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  • El periódico «La Voz de los Trabajadores»: Edición de marzo-abril

    El periódico «La Voz de los Trabajadores»: Edición de marzo-abril

    La guerra de Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán es una escalada importante en el Medio Oriente que tiene implicaciones peligrosas para los trabajadores de todo el mundo. La brutalidad del asalto imperialista a nivel internacional va junto con el ataque a las libertades civiles por parte del régimen de Trump dentro de Estados Unidos. Esto incluye las operaciones continuas del ICE y la Patrulla Fronteriza, las amenazas a las elecciones de mitad de período de 2026, los retrocesos ambientales que afectan profundamente a la comunidad negra y la brutalidad policial sin control.

    Nuestro editorial en este número nos advierte: «Existe un gran peligro de subestimar la determinación de la élite empresarial estadounidense de llevar adelante esta iniciativa. No podemos confiar en que las sentencias judiciales o las próximas elecciones nos salven. Debemos organizarnos ahora, no solo para realizar manifestaciones masivas y crear redes comunitarias contra la violencia del ICE, sino para encontrar el camino hacia la construcción de un nuevo partido de la clase trabajadora a través del cual podamos organizar nuestra defensa política en todos los planos y todos los días».

    En este número también tenemos artículos sobre los archivos de Epstein y la clase dominante, la huelga de maestros de San Francisco y una reseña del nuevo álbum de U2.

    La edición de marzo-abril de 2026 de nuestro periódico está disponible en formato impreso y en línea como PDF y contiene articulos en ingles y español. ¡Lee hoy mismo el último número de nuestro periódico con una descarga gratuita en PDF! Como siempre, agradecemos cualquier donación que ayude a sufragar los gastos de impresión.

    Haz clic en la imagen para leer el periódico o envíanos un mensaje para recibir una copia impresa:

  • In Defense of Black Power

     

    Introduction:  Socialist Resurgence is reprinting In Defense of Black Power by George Breitman. 

    This essay lays out many ideas and challenges facing the movement in 1966 that, unfortunately, remain relevant for the Black Liberation Movement today. Black Power represented a declaration of independence from the liberalism and reformism of the civil rights movement and the desire to develop an independent perspective and movement. 

    In particular, Black Power broke with the nonviolence strategy of the civil rights leadership and advocated for the right to self-defense by the oppressed. Black Power was untainted by the anti-communist prejudices of the past and embraced internationalism and anti-imperialism. Black Power was a concrete step toward a break with the subordination of the Black community to the Democrats and towards political independence. 

    In Defense of Black Power

    (October 1966)

    By GEORGE BREITMAN

    Up to now the capitalist masters of this country have been able to control or contain the efforts of black people to liberate themselves. Directly and indirectly, they have set down the rules and the boundaries within which the Negro organizations have operated. As a result, the leaders of those organizations have usually been “the right kind” — moderates and liberals, who know what they may and may not do, who abide by the rules and do not cross the boundaries. The main reason why black Americans are not closer to their goal of freedom, justice and equality is that they have lacked a mass movement and a leadership truly independent of the ruling class, its ideology and its institutions.

    Malcolm X set out early in 1964 to build such a movement, but he was killed before he could do more than expound some basic principles and offer a personal example of fearless independence. The Black Power tendency is an attempt, starting from a slightly different direction, to do essentially the same thing that Malcolm tried to do. Its appearance marks another stage in the radicalization of the Negro people, in accord with the law that the more independent any oppressed group is of the ruling class, the more radical it tends to be.

    Organizationally, the Black Power tendency is only in the early stages of its development; the various groups and individuals who have raised the Black Power banner have not yet defined their relations to each other or united into a single movement or federation. But numerically it is already considerably stronger than the organized adherents of Malcolm’s movement. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), groups in the new tendency, are national organizations, with thousands of members or sympathizers. They have an experienced cadre of dedicated leaders and activists, hardened in battle along many fronts and equipped with a variety of skills. They represent the best of the new generation of young freedom fighters who appeared on the scene around 1960, with a consistently more militant outlook than that of previous generations and an enviable ability to learn from experience and grow.

    Ideologically and politically, the Black Power tendency is also still in the process of crystallization. But its direction-to the left-is unmistakably indicated by the way it has broken away from several of the premises and shibboleths of the old “civil rights” consensus. Internationalist and anti-imperialist, it expresses solidarity with the worldwide struggle against colonialism and neo-colonialism, condemns the US war in Vietnam and rejects the contention that the freedom movement “should not mix civil rights and foreign policy.” It spurns the straitjacket of “non-violence” and proclaims the right of self-defense. It challenges the fraudulent claim that freedom can be won through the passage of a series of civil-rights laws that are largely un-enforced and benefit mainly middle-class Negroes.

    Some of its adherents still believe in working inside the Democratic Party, but others advocate a complete break with the Democrats and Republicans and the establishment of independent black or black-led parties — not only in Lowndes County, Ala., but in the Northern ghettos. Some accept capitalism; others are talking rather vaguely about a cooperative based economy for the black community that they think would be neither capitalist nor socialist; and there is also evidently a pro-socialist grouping, as was shown when delegates at a Black Power planning conference in Washington Sept. 3 posed the need to “determine which is more politically feasible for the advancement of black power, capitalism or socialism.”

    It was therefore to be expected, and logical, that Johnson, Humphrey and the capitalist brainwashers would oppose and attack Black Power, and not surprising that most liberals tagged along behind them. But how account for the attitudes of the Socialist and Communist parties and the forces close to them? Why do they respond with distress, fear or hostility, to the development of a radical and potentially pro-socialist movement among the Negro people?

    Radical Critics of Black Power

    Bayard Rustin, social-democrat and director of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, is one of the harshest critics of Black Power. Writing in the September issue of Commentary, he says that it “not only lacks any real value for the civil rights movement, but that its propagation is positively harmful. It diverts the movement from a meaningful debate over strategy and tactics, it isolates the Negro community, and it encourages the growth of anti-Negro forces.” SNCC and CORE once “awakened the country, but now they emerge isolated and demoralized, shouting a slogan that may afford a momentary satisfaction but that is calculated to destroy them and their movement.”

    Paul Feldman, a member of the Socialist Party’s national executive committee and editor of its paper, New America, is equally antagonistic. In the June 30 issue of his paper and in the September-October issue of Dissent, he says that Black Power “as it is practiced by SNCC means only the continuation of protest outside the political framework.” “Slogans like ‘black power’ are substitutes for some painful rethinking; they are an attempt to stir a lagging movement by injecting heady verbal stimulants.” In the same way that the social-democrats in the McCarthy era used to criticize Truman and Eisenhower for “encouraging communism,” Feldman charges that:

    “Through the inadequacy of its approach to poverty and unemployment, the Johnson administration has encouraged nationalistic tendencies in both the civil rights movement and the Negro community.”

    James E. Jackson, a leading Communist Party spokesman, is more circumspect than Rustin and Feldman. That is because he burned his fingers last June at the CP’s national convention when he criticized Black Power; among the younger members of the CP and among the DuBois Clubs there is sympathy for Black Power, and even some sentiment for black nationalism, and they voiced strong objection to Jackson’s remarks. As a result, Jackson’s article in the September issue of Political Affairs finds some favorable things to say about the Black Power tendency, and he couches his opposition to its essential characteristics in softer language than the kind he used to use about Malcolm X and Robert F. Williams. But this does not alter the CP’s basic position, which remains, like that of the SP’s, opposed to the most radical aspects and implications of Black Power.

    In their efforts to belittle the Black Power tendency, Rustin and Feldman occasionally go to ridiculous lengths. “In some quarters,” Rustin says, Black Power connotes “a repudiation of non-violence in favor of Negro ‘self-defense.’ Actually this is a false issue, since no one has ever argued that Negroes should not defend themselves as individuals from attack.” No one! Ever! Rustin must think his readers have short memories or have never heard his ally, Martin Luther King, admonishing black people that if blood must flow, it should be theirs. In an attempt to support his claim, Rustin adds a footnote recalling that “as far back as 1934” (he means 1943) he, A. Philip Randolph and others “had joined a committee to try to save the life of Odell Waller … a sharecropper [who] had murdered his white boss in self-defense.” But that doesn’t prove anything; it is perfectly possible to defend someone on trial for self-defense while opposing self-defense, just as it is possible to defend a terrorist on trial for his life while remaining opposed to terrorism.

    Anyway, Rustin completes the circle and compounds the confusion by adding the charge that “the new militant leadership, by raising the slogan of black power and lowering the banner of non-violence, has obscured the moral issue facing this nation [?], and permitted the President and Vice President to lecture us about ‘racism in reverse’ instead of proposing more meaningful programs for dealing with the problems of unemployment, housing and education.” Of course this doesn’t explain what kept Johnson and Humphrey from proposing “more meaningful programs” before the Black Power tendency “permitted” them not to. But it does show that “someone” is still arguing against self-defense. Feldman does not discuss self-defense at all. Jackson endorses the concept, but seems a little uneasy at the suggestion, by “some speakers,” that “Negroes could organize their own policing system to counter the violence of the racists and the police.” He deems it necessary to remind Negroes that they must continue to demand that “the government … discharge its duty to safeguard the lives and property of all its citizens.”

    Feldman doesn’t concede that the Black Power tendency is militant, let alone radical. [1] “The militant verbiage that frightens so many whites may well hide conservative tendencies,” he says. This may explain why he never mentions the SNCC-CORE opposition to the Vietnam war, which is certainly couched in militant and radical terms, and is one of the main reasons for the conservative-liberal attack on Black Power. This is an odd omission for the editor of a paper that is in its own way critical of the war. Odder yet is Rustin’s sole reference to the Black Power position against the war:

    “Floyd McKissick and Stokely Carmichael may accuse Roy Wilkins of being out of touch with the Negro ghetto, but nothing more completely demonstrates their own alienation from ghetto youth than their repeated exhortations to these young men to oppose the Vietnam war when so many of them tragically see it as their only way out.”

    Such contortions — by a man who still calls himself a pacifist — are all the more notable because this is the first time that a significant section of the organized freedom movement has flatly opposed a major war of the American ruling class. It may be news to Rustin, but the Black Power stand against the war is one of the major sources of its popularity in the ghetto, among both young and old. This is something that Jackson has the sense to recognize, despite his trepidation on other points.

    If, in the political arena, the Black Power tendency was concerned only with electing black representatives to public office, our three critics would have no objections. Jackson approves the objective of winning “the political power in those areas where Negroes predominate,” and says the CP has long advocated this. Rustin sees “nothing wrong” (and “nothing inherently radical”) in “the effort to elect Negroes to office in proportion to Negro strength within the population,” although he doesn’t think it important because there are only 80 counties and two congressional districts in the South where Negroes are a majority. Feldman says its all right too, but adds that no special strategy is needed in Southern areas where Negroes are a majority because they would win office anyway “more or less naturally as more and more Negroes in the Black Belt got the vote.” 

