Thursday, January 29, 2026

Three lies about value

Written by: Humphrey McQueen on 30 January 2026

 

To understand ‘capital-within-capitalism’ is to conceptualize ‘value,’ a coupling approached through a trio of questions and answers:
 
Q. What is capital within capitalism?
A. The accumulation of values.
Q. From where do those values come?
A. From our labour as wage-slaves.
Q. What happens to the values we add?
A. Some are accumulated to expand reproduction and exchange, while some maintain the personifications of capital and their agents. 
 
From these starting points, it is necessary to take a broader and deeper look into how Marx conceptualizes labour-value. This missile explodes three lies about his critical analysis of political economy. Their perpetrators serve as ‘teachers by negative example,’ to quote Mao. Their thinking is not ‘wrong’ from the standpoint of the needs of social capital, but expresses the daily doings of its personifications and agents in corporations and the state.
 
1. Mud pies
 
It would have no more importance for theoretical analysis than does the exchange of toys between two children in the nursery, an exchange which is fundamentally different in character from the purchases made by their fathers at the toy shop.
Rudolf Hilferding, Finance Capital (1910).  (1)
 
The first lie is about mud pies. Student comrades at the Australian National University report that this blather is taught in what passes for economics in academe. The mud-pie story is supposed to show how silly Marx is. It goes like this: a child makes mud pies in her backyard. To do so, she must expend labour. In doing that, she transfers her labour to the dirt and water. Mud pies, thereby, acquire an economic ‘value.’ 
 
One version stops here. Students are supposed to see how childish are Marx’s ideas. A more advanced version is that the mud pies will not have a price, which neo-Classical economists equate with value. Marx is again exposed as a fool.
 
Let’s not dwell on the ignorance and stupidity of the professors pushing this lie. Instead, let us turn to what Marx would have said if asked about mud pies.
 
First, he would accept that the child has added value to the dirt and water. She has made a use-value. Of what use is a mud-pie? The use is that it amuses its maker, fulfilling what Marx calls a ‘fancy,’ her need for play. We could go further and point out that her act of shaping the mud teaches her something about form. In addition, when the mud dries, its consistency will be different. In brief, her making mud pies has psychological and pedagogical uses. Another use, since she is bound to ingest some dirt, will be to strengthen her gut.
 
But use-value is not the same as exchange value. The presence of exchange-value is crucial to Marx’s concept of labour-value. In the case of a child’s making mud pies for fun, two essential exchanges are absent. First, she has not sold her capacity to make mud pies – i.e. her labour-power – for money wages, as some children are still forced to do to make bricks. Secondly, she has not exchanged the product of her labour for any other commodity. In short, her labour is not part of the capitalist mode of reproduction and exchange. Indeed, it is not part of any mode of production, as Hilferding has it. Her parents will have to be part of some mode of production in order to keep her alive so that she can play in the dirt.
 
The ANU academics dispose of Marx’s analysis of capitalism by making up an example from which capitalism is absent.
 
Before leaving these frauds behind, we might give the thumbscrew one more turn by relocating mud pies from backyards into the capitalism where mud is used as a cosmetic. The customer pays money to have mud applied to her face. The use-value is to improve the quality of the skin. The exchange-value is in the money she pays the Beauty Parlour to supply this service. The exchange-value is also present in the sale of labour-power by the persons who mix, apply and remove the mud. Finally, someone has had to earn the money that pays for the treatment.
 
Why not give the thumbscrew yet another twist? In The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith writes of poor folk who collect and sell pebbles. Picking up pretty stones, is another form of child’s play. But, like the sale of mud-packs, the Scottish paupers performed that labour to earn money. The use-value to the people who buy the pebbles is to fulfill a fancy, not to fill their stomachs. We can bet Paris to a peanut that few of the mud-pie scholars will not have read beyond the first three chapters of The Wealth of Nations. Their ignorance extends beyond Marx to their own master-mind.  
 
