Wednesday, December 31, 2025

What are the conditions facing workers on May Day? Updated

words by Charles Brooks 

This is an end of year update on the issues affecting working people in the May Day article

In the seven months since May 1st, otherwise known as May Day and International Workers Day, workers in the US and around the world continued to experience increasing challenges to their personal household economy. 

2025 comes to a close with one gloomy news report after another about the national and local economies.  The crisis to the personal economy deepens with rising rates of unemployment, record layoffs, and increasing costs of living, including health-care. 

2025 was a record year for layoffs - over one million layoffs, as the unemployment rate rose to its highest rates in four years since 2021.  

Store closures reached nearly four thousand stores during 2025. 

Federal workers stayed home as the government shutdown for over a month as families had to find a way to do without their SNAP benefits.   

By August 2025, the Black unemployment rate had risen for four consecutive months reaching 8.3% in November, the highest reading since August 2021, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. 

Economic data and news reports show that “affordability” is a real issue for working class folks only to be confronted by unresponsive elected officials.  Take for example, members of Congress continuing to receive their salaries while laid off federal workers had to do without their paychecks. Or the recent $900 billion bill for defense and military passed by Congress and just signed into law.

Meanwhile, 2026 opens with people having to adjust their personal economies for new taxes, and fees scheduled to increase on January 1st, as millions are waiting on increases to their healthcare premiums, 


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Where is the sense of urgency (December 2025 update)

words by Charles Brooks

Due to recent developments, "Where is the urgency?" has been updated:

Earlier this year on June 17th, Bilal “BJ” Abdullah was shot and killed by three Baltimore City police officers.  He was well known in communities and neighborhoods throughout Baltimore City as an arabber, selling fruits and vegetables from a horse-drawn cart. He was also reportedly known to have mental challenges as well.  

For six months, the Independent Investigations Division (IID) in Maryland’s Attorney General office conducted their investigation.  

Just days before Christmas Day, the Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown announced his decision, based on the IID’s report findings, not to prosecute any of the police officers involved in Abdullah’s death.  The decision was met with anger and frustration from Abdullah’s  family as the family’s attorney stated his intention to legally challenge the report findings.

Press Release: Attorney General Brown Announces That No Charges Will Be Filed in the June 17, 2025 Fatal Police-Involved Shooting in Baltimore - News - Office of the Attorney General of Maryland

Independent Investigations Division Report: 25-IID-012 FINAL_Declination Report- 6.17.2025 Baltimore Police Involved Shooting (ABDULLAH).pdf

Family Attorney press conference: http://instagram.com/reels/DSnNcoNEYxb/


See the originally published article here


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

How do we approach human rights?

 words by Charles Brooks

One way to describe the current political moment can be the constant reminder of the political contradictions on public display, every single day.  

December 10th was no different. 

December 10th is observed across the world as Human Rights Day, commemorating the anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights signed on this day, back in 1948. 

The US, in parading itself as the defender and champion of human rights, publishes an annual report outlining the human rights abuses occurring in nearly 200 countries around the world. The report highlights atrocities such as torture, genocide, crimes against humanity, and political repression to name a few.  

But on this December 10th, the contradictions are particularly amplified as the cries are heard around the world from wars, military actions, and economic sanctions. 

The president emerges as an incredibly easy target for criticism on the human rights issue considering what has been done in less than a year.  Most obvious is his use of a paramilitary force as ICE infiltrates, SNAP cuts, the recent boat strikes on Venezuela.  

Meanwhile on this day, the House of Representatives passed a $900 billion bill for military and defense spending, later signed into law. 

The state of Texas posted their recognition of Human Rights Day. “In Texas, we’re fighting every single day to make sure that every Texan that stands on our soil has basic human rights.”- even as they continue to execute the death penalty.  

While these are just the more recent examples, we’re reminded of what happened back in 2004 in Katrina, where thousands were stranded or the water crisis, or six years later in Flint, Michigan as thousands were exposed to toxic water, or the global pandemic in 2020.  

In today’s America, political prisoners, the prison conditions, the death penalty, ongoing use of the methods and tactics of counterinsurgency not only compromise and threaten human rights but shed light on the role of the state, relationship with government/state actors. 

The issue of human rights is one that defines and highlights the Black experience in America, the struggle to recognize and acknowledge Black humanity. From the early days of American settler colonialism, Black people were considered to be "3/5 of a person". This constitutional clause helped to shape and influence Black resistance and rebellion ever since. 

There is a strong historical context of Black folk engaging with humanism and human rights during the 18th and 19th century that extends beyond the pursuit of integration and the legal protections of civil rights. In the 20th century, there “We Charge Genocide” campaign, and Dubois letter that predates the analysis of Malcolm X that drove his approach to human rights versus civil rights. 

This tradition continues today as a number of Black radical and revolutionary formations pursue a self-determination approach to human rights; organizations such as December 12th Movement, Black Alliance for Peace, Cooperation Jackson, Community Movement Builders, Jericho Movement, International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Mississippi Center, 

Back in 2021, Ajamu Baraka, Director of the North-South project, developed a “Peoples centered human rights” framework, describing the framework this way, ”…They are “those non-oppressive rights that reflect the highest commitment to universal human dignity and social justice that individuals and collectives define and secure for themselves through social struggle,” he goes on to explain, “...They are not just a specific set of rights. Peoples centered human rights reflect a process informed by an ethical framework as opposed to a pre-figured list of items defined as representing human rights. This is one of the key differences between the liberal framework and Peoples centered human rights...” 

During the interview, Baraka explained that human rights must be created from the bottom-up, rejecting the idea that human rights can only come from legal texts via negotiation and compromise: “...The people themselves write their own laws…So for the people centered human rights framework, the foundation begins and ends with the people…”

In, “A People's orientation to the praxis of People(s)Centered Human Rights: proposed approach and application,” Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright asks important questions to guide thinking as folks grapple with the self-determined approach:  “…That’s the what of PCHRs, yet many are rightfully inquiring about the how - what does a PCHRs framework look like in practice and, given that this framework centers oppressed and colonized peoples, how do they become effective practitioners?” 

Meanwhile today’s headlines continue to chronicle the current moment as war, famine, deaths, hunger continues uninterrupted in real time yet fails to capture the fundamental hypocrisy and contradictions of human rights. 

But there’s a new and different narrative taking shape around human rights as more and more Black people in the US and around the world resist their daily existence of being commodified, exploited and weaponized.