    Independent political action

    But their reaction is quite different when certain advocates of Black Power call for the election of black representatives through independent political action, through the creation of political parties independent of the Democratic Party-such as the Lowndes County Freedom Organization (“Black Panther”) in Alabama. Then the fur begins to fly.

    Rustin rejects independent black political action (“SNCC’s Black Panther perspective”) as “simultaneously Utopian and reactionary” – Utopian, because “one-tenth of the population cannot accomplish much by itself”; reactionary, because “such a party would remove Negroes from the main area of political struggle in this country (particularly in the one-party South, where the decisive battles are fought out in Democratic primaries), and would give priority to the issue of race precisely at a time when the fundamental questions facing the Negro and American society alike are economic and social.” Rustin says that “Southern Negroes, despite exhortations from SNCC to organize themselves into a Black Panther party, are going to stay in the Democratic party … and they are right to stay,” because their winning the right to vote “insures the eventual transformation of the Democratic party, now controlled primarily by Northern machine politicians and Southern Dixiecrats.” The Black Power perspective, he declares, flows from despair, frustration, pessimism and “the belief that the ghetto will last forever.” The best alternative that he can see is “a liberal-labor-civil rights coalition which would work to make the Democratic party truly responsive to the aspirations of the poor.”

    Feldman’s arguments are similar. Since Negroes are a minority, they can at best be “a swing vote under certain conditions.” The Black Panther strategy will deprive them of the ability “to affect the choice between a Wallace and a Richmond Flowers.” SNCC’s “most positive quality” has been “prodding liberal elements into action” and that will be dissipated if it breaks from the Democratic Party coalition. “The quick demise of the all-Negro ‘Freedom Now’ Party started in 1963 does not augur well for those who would start a similar political group in the North.” Black Power “continues to bring the racial issue to the forefront when it is vital instead to raise and make central the economic issues that can unite the black and white poor against their exploiters.”

    “The real alternative to the coalition strategy for the Negro community is not, as SNCC would have it, a radical movement of the Negro masses but the kind of Negro machines run by Congressmen Powell in New York and Dawson in Chicago, who act as the middle men between machine hacks and power centers in the Democratic Party.”

    Black Power “is aimed at the liberal coalition as well as at white racists; and it signifies a rejection of alliance with liberals. It sounds militant, but it marks a retreat into the ghettos of the North and enclaves in the South — a continuation of protest without politics.” And probably worst of all, if SNCC and CORE turn away from a coalition strategy, “the coalition itself faces a major crisis” and may disintegrate.

     Breaking with the Democratic Party

    What comes through very distinctly from Rustin and Feldman is the notion that black people are helpless, impotent, unable to do anything significant by themselves, doomed to the auxiliary role of “prodding liberal elements into action.” The social-democrats of course did not originate this view; they absorbed it from the capitalist ideologists — so thoroughly that it is as natural to them now as breathing in and breathing out. Ossified by the dogmas of gradualism and reformism, their minds cannot entertain any part for Negroes to play beyond helping “to affect the choice between a Wallace and a Richmond Flowers” in 1966 (like the choice between Goldwater and Johnson in 1964). Their thinking is so frozen that they equate “political framework” with “Democratic Party,” as though political action outside the Democratic Party, by Negroes or anyone else, is the ultimate absurdity. The revolutionary conception of the American black minority — as a vanguard of social change — is utterly alien to them.

    But the most advanced Black Power forces are moving toward this conception, even though their spokesmen do not always formulate it consistently or precisely. Some of them are beginning to grasp the fact that, thanks to discrimination and segregation, which keep them at the bottom of the social structure but also tend to unite them in resistance to their oppression, the Negro people of this country, although they are a minority, are in the uniquely favorable position of being able, through their own efforts (“by themselves”) if necessary, to set into motion a series of changes that can upset the social and political equilibrium and transform the whole future of the United States.

    The first step in this process is political — a break by the Negro people with the Democratic Party and the two-party system as a whole, and the formation of a political party of their own. (Whether such a party will be black-led and controlled like the Lowndes County Freedom Organization or all-black, like the Freedom Now Party of 1963–64, is a secondary and tactical question.) This would give them, for the first time, a political instrument that they themselves controlled, through which they could elect their own representatives in both the Southern counties and the Northern cities where they are majorities or the single biggest bloc. For the first time in American history Negroes would have a party that really represented them and that they could count on to contend in their interest against the parties of their oppressors.

    And that would be only part of the story. The other part would be the effect their withdrawal would have on the Democratic Party and its coalition with the labor leaders and liberals. In a word, it would be devastating. Without the support it now enjoys from Negroes, the Democratic Party would come apart at the seams; the coalition would be thrust into what Feldman fears so much — “a major crisis.” The Democratic Party would cease to be the major national party. The unions would be forced to reconsider their relations to a party that could no longer win national elections; in the long run, this would strengthen sentiment for independent labor politics and a labor party. Political realignment, about which there has been so much talk for so long, would become a probability, and along more fundamental lines than the liberals have ever conceived. All this would not yet give the Negro what he needs and wants, but it would create infinitely better conditions for him to obtain it than he now has. Contrary to Rustin, “one-tenth of the population” can do quite a lot by themselves when they utilize all the opportunities within their reach.

    Rustin claims that independent black politics is “utopian,” but he is the last man who should use that word; it is impossible to think of a more Utopian task than trying to make the world’s major capitalist party “truly responsive to the aspirations of the poor.” Rustin and Feldman attribute Black Power to despair and frustration, but the only sense in which this is true is that increasing numbers of black people are beginning to recognize the futility of trying to reform the Democratic Party; in general, desperate and frustrated people do not undertake a task as difficult as building a new political party. Feldman argues that independent black politics must fail because the Freedom Party suffered “a quick demise.” By this “logic” — that you should never try anything again if it doesn’t succeed at the first attempt — he would have a hard time justifying his policy of working in the Democratic Party after so many decades of defeats and betrayals. The fact is that there is already a sufficiently large body of Negroes disillusioned with the Democratic and Republican parties to provide the initial mass base for an independent black party. According to a recent national survey by Newsweek (printed Aug. 22), 17 per cent of the Negroes [2] are in favor of “dumping the Democratic Party, and going it alone in all-black political organizations, while 74 per cent are against this course. A majority of black people are not yet ready for an independent party, but no political party starts with a majority of its intended constituency. If around one-sixth of the 22–23 million black people are in favor of an independent party now, before it exists, then the possibility of starting such a party, and winning the majority of Negroes to it, certainly cannot be dismissed as Utopian.

    When Rustin argues that Black Power moods result from “the belief that the ghetto will last forever,” he may be right. Of course forever is a long time, and it is unhistorical to think the ghetto will survive long after the system that brought it into being is replaced by a non-exploitative system. But militants who expect the ghetto to last forever are more realistic than Rustin, who thinks it will be eliminated by a reformed Democratic Party. Correct strategy and tactics must flow from the understanding that the ghetto is here to stay as long as capitalism stays, and that capitalism will stay as long as the two-party system remains unchallenged. Anyway, all such beliefs are subject to modification through experience. The real question is not how long one believes the ghetto will last, but what one proposes to do about the ghetto: Do you strive to keep its residents handcuffed to capitalist politics, or do you work to liberate them for action by organizing them in a party of their own to fight against capitalist, that is, racist, politics?

    The Black Power tendency is clearing the ground for the emergence of an independent black party. The basis for such a party is the oppression common to the Negro people, or, to use the shorthand equivalent in this racist society, their “blackness.” When Rustin complains that Black Power “would give priority to the issue of race” and Feldman that it “continues to bring the racial issue to the forefront,” they are standing things on their heads. The “racial issue” is already to the forefront, it already has priority. The responsibility for that rests on the ruling class, not on SNCC or CORE. What they are attempting to do is utilize a situation that they did not create in order to change the situation; they are attempting to extract certain tactical advantages from that situation that will enable them to organize the black masses, whom the old civil-rights movement never organized and who cannot be organized by the Rustin-Feldman method of denying the importance of the “racial issue.” At the end of this process lies not racism but equality, which will be advanced by the proper mobilization and politicalization of black consciousness, just as a classless society will be achieved through the promotion of proletarian class consciousness.

    Jackson’s article avoids many of the pitfalls plunged into by Rustin and Feldman, but only by refusing to discuss some of the basic questions. He is for Black Power if all it means is “the struggle to create the conditions for the Negro people to exercise the power in the areas of their majority.” But he adds, ever so delicately, “In terms of the country as a whole, Negro Americans are more often than not cast in a minority situation.” So? So “more than the political and organizational build-up of ‘Black Power,’ more than the self-organization and militant action of the Negro people themselves is required.” He even seems to be willing to grant, conditionally without enthusiasm, that a “Black Panther” approach may be permissible in certain local situations, but he insists that a different strategy is needed nationally:

    “The perspective and struggle to establish Black Power bases of local political control in the deep South and in metropolitan slums of the North … would prove useful to a total strategy of Negro freedom only insofar as they enhanced the capability of the Negro movement to consummate more favorable alliance relations with comparable disadvantaged and objectively ‘anti-establishment’ classes and forces among the white population.”

     Anti-Monopoly Coalition

    This doesn’t mean quite what it may seem to the unwary reader. When Jackson and the CP talk about “objectively ‘anti-establishment’ classes and forces,” they are not talking only about poor whites or white workers and they are not proposing an anti-capitalist alliance. What they favor is a coalition against the monopoly capitalists, in which “good” and “liberal” capitalists would be included. Politically, they mean the Democratic Party, the same thing the social-democrats mean. The CP wants the black people to remain inside the national Democratic Party even if, in isolated instances, Negroes create local political organizations outside the local Democratic Party. Jackson’s article neither proposes nor attacks the “Black Panther” approach — it is written in the hope of influencing Black Power partisans in a pro-national Democratic Party direction. He will attack the Black Power tendency if it definitively rejects such “favorable alliance relations.” He will call it “political isolationism” — the CP’s name for any breakaway from the Democratic Party to the left.

    It is misleading to read “isolationism” into the statements of the major Black Power spokesmen. When they project a new, more independent and more radical movement, and concentrate on the questions that will help to bring it into being, that does not mean they are opposed to alliances with other forces, or indifferent to them. It means only that they are putting first things first. Feldman tries to make fun of the “small groupings of alienated white radicals” (he means chiefly the Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance) who do not see any contradiction between the independent organization of black people and their subsequent collaboration with revolutionary white workers in a struggle against capitalism. He wants us to insist that black people must commit themselves to such collaboration even before they have organized themselves. Thanks immensely for the unalienated advice, Mr. Feldman, but the days are gone when militant Negroes will give blank checks to anyone — and that, we think, is the best thing that’s happened in decades. First things first.