2. Mona Lisa
 
At the other extreme is the labour of Leonardo. Should a child’s mud pie ever happen to have an exchange-value, its sale price would be no more than a dollar or two – unless recognised as a Work of Art, which is by no means impossible in an era when an artist’s faeces entered a state collection.
 
Mona Lisa on the other hand is deemed ‘priceless,’ which it is, in part, because it is in the Louvre and unlikely to come onto the market. Were it to be stolen again and enter the Dark Web, bidding would start at well above a billion Euros.
 
In the case of Leonardo, Marx’s critics do not deny that the artist added ‘value’ to the paints, canvas and brushes. Rather, their accusation is that the price that the masterpiece would fetch today bears no relation to the cost of the labour that went into its production. That qualification holds even when the cost of materials are added to the cost of the labour-power that went into making them. Hence, like the mud pie, the Mona Lisa refutes the concept of labour-value.
 
How would Marx respond? The first thing he might point out is the Mona Lisa was produced in 1500, more than 250 years before the capitalist mode of reproduction and exchange became dominant. The second point is that the price that Leonardo put on his creation had been related to the costs of its production at the time. The third, and more important point concerns the nature of those costs. 
 
Here, we need to spotlight a crucial element in Marx’s concept of labour-value: what is ‘socially necessary’?
 
Marx writes about a wage-slave selling her labour-power to this or that personification of capital. Such simplifying assumptions introduce how social capital exploits social labour. Hence, the concept of labour-value applies only to such products of labour as are reproducible. You cannot mass produce works of genius.  (2)
 
A fourth aspect makes that point clearer. Leonardo could have made an exact copy of the Mona Lisa. Many portrait painters did that after being commissioned to provide one for the family to keep, and the other to be sent to a suitor hundreds of miles away. An ocean separates copies by the artist from the mass production of postcards. The social labour of factory hands who produce millions of mementoes confirms Marx’s conceptualizing of labour-value in terms of the socially-necessary costs of its reproduction. The market-price of their product is also subject to competition. The demand for postcards of Mona Lisa has dropped off in an era when gallery-goers jostle each other out of the way to take selfies in front of masterpieces other than themselves.
  
3. The wealth of nature
 
A third fib about the concept of labour value afflicts some environmentalists. They overhear that Marx argues that only labour can add value. From this correct report, they conclude that he ‘devalues’ nature, a confusion which bedevils many a discussion.
 
The word ‘value’ has several connotations. We use it in a moral sense, in an aesthetic sense and in an economic sense. Only confusion can result from not distinguishing them. Marx fully recognises the value of nature in the ethical and aesthetic senses, but his concept of labour-value is not about our feelings.
 
In 1875, two factions of German socialists published a draft programme for a unity conference at Gotha. Marx sent his thoughts to his comrades about the first part of their Programme, which had proclaimed:
 
1.  Labour is the source of all wealth and all culture ….
 
He is scathing about a phrase which could be 
 
found in all children’s primers when one task of the labour movement is to enrich the understanding of working people: ‘But a socialist programme cannot allow such bourgeois phrases to pass over in silence the conditions that alone give them meaning.
 
He lays down the law about why the opening ten words in the Programme are misguided:
 
Labour is not the source of all wealth. Nature is just as much the source of use-values (and it is surely of such that material wealth consists!) as labour.
 
Nor was Marx happy with the use of the word ‘labour.’ The draft would still have been wrong had it said that labour and nature are the sources of all wealth and culture. Marx had put a lot of his brainpower into conceptualizing the difference between labour and labour-power. Labour ‘itself is only the manifestation of a force of nature, human labour-power.’ To correct these errors, the draft should read: ‘human labour-power and nature are the sources of all wealth and culture.’  (3)
 
A further distinction is telling. Marx did not confuse wealth with value. He demonstrates that labour-power, with or without tools or machines, is the source of all the values that could be added to nature. Nature will never add economic value – but neither can money nor machines.
 
