seeking to overthrow our government by force and violence? And I remember the day in San Francisco when the specially appointed and imported Federal prosecutor from Washington, D.C., F. Joseph "Jiggs" Donohue stood up in the courtroom and urged that I be tossed into jail — which I was for three weeks — because as he said at that perilous time, "not one dissenting voice" could be allowed to speak out in the U.S. against what the country was doing. My dissenting voice was urging a ceasefire in Korea and proposing ЖЈ1ДНВДМИНДЦИНИи1ЦИВДН1)ЦЦОЦ1ТТИУГГГ OCCASION-WEDDIN- G SPECIALIST mSSPORTS, PORTRAITS, JORDAN VASIUEVICH 3047DUNDASSTW (at High Park) ONTM6P1Z5 TEL. 767-228- 6 "dissident" campaign. -- Sean Griffin photo и that the United Nations be left to settle the war there. What comes through to me when it comes to what these dissidents really want is that their program is one that calls for a return in the USSR for the good old days when the czars ruled that vast country, when tens of millions of human beings were serfs — a modern name for slaves — and pogroms and famines were regular oc-currences. Sure, I known from my own personal knowledge that there are plenty of changes still to come about in the USSR to better the life of its people and given time those changes will come along. After all, the Russian revolution is only 60 years old, and 60 years historically speaking, is little more than a matter of hours. But one thing is sure in the USSR, and that is that changes are coming about that will bring about an end of two main evils facing the people in our country, especially the working people, and that is the matter of unemployment and growing inflation that are features of the capitalist world, as well as inadequate and expensive health care for the people. Yes, there are some causes for dissension in the USSR, but the big thing they have going for them over there is the socialist social system that affords the means to overcome and remove the causes of dissension, when such ills affect the welfare of all the peoplenot just the rich, privileged few. JORDAN BANQUET HALL Catering, Hall For Rental, For Wodding, Parties And Other Occasions PHOTO SERVICE FOR EVERY PORTRAIT CHILDREN MOVIES W(TH SOUND TORONTO mm -- шш ® ® a H ® RIESLING ZUPA TRAMINAC PROKUPAC MUSKATNI SILVANEC TIGER MILK Ш Ш Ш M Шт MERLOT гаШШаММн ии "SiSl Kod LCB u Ontariu, Albert, Britanskoj Columbiji i Saskatchewanu Za informacije obratite se GYAKI AGENCIES 1579 Bloor St. W. —Toronto, Ont. Phone (416) 531-99- 46 (7) I GLASCMTO UEKOVITO BILE --CAJ IZ BUGARSKE Urine-regulati- ng Tea No. 107 - Ovaj Caj pomaie reguliratt mokracu. smanjuje iritaciju. Lipov CVijet No. 114 — UblaJuje prehladu. kaSalj. sijatiku, reumatiCke i bubreine bolove. Camomile Flower Tea No. 113 — Caj od kamomi- - Imog cvieca ublaiuje bolove u ielucu, zubobolju. Chest-easin- g Tea No. 111 - Ubiaiava kaSalj. olakSava disanje. Soothing Tea No. 112 - Ovaj Ca krijepi i umiruje iivce. Kutija svakog od ovih cajeva stoji $2.00. Narudzbe iz U.S.A. $2.25 kutija. Kod porucivanja navedite Ime ili broj Caja koji trebate. Imamo Г druge vrste Cajeva. PiSite po cijenik. Narudibe i novae Saljite na: BALKAN IMPORTS 212 Spadina Road, Toronto, Ontario M5R 2V1 Tel. 921-858- 7 ffyrethour REALTY SERVICES. LTD.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, June 29, 1977 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1977-05-11 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000019 |
Description
Title | 000309 |
OCR text | ГФ~! iwiiS.t.-U- i -- Ht-i " Мг1И vr ЛЛнм II May 11, 1977 I У1 IZ JUGOSLAVIJE... Vino PLUM BRANDY I, ft ft' ft) Is JS K? I П г J. Sto w ft 1Ift I i i; 8 il N $NM J ft !!i Л "People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones," Harry Bridges, longtime international president of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, declared in a union newspaper column as he took issue sharply with the clamor begun by the U.S. administration over the issueof "human rights" in the USSR. In his column, On the Beam, published in the February 25 edition of the ILWU paper, The Dispatcher and reprinted below, Bridges looks at the human rights issues from the workers' viewpoint and from his own experience. The column has special relevance in light of the decision last week by the U.S. State Department to deny visas to the Soviet trade officials who had been invited as fraternal guests to at-tend the ILWU international convention. The reason? "They are members of the Communist Party," the department said. "People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones." t think the full meaning of the proverb can be applied to how the (U.S.) is acting with respect to the so-call- ed dissidents from the Soviet Union. Judging from the reports in the public media, it would appear that the most important part of our foreign policies in dealing with other countries is this matter of dissidents operating in or coming from the USSR. One thing I notice about the Russian dissidents or defectors — there's not a single working stiff among them. They all seem to have been treated pretty well by their country in terms of education, good jobs and homes. And what comes through to me from what-- 1 gather they want, and of course what they are en-couraged to publicly demand by their supporters in this country, is to have the Soviet Union, its form of government, its economic and social system, made over to more closely resemble