    First the Black Power movement will seek to organize the black masses independently, and then they will consider the question of alliances. How can we be sure? Because every movement does that, and has to. Capitalists look for allies, small businessmen look for allies, the labor movement looks for allies. The real question is what kind of alliances will an independent black movement seek. Will it be the kind that has existed up to now, where the methods and goals are dictated by other forces, and where black people are subordinates, with little voice and little choice but to do the legwork? Or will it be a new kind of alliance, where the blacks will have an equal say in the leadership and determination of policy — and the power to withdraw from unsatisfactory arrangements precisely because they are independently organized? The difference between an independent movement and a dependent movement is not over their willingness to enter into alliances, but over the kinds of alliances they enter.

    The thing that worries the Socialist and Communist parties about the Black Power tendency is not that it may reject alliances, but that it may reject alliances limited to reforming capitalism and the Democratic Party. Here their fears are soundly based. For the emergence of an independent mass black movement will create “a major crisis” for the non-revolutionary Socialist and Communist parties as well as the Democratic Party.

    October 1966

    * * *

    Footnotes

    1. In the summer Stokely Carmichael and Rep. Adam Clayton Powell jointly announced that a Black Power conference would be held in Washington later in the year. Powell’s advocacy of Black Power was seized on by Feldman (“it is especially to be noted”) and Rustin (“it is no accident”) as evidence of its non-radical character. It turned out to be poor evidence. On Sept. 8 Powell explained that he was trying to “channelize” the tendency to assume constructive roles in American society. Later, on Oct. 9, the Harlem opportunist publicly denounced Carmichael and said, “Any effort to tie me with the SNCC definition of black power is totally erroneous.”
    2. There is a close correspondence between this figure and the 19 per cent of the Negroes surveyed who voiced approval of Floyd McKissick and Stokely Carmichael as leaders.

     

     

  • Video from Chile for March 8 International Working Women’s Day


    #OutwithPiñera #GeneralStrike #Women #March8 | For this revolution to advance and to conquer all of our demands, we must make March 8 a day of struggle for all women and all workers and oppressed people. That is, we must prepare an indefinite General Strike and a plan of struggle until Piñera falls and all of the above leave.

    #FueraPiñera #HuelgaGeneral #Mujeres #8M | Para que esta revolución avance y conquiste todas nuestras demandas, hay que hacer del 8 de marzo un día de lucha de todas las mujeres y de todos los trabajadores y oprimidos.Es decir, debemos preparar una Huelga General indefinida y un plan de lucha hasta que caiga Piñera y se vayan todos los de arriba.”
     

     

    Check out this video our comrades from MIT Chile Lit-Ci made for March 8th, International Working Women’s Day! We have created english subtitles for it. The Chilean revolution continues!
     
  • U.S. immigration policy contributes to human rights tragedies

    By ANDY BARNS

    Much has been made of the mass of migrants arriving at the U.S. southern border and Trump’s inhumane response to it. In the process of developing a clear working-class response to the xenophobic rhetoric of the Trump regime, however, it is important to note the dire human rights violations that caused the migrations in the first place and how these violations are exacerbated by U.S. immigration policy. The historical context of U.S immigration policy must also be taken into account.

    Deportations of the immigrant working class have occurred with similar results throughout all U.S. presidencies, including “Democratic” ones. Illegal border crossings were at a historically low level even before Trump took office [1]. The majority of refugees fleeing the dangers in their home countries in 2017-2018 actively sought out border patrol agents for protection. Even then, the dismissive way that U.S. immigration policy treated refugees simply returned them to the dangers they were fleeing, directly contributing to human rights tragedies [2]. That is to say nothing of the heinous treatment of refugees, including children, at the hands of U.S. border patrol agents themselves.

    One of the first (of many) erroneous claims Donald Trump made in his bid for the presidency back in 2016 was that illegal immigration was of such a high level and a dangerous nature that immediate fortification of the southern border was the only viable option to protect Americans. This came with the sibling lie that the refugees from Central America are secretly criminals.

    Let us examine this claim from two angles—first, the height of illegal immigration historically, and second, the danger posed by displaced refugees. Apprehensions of illegal migrants at the border were already in decline by the beginning of the 21st century [1]. Resettlement of refugees in the U.S. has historically occurred from all across the world, and refugees from Central America make up only a small percentage of the total resettlement both before and after the Trump regime came to power.

    The sudden, sharp increase of refugee caravans in mid-2017 mainly included migrants from the so-called “Northern Triangle”—El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. This spike in migrants was motivated by increasing violence in these countries, as well as the unwillingness or inability of the police institutions of those countries to combat the violence. The threat was to life itself. Often, young children were targeted by gangs for recruitment with threats of violence or death [3]. Naturally, returning these people to their countries of origin is often lethal, if only due to the retribution of the gangs (more on this later).

    Gang membership in itself is often cited by xenophobes as a reason for border militarization. However, a very small number of children apprehended at the border have been found to have gang affiliation, approximately 56 in 250,000 [3]. That is hardly justification to scar thousands of children with family separation and, quite likely, simply create future criminals. Without parental support (emotional and intellectual) a child will often fall victim to criminal habits.

    As already stated, the reasons for the thousands of migrants is the penalty of death, and these claims are not trivial. By the standards of U.S. law, the threat of death and violence in their country of origin is justification enough for claiming asylum. But the U.S. immigration system has never really been commensurate with human rights, even under “Democratic” presidents [4]. The only thing the Trump regime accomplished was removing the façade of fairness.

    Additionally, migrants traveling to the U.S. have often suffered violence on the way, including instances of theft, physical violence, and sexual violence [5], only to then be turned back towards this madness due to suspicion that they had been the violent ones.

    On that note, the admissions process is designed to be as slow and difficult as possible, even if the asylum claims are, on paper, legitimate. Since Trump took office border patrol agents have adopted a process known as “metering” [6], whereby asylum seekers are simply put on a waiting list because “the processing facility is full.” This is a lie. Before this, all those who showed up at the border were processed relatively quickly. This process also, not coincidentally, encourages more illegal border crossings [6], the very thing xenophobic fear-mongers claim these policies prevent.

    This change in policy increases the danger the refugees face. While waiting in Mexico, or in their home country, these people are subject to the wrath of assassins. One example was the story of “Franklin” (a fake name, for protection), a man who testified against the cartels in his home country and actually helped send criminals to prison, as detailed in an article published by The Intercept [7]. As per the Trumpist policy, he was treated a priori as a criminal himself! He very well may already have been murdered. The same fate awaits many others, as the poisonous smog of nationalist rhetoric doesn’t simply taint American discourse but literally kills people. The so-called “Migrant Protection Protocols” [7] are anything but.

    The many refugees held in squalor by border protection agents create an image that furthers Trump’s anti-working-class narrative that there is a dangerous hoard waiting to spill over the border and ruin American lives. This new policy is nothing more than thinly veiled racist discrimination, an arm of class-based oppression used against the U.S. working class since the dawn of the country. A real working-class government would not only recognize the asylum claims and basic humanity of the refugees but would be more than capable of swiftly processing the refugees under humane conditions.

    Humane processing of southern migrants has never, and will never, be a priority for a government dedicated to capitalist accumulation, which requires the strict control of people (labor). This applies to “Democratic” [2] [4] and Republican presidencies, whatever they may say on national TV, where lies are a normal process of politics. Of course, the growth of political discourse detached from scientific analysis of facts, exemplified by all far-right politics, never improved the lot of human beings. Not once.

    With several hundred miles of Trump’s border wall now complete, and with several varied proposals for the design having been considered, one might ask whether any of it had even been worth it? Again, not only had illegal border crossings been in decline already, but the largest influx of migrants in recent memory had been asylum seekers. To put the numbers in historical perspective, in 1980 the cap for global refugee resettlement in the U.S. was about 225,000 persons annually, compared to the end of Obama’s presidency at just over 100,000 [8]. With Trump the cap is now under 30,000. Remember, these are claims for asylum as the result of human rights violations and even the threat of death.

    The number of persons detained at the border was about 19,000 as of May 2019. In terms of means, there is no real barrier to providing safe haven to refugees and acclimating them to the U.S. workforce. Historically, greater numbers have been admitted.

    Under capitalism, the ruling class, through mouthpieces like Trump, often stoke fear that immigrants will “steal jobs.” But who’s buying the jobs? Who is buying the work by paying wages? The capitalist class, of course! The owners of corporations are out to make as mighty a profit as possible.

    There is no shortage of work that needs done to improve the country and American lives, just a shortage of labor that the capitalist will pay for. A workers’ government would be able to plan the economy in a way that would avoid this problem, and guarantee good employment as a right. The fear that immigration, of any type, would destroy the United States is a lie calculated to keep the U.S. working class as profitable as possible. But there is a better way. A workers’ government can both fairly distribute work, and safeguard the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of all persons, including asylum seekers and their children.

    Sources 

    [0] https://www.unrefugees.org/refugee-facts/statistics/ -70.8 million global refugees. For general reference. These people fall through the cracks of global capitalism.

    [1] https://www.wola.org/analysis/2017s-migration-statistics-tell-us-border-security/ -Statistics on the current migration crisis at the southern border.

    [2] https://www.commondreams.org/views/2020/02/08/what-happens-when-person-deported -Common fate of deported asylum seekers

    [3] https://www.wola.org/analysis/fact-sheet-united-states-immigration-central-american-asylum-seekers/ -Asylum seekers are fleeing violence, not seeking it.

    [4] https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/oct/12/obama-immigration-deportations-central-america -Democratic presidents are less xenophobic only in words. Deeds speak louder.

    [5] https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2019/08/beatings-kidnappings-and-rape-sobering-new-data-shows-just-how-much-violence-migrants-through-mexico-endure/ -The dangers that refugees face on their journey. Do not forget that many are accompanied by their underage family members.

    [6] https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-06-17/thousands-asylum-seekers-left-waiting-us-mexico-border -Refugees currently detained at the border, and information on the “metering” policy.

    [7] https://theintercept.com/2019/07/14/trump-remain-in-mexico-policy/ -Examples of refugees who face the possibility of death by waiting, including “Franklin”.

    [8] https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/refugees-and-asylees-united-states -Assorted information on current and historical refugee migration to the United States.