These differences allow Marx to develop his concepts of surplus-value and the kind of exploitation peculiar to capitalism. His formulations are miles away from the Gotha Programme’s kindergarten belief that ‘labour is the source of all wealth and culture.’ 
 
To repeat, nature is ‘just as much the source’ of wealth as is labour.
 
Marx draws a line between wealth and value as economic categories. In short, only labour can add value to the wealth of the use-values supplied by or taken from nature. When he calls them a ‘free gift,’ he means that no labour has been expended on them – as with virgin forests. Solar power, however, requires outlays of labour-power at every step, from mine-sites to repairing panels. 
 
Corporates are in favour of putting a market-price on nature the better to exploit its wealth. They expect to be rewarded with subsidies, off-sets and tax-exemptions for doing their dirty business somewhere else and not fouling our nest.
 
Why must the hired-pens of capital peddle their porkies? The answer is as simple as it is complex. Marx’s concept of labour-value explains how the exploitation of wage-slaves is the life-blood of vampire capitalism. Scholars are paid to fail students who use naughty words like wage-slave or exploitation. Could Marx have had them in mind when he quipped that ‘conscience, honour’ can have their market-price but no value?  (4)
 
(1) Rudolf Hilferding, Finance Capital A study of the latest phase of capitalist development (London: Routledge, 1981), 28.
(2) Karl Marx, Capital, III (London: Penguin, 1981), 772.
(3) Karl Marx, “Critique of ‘The Gotha Programme’,” M-ECW, vol. 24 (London:  Lawrence & Wishart, 1989), 81-3.
(4) Karl Marx, Capital, 1 (London: Penguin, 1976), 197.

US Department of War releases Strategy Document

 Written by: Nick G. on 30 January 2026

 

The US Ozymandias
 
The US Department of War (DoW) has released its 2026 National Defense Strategy. The document builds on the National Security Strategy which we reviewed last December. Vanguard - Communist Party of Australia (M-L)
 
Both documents identify US domination and control of the Western Hemisphere (North,  Central and South America) as Trump's priority. Without control of the Western Hemisphere, the US does not believe it can effectively exercise global hegemony.
 
Both Strategies attempt to manage US imperialism's decline, and match the growing reach of its biggest competitor, Chinese social-imperialism.
 
During his first presidency, Trump attempted to deal with the cost of US over-reach. He instructed US "allies" to take on more of the financial burden of maintaining US global dominance.
 
The Strategies formalise that approach and are couched in a double-speak that attempts to sound benign, but is always backed up by the big stick.
 
It says that Trump entered his second term of office with the US "on the precipice of disastrous wars for which we were unprepared", and that having "the world's strongest, most lethal and most capable military", it no longer has to be "distracted by interventionism, endless wars, regime change and nation building."
 
The DoW Strategy identifies four key "lines of effort", namely:
 
1. Defend the US Homeland
2. Deter China in the Indo-Pacific Through Strength, Not Confrontation
3. Increase Burden-Sharing with US Allies and Partners
4. Supercharge the US Industrial Base
 
The "foremost" of these is the first one.
 
There are various ways to do this, according to the document. The first is using the DoW to seal US borders: "repel forms of invasion, and deport illegal aliens in coordination with the Department of Homeland Security". This has already plunged the US into the new ICE age as uniformed ICE thugs kill who they like, when they like and then have the Secretary of the DHS, Kristi Noem lie about it and label the victims as "domestic terrorists".
 
Another way is to "secure key terrain in the Western Hemisphere … especially Greenland, the Gulf of America (sic) and the Panama Canal."
 
Deterring China is the second most important "line of effort". It is almost conciliatory in tone, denying any US aggressive intent and offering a "balance of power in the Indo-Pacific that allows all of us – the United States, China and others in the region – to enjoy a decent peace." Breaking Defense, a website for the US military community, notes: "Interestingly, "Taiwan" does not appear mentioned anywhere in the document."
 
