With the birth name of Claudia Cumberbatch, Claudia Jones was born on February 21, 1915 in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. She was a communist author, activist, and journalist active in the United States and Great Britain. She was imprisoned and deported by the U.S. for violating the anti-communist McCarran and Smith Acts.

Born in the British colony of Trinidad as Claudia Vera Cumberbatch, she later adopted the name Jones as "self-protective disinformation". She came to the U.S. as a child when her family migrated to Harlem.

Growing up working poor had a lasting impact on Jones; her mother died when she was twelve from work-related exhaustion and she herself caught tuberculosis at the age of 17 from poor living conditions, leading to lifelong lung damage.

In 1936, Jones joined the Young Communist League USA to help support the Scottsboro Boys, a group of young black men being subjected to a legalized form of lynching in the American South. Jones became a prominent author within the organization, editing its monthly journal "Spotlight".

As a member of the Communist Party USA and a feminist black nationalist, Jones' main focus was on creating "an anti-imperialist coalition, managed by working-class leadership, fueled by the involvement of women", and championed women's causes inside the Party.

One of Jones' best known works is the 1949 piece "An End to the Neglect of the Problems of the Negro Woman!". In the work, Jones shows an understanding of what would later be called "intersectionality", writing: "The bourgeoisie is fearful of the militancy of the Negro woman, and for good reason. The capitalists know, far better than many progressives seem to know, that once Negro women begin to take action, the militancy of the whole Negro people, and thus of the anti-imperialist coalition, is greatly enhanced."

Following a hearing by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Jones was found in violation of the McCarran Act for being an "alien" (a non-citizen) who had joined the Communist Party, despite the fact that she had identified herself as a party member when completing her Alien Registration in 1940. She was ordered to be deported in 1950.

Before Jones could be deported, however, she was tried and convicted with eleven others, including her friend and communist of note Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, of "un-American activities" under the anti-communist Smith Act.

After serving several years in prison, Jones was released in 1955 and deported to the United Kingdom on December 7th that year. She immediately joined the Communist Party of Great Britain upon her arrival in Britain and remained a member until her death.

Jones continued her activism in Britain, campaigning against racism and sexism, speaking at trade union rallies, and visiting China, meeting with Mao Zedong. In 1958, Jones founded the West Indian Gazette, Britain's first major black newspaper, and helped organize celebrations of Caribbean culture that became the annual Notting Hill Carnival.

Jones died in 1964 at the age of 49. She is buried next to Karl Marx in Highgate Cemetery, North London.

"It was out of my Jim Crow experiences as a young negro woman, experiences likewise born of working-class poverty that led me to join the Young Communist League and to choose the philosophy of my life, the science of Marxism-Leninism - that philosophy not only rejects racist ideas, but is the antithesis of them."

  • Claudia Jones

Claudia Jones - Marxist.org hammer-sickle

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  • edge [he/him]
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    edit-2
    9 months ago

    [Resume] Keyword Stuffing: What It Is And Why You Should Never Do It

    I hate capitalism. Almost all of the arguments in there are bullshit. "It's unethical", 1) so is your process of automatically throwing away resumes that don't follow some bullshit resume metagame and 2) The keywords are relevant to me, it's not like I'm lying.

    "DON’T USE WHITE FONT" but also "DON’T OVERSTUFF YOUR SKILLS LIST: I’ve seen horror-level amounts of skills in people’s resumes". Hmm, if only there was a way to provide a complete skills list to the automated system that you don't need to read thonk

    "DO OPTIMIZE YOUR KEYWORDS: Pick 8-16 keywords directly out of the job description.", I don't have the time or energy to customize my resume to each job listing when it's 90% likely to just get instantly thrown away.

    I hate the hiring process so much. And I'm not in need of a job, I would just like a slightly better one. I'm sure it's even worse for people who need to find a job, usually in a limited time frame.

    • ColonelKataffy [he/him]
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      9 months ago

      sorry to be the one to say it, but the 8-16 keywords from job description being included in resume is probably the #1 most important thing you can do to get your resume past the proofreading/keyword-searching bots, and without those words popping up, that's what gets it instantly thrown away.

      • edge [he/him]
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        edit-2
        9 months ago

        I mean, it's not like I have nothing from the job descriptions. I'm looking for a programming job and have the programming languages, frameworks, tools, etc that I know listed in the resume, the same kinds of things that would be in the listing. But it's not something I tailor to each listing. Like I shouldn't have to read through the descriptions paying close attention to the wording and carefully picking out specific key words when what I know is already listed. And if the automated system is looking for anything like some of the wordy, redundant, and sometimes arbitrary bullshit in the listing, how am I even supposed to figure out which.

        Like, I probably don't have anything that a machine would interpret as "proven track record delivering great UIs to production". But I do have a list of technologies I work with and 4.5 years of not being fired from my current job at a Fortune 500 company (along with a little about what I do at that job), so of course I've delivered UIs to production. And "great" is some of the arbitrary bullshit. Part of the problem with my current job is that I don't have the opportunity to make anything "great", it's a shitty ancient internal website with some of the worst code I've ever seen across hundreds of files. They love those kinds of arbitrary or useless descriptions. They don't want me to "program a UI", they want me to "build robust front-end experiences". But each listing uses different bullshit like that.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Wait wait white font? Stacking keywords invisibly on the doc? Tell me more!

      • edge [he/him]
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        9 months ago

        That's about it really. Applications go through an automated filter before they're seen by a person. The filter usually looks for key words or phrases so if you just spam a bunch of those you're most likely to get past the automated filter. But the recruiter doesn't want to see keyword spam, so tiny white text hides it. Some people just copy/paste the entire job description and hide it.

        It could also be used as a way to lie to the filter without lying to the person who would be more likely to know you're lying. Maybe you're missing one of the qualifications but you think you could learn it on the job. The automated filter might throw you away for not having those keywords, but a person is more likely to understand that you can learn on the job.

        You can always try to work those into the visible resume without spamming them, but then you have to have writing skills, which I do not.

        But supposedly the automated filters already look for those tricks so idk how well it works.

    • edge [he/him]
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      edit-2
      9 months ago

      lol I was about to submit an application with the hidden keywords anyway, but the job seemed like a pretty good fit for me so I was too scared to risk it. I just submitted my normal resume instead. I just got a call about it. But it was from a recruiter and I've gotten calls from recruiters before saying they'd forward me along then never heard anything else. I'll probably bomb the phone interview anyway. They'll ask questions about things that I know how to do but can't really explain because autism.