our way of life. What bugs me is that our government and our spokesmen on foreign affairs, all the way up to the president, in their seemingly holier-than-thoihattitu- de toward the USSR regarding the handful of dissidents seem to accept without questioning the notion that Soviet dissidents are not working for other countries or other political regimes. Here in the U.S. we have Vladimir Bukovsky speaking in Washington to the U.S. Com-mission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. What does Bukovsky want the U.S. to do about the political life, internal affairs and government institutions of the USSR? Why, he wants us to demand that the Soviet Union admit teams of American ob-servers to inspect Soviet prisons, prison camps, and hospitals. How about that as a demand from us, where U.S. foreign policy is one whereour union can't even have an official Soviet trade union delegation come as observers and fraternal delegates to our in-ternational convention coming in Seattle! Another of Bukovsky's demands is that there should be official contacts and recognition between "western groups" and such Ukrainian, Lithuanian and other nationalist groups which have sprung up in the USSR. Regarding such groups, our HARRY BRIDGES challenges memories should not be so short as to not remember that when Hitler and the Nazi war machine laun-ched the invasion into the USSR, slaughtered hundreds of thousands of civilian men, women and children, the Nazi butchers received help from such reac-tionary Lithuanian and Ukrainian nationalist sources inside the USSR. And while our spokesmen are doing so much bellyaching about how the Soviet dissidents are treated inside their country, I don't see why we, at least I mean some of us who have kept track of such things — should forget our own government's sordid record when it comes to dissidents — and I don't mean war criminals. How about the Smith Act trials of about 20 years ago? Wasn't the main charge against the members of the U.S.A. Communist Party officials and members hauled into court, tried, and convicted of being agents of Soviet Communism and Moscow, seeking to overthrow our government by force and violence? And I remember the day in San Francisco when the specially appointed and imported Federal prosecutor from Washington, D.C., F. Joseph "Jiggs" Donohue stood up in the courtroom and urged that I be tossed into jail — which I was for three weeks — because as he said at that perilous time, "not one dissenting voice" could be allowed to speak out in the U.S. against what the country was doing. My dissenting voice was urging a ceasefire in Korea and proposing ЖЈ1ДНВДМИНДЦИНИи1ЦИВДН1)ЦЦОЦ1ТТИУГГГ OCCASION-WEDDIN- G SPECIALIST mSSPORTS, PORTRAITS, JORDAN VASIUEVICH 3047DUNDASSTW (at High Park) ONTM6P1Z5 TEL. 767-228- 6 "dissident" campaign. -- Sean Griffin photo и that the United Nations be left to settle the war there. What comes through to me when it comes to what these dissidents really want is that their program is one that calls for a return in the USSR for the good old days when the czars ruled that vast country, when tens of millions of human beings were serfs — a modern name for slaves — and pogroms and famines were regular oc-currences. Sure, I known from my own personal knowledge that there are plenty of changes still to come about in the USSR to better the life of its people and given time those changes will come along. After all, the Russian revolution is only 60 years old, and 60 years historically speaking, is little more than a matter of hours. But one thing is sure in the USSR, and that is that changes are coming about that will bring about an end of two main evils facing the people in our country, especially the working people, and that is the matter of unemployment and growing inflation that are features of the capitalist world, as well as inadequate and expensive health care for the people. Yes, there are some causes for dissension in the USSR, but the big thing they have going for them over there is the socialist social system that affords the means to overcome and remove the causes of dissension, when such ills affect the welfare of all the peoplenot just the rich, privileged few. JORDAN BANQUET HALL Catering, Hall For Rental, For Wodding, Parties And Other Occasions PHOTO SERVICE FOR EVERY PORTRAIT CHILDREN MOVIES W(TH SOUND TORONTO mm -- шш ® ® a H ® RIESLING ZUPA TRAMINAC PROKUPAC MUSKATNI SILVANEC TIGER MILK Ш Ш Ш M Шт MERLOT гаШШаММн ии "SiSl Kod LCB u Ontariu, Albert, Britanskoj Columbiji i Saskatchewanu Za informacije obratite se GYAKI AGENCIES 1579 Bloor St. W. —Toronto, Ont. Phone (416) 531-99- 46 (7) I GLASCMTO UEKOVITO BILE --CAJ IZ BUGARSKE Urine-regulati- ng Tea No. 107 - Ovaj Caj pomaie reguliratt mokracu. smanjuje iritaciju. Lipov CVijet No. 114 — UblaJuje prehladu. kaSalj. sijatiku, reumatiCke i bubreine bolove. Camomile Flower Tea No. 113 — Caj od kamomi- - Imog cvieca ublaiuje bolove u ielucu, zubobolju. Chest-easin- g Tea No. 111 - Ubiaiava kaSalj. olakSava disanje. Soothing Tea No. 112 - Ovaj Ca krijepi i umiruje iivce. Kutija svakog od ovih cajeva stoji $2.00. Narudzbe iz U.S.A. $2.25 kutija. Kod porucivanja navedite Ime ili broj Caja koji trebate. Imamo Г druge vrste Cajeva. PiSite po cijenik. Narudibe i novae Saljite na: BALKAN IMPORTS 212 Spadina Road, Toronto, Ontario M5R 2V1 Tel. 921-858- 7 ffyrethour REALTY SERVICES. LTD. |
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