But it is to be peace though (US) strength, and that means "to build, posture and sustain a strong denial defense along the FIC".  The FIC is the so-called First Island Chain, stretching from the Kuril Islands and Japan, down to Taiwan, the northern Philippines, Borneo and around to the Malay Peninsula.  It is designed to be a barrier to Chinese entry into the Pacific. 
 
Increasing the burden-sharing has already been mentioned, and the last, super-charging the US Defense Industrial Base simply means spending heaps of federal money to try and catch up with those areas where China now holds a commanding lead.
 
US imperialism is in trouble.  It is beset with inter-imperialist contradictions and sharpening social contradictions at home.
 
No matter how it tries to secure its global domination, it is a weakening power and will inevitably use war as the only way to try and stay on top.

 

More Invasion Day reports

 Written by: CPA (M-L) on 28 January 2026

 

(Above -the banner says it all, Tarndanya)

We continue our reports on Invasion Day from Boorloo, Naarm and Tarndanya -  eds.

We start with Boorloo (Perth) where a terrorist attempted to detonate a homemade bomb to kill First Peoples.

The Boorloo event started pretty normally with about 5000 in attendance (Pretty big for Perth) but about 45 minutes into the speeches a 31 year old man threw a bomb into the crowd and ran off. Thankfully it only let out a small puff of white smoke instead of exploding as designed. As more details come out, it's becoming obvious it was planned to murder Aboriginals en masse. But interestingly the media hasn't called him a terrorist.

Around 30 minutes later the police decided to clear the area by demanding everyone leave without really explaining what the issue was and that annoyed everyone. So the 5000+ people started to march as planned which upset the police because they hoped everyone would just head home. 

We marched through the city and blocked the roads for around 2 hours while music played and rappers sang. A bus driver who was stuck in traffic decided to get out and dance with the rest of us for a while. 

We marched as planned to the Stirling gardens out the front of the Supreme Court building and yarning circles formed for some more speeches. 

There was originally a music festival planned to be there with stages and Indigenous performances but the City of Perth pulled funding last week and gave it to Gina Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting event, which started later that day. 

On the other side of the City, the March for Australia folks managed to get around 250 - 300 to attend their rally. One Nation and former Nazi Party speakers spoke about 'white replacement' and mass deportation. (The Nazi Party, or NSN, says it has disbanded because of Albanese’s hate speech legislation, but its members were prominent in March for Australia events around the country).
.....................
The Naarm/Melbourne rally was big as usual.  Organisers estimated anywhere between 80,000 - 100,00, although perhaps 50,000 - 60,000 might be a more realistic estimate, but it was huge and 90% were young people.  

Mainstream media (MSM) claimed 17,000 at the Invasion Day and 2,000 anti-Immigration.   They underestimated the first and overestimated second.   MSM said neo-Nazis infiltrated the leadership of the Australia Day march and led it.  Not a peep from Zionist leadership on presence of Nazis and their hate speeches!

There were many good speakers.  Gary Foley called for unity between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous.  He reminded people there were no Australia Day celebrations and public holidays until 1988 when Bob Hawke declared 26 January to be a national day of celebrations - Gary called it right wing nationalism.  He warned of the Mussolini in Mar-a-Lago. At the end of his talk, he said he wanted to finish by quoting the greatest Indigenous philosopher Mao Zedong - "educate yourself and educate the people".  He received rousing cheers and applause. 

Another Indigenous speaker called for an independent, sovereign republic.
.....................

About 2,000 people rallied and marched in Tarndanya (Adelaide) today on Invasion Day. 

Despite a temperature of 44.7 degrees, people’s spirits were high.

They marched down the Main Street of the city and returned to Tarntanyangga (the central city square) where there was shaded area and water fountains for many children to cool off in.

The march was led by organiser Natasha Wanganeen’s daughter Tjarrah under the banner Always Was, Always Will Be - Aboriginal Land.

