Forbes: Jacob Blake wus a gud boy
Dindu Nuffin
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jemimamcevoy/2020/08/26/video-of-police-ignoring-suspected-kenosha-shooter-sparks-calls-of-injustice/#5f403cb34f9b
Forbes: Jacob Blake wus a gud boy
Dindu Nuffin
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jemimamcevoy/2020/08/26/video-of-police-ignoring-suspected-kenosha-shooter-sparks-calls-of-injustice/#5f403cb34f9b
The fake news is out of control
Blake, (((a 29-year-old Black man))), was shot in the back several times by a Kenosha Police Department officer on Sunday as (((he leaned into his vehicle))) following (((an initial interaction with law enforcement on the scene.)))
Blake, a 29 year old criminal who is currently charged with Sexual Assault and domestic abuse for sexually assaulting his girlfriend and stealing her car, and has a history of attacking police officers, was shot in the back several times by a Kenosha Police Department officer on Sunday as he resisted arrest, refused to comply with lawful police orders and was stupid enough to reach climb into his car to grab a weapon
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/513881-justice-dept-launches-civil-rights-investigation-into-jacob-blake
An examination of black Marxismâthe marriage between Marxism and âblack radicalismââilluminates the theoretical gaps in the Marxist canon as it relates to non-Western movements and non-Western liberation struggles that speak in the idioms of culture, nationalism, and race. Black Marxists have grappled with the contradictions that emerge when Marxist paradigms are the medium for the articulation of a path to transformation. While theorists have noted the âanti-bourgeois tendencies in black culturesâ (Duran 2005, p. 1), many of the Eurocentric assumptions that pervade Marxism are a challenge to the formulation of a black Marxist theory (see Robinson 1983). Whereas Marxism focuses heavily on the activism of a vanguard proletariat, black freedom struggles have revolved around a collective, albeit contested identity shaped by racism.In reaction, black Marxist thinkers have argued for a position that emphasizes âmaterialism over idealismâ and acknowledges the centrality of race in the black experience (Campbell 1995, p. 420).
Marxism is a method of analysis and a theoretical critique that sees capitalism as a system which fosters social divisions. A powerful class-consciousness, specifically among the working class, is considered vital to the oppositional upsurge that Marxism contends is essential to revolution. Cedric Robinson (1983) argued against the Marxist position that the âEuropean proletariatâ is the ârevolutionary subject of historyâ (p. 4). He criticized Marxismâs âdismissal of cultureâ and its theoretical myopia on the issue of race (p. 78). Furthermore, as A. Sivanandan (1977) explained, âBlacks are a class apart, an underclass, a subproleteriatâ (p. 339). Thus, for many black (((intellectuals))), race, rather than being an incidental dimension of class, provides a significant subtext for the theorizing of radical change.
Collaborations between Marxists and black radicals in the United States began in the 1920s and 1930s when African Americans became a focus of organizing by the Communist Party. Early black Communists like Harry Haywood helped to elucidate the âNegro Questionâ and struggled against the assignment of blacks to a âsubsidiary position in the revolutionary movementâ (Haywood 1978, p. 234). At the Sixth World Congress of the American Communist Party in 1928, resolutions were passed on the American âNegro Question.â They concluded that African Americans were an âoppressed nation which had the right to self-determination,â and that the Southern âBlack Beltâ was prime for revolutionary activity (Haywood 1978, p. 268).
Robin Kelley (1990) charted the history of the connections between southern black resistance and the organizing of the Communist Party in 1930s Alabama. According to Kelley, historically black working-class resistance occupied the âmargins of struggle,â and even without a specific organizational context, southern African Americans always possessed a ârich culture of oppositionâ (p. 99). Communist organizers focused their recruitment on agricultural workers and sharecroppers in Birmingham, making the Communist Party in Alabama a âSouthern working class black organizationâ (p. xii). Communists formed sharecropping unions, neighborhood relief committees, and unemployment councils for the cityâs poor. In Alabama, Communists âopposed race and class oppression as a totality under the banner of âbread and freedom,â and through the newspaper, The Southern Workerâ (Kelley 1990, p. xii).
