From The Marxist Archives-"Racial
Oppression and Working-Class Politics"
This article is passed on as an item of historical interest to the radical movement. I would only comment that some of the analysis reads as though it could have been written today. At the time radical youth, including radical working class youth, were looking for a way to change society and to fight against that generation’s war in Vietnam. In those days radicals, for the most part, stood point blank against the bourgeois parties and were out on the streets. Today those who are trying to ‘brain-trust’ a new SDS for this generation of youth seem to have regressed to a point early in the old SDS where the youth were directed toward to going half-way with Lyndon Baines Johnson and the Democratic Party. We should, however, try to learn something from history. Read on.
Workers Vanguard No. 897 31 August 2007
"Racial Oppression and Working-Class Politics"
Revolutionary Marxists at 1969 PL-SDS Conference {Young Spartacus pages)
Crystalizing out of student and youth
struggles against segregation and, later, against the Vietnam War, Students for
a Democratic Society (SDS) became the iconic organization of the New Left
radical student movement of the late 1960s.
Originally the youth group of the Cold War "socialists" of the League
for Industrial Democracy, under the impact
of events, SDS was drawn increasingly to the left. In 1965, SDS dropped its
anti-Communist exclusion clause and soon was separated from the League
entirely. It grew rapidly, drawing in tens of thousands of young
activists at its peak. However, after years of rejecting the history of the
"old left" as sectarian, sterile
and irrelevant, SDS found itself confronting the same questions, centrally:
what force can bring about social change, what attitude should be taken toward
the Soviet Union and other workers states, and
how to combat racial oppression.
A broad span of
tendencies began to gain followers within SDS, ranging from the Moscow-line
Stalinists of the Communist
Party to the revolutionary communist Spartacist League, as well as anarchists,
Maoists and uncritical cheerleaders for Third World
and black nationalism. Intense ideological struggles ensued in which spokesmen for various positions were able to
compete for hegemony. Some of the petty-bourgeois radicals in SDS were
able to overcome the oppressive weight of bourgeois ideology and re-learn
lessons set forth in the Communist
Manifesto regarding the working
class as the modern agency of social revolution.
At the national SDS
convention in the summer of 1969, a split took place between the National
Collective, a bloc of groups
that tailed national-liberation movements and dismissed the proletariat, and
the crudely pro-working-class tendency of
the Worker-Student Alliance (WSA) led by the left-Stalinist Progressive Labor
Party (PL). The Revolutionary Marxist
Caucus, supporter of Spartacist politics within SDS and forerunner of today's
Spartacus Youth Clubs, worked within the WSA wing (known as PL-SDS), struggling
to transform SDS into a socialist
youth organization open to all political tendencies seeking revolutionary
political change. It was in this context that "Racial Oppression
and Working-Class Politics" was produced as a position paper presented for
discussion at PL-SDS's December 1969 New Haven conference.
The National
Collective degenerated rapidly on the one side into Weatherman-style
anarcho-terrorist despair, and
on the other into internecine Maoist factional squabbling driven by the twists
and turns of the Chinese Stalinist
bureaucracy. (Today's Revolutionary Communist Party is one result.) Some, such
as Bernardine Dohrn, have found
their place braintrusting the "New SDS," a liberal talkshop whose
main purpose so far seems to be drawing
in youth to aid the Democrats' prospects in the 2008 elections.
The PL wing of SDS also degenerated, although
not as rapidly, eventually retreating into campus parochialism and ordinary reformism, leading pointless and tepid
campaigns against "racist textbooks." Today Progressive Labor,
still Stalinist and now without the leftward pressure imparted by the radicalization
of the 1960s, vacillates between
increasingly hollow sectarian "revolution now" rhetoric and
run-of-the-mill liberalism. Readers
may also note that the position paper devotes some attention to the Labor
Committee of Lyn Marcus, who is
currently known as Lyndon LaRouche. While LaRouche today is a right-wing
crackpot, at the time he was a left-wing crackpot. The Labor Committee
was a tendency to be contended with in SDS, and served as a useful polemical foil for the exposition of our Marxist program.
Youth now are far
more likely to encounter liberal hand-wringing over racism a la the "New
SDS" than the distorted orientation to the working class that the RMC's main fire was
directed against at the time. However, this position paper, written in a period
of significantly higher consciousness and struggle, remains a powerful exposition of a
genuine Marxist approach to black oppression, laying out a perspective in which
the struggle for black freedom is bound up with the general struggle for the emancipation
of the working class.