A feature of the rally and march was the large number of young Indigenous people. As Natasha Wanganeen later posted on Facebook, “The Next Gen Is Here!! & They Are Proud & Loud!! & Ready to Go!!” 

There were no mainstream politicians at the rally but that did not seem to worry anyone.

SA Unions provided a sausage sizzle stall and given the very hot day, the sausages were really sizzling!

The main banner focusing on the fact the city of Adelaide and surrounds is on Aboriginal Land is a timely reminder to the SA Government that all its corporate events like Liv Golf take place on Aboriginal Land

 

Invasion Day in Sydney: ‘We are stronger than their lies, Stronger than their prisons’

 Written by: Louisa L. on 28 January 2026

 

Auntie Lizzie Jarrett waits for the march to begin

La Perouse near the northern headland of Gamay Botany Bay, is Bidjigal and Gadigal land. The British invaders’ First Fleet set anchor nearby, before moving to the deeper waters of Warrane Sydney Cove. 

Pemulwuy who led the first systematic armed resistance was Bidjigal. For 30 years it flamed from the wetlands and flanking rocky ridges, then west and north along the Hawkesbury River with Darug and Gundungurra alliances, to temporarily drive the British from Parramatta.  

What became the ‘La Pa’ community drew Yuin (who had always traded and done ceremony) north. La Pa helped hold this resistance story that now inspires us. 

The La Pa mob always resisted invasion, winning the fight to stay on their land. Even as a mission, its Peoples took part in the 1938 Day of Mourning on January 26. La Perouse was a spearhead in the huge 1988 Survival Day gathering from across the continent.

1988’s spirit continued in the yearly Survival Concert until it moved as Yabun (‘music to a beat’, a reference to the importance of culture in survival) to Victoria Park at the western end of Sydney CBD bordering Redfern, that other, but later, great centre of resistance.   

In their juggernaut to divide first peoples, the Business Council of Australia targeted both La Perouse and Redfern, just as they targeted communities whose lands held other rich resources, Called Jawun, the BCA launched it in 2000, the year of that other huge – but connected – march across Sydney Harbour Bridge. 

A bloodline of warriors

At Sydney’s Invasion Day a young La Pa speaker first honoured ‘our ancestors for their bravery’. 

He said, ‘All the rights we have now were fought for by our Elders. We have to keep that same fire burning.’

On the horrific human incarceration statistics, he said, ‘It’s up to us to stop that!’

Aunty Lynda June Coe said, ‘We keep turning up every year … a bloodline of warriors’, her Wiradjuri People, ‘standing in solidarity with the Peoples along the coastline.’

‘Our young people are powerful,’ she said, ‘despite the chokehold around our necks.’  

She honoured her warrior uncle Paul Coe who died in 2025. He took a leading role in every major struggle from the early 1970s, including the founding of the Aboriginal Medical Service and the Aboriginal Legal Service. 

Against an undeclared war she said, ‘We are driven by love and respect.’

Aunty Lynda June continued, ‘We have strategies to mobilise. A coalition is growing. We plant the seeds today. We water them. A hundred years on, our young people will benefit from it.’

A figure in chains

Bundjalung Gumbaynggirr Dunghutti woman Aunty Lizzie Jarrett introduced her Dunghutti nephew, Paul Silver. Years of collective resistance has made him a formidable leader. As a grief-stricken young teen he cried out and ran from the Sydney Coroners Court as video of the murder by suffocation of his uncle, David Dungay Jnr, played on screen. 

Aunty Lizzie praised his leadership against police threats to stop the protest. Permission or not, backed by the knowledge people would defy the police order, he fronted police to force a backdown.  

Paul Silva spoke poetry of power. ‘We were here before the ships’ and the invader’s ‘chains described as law’.  

And now, ‘stealing our heart while making profit. 

‘Yet still we stand on sacred land, stronger than their lies. Stronger than their prisons.