Later, the Communist Party chose Harlem, New York, as another âconcentration pointâ because it was the epicenter of black protest (Naison 1983, p. xvii). Early black radicalism in 1930s Harlem aligned itself with the traditions of black nationalism and black militancy. Some Communists considered ânarrow nationalismâ and âback to Africaâ ideologies to be reactionary, although others viewed nationalism as a âlegitimate trend in the Black Freedom Movementâ (Haywood 229, p. 1978). Mark Naison (1983) documented Communist Party activism in Harlem and described how early black Communists were ârace men and womenâ drawn from the ranks of nationalist organizations. In Harlem, Communists organized workers alliances, tenant unions, cultural groups, and legal defense organizations. Harlem was a rich political landscape, with organizations like the Urban League and the NAACP, and the ultranationalism of Marcus Garvey. Within Harlem, socialist ideas were spread through the work of A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters union. His magazine, the Messenger, was accused by the U.S. government of promoting âBolsheviki activities among Negroesâ (Kornweibel 1998, p. 21). While in socialist and Communist circles the dominant view, shared by Randolph, was that ârace was a strategic weapon to dissipate working class coherence,â convergent race and class struggles dominated mass protests of this time (Henderson 1978, p. 148). Even at the height of the black power discourse of the 1970s, African American activists like Angela Davis==âa member of the Communist Party also affiliated with the Black Panthersâcontinued to forge connections between class struggle and antiracism.'''
Within the African Diaspora, the dialectical method of Marxism proved a useful source of insights for those engaged in anticolonial and postcolonial struggles. Afro Caribbean intellectuals and activists such as Trinidadians C. L. R. James and George Padmore, Guyana native Walter Rodney, and Martinique-born Aime Cesaire merged the tenets of Pan-Africanism, nationalism, âNegritude,â and Marxism. Padmore, a unionist and founder of the Pan-African Federation, remarked, âlabour in white skin cannot free itself while labour in dark skin is brandedâ (Padmore 1945, p. 3). Cesaire, however, eventually became disillusioned and resigned from the French Communist Party, saying, âWhat I desire is that Marxism and communism should serve Black people, and not that Black people should serve Marxismâ (Caute 1964, p. 211). C. L. R. James, a Trotskyite, lauded the independent and dynamic trajectory of black struggles in the United States. He believed that âthe Negro people based on their own experiences approach the conclusions of Marxismâ (Grimshaw 1992, p. 187). In the 1970s the historian Walter Rodney extolled âa working class oriented definition of Black Powerâ and contended that the extraction of labor from black people was a cornerstone of capitalism (Fontaine 1982, p. 16). Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Marxism was an instrumental theory in African-based liberation movements in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea Bissau. Amilcar Cabral, the revolutionary leader of Guinea Bissau, linked class struggle to anti-imperialism, demonstrating the necessity of âincorporating the proletarian project into the project of national liberationâ (Magubane 1983, p. 25). Also, antiapartheid ideologists in South Africa adopted aspects of Marxist dictum even as they emphasized national and racial identities (see Marx 1992).
Marxism continues to inform the spectrum of black progressive politics, even as Afro-Diasporic intellectuals argue for the autonomy of black liberation struggles and their âorganic political perspectivesâ (James 1992, p. 183). Contemporary black intellectuals urge that a tripartite analysis, stemming from âthe nexus of three crucial sites of struggles, community, class and gender, be at the center of Black liberatory projectsâ(Marable 1997, p. 8). If they adhere to this perspective, social justice movements constituted by black people can remain âavant-gardeâ formations of contiguous race and class struggles (Duran 2005, p. 3).
SEE ALSO Black Nationalism; Black Panthers; Black Power; Marx, Karl; Marxism; Politics, Black
https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences/applied-and-social-sciences-magazines/marxism-black