Letters to the Editor
Join the Pol Pot international movement
To The Delay:
WE from the Pol Pot
International Movement (PPIM)wish to express our views on a
pressing issue currently at hand here at the University of
MichiKlan, and all across the United SnaKKKes of AmeriKKKa.
Page 3 of your March 22 issue carries a story by Mr. A.B. Cohen on the topic of sweatshop labor. We at the Pol Pot International Movement (PPIM) were appalled though not at all surprised-by this obvious case of revisionist bias.
Mr. Cohen fails to mention that one ought not to blame Mr. Tom Go$$ and Mr. Keith Molin for their bull-headedness on the issue of sweatshop labor, but rather the bourgeois pig$ who have dominated western $ociety since the earliest days of hystory. If Mr. Cohen, Students for a Sweatshop-Free Univer$ity and the other cry-baby liberals here in Klan Arbor truly wish to aid Oppressed Nations in their Mass Struggle for Liberation, then these would-be revolutionaries must strike at the very heart of the dominant regime by taking up armed struggle against the blatantly racist and patriarKKKal ameriKKKan INjustice system, its maintenance men, and the attitudes which perpetuate western $ociety as a whole.
WE at the Pol Pot International Movement (PPIM) draw directly from the philosophy of the late and revered crusader for social justice, Cambodian revolutionary Pol Pot. Pol Pot held to three simple tenets which, if followed unflinchingly, necessarily lead to the eradication of all oppression. They are: 1) Kill everyone with glasses (these being, of course, bourgeois intellectuals). 2) Kill everyone who speaks French (colonialist bourgeois). And finally, 3) kill everyone with soft hands (again, bourgeois intellectuals). This program may seem harsh, but once one has heard the cry of the People, no price is too great for Liberation.
Join the struggle for Liberation, Mr. Cohen! Join the struggle for Liberation, Students against Sweatshop Labor! Stop wasting time.
Comrades 187 & 420
Klan Arbor PPIM
RC sixth-year seniors
This article was published in the 1 April 1999 edition of the Michigan Delay.