‘We are still rising. They try to erase us.

‘But still we rise, in a country that always was, always will be, Aboriginal land.’ 

At La Pa a figure of a convict in chains is carved into the rocks. First Peoples cried as flesh was gouged from convicts whipped in Sydney Town. They sometimes sheltered runaways. 

The coalition Lynda June Coe spoke of was born then. It has only grown stronger.

Board of Peace: an “upscale golf club” with select membership and hidden agendas

Written by: (Contributed) on 29 January 2026

 

(Above: source https://worldnews.whatfinger.com)

A decision, by the Trump administration, to establish a Board of Peace, has carried all the hallmarks of the creation of a secret cabal to further 'US interests'. It aims to by-pass already existing international institutions, raised serious questions about the hidden agendas of those associated with the Trump administration and their accountability.

Following the announcement of the so-called Phase Two of the Israel-Gaza 'peace initiative',  the Trump administration launched its Board of Peace. Requesting an entry fee of $1.5 billion, the presidential administration did not provide any answers about what the financial outlay would be used for. In fact, the whole venture has raised serious doubts about the US diplomatic position and its objectives. Gaza, for example, was not even mentioned in the launch of the Board.

The founding Charter of the Board, for example, stated that it 'seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict'. (1)

The Charter was subsequently forwarded to sixty different countries although received with some noted diplomatic and political concerns. (2) The fact that Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu quickly announced his acceptance of the invitation to join the Board remains evidence, in itself, of the chosen agenda of the Trump administration. War crimes appear to not be a disqualification for membership.

One noted reaction to the Charter has included reference to European countries and others, including Australia, as possessing 'complicated ratification procedures involving pluralistic democracies, rather than nations run by a strong man or wealthy family, which characterises most of the volunteers so far'. (3)

The proposal comes at a time when questions and doubts have arisen about Trump; one of those close to him has already noted 'seeing a significant decline in the president's mental fitness'. (4) It is difficult for a sensible observer to take his changeable behaviour seriously.

It is also not particularly difficult to find examples of his confused and totally unreliable thinking and low attention span, which can often be symptomatic of mental health problems.

Coming so soon after the Trump debacle at the World Economic Forum where his rambling 72-minute speech included numerous confused references to Iceland in place of Greenland, moves by the Trump administration to use the Board of Peace 'as an alternative to the UN', has revealed further grandiose diplomatic positions more in line with idle-thinking and pipe-dreams than tangible and realistic planning with an agreed policy for implementation. (5)

It is, however, important to place Trump into the correct category: he is not a sole political leader; he is a figurehead for the most reactionary side of Wall Street and their military-industrial complex. They are also frantic; the rise of China as a competitor has threatened their position. They still, moreover, have considerable influence over the White House and Pentagon; they, therefore, seek an aggressive foreign policy and war as a means of boosting their profits. The UN is regarded as an obstacle.

They also have a long history of connivance.

The roots of the present diplomatic impasse between the US and Venezuela, for example, lie in developments in the southern half of the Americas over forty years ago. Decisions taken by the Contadora bloc consisting of Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and Panama, in January 1983, laid the basis for the right to protect sovereignty and self-determination over and above the US-imposed Monroe Doctrine. The US reaction to the move, led by Fred Ikle, Under Secretary of Defence for Policy, was to announce it was not in US interests to allow new regimes not to the liking of Washington to emerge. The policies of the US backyard?

The threats by Ikle were soon acted upon with the US invasion of Grenada in October 1983. It followed assessments by the Pentagon and their intelligence services that the small island was a base for regional subversion. Washington and the Pentagon, however, over-reacted: the small island with only 105,000 population and their main export crop being nutmeg, had merely sought an independent domestic and foreign policy.

Over four decades later, however, it is not difficult to observe the southern half of the Americas as moving away from US influence with economic links to the BRICs.