It hardly needs
saying that increasing black-white conflict is the dominant feature of the
current American political
scene. The polarization of U.S.
society along racial lines has been reflected even within the left, which has
become increasingly split between supporters of Black Nationalism and advocates
of an oversimplified pro-working-class
line, indifferent and sometimes hostile to the Black liberation movement. One effect of the increasing black-white hostility is
that any struggle involving Black people is viewed as the same struggle. Everything, from demands for Black
Studies departments to integrating the building trades, is seen as part
of a larger Black liberation movement, and attitudes toward each particular
struggle are determined by general
theoretical outlook.
The position of this
paper is that Marxists must aggressively fight against the oppression of the
Black masses while rejecting
Black Nationalist pseudo-solutions. This must be done in ways that are
compatible with the over-all goals of socialism. This means making clear and
careful distinctions between different demands and struggles of the Black movement and different facets of the race
question generally. Our guiding concern must be to link up a pro-working-class
political line with demands aimed at fighting the pervasive double oppression of Black workers.
Racism and Racial Oppression
One result of the
ghetto uprisings in Watts, Detroit , Newark and elsewhere was
that it was no longer possible to deny that Black people were deeply hostile to the
state of American society. The liberals argued (e.g., in the Kerner Report) that the oppression of
Black people was a result of the racism of the white population, rather than locating the source of oppression and hostility
in the working of the economic system and the policies of the ruling class and
deliberately obscuring the fact that some whites have qualitatively more social
power than others. To blame the
oppressed condition of Black people on pervasive racist attitudes is a variant
of the classic reactionary argument that social ills stem from a flawed
human nature. By placing the blame for racial oppression on the white
population en masse, the liberal wing of the ruling class not only deny their
own responsibility, but even pose as
champions of the Black people against the ignorant and bigoted white workers. In some cases, blaming racist attitudes begs the
question. Many liberal capitalist bosses do not believe any of the myths of racial inferiority, yet deliberately
pursue oppressive policies aimed at dividing workers along ethnic lines.
The widespread
acceptance on the left of the liberal myth that the oppression of Black people
results from the racism of the white lower classes has been totally destructive of the
left. Its most extreme exponents are, of course, the Weathermen, who regard the
white working class as hopelessly corrupted by racism, and, therefore, "the
enemy." However, even those who realize that racism is against the
long-term interests of white workers, such as the Worker-Student Alliance caucus,
see changing racial attitudes as the key to the problem.
It is essential to
make a distinction between those actively responsible for racial oppression and
the masses, who passively accept it. An analogy of the relation between national
chauvinism and imperialism is useful here. National chauvinism is rampant in the U.S. —look at
the recent proliferation of American flag decals. Yet, no one would contend
that U.S.
counter-revolutionary policy in Viet
Nam is the result of the nationalist
attitudes of the American workers! National chauvinism helps sustain U.S.
imperialism, but is not the cause of it. In a like manner, the racist
attitudes of the white working class help sustain the oppression and economic
degradation of the Black masses, but do not cause it.
Most white workers
are neither active racists nor thorough-going integrationists. Rather, their
attitude toward Black people is contradictory and differs according to the
context. Many white workers will treat Black workers on the job as
equals. Many believe Blacks should have equal rights, yet maintain racist
attitudes on social and sexual questions. (A white worker might vote for a Black
as union official, yet, as the saying goes, wouldn't let his daughter marry him.) In general, there
are many more white workers who will support the political and economic rights of Blacks and unite
with them in struggle than there are who are really free of race prejudice. In addition, the level of racism is affected by the
level of class struggle. Involvement in a militant strike action, for example, often combats backward consciousness on
many levels.
The Southern Populist movement of the
1890s was the highest point of class struggle reached in the post-Reconstruction South. It not only united poor
white and Black farmers around their shared economic interests, it also
aggressively fought for the political rights of Black people. Yet, in deference
to the white supremacist attitudes of most
Southern farmers, the leaders of the Populist movement stressed that they were
not in favor of
social integration.
Thus, by today's standards, the Populist movement would be considered racist,
although it aggressively fought for the political rights of Blacks. Certainly we
should make no concessions to racism. But this example shows that fighting racism and
fighting racial oppression are not identical.