    Photo: Cuartoscuro

  • UConn Young Socialists stand up for trans rights

    (Left) Connecticut trans athlete Andraya Yearwood, a high school senior in Connecticut.

    On Feb. 12 the families of three high school girls in Connecticut filed a suit in federal court to prohibit the participation of trans athletes in school sports. The Young Socialist Alliance at the University of Connecticut responds in the video below in support of trans rights:

  • Malcolm X, nacionalismo negro y socialismo

    Por GEORGE NOVACK

    Malcolm X fue asesinado el 21 de febrero de 1965. En este aniversario de la tragedia, volvemos a publicar esta reseña del libro de George Breitman, “El último año de Malcolm X: la evolución de un revolucionario”. George Novack, miembro destacado del Partido Socialista de los Trabajadores y autor de muchos libros de filosofía marxista, presentó originalmente la reseña en un simposio en San Francisco con Eldridge Cleaver, el 4 de mayo de 1967. Esta versión impresa apareció en International Socialist Review, Vol. 28, No. 4, julio-agosto de 1967, y fue reimpresa por el sitio web marxists.org.

    Cuando Malcolm X fue asesinado en febrero de 1965, estaba claro que su memoria sería apreciada por los millones de hombres y mujeres negros que lloraban a su líder mártir. No era tan seguro que el movimiento que inició tras su salida de la Nación del Islam o las ideas que estaba elaborando y difundiendo durante su último año sobrevivieran y ganaran terreno.

    Los pistoleros habían silenciado a una personalidad en pleno cambio que aún tenía mucho que aprender por sí misma, así como que enseñar y contar a los demás. Sus balas apartaron del campo de batalla a un comandante excepcionalmente capaz, antes de que le diera tiempo a entrenar a los oficiales y reunir las tropas para un ejército de emancipación afroamericana.

    Cuando escribí un artículo necrológico sobre el significado de su vida y su muerte en aquella época, pensé que era probable que Malcolm se convirtiera en una leyenda heroica como inquebrantable desafiador de la supremacía blanca y entrara en la memoria popular de los oprimidos que anhelan la libertad, como Patrice Lumumba o Joe Hill. La imagen de “nuestro brillante príncipe negro” evocada por Ossie Davis en el funeral apuntaba en esa dirección y tendió durante un tiempo a velar las opiniones y perspectivas políticas más prosaicas pero potentes que Malcolm había proyectado en los meses más creativos de su carrera.

    Éstas se oscurecieron aún más cuando el movimiento que acababa de lanzar y que apenas había empezado a construir, la Organización para la Unidad Afroamericana, se fragmentó y, al pasar bajo un tipo de liderazgo diferente, se desvió cada vez más del nuevo rumbo que él había trazado. Esta desafortunada evolución no puede echarse en cara al propio Malcolm. Se vio obligado a emprender su propio camino en la primavera de 1964 con grandes desventajas. Tenía una considerable notoriedad nacional e internacional y muchos seguidores. Malcolm carecía de los medios para crear una base organizativa lo suficientemente amplia y fuerte como para poner en práctica los objetivos que había fijado para el movimiento. Eran grandes objetivos y exigían amplios recursos y poderosas fuerzas para su promoción y realización. Adquirirlos y reunirlos habría llevado no poco tiempo y esfuerzo, y ese tiempo le fue arrebatado al revolucionario de treinta y nueve años junto con el aliento de vida.

    Su ámbito de influencia

    Sin embargo, si bien la organización de Malcolm flaqueó y no alcanzó su potencial como centro de reunión para la unidad y la militancia negras, su ejemplo y sus ideas han tenido un destino más feliz. En los dos años transcurridos desde su muerte han penetrado en los corazones y las mentes de la población de los guetos de norte a sur, de Harlem a Watts. Sus argumentos, sus dichos punzantes e ingeniosos y sus puntos reveladores son repetidos en muchas ocasiones por portavoces afroamericanos y entretejidos en sus debates y discusiones por radio y televisión. Orientan el movimiento del poder negro que se impuso al SNCC y al CORE, cuyos miembros difunden sus palabras a círculos más amplios. El periodico N. Y. Times Book Review informaba recientemente de que la autobiografía y los discursos recopilados de Malcolm ocupan un lugar destacado entre las lecturas favoritas de las comunidades negras.

    Los principales canales de comunicación en estas comunidades no son literarios sino verbales. Así que las ideas de Malcolm se transmiten a través de la palabra hablada que él mismo dominaba por aquellos que las han leído o escuchado de diversas fuentes. Los niños y niñas en edad de crecimiento, afligidos por las brutales realidades de la pobreza y el racismo, como lo estaba Malcolm, absorben sus ideas con la misma facilidad con que inhalan el polvo de las calles de las grandes ciudades y las carreteras rurales. Las palabras de Malcolm se transmiten en las aulas y en los patios de las escuelas, en las esquinas de las calles y en los bajos de las casas de vecinos, y crecen como semillas en un rico suelo tropical porque coinciden con los sentimientos más profundos, las aspiraciones inarticuladas y las experiencias vitales de la rebelde juventud negra. Sus ideas se han convertido en una parte preciosa e inalienable del patrimonio cultural y político afroamericano, alimentando el nacionalismo negro que bulle y hierve en las calderas gigantes de los guetos.

    La influencia de Malcolm no se detiene en las costas estadounidenses. De un extremo a otro de África, los luchadores por la libertad le rinden homenaje y le colocan junto a Lumumba. Esto no es sorprendente. Más sorprendente es que su autobiografía y sus discursos hayan sido publicados en el extranjero y traducidos a varios idiomas: francés, alemán, italiano y japonés. En Inglaterra se acaba de representar una obra de teatro sobre su vida, que ha sido muy aplaudida.

    Las principales razones de su renombre hay que buscarlas en la integridad y valentía del hombre, en las capacidades de crecimiento y liderazgo que demostró, en lo acertado y pertinente de sus posiciones y, sobre todo, en la gravedad e importancia de la causa de liberación afroamericana que representaba. Pero si el mensaje de Malcolm ha tomado alas y ha viajado tan lejos y tan rápido a través de la página impresa como lo ha hecho, no es poco el mérito de la abnegada labor de George Breitman. Fue uno de los primeros, sin duda entre los radicales blancos, en discernir la verdadera talla e importancia de Malcolm como el defensor más receptivo del nacionalismo negro desde Marcus Garvey. Se comprometió a defenderlo de sus detractores y difamadores. Explicó y propagó sus puntos de vista entre militantes blancos y negros y luego, cuando Malcolm ya no pudo hablar por sí mismo, recopiló y editó los materiales que se encontrarán en Malcolm X Speaks.

    Poco antes de la muerte de Malcolm hablé con el muy cansado líder y su lugarteniente James Shabazz en la sede de la OAAU, en el Hotel Theresa de Harlem, sobre la publicación de sus discursos. Estaba de acuerdo con la propuesta, pero no iba a llevarse a cabo bajo su dirección. Su movimiento se sumió en tal desorden tras su asesinato que su aparición se habría retrasado indefinidamente, y los militantes negros se habrían visto privados de estos tesoros durante mucho más tiempo, si George Breitman no hubiera tomado la iniciativa de reunirlos de diferentes lugares y empujarlos a través de la prensa.

    Interpretación de la dirección de Malcolm

    Después de eso, sintió que era urgente hacer algo más que simplemente poner a disposición el texto de los discursos. Las declaraciones de Malcolm tenían que ser hilvanadas e interpretadas con precisión, no sólo en vista de los muchos distorsionadores de sus posiciones, sino también porque la perspectiva de Malcolm había evolucionado tan radical y rápidamente después de abandonar a los Musulmanes Negros que incluso muchos de sus seguidores y admiradores no podían seguir el ritmo de su desarrollo teórico y político y seguían sin ser conscientes de toda su importancia y aplicaciones.

    El principal objetivo del último libro de Breitman es mostrar en qué aspectos cambió Malcolm durante el último año de su vida. Breitman analiza a Malcolm, el agitador, en agitada transición. ¿De qué pasó Malcolm y hacia qué se dirigía?

    En un simposio sobre este libro celebrado en el Militant Labor Forum de Nueva York el 14 de abril, uno de los participantes, que era, como Malcolm X, un antiguo ministro musulmán, afirmó que en esencia nunca cambió. Esta opinión deja de lado y no hace justicia a los rasgos diferenciales en las sucesivas etapas del crecimiento de Malcolm.

    Desde el momento en que fue plenamente consciente de su propia degradación y de que su pueblo estaba atrapado en las jaulas de la sociedad capitalista blanca, Malcolm estuvo imbuido de una firme determinación. Era oponerse, combatir y burlar al sistema que empobrecía, aplastaba y humillaba a veintidós millones de negros. Ese ardiente fuego revolucionario nunca se apagó en él.

    Del individualismo a la organización

    Sus primeros modos de resistencia y rebelión fueron individualistas. Buscó alivio y liberación del infierno dominado por los blancos llamado América “buscándoselas” de cualquier forma, legal o ilícita, que la vida en el gueto le dejara abierta. El primer gran giro se produjo cuando tuvo tiempo de leer y reflexionar dentro de los muros de la prisión y vio que ese temerario rumbo conducía a un callejón sin salida o a un final en muerte prematura y sin propósito. Su conversión a la Nación del Islam no fue sólo una redención personal y un despertar racial, sino un tremendo paso adelante para él y para miles de personas que ingresaron en las filas de los musulmanes negros en la posguerra.

    Representó el paso de la evasión individual de un entorno terriblemente opresivo y cruelmente depresivo a la organización y la acción colectivas. Sin duda, los impulsos revolucionarios nacionales y sociales que fluían a través de la congregación de esta secta religiosa aún no habían encontrado su cauce adecuado. No obstante, la Nación del Islam proporcionó una expresión elemental, aunque inadecuada, de solidaridad racial y conciencia nacional emergente, una cohesión nacida de la ardiente necesidad de luchar contra los diabólicos amos blancos como una banda unida de hermanos y hermanas.

    A pesar de los insuperables defectos del movimiento musulmán, los doce años que sirvió en él fueron un factor ineludible, indispensable y valioso en la formación del revolucionario Malcolm X. No podría haber sido educado y haber sacado a relucir sus especiales dotes de liderazgo de ninguna otra forma disponible. Por temperamento y formación era un hombre de acción que tenía que poner a prueba las ideas en la práctica para ver lo que valían. Tenía sed de conocimientos de todo tipo y los asimilaba a grandes tragos. Para él, las generalizaciones teóricas no precedían sino que fluían de sus propias experiencias de lucha. Por ejemplo, tuvo que golpearse la cabeza contra las constricciones del movimiento musulmán antes de convencerse de su incorrección e insuficiencia.