The Middle East, likewise, has also seen a number of countries surrounding Israel join, or be associated with BRICs. Strangulation, encirclement and containment, for Tel Aviv, is likely at some point in the future.

The BRICs summit later this year will also provide a forum for other related 'surprises', including moves away from the primacy of the US dollar as an international trading currency. It will hit Washington hard. How the Trump administration respond will be worth noting, coming shortly before the mid-term elections in November.

In conclusion, it is important to note the response to the creation of the Board of Peace European diplomatic circles. They noted 'it reads like membership of an upscale golf club'. (6) They did not comment on the agendas; diplomatic silence should be noted

To date, furthermore, there has been no response from Canberra:
                                              
                                          We need an independent foreign policy!


1.     Trump fiercely promotes his board,  Australian, 22 January 2026.
2.     Concerns over Gaza 'Board of Peace' with $1.5 bn membership, Australian, 20 January 2026.
3.     Australian, op.cit., 22 January 2026.
4.     See: Former Trump lawyer says he has dementia, Sarah K. Burris, Alternet, 21 January 2026.  
5.     The tale of two Trumps: Good, Bad and Bluster, The Weekend Australian, 24-25 January 2026; and, Australian, op.cit., 22 January 2026.
6.     Australian, ibid., 22 January 2026.

 

Monday, January 26, 2026

The politics of “non-political” appointments

Written by: Nick G. on 26 January 2026

 

(Above: Hamilton Secondary College Space Academy students.  Source: www.hamcoll.sa.edu.au/space-school/)

Two recent selections of people to fill significant roles reflect the continuing subservience of the Australian ruling class to the needs of the US empire.

Yesterday, PM Albanese chose the ABC’s Insiders program to announce his choice of Defence Department Secretary Greg Moriarty as the new Australian Ambassador to the US.

The announcement was welcomed by the media and by the Liberal Opposition. 

Albanese let it be known that he had consulted with the US over the appointment.

Typical of media comments was The Conversation: "The highly-respected senior bureaucrat is a safe choice, and his defence background gives him special qualifications for the post when the further development of AUKUS will be a major preoccupation in coming years."

But not everyone was throwing bouquets.  Many in the Defence community have been critical of the Department’s secrecy, its lack of accountability and its poor performance in procurement, making sometimes erratic decisions that have wasted millions of dollars.

Former Senator and submariner Rex Patrick wrote, “I’m trying to recall Secretary Greg Moriarty’s finest hour. Was it signing the $45B (up from $35B) contract for 9 Hunter Class frigates (downgraded to 6 frigates for the same $45B) OR his judgement in hiring #RoboDebt’s Kathryn Campbell for $900K p/a?”

Moriarty is a career public servant and diplomat, but he has worked directly for the US in the past. He served in the headquarters of the United States Central Command in the Persian Gulf during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. No doubt that will endear him to the Orange Idiot.

The other announcement was the selection of Katherine Bennell-Pegg, the astronaut in waiting and obviously a highly qualified scientist, as the Australian of the Year.  She was selected by the National Australia Day Council, a not-for-profit Australian Government-owned social enterprise.

Bennell-Pegg’s selection is part of the preparations for embedding Australia more compliantly in the US race to achieve military superiority in the Space Domain. She will propagandise about the magic of being an astronaut, and engage schools and students in Space-related STEM studies and the military will scoop up the “best and brightest”.

She will no doubt encourage other Australian States to follow the SA example of declaring a working class high school to transform into a “Secondary College” with a attached “Space Academy”. 

Despite the UN Outer Space Treaty (1967)  and various updates as recently as Dec 2023.  Space is the new military frontier and all the imperialist powers are racing to gain space warfare advantage.  We wrote about this, and Australia’s role, last November.

Bennell-Pegg is perfect for the role. She is on the Australian-American Leadership Dialogue private diplomatic initiative.