    Durante mucho tiempo creyó firme y fervientemente que Mahoma tenía las llaves del reino de la salvación y que su sabiduría bastaba para dirigir el movimiento. Tanto en los círculos religiosos como en los políticos radicales no hay nada inusual en una relación tan deferente entre maestro y discípulo y en la disciplina que conlleva. Piénsese en los millones de personas que han adoptado una actitud comparable de fe ciega y obediencia hacia las declaraciones de Stalin o Mao Tse-tung, y esto en movimientos que no son de inspiración religiosa, sino presumiblemente impulsados por la filosofía crítica del materialismo.

    Malcolm no hizo valer toda su capacidad de liderazgo autosuficiente hasta que se recuperó de la sorpresa y la conmoción que le produjo su ruptura con Muhammad y procedió a examinar y revisar su pensamiento anterior. Breitman describe y documenta los pasos sucesivos de este segundo periodo de transformación de su perspectiva. Ese cambio consistió esencialmente en pasar del rechazo total a la revolución deliberada de la sociedad estadounidense. Tal tarea requería el desarrollo de un programa político que guiara la acción de las masas negras y la construcción de una organización capaz de sacarlas de la esclavitud.

    Las ideas clave que avanzó en su propia carta del nacionalismo negro incluyen el liderazgo de los negros a todos los niveles resumido en la idea del poder negro; la autodefensa; el orgullo racial y la solidaridad frente al enemigo; la identificación con África y la lucha de liberación colonial; oposición intransigente a la estructura de poder capitalista blanca y a sus partidos gemelos; acción política negra independiente; oposición a todas las intervenciones imperialistas contra los pueblos coloniales; colaboración sobre una base de igualdad entre los negros militantes y aquellos blancos militantes que estén dispuestos a hacer algo más que hablar sobre la lucha contra la injusticia racial y la desigualdad social.

    Estos resultados de las revalorizaciones de Malcolm se han extendido desde entonces por toda la comunidad negra. Pero cuando su vida se truncó se embarcó en un nuevo y tercer estado de transición que no es tan bien o ampliamente conocido. En este libro Breitman trata sólo de pasada esta fase incompleta del pensamiento de Malcolm, aunque ha escrito sobre el tema en otros lugares, especialmente en Marxism and the Negro Struggle.

    Malcolm iba camino de convertirse en algo más que un nacionalista negro puro y duro y un defensor revolucionario del poder negro; empezaba a abrazar algunas de las ideas del socialismo, especialmente la convicción consciente de que el capitalismo estadounidense y su imperialismo vulturista tenían que ser derrocados y abolidos si se quería liberar a los afroamericanos y a los explotados y oprimidos del resto del mundo. Estas conclusiones tienen una inmensa importancia tanto para los problemas de la liberación de los negros como para las perspectivas de una América socialista.

    Hay muchos malentendidos sobre las relaciones reales entre el nacionalismo militante progresista y el socialismo revolucionario. A menudo se afirma que el nacionalismo y el socialismo no tienen nada en común, que son opuestos irreconciliables. Se trata de un juicio unilateral. Es cierto que el Estado-nación ha sido el producto característico de la sociedad burguesa y del desarrollo político capitalista; que los marxistas son internacionalistas; y que uno de los principales objetivos del socialismo es acabar con las fronteras nacionales que encorsetan la actividad económica y con las animosidades nacionales que dividen a los pueblos y permiten a las fuerzas reaccionarias lanzarlos unos contra otros.

    Independencia nacional antiimperialista

    Todo esto constituye una parte del programa socialista. Pero su posición es más que eso, especialmente en este momento de la historia.

    Los marxistas reconocen que la conquista, la división y la explotación imperialistas del planeta han tenido como consecuencia la subyugación y la opresión de muchos pueblos. Sus luchas por librarse de la dominación económica, política y cultural de las grandes potencias capitalistas y conquistar la independencia y la unidad nacionales no sólo son irreprimibles, sino totalmente legítimas. Estas luchas tienen derecho a ser apoyadas por sus propios méritos por cualquier auténtico partidario de la democracia.

    Hay otras razones por las que los socialistas revolucionarios saludan y ayudan a las luchas de liberación nacional en Asia, África, Oriente Medio y América Latina en todas sus fases. Estos movimientos antiimperialistas asestan duros golpes a los gobernantes capitalistas, que son los principales enemigos de la clase obrera mundial y opositores al socialismo, y alteran así el equilibrio de fuerzas de clase a favor del campo anticapitalista. Así, las nacionalidades insurgentes están en alianza objetiva con las fuerzas del socialismo contra todas las formas de reacción y represión imperialistas.

    Este alineamiento de los dos movimientos sociales y políticos separados no se limita a la arena internacional; también puede ser operativo dentro de los propios bastiones imperialistas. Es el caso actual de Estados Unidos, donde los sentimientos nacionalistas expresados en la cruzada del poder negro y el movimiento socialista revolucionario se enfrentan por igual al régimen capitalista.

    Desarrollo desigual de los trabajadores

    Desgraciadamente, los movimientos de oposición no marchan al unísono, sino que a menudo están desfasados entre sí. Esto es ciertamente así hoy en día, cuando las masas negras están muy por delante, dispuestas a desafiar a la estructura de poder como la fuerza social más rebelde de la vida americana, mientras que la mayoría de los trabajadores blancos están conservados y apáticos. Al igual que las zonas coloniales son el escenario de la actividad revolucionaria más intensa a escala mundial, el movimiento de resistencia negro tiene prioridad en las luchas anticapitalistas en Estados Unidos. Este desarrollo irregular crea muchos problemas angustiosamente difíciles para los revolucionarios, tanto blancos como negros, que se preocupan por construir una oposición ganadora al statu quo.

    Sin embargo, las experiencias de las revoluciones coloniales con las que los militantes negros se sienten tan estrechamente emparentados tienen muchas lecciones que enseñar a quienes, como Malcolm, quieren reflexionar sobre sus problemas para librar la lucha más eficaz. Entre ellas están la necesidad de unidad en la lucha, la hostilidad intransigente hacia los hombres del dinero y la desconfianza hacia todos sus agentes, conservadores o liberales, abiertos o encubiertos.

    Dos de estas lecciones que Malcolm llegó a aprender son de gran importancia e incluso decisivas. Una es la utilidad de tener aliados cuando uno se ve acosado por un enemigo formidable. Para rechazar y derrotar los asaltos del imperialismo, los insurgentes coloniales necesitan toda la ayuda que puedan obtener de cualquier parte, y no menos de los residentes descontentos en las patrias de sus opresores. Vemos un nuevo ejemplo de esto en el impulso a la moral de los vietnamitas y la disensión sembrada en Washington por las movilizaciones contra la guerra que han provocado ataques tan frenéticos de Johnson, Westmoreland, Lodge y Nixon.

    Así que los luchadores negros por la libertad aquí, como Malcolm llegó a comprender, pueden beneficiarse de las alianzas con fuerzas fraternales en casa, siempre que estos alineamientos no obstruyan su propia unidad e independencia o desalienten y disuadan su propia acción revolucionaria. Lo que cuenta en las alianzas, como subraya Breitman, no es el color de la piel ni la afiliación nacional de los participantes, sino la naturaleza y el objetivo de su asociación en la lucha.

    Otra verdad que se ha enseñado a muchos rebeldes coloniales, a veces para su asombro y consternación, es que una lucha nacional que se queda a medio camino no puede satisfacer las necesidades y aspiraciones sociales más profundas de sus pueblos. La lucha por la emancipación debe llevarse hasta su conclusión lógica. No basta con conquistar la soberanía política en el capitalismo. La independencia nacional puede volverse ficticia y convertirse en una trampa y un engaño si el poder popular, amarillo, negro o blanco, no se apoya en la propiedad pública de los medios de vida y de trabajo. Mientras los intereses de los propietarios extranjeros o nativos controlen los principales recursos nacionales, las demandas de las masas seguirán insatisfechas y el país puede volver a caer fácilmente en la sumisión económica al imperialismo. La reinstauración del neocolonialismo bajo regímenes negros formalmente independientes se está imponiendo hoy en muchas naciones africanas recién liberadas.

    Del nacionalismo al socialismo

    Esta evolución no está predestinada. Puede evitarse y tomar el camino del progreso si la revolución nacional se combina con una revolución más profunda y amplia de carácter socialista, mediante la cual un gobierno de obreros y campesinos se haga cargo de las instalaciones productivas del país y gestione una economía planificada de forma democrática. Por eso los movimientos de liberación nacional antiimperialistas en los países subdesarrollados tienden irresistiblemente a pasar de los motivos puramente nacionalistas a los objetivos y medidas socialistas, a menudo en la retórica, pero a veces en la realidad.

    Esta reorientación de una revolución nacionalista democrática hacia cauces socialistas, que se aloja en la propia dinámica de un poderoso levantamiento de masas, tuvo lugar en Cuba después de China y Vietnam. Comenzando como luchas armadas de liberación nacional, estas revoluciones se convirtieron en movimientos conscientemente socialistas a través de las conclusiones derivadas de las confrontaciones y colisiones directas con los imperialistas y sus sirvientes.

    ¿Qué aplicación tienen estos desarrollos de la revolución colonial a la lucha afroamericana por la igualdad y la emancipación? Hay tres componentes diversos en el movimiento por la liberación negra: su composición social de clase obrera, su nacionalismo negro y su socialismo sumergido y latente. La interrelación e interacción de estos elementos rara vez se ve con claridad, y a menudo se niega y descarta, porque no aparecen de manera uniforme ni maduran al mismo ritmo.

    Es obvio para casi todos los negros estadounidenses, nacionalistas o no, que tienen que trabajar para ganarse la vida (si pueden conseguir un empleo), y que toda la existencia de su pueblo está desfigurada por la barra de color. Estas condiciones generan una revuelta feroz y explosiva. Pero la dinámica y la dirección anticapitalista, y por tanto prosocialista, de su lucha no son tan evidentes, especialmente cuando aún no conoce el auténtico pensamiento socialista, cuando el movimiento obrero es pasivo e indiferente a su difícil situación, y cuando los elementos socialistas declarados son predominantemente blancos y débiles.

    En tales circunstancias, una perspectiva prejuiciada en principio contra el socialismo o el marxismo, políticamente poco clara y que ignore el anticapitalismo implícito en el carácter obrero de la revuelta negra es peligrosa. Corre el riesgo de ir a remolque de las necesidades y de frenar el avance del propio movimiento. Los millones de habitantes de los guetos no sólo están presos de la segregación racial; se enfrentan diariamente a problemas sociales, económicos, políticos y educativos que no pueden aliviarse, y mucho menos resolverse, en el marco del sistema económico y político existente o sin la ayuda de las ideas socialistas.

    El significado destacado de la evolución de Malcolm desde el nacionalismo negro hacia el socialismo a escala nacional e internacional fue que, a partir de sus observaciones del mundo colonial y de su análisis de la historia moderna, había empezado a comprender la necesidad de la fusión de estos dos movimientos y a buscar una síntesis de los aspectos nacionalistas revolucionarios y socialistas de la lucha por la libertad. Este paso en su evolución no fue accidental ni estrictamente individual; fue una conclusión política lógica de toda su experiencia como revolucionario. En este sentido, anticipó el futuro del movimiento y encarnó lo mejor de su etapa actual.

    Su evolución fue incompleta, o mejor dicho, incompleta. No era, o todavía no lo era, como Breitman se encarga de señalar, marxista. Sin embargo, algunos de sus discípulos de hoy, inspirados por la visión de Malcolm y su don para el crecimiento, también están empezando a ver que el nacionalismo negro y el socialismo revolucionario no tienen por qué ser adversarios o rivales, sino que pueden y deben ser amigos y aliados cuyos seguidores pueden trabajar juntos por fines comunes.

  • Lal Khan: “What a heart has ceased to beat!”

     

    Lal Khan,  June 1956 – 21 February 2020,

    Lal Khan, Pakistani revolutionary internationalist, and fighter for the working class, has passed away.

    BY ASIAN MARXIST REVIEW

    Lal Khan, whose name needs no introduction in the revolutionary politics of not only Pakistan but world over, breathed his last today on 21st February at 7:00 PM in Lahore. He had been fighting cancer for the last one and a half year. He was 64.

    He was one of the founders of ‘The Struggle’, a fortnightly Marxist magazine in Urdu language, chief editor of Asian Marxist Review and international secretary of Pakistan Trade Union Defence Campaign (PTUDC). Lal Khan started his lifelong revolutionary struggle as a student leader at Nishtar Medical College Multan in late 1970s and soon got interested in the ideas of Marxism and revolutionary socialism. During despotic Zia-Ul-Haq regime he endured floggings and incarceration and later went into exile for many years when martial law courts sentenced him to death for not abandoning his political activities. For more than four decades he fought under the banner of revolutionary socialism for the historical interests of working class. In the dark period unfolding with the collapse of Soviet Union he not only laid the foundations of a Marxist organization in South Asia but ruthlessly defended, through dozens of his writings, the ideas of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Trotsky against the imperialist propaganda onslaught of so called failure of Socialism as a social system. His confidence and belief in the communist future of mankind didn’t shake till his last breath.

    The journey of his life may have come to an end but he will live long in the struggle for the emancipation of mankind from capitalist exploitation and tyranny in Pakistan, South Asia and whole world. His legacy would inspire many generations to come who have to keep the red flag flying high. We would like to pay tribute to him in the words of comrade Lenin:

    What a torch of reason ceased to burn,
    What a heart has ceased to beat!

    Farewell comrade Lal Khan…  your memory would always be honored.

  • Thirteen theses on the imminent ecological catastrophe

    Thirteen theses on the imminent ecological catastrophe and the (revolutionary) means of averting it

    By MICHAEL LÖWY

    I. The ecological crisis is already the most important social and political question of the 21st century, and will become even more so in the coming months and years.The future of the planet, and thus of humanity, will be determined in the coming decades. Calculations by certain scientists as to scenarios for the year 2100 aren’t very useful for two reasons: A) scientific: considering all the retroactive effects impossible to calculate, it is very risky to make projections over a century. B) political: at the end of the century, all of us, our children and grandchildren will be gone, so who cares?

    II. As the IPCC explains, if the average temperature exceeds the pre-industrial period’s by 1.5°, there is a risk of setting off an irreversible climate change process. The ecological crisis involves several facets, with hazardous consequences, but the climate question is doubtless the most dramatic threat. What would the consequences of this be? Just a few examples: the multiplication of megafires such as in Australia; the disappearance of rivers and the desertification of land areas, melting and dislocation of polar ice and raising the sea level, which could reach dozens of meters. Yet, at two meters vast regions of Bangladesh, India and Thailand, as well as the major cities of human civilisation – Hong Kong, Calcutta, Venice, Amsterdam, Shanghai, London, New York, Rio – will have disappeared beneath the sea. How high can the temperature go? From what temperature will human life on this planet be threatened? No one has an answer to these questions.

    III. These are risks of a catastrophe unprecedented in human history. One would have to go back to the Pliocene, some millions of years ago, to find climate conditions similar to what could become reality in the future, due to climate change. Most geologists consider that we have entered a new geological era, the Anthropocene, when conditions on the planet have been modified by human action? What action? Climate change began with the 18th Century Industrial Revolution, but it is after 1945, with neoliberal globalisation, that it took a qualitative leap. In other words, modern capitalist industrial civilisation is responsible for the accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere, thus of global heating.

    IV. The capitalist system’s responsibility in the imminent catastrophe is widely recognised. Pope Francis, in his Encyclical Laudato Si, without uttering the word ‘capitalism’ spoke out against a structurally perverse system of commercial and property relations based exclusively on the ‘principle of profit maximization’ as responsible both for social injustice and destruction of our Common House, Nature. A slogan universally chanted the world over in ecological demonstrations is ‘Change the System, not the Climate!’ The attitude shown by the main representatives of this system, advocates of business as usual– billionaires, bankers, ‘experts’, oligarchs, politicians – can be summed up by the phrase attributed to Louis XIV: ‘After me, the deluge’.

    V. The systemic nature of the problem is cruelly illustrated by governments’ behaviour. All, (with very rare exceptions) acting in the service of capital accumulation, multinationals, the fossil oligarchy, general commodification and free trade. Some of them – Donald Trump, Jair Bolsonaro, Scott Morrison (Australia) – are openly ecocidal and climate deniers. The other, ‘reasonable’ ones set the tone at the annual COP (Conference of the Parties or Circuses Organised Periodically?) meetings, which feature vague ‘green’ rhetoric and total inertia. The most successful was COP 21, in Paris, which concluded with solemn promises from all governments taking part to reduce emissions – not kept, except by a few Pacific islands. Scientists calculate that even if they had been kept, the temperature would still rise up to 3.3° higher…

    VI. ‘Green capitalism’, ‘carbon markets’, ‘compensation mechanisms and other manipulations of the so-called ‘sustainable market economy’ have proven perfectly useless, while ‘greening’ with a vengeance, emissions are skyrocketing, and catastrophe gets closer and closer. There is no solution to the ecological crisis within the framework of capitalism, a system entirely devoted to productivism, consumerism, the ferocious struggle for ‘market shares’, to capital accumulation and maximizing profits. Its intrinsically perverse logic inevitably leads to the disruption of ecological balance and destructions of ecosystems.

    VII. The only effective alternatives, capable of avoiding catastrophe, are radical alternatives. ‘Radical’ means attacking the root of the evil. If the capitalist system is at the root, we need anti-system alternatives, i.e. anticapitalist ones, such as ecosocialism, an ecological socialism up to the challenges of the 21st century. Other radical alternatives such as ecofeminism, social ecology (Murray Bookchin), André Gorz’s political ecology, or degrowth have much in common with ecocialism: relations of reciprocal influence have developed in recent years.

    VIII. What is socialism? For many Marxists, it is transformation of the relationships of production – by the collective appropriation of the means of production – to allow the free development of productive forces. Ecosocialism lays claim to Marx, but explicitly breaks with this productivist model. Of course, collective appropriation is indispensable, but the productive forces themselves must also be transformed: by changing their energy sources (renewables instead of fossil fuels); b) by reducing global energy consumption; c) by reducing production of goods (‘degrowth’), and by eliminating useless activities (advertising) and harmful ones (pesticides, weapons of war); d) by putting a stop to planned obsolescence. Ecosocialism also involves transformation of consumption models, transport forms, urbanism and ‘ways of life.’ In short, it is much more than a change of property forms: it is a civilizational change, based on values of solidarity, equality, and respect for nature. Ecosocialist civilisation breaks with productivism and consumerism, in favour of shorter working time, thus more free time devoted to social, political, recreational, artistic, erotic etc activities. Marx referred to this goal by the term ‘Realm of freedom’.

    IX. To achieve the transition towards ecosocialism, democratic planning is required, guided by two criteria: meeting actual needs, and respect for the ecological balance of the planet. The people themselves, once the onslaught of advertising and the consumption obsession created by the capitalist market are eliminated – who will decide, democratically, what their real needs are. Ecosocialism is a wager on the democratic rationality of the popular classes.

    X. This requires a real social revolution. How can such a revolution be defined? To carry out the ecosocialist project, partial reforms will not suffice. We could refer to a note by Walter Benjamin, on the margins of his theses On the concept of history(1940): ‘Marx said that revolutions are the locomotive of world history. But things might work out otherwise. It is possible that revolutions are the act by which humans travelling in the train activate the emergency brakes.’ Translation in 21st-century terms: we are all passengers on a suicide train, which is named Modern Industrial Capitalist Civilisation. This train is hurtling towards a catastrophic chasm: climate change. Revolutionary action aims to halt it – before it is too late.

    XI. Ecosocialism is at once a project for the future and a strategy for the struggle here and now. There is no question of waiting for ‘the conditions to be ripe’. It is necessary to provoke convergence between social and ecological struggles and fight the most destructive initiatives by powers in the service of capital. This is what Naomi Klein called Blockadia. Within mobilisations of this type, an anticapitalist consciousness and interest in ecosocialism can emerge during struggles. Proposals such as the Green New Deal are part of this struggle, in their radical forms, which require effectively renouncing fossil energies – but not in those limited to recycling ‘green capitalism’.

    XII. Who is the subject in this struggle? The workerist / industrialist dogmatism of the previous century is no longer current. The forces now at the forefront of the confrontation are youth, women, Indigenous people, and peasants. Women are very present in the formidable youth uprising launched by Greta Thunberg’s call – one of the great sources of hope for the future. As the ecofeminists explain to us, this massive women’s participation in the mobilisations comes from the fact that they are the first victims of the system’s damage to the environment. Unions are beginning here and there to also get involved. This is important, because, in the final analysis, we can’t overcome the system without the active participation of workers in cities and countryside, who make up the majority of the population. The first condition, in each movement is associating ecological goals (closing coal mines or oil wells, or thermal power stations, etc) with guaranteed employment for the workers involved.