It was set up in 1992 and is the only non-USA NGO to be invited to a private briefing in the White House. Geroge Bush in 1992 was keen on it and every US President since has embraced it apparently,

Companies in this leadership dialogue include Raytheon, BHP, Lockhead Martin, Microsoft and Thales. The Australian Government is on it too.

Both selections will probably be praised as “non-political”.

Nothing could be further from the truth. 

 

Trump sends carrier strike force in threat to Iran

 Written by: Nick G. on 26 January 2026

 

Whilst it is difficult to follow events in any country at a distance, various statements are coming out of Iran, or about Iran by external commentators. 

There was a good attempt at analysis on Pearls and Irritations .

This analysis makes the point that references to CIA, Mossad and Pahlavi/monarchist forces are not necessarily reliable and could be part of the normal imperialist psy-ops interference. 

Meanwhile, Trump has ordered the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and three accompanying destroyers to leave the South China Sea for the Middle East, and has made ambiguous statements about whether the US will or will not deploy its military against the Iranian regime.

Workers taking initiative in anti-theocratic uprising.

Our hopes as Australian anti-imperialists are that the Iranian working class will seize the initiative in the current uprising, overthrow the theocratic dictatorship, and protect Iranian sovereignty and independence from the imperialists and their monarchistic bourgeois collaborators.

There are some reports of independent working class activity.

The Iranian city of Arak is a major industrial centre with a fairly class-conscious working class. Various industries there have confronted the regime with strike action, and faced death to do so.  

In December 2024, workers at the railway rolling stock manufacturing plant Wagon Pars held demonstrations after 50 contract workers were abruptly dismissed without contract renewal. The despair of job insecurity led one dismissed worker to attempt suicide, though colleagues intervened in time. The workers emphasized the urgent need for job stability and an end to exploitative practices by contracting firms. The strike went on for 6 weeks and the Pars workers were joined by workers at HEPCO, heavy equipment manufacturers.

Last year, there was a prolonged strike by aluminum workers, and the Iranian Human Rights Society reported on it, a part of which follows: 

Iran Human Rights Society, Thursday, September 11, 2025– The Arak Aluminum strike grips Iran. On Thursday, September 11, 2025, over 4,000 workers at Arak Aluminum Company push into their 44th day of protests. The Iran Human Rights Society reports intense security pressures. Workers face fear from management and forces. They started with demands for overdue wages. Now, this action symbolizes resistance. It fights anti-labor laws, rising poverty, and worker suppression in Iran. Furthermore, the strike highlights factory risks. Therefore, global attention grows urgent. Families endure hardship. However, workers stand firm for justice. 
Death of Arak Aluminum Workers Behind the Scorching Furnaces of Poverty - Iran HRS 

Three days ago, IranWire released the names of five people killed days ago in Arak, noting: “Except for Meysam Saberi, who was first wounded and then killed after being run over by a vehicle, all the other victims named in this report were shot dead with live ammunition.” 
Identities of Five Slain Protesters in Arak During the January Protests 

There are also reports of Arak city workers having declared the creation of workers’ councils, or Soviets. This has been reported by the Communist Party of Iran (not to be confused with the Tudeh party or the MLMs).  

This was apparently a strategy decided on by various left groups which held a Conference in Stockholm on January 10. (Press Release on Holding Iranian Left and Communist Forces’ Conference in Stockholm ). 

This was followed the next day with the statement “All Power to the Workers’ Councils” ( Statement of the Workers’ Councils of Arak: All power to the councils!

On the 19th January, these groups released a Charter for the Overthrow of the Regime: 
The Charter of the Cooperation Council of Iranian Leftist and Communist Forces for the Revolutionary Overthrow of the Islamic Republic and the Establishment of Council Rule in Iran  

None of these developments by leftist forces in Iran get any mention in the capitalist press. 

Whilst we cannot independently verify the nature of these developments and the strength of the working class revolutionary and socialist movement in Iran, it is appropriate that communists internationally make these developments known, and express their support.