    XIII. Do we have any chance of winning this battle, before it is too late? Unlike the so-called ‘collapsologists,’ who clamorously proclaim that catastrophe is inevitable and that any resistance is futile, we think the future is open. There is no guarantee that this future will be ecosocialist: this is the object of a wager in the Pascalian sense, in which we commit all our forces, in a ‘labour for uncertainty’. But as Bertolt Brecht said, with grand and simple wisdom: ‘Those who fight may lose. Those who don’t fight have already lost.’

    Michael Löwy, an activist of the Fourth International, is an ecosocialist, sociologist, and philosopher. Born in 1938 in São Paulo (Brazil), he has lived in Paris since 1969. He is research director (emeritus) at the CNRS, professor at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales, and the author of numerous books published in 29 languages, including The Marxism of Che Guevara, Marxism and Liberation Theology, Fatherland or Mother Earth? and The War of Gods: Religion and Politics in Latin America. He is joint author (with Joel Kovel) of the International Ecosocialist Manifesto. He was also one of the organizers of the first International Ecosocialist Meeting, in Paris, in 2007.

  • Philadelphia: A history of racism, repression, and struggle

    In 1944, the Philadelphia Transportation Company and its old whites-only company union initiated a reactionary strike, after eight Black transit employees (above) were trained as trolley operators. The federal government intervened, sent National Guard troops to guard the trolleys, and forced the strikers back to work.

    By JOHN LESLIE

    Philadelphia was the major city of the United States for several decades after the Revolution. Early on, the city’s Black population, both free and slave, was substantial. Escaped slaves came to Pennsylvania, seeing it as a refuge from Southern slaveholders, especially after the state enacted a gradual emancipation act in 1780. But slave catchers still roamed the streets of Philadelphia, ready to kidnap Black people and send them back into bondage.

    In the 100 years spanning 1790-1890, the Black population of Philadelphia rose from 2000 to almost 40,000. A further increase in Black migration from the South was made possible by greater opportunities for work in the mines and mills of Pennsylvania. Black workers were consigned to the dirtiest and most dangerous jobs, and had to contend with growing racial segregation in public facilities such as the streetcar lines.

    The demand for workers was made more acute by the First World War, when the supply of immigrant labor from Europe was cut off. About 50,000 Black workers from the South and the West Indies came to Philly during the war. Afterward, many Black workers lost their jobs to returning white veterans.

    Throughout the history of Philadelphia, the competition for jobs between white and Black workers led to tensions and, at times, violence toward Black workers. In 1917 and 1918, there were race riots directed at Black workers in both Chester, Pa., and Philadelphia, which left two dead and many injured. In 1911, a Black steel worker, Zachariah Walker, was lynched in Coatesville, Pa. Black workers experienced systematic discrimination in the Philadelphia area. This discrimination was resisted by the NAACP, Black fraternal organizations and churches.

    From 1913 to 1922, the Industrial Workers of the World, Local 8, organized a multiracial union of dockworkers. Local 8 had an integrated leadership and won many gains for longshoremen on Philly’s docks. The union was smashed by the employers in 1922 in the midst of the Red Scare. The bosses played on racial prejudices of the workers to divide the union and weaken it.

    The 1944 racist transit strike

    The Second World War brought another surge of migration to meet the needs of war production. World War II opened the door to increased activity demanding civil rights and an end to job discrimination.

    For example, the Transport Workers Union fought for the hiring of Black trolley operators during the war. In 1944, the six-day Philadelphia Transportation Company strike and lock-out was a hate strike intended to stop the hiring of Black workers by the local transport company.

    Art Preis wrote in the Socialist Workers Party’s newspaper, The Militant, “In a desperate move to smash the CIO Transport Workers Union, the Philadelphia Transportation Company, acting in collusion with leaders of the former company union, last week inspired a six-day municipal transportation stoppage against the training of eight Negro workers for operating jobs on street cars and buses.

    “Using the time-worn device of ‘divide and rule,’ the company and its agents provoked this anti-labor race-hate action aimed at splitting the ranks of the CIO union, which a few months ago won a collective bargaining election against the company-sponsored Philadelphia Rapid Transit Employees Union. This company outfit for years had upheld the PTC’s flagrant Jim Crow policies” (“Philadelphia Walkout Aims To Smash CIO Transport Union,” The Militant, August 7, 1944).

    For several days, the strike brought Philadelphia’s public transport to a standstill. Given the city’s importance to wartime production, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the Secretary of War to put an end to the walkout. General Phillip Hayes ordered strikers to return to work. Refusal would have meant termination and loss of draft deferments. The eight Black workers were allowed to assume the jobs they had been promised.

    Following World War II, a Republican-controlled city council passed anti-discrimination legislation, but racism and lack of opportunity persisted in employment, education, and housing. During the 1950s, Black clergy led a series of boycotts demanding fair employment opportunities and winning some victories.

    In the early 1960s, the NAACP led demonstrations against Jim Crow practices in the building trades and the exclusion of Black tradesmen from jobs in the city. This struggle reached its height in a fight to integrate the site of a new junior high school in North Philadelphia. NAACP pickets, which included many Black trades people, blocked the worksite gates, demanding the hiring of minority workers. Pickets were met with violence from white union workers and cops.

    After two weeks of picketing, building trades unions and contractors met with the NAACP, led by Cecil B. Moore, and the AFL-CIO Human Rights Committee to iron out an agreement.

    “By the time the meeting came to an end, Moore believed that the contractors had agreed to hire a Black plumber, a steamfitter and two electricians onto the Strawberry Mansion site. On Tuesday morning, however, Moore and NAACP pickets found not a desegregated workforce, but rather a significantly larger police presence with orders … to insure that workers were able to enter the site” (from “Up South, Civil Rights and  Black Power in Philadelphia,” by Matthew J. Countryman).

    Despite promises from the unions, the overwhelmingly white composition of building site crews persists to this day.

    From civil rights to Black Power

    As the civil rights struggle in the South heated up and with the emergence of the Black Power movement, Black radicals in Philadelphia organized themselves.

    In 1964, John Churchville, a Philly native who had worked in organizing for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in Mississippi and Georgia, opened a SNCC Freedom Library in the city. A core group of activists soon gathered around SNCC’s principles of self-organization and organizing independent of white liberals.

    The Freedom Library became a center for educational programs, including tutoring of students, as well as an organizing center for the Black Peoples’ Unity Movement. BPUM was a nationalist-oriented formation dedicated to community control and Black self-organization.

    In August 1966, 80 Philadelphia cops, led by police captain Frank Rizzo (later the city’s mayor), raided the offices of SNCC, the Freedom Library, and apartments where activists lived. Some dynamite, which had been brought into the SNCC headquarters by one activist, Barry Dawson, was seized, and Dawson was charged with possession of an explosive. Other SNCC activists and organizers went into hiding as Rizzo claimed that he had evidence that SNCC was planning to initiate a campaign of urban guerilla warfare. Police repression effectively ended SNCC’s organizing in Philadelphia.

    The emergence of the Black Power tendency was the result of frustration with the self-limiting nature of the liberal-controlled mainstream civil rights organizations—in particular with the nonviolence strategy of a civil rights leadership that condemned self-defense by the oppressed. Black Power was untainted by the anti-communist prejudices of the past and embraced internationalism and anti-imperialism. Black Power was a concrete step toward a break with the subordination of the Black community to the Democrats and towards political independence.

    The founding of the Philadelphia chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP) by young activists, including Mumia Abu-Jamal, was met with police violence under the command of the reactionary Frank Rizzo, who became chief of police in 1968. Mumia was beaten by Philly cops while protesting against a campaign appearance of the racist George Wallace the same year.

    On Aug. 31, 1970, Rizzo’s cops raided the offices of the BPP in the neighborhoods of North Philadelphia and Germantown on suspicion of Panther involvement in the shootings of two police officers. No evidence linking the BPP to the shootings was found, but Black Panthers were marched through the streets naked in an attempt to humiliate them. The raid had the effect of increasing community support for the BPP. In September 1970, the BPP-initiated People’s Constitutional Convention convened on the Temple University campus with more than 6000 participants.

    “Despite the ever-present repression, the police harassments, and the arrests, the city’s chapter blossomed as Black youth flocked to the offices to join the Party. We had Panther supporters in most of the city high schools, selling and sharing the newspapers. By fall 1970, we fed kids in four sites throughout the city; across from the main office in North Philadelphia on Columbia Avenue in a storefront next to a supermarket, in West Philadelphia, in a church near Party headquarters; in Germantown; and in a community center in South Philadelphia” (Mumia Abu-Jamal, “We Want Freedom”).

    Unfortunately, the BPP was destroyed by police repression, COINTELPRO disruption and spying, and factionalism.

    Unable to rely upon repression alone to keep the aspirations of the Black community under control, the Democratic Party—which consistently controlled the city government since 1952—assimilated a layer of Black reformists and former radicals into its ranks. The ability of the Democrats to co-opt the demands of popular movements helps the ruling class keep potentially radicalized people trapped within a set-up that’s rightly called the graveyard of social movements.

    Postwar white flight to Pennsylvania and New Jersey suburbs, and the loss of many industrial jobs in the city, has meant that tens of thousands of Black workers face a choice between long-term structural unemployment or a future of low-wage, no-benefit jobs. By 1990, Blacks were about 40% of the population of the city.

    According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia also has the highest “deep poverty rate—a measure of people living at 50% of the poverty line or below.” Although the rate “dipped somewhat in 2018, it came in at 11.1%, the highest among cities with a population of one million or more.” This high level of poverty disproportionately affects people of color.

    The struggle for equality and justice persists today as Philadelphians face poverty and lack of jobs, attacks on public education, mass incarceration, police brutality, and gentrification of neighborhoods. Fighting back will require unity and the mass activity of the most oppressed. As we fight for the future, we should remember the past and learn its lessons.

     

  • 1917: Black troops rebel against Jim Crow in Houston

    Court-martial of Black soldiers charged with participation in the mutiny at Camp Logan in 1917. Nineteen men were hanged and 63 got life sentences.

    By JOHN LESLIE

    In the months following the U.S. entry into the First World War in 1917, the U.S. needed to train tens of thousands of soldiers quickly. Training camps were authorized in a number of locations, including the construction of Camp Logan in Houston, Texas. On July 24, 1917, the 3rd Battalion of the 24th Infantry was assigned to guard this new installation.

    The all-Black Army unit was sent into Houston, where racist Jim Crow practices predominated and the Houston police had a reputation for corruption and violence against the local community. Lynching was common. A Black teenager, Jesse Washington, had been lynched in 1916 in Waco, Texas, by a white mob. Despite assurances of fairness from the local political establishment, the troops received racist treatment from cops and the white community.

    The role of Black troops

    During the U.S. Civil War, Black troops played a crucial role in the defeat of the slaveholders’ rebellion. Units like the Massachusetts 54th, made famous by the movie Glory, were instrumental in the Union victory.

    Reconstruction followed the Civil War with the promise of freedom for the newly freed former slaves. White resistance to Reconstruction fostered an environment of terror and lawlessness, with mass violence and lynching used against freed slaves. After Reconstruction ended, Black people were robbed of the right to vote and police state conditions were enforced against Blacks.

    “The slave went free; stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again towards slavery,” WEB DuBois wrote in “Black Reconstruction.”

    Following the Civil War, Black troops served in the genocidal Indian wars of the U.S. West. The 24th Infantry was organized in 1869 through the merger of the 41st and 38th Colored Infantry units. Many were veterans of the Civil War. The 24th fought in Cuba during the Spanish-American War, participated in the U.S. occupation of the Philippines, and in the U.S. incursion over the Mexican border in pursuit of Pancho Villa. Black soldiers were the target of racism from white civilians, as well as racism within the military. Black units often served in isolated areas and were given second-hand equipment previously used by white troops.

    Jim Crow segregation was the law of the land. The U.S. military was segregated, and Blacks could not join the US Marines or the US Army Air Corps. The only options were either service in segregated Army units or the most menial jobs in the Navy as porters or below decks. Black troops served under white officers, who were quite often racist Southerners.

    The early 20th century was punctuated by “race riots”—in reality anti-Black pogroms—in Atlanta; Brownsville, Texas; Onancock, Va.; and Springfield, Ill. The Houston Troop Rebellion took place only weeks after the bloody East Saint Louis “race riot,” which resulted in up to 200 deaths, with more than 6000 left homeless, and extensive damage to Black-owned property.

    The commanding officer of the 24th, Col. Newman, tried to get the unit reassigned, citing the pervasive racism in the city. When the soldiers arrived in Houston, there were numerous racist incidents between the troops and construction workers working on Camp Logan, on segregated public transportation, and involving police. In early August, two city detectives boarded a streetcar and beat two soldiers. There were also tensions between members of the 24th and white National Guardsmen, who were believed to have shot down Blacks fleeing the East Saint Louis race riot.

    The uprising

    Members of the 24th were restricted to base, with a few exceptions, and the troops were disarmed while on base. Likewise, members of the military police were forced to surrender any arms they carried. The unit was also below strength in terms of experienced officers and non-commissioned officers (NCOs). Twenty-four of the most experienced NCOs had been placed in officer training by the Army in response to demands of the Black community for Black officers in the military.

    On Aug. 23, 1917, two police officers, Lee Sparks and Rufus Daniels, broke up a dice game involving several Black youth on the street near the camp; shots were fired at the fleeing young people. As cops searched for the young people, Sparks entered the home of a woman named Sara Travers. Travers, who was doing her laundry, exchanged harsh words with Sparks, who then arrested her and brought her outside in her bathrobe. Sparks, who had a reputation for racist treatment of local residents, reportedly threw Travers’ baby on the sidewalk.

    A passing member of the 24th, Private Alonzo Edwards, stopped and exchanged words with the cops about their mistreatment of Travers. The cops placed Edwards under arrest and proceeded to pistol-whip him. Later in the afternoon, a military policeman, Corporal Charles Baltimore, approached Sparks and Daniels to ask why Edwards had been placed under arrest. Sparks then struck Baltimore and shots were fired at him while he fled. He was arrested later and severely beaten. Baltimore was later freed from custody through the intervention of two officers, Major Snow and a Captain Shekerjian.

    Rumors spread through the camp that cops had killed Baltimore and that a white mob was coming to attack the camp. Given the recent events in East Saint Louis, it’s understandable that the troops believed themselves under attack. Approximately 100 to 150 soldiers seized rifles and ammunition and marched in formation towards the police station, firing on whites who got in the way. Some were shouting, “To hell with going to France, let’s clean up the police.”*

    A total of 15 whites, including four cops, were killed. Another bystander, Manuel Garredo, was also killed. Twelve whites were also wounded. A total of four soldiers were killed in the mutiny. Police officer Daniels—one of the assailants of Travers, Edwards, and Baltimore—was shot during a skirmish and stabbed with bayonets.

    As the column advanced, a car approached carrying a white artillery officer, Captain Joseph Mattes. Soldiers opened fire on Mattes, who was trying to quell the rebellion, erroneously thinking that he was a police officer. Afterward, the column went into disarray and soldiers began to return to camp.

    Mainstream accounts claim that Sergeant Vida Henry, a leader of the rebellion, committed suicide under a tree near some railroad tracks after the uprising ended, but this contention is contradicted by the findings of a coroner’s inquest, which found the “cause of death … skull crushed and knife or bayonet wound. Location of wounds on head and left shoulder.” It is more likely that Henry was killed by vigilantes or vengeful cops.

    Miscarriage of justice

    One hundred and eighteen members of the 24th were tried for mutiny and 110 were convicted. A total of 19 were hanged and 63 received life sentences. Corporal Baltimore, who was severely injured and played no role in the rebellion, was tried with the others and executed.

    The soldiers were tried in three tribunals. In the first court martial, 63 soldiers were charged with mutiny, murder, and related offenses. Fifty four of the defendants in the first trial were found guilty of all charges. Five were found not guilty and four were found guilty of lesser charges. Thirteen of those convicted in the trial received death sentences and 41 were given sentences of life at hard labor.

    On Dec. 9, 1917, the 13 were taken to a spot on the edge of Camp Travis in San Antonio and hanged. None of the executed were afforded any right to appeal, and their bodies were placed in unmarked coffins and buried. The press was only notified of the executions after the fact.

    White newspapers and politicians reacted with glee at the punishment meted out to the defendants. Black newspapers and civil rights organizations reacted with outrage at this miscarriage of justice. W.E.B. Du Bois wrote, “ They have gone to their death. Thirteen young, strong men; soldiers who have fought for a country which never was wholly theirs … we raise our clenched fists against the hundreds of thousands of white murderers, rapists, and scoundrels who have oppressed, killed, ruined, robbed, and debased their Black fellow men and fellow women, and yet, today, walk scot-free” (The Crisis, January, 1918).

    In the two subsequent trials, of the 54 put on trial only two were acquitted. Twelve received life sentences, 24 were given lesser terms and 16 received the death sentences. In response to the public outcry against the previous hastily organized executions, a review of the death sentences resulted in the commutation of 10 death sentences to life.

    A later commentary said: “After a military Scottsboro trial, thirteen men were executed without a chance to appeal to the War Department or the President. Sixteen others were later condemned to die but widespread public protests won amnesty for ten of these. All told, 19 were hanged and 61 were sent to long terms in the penitentiary, most of them for life. After a long campaign under the leadership of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, all of the imprisoned men were freed, except one who escaped and was recaptured. Later, two violated parole and were sent back … No attempt was ever made to punish the white policemen who provoked the uprising” (Walter Wilson, “Old Jim Crow in Uniform,” The Crisis, February 1939).

    State of emergency in Black America

    Marcus Garvey wrote shortly before the uprising, in July 1917, “For 300 years the Negroes of America have given their life blood to make the Republic the first among nations of the world, and all along this time there has never been even one year of justice.”

    Outrage at the East Saint Louis pogrom, followed by the racist injustice in Houston, energized the civil rights movement and the NAACP’s campaign against lynching.  NAACP membership grew from less than 10,000 to more than 44,000 in the year following the massacre in East Saint Louis. The vision of Bolshevism abroad and Black revolt at home frightened the white establishment.

    It is clear that, for Black people, justice is just as elusive today as it was in 1917. U.S. society has moved from Jim Crow to the New Jim Crow in the space of a century. Many hard-won gains of the civil rights era, another “brief moment in the sun,” have been undermined or destroyed. The majority of Black America faces mass incarceration, police violence, lower life expectancy, and employment discrimination.

    The road forward requires mass struggles independent of the two ruling-class parties to win liberation for the oppressed. The fight against police brutality, mass incarceration, and racism is an urgent task that must be taken up by all progressive people and the labor movement in a combined struggle against oppression and capitalism.

    *Walter Wilson, “Old Jim Crow in Uniform,” The Crisis, February 1939

    Other source material:

    Fred L. McGhee, Ph.D., “Two Texas Race Riots” (Fidelitas Publishing)

    Louis F Aulbach, Linda C. Gorski, and Robbie Morin, “Camp Logan, Houston, Texas 1917-1919” (Louis F Aulbach)

    Garna L. Christian, “Black Soldiers in Jim Crow Texas,” (Texas A&M University Press)

     

     

  • [Chile] The Spectre of Revolution Haunts the World

    Sooner rather than later, more and more people around the world rise up . From Chile to Hong Kong, through Lebanon, Iraq, France or Bolivia. In Latin America, the Middle East and Asia you breathe in winds of revolution.
    By MIT-Chile  02/11/2020
    We used to wonder who would rise up , now the question is who will be next ? and that’s because the world is a great pressure cooker that is reaching its boiling point, any country can be the next to rise against misery, oppression and exploitation.
    It is true that each of these struggles is different from each other, in some the revolution deepens, counterrevolution advances in others, however, the world class struggle is increasingly polarized. Some things change, but overall, the situation is the same, the fight against the precariousness of life, against cuts in pensions, health and education, the fight against state authoritarianism ,in reality , the fight against the evils caused by capitalism.
    As we have seen here in Chile, the big businessmen and their political representatives are deeply scared, after all, we are questioning their privileges. But this does not happen only here, but on the entire planet. While they tremble in fear, we continue at a steady pace, because we know that these revolts and revolutions are our only hope for the conquest of a better world, according to the needs of the working class and precarious youth.
    In all the countries the excessive repression of governments has been the norm, they kill and imprison those who have questioned their privileges, however, this has not stopped the processes, on the contrary, the workers’ and popular solidarity at international level is strengthened , there are several cases of support from many countries to the Chilean revolution. In addition to solidarity, we also learn from each other, a clear case is how the Chilean front line incorporated methods of struggle from the conflict in Hong Kong.
    Ultimately, what we are evidencing is the crisis of the capitalist system worldwide, which proved to be a failure: the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer. This is the root of the crisis at the international level that is expressed in each of the uprisings within national borders.
    These struggles and revolutions can advance as well as recede, we must learn from them and see their limitations, initially we can mention one: the lack of a revolutionary leadership at the international level to bring the precarious working class and youth to power.
    From the MIT (Chilean section of the IWL-FI) we have made ourselves available to build revolutionary organizations in Chile and the world, that seek to bring these revolutions to victory, we know that if they do not succeed internationally, they are destined to fail . Let’s build this project together.
     
    Translation : Blas (Corriente Obrera Lit)

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