For a Materialist Approach
The practical
conclusion to be drawn from making this distinction between racism and racial
oppression is that SDS is more likely to gain the support of white workers if
we oppose concrete acts of racial oppression in the name of democratic rights and class solidarity, than if
we rant about "fighting racism" as a social attitude (which has a
moralistic tone to it—like fighting sin). Again, an analogy with the fight
against imperialism is useful. In fighting
American imperialism, we make specific demands, such as the immediate
withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Viet Nam
and all other countries. We do not approach this struggle mainly by calling
moralistically on the American working class to give up its national
chauvinism and solidarize with the international proletariat. To be sure, the
demand for immediate withdrawal from Viet Nam implies an attack on
patriotic attitudes, just as the demand to integrate a union implies an attack
on racist attitudes. But we attack these attitudes
at their weakest point, where they come into conflict with other powerful
social attitudes.
There is an important tactical reason for
using the terminology of fighting racial oppression rather than fighting racism. To announce that we are fighting
racism within the working class implies that the rank and file white worker is
the target of our hostility. To say we are opposing the double oppression of
Black workers puts the
responsibility where it belongs—on the capitalists and trade union bureaucrats.
Rather than saying we expect the mass of white workers to oppose us, we
are calling on white workers, as potential comrades, to fight the oppressors of Black people, who are the oppressors
of white workers as well.
Black Rights and Economic Insecurity
Within SDS, the Labor
Committee is considered the main exponent of the view that the widespread
hostility of
white workers to the Black liberation movement stems from a belief that Black
equality will be achieved at their economic expense. So far as this view goes it is
substantially correct. However, the Labor Committee has drawn a fundamentally wrong conclusion
which leads to de facto tolerance for most forms of racial discrimination—namely that equality for Blacks be
made conditional on whites not suffering any loss.
Given the insecurity
of white workers, it is necessary to combine demands for equal opportunity for
Blacks with demands aimed at
assuring white workers that the benefits accruing to Blacks will not come at
their expense. Thus, in demanding that more Black workers be admitted into
skilled jobs, we should also raise demands
(such as a shorter work week with no loss in pay) aimed at expanding total
employment. However, an end to
discrimination should not be made conditional to these broader demands being
realized.
Under normal
conditions, demands aimed at improving the condition of the working class as a
whole are less within the power of the presently constituted labor movement than
demands for the upgrading of one section of the class. Socialists have traditionally contended—and
rightly—that permanent full employment and a continuously
rising standard of living are not possible under capitalism. We can and must
raise demands which take the level of consciousness outside the framework of
capitalism—transitional demands which workers will accept as necessary but which cannot be achieved
under this social system. But it would be a cruel joke on the legitimate
aspirations of Black workers involved in struggle for socialists to make
struggling for their rights conditional on
the acceptance of other demands. If the attack on the economic oppression of
Black people is to be postponed until the eradication of economic
insecurity on the part of whites, racial oppression would continue to exist until several decades after
the victory of the socialist revolution.
Labor Committee Default
In practice, the Labor Committee's
politics have meant toleration of racial oppression while posing ultimatistic solutions to the problem of the
limited resources available to the working class under capitalism. A good example of this is the Labor Committee's
opposition to the so-called CCNY solution. After considerable agitation by
Blacks, the City University system officials agreed to
replace the existing admissions selection— based on academic
qualifications—with an ethnic quota system increasing Black admissions. (The
city government later rejected the
agreement.) The Labor Committee argued that this was no solution to the problem
and, correctly, called for open admissions
for all working people. So far, so good. However, instead of critically supporting the CCNY solution against
the present system, which is both class and race biased, while continuing
to agitate for open admissions, the Labor Committee supported the status quo in
effect, until the advent of free universal
higher education. In other words, according to them the whites might as well
have the lion's share of social
services until these services become unlimited.
The Labor Committee's
empathy for white workers worried about losing their jobs to Black militants
causes them to blur an
important distinction. It is the distinction between firing a white worker to
replace him with a Black and eliminating discrimination in hiring. We should
almost always oppose firing a white worker to replace him with a Black. On the
other hand, we should always oppose discrimination in hiring even if this means (as it will in the building trades) that a
larger percentage of the white labor force would be unemployed. The
former would exacerbate racial antagonisms; the latter would tend to unite the
working class in the fight against
unemployment. The underlying principle is that Black workers should be treated
as equals. We wouldn't expect any
employed worker to give up his job to an unemployed worker regardless of color.
In a like manner, an unemployed Black
worker should have the same chance to find a job as a white worker, and vice versa.
If the Labor Committee's principle that
the economic oppression of Blacks can be opposed only provided there is no
re-distribution of income against whites is accepted, Blacks are slated to
remain on the bottom of American society
until socialism. If the desires of white workers must be substantially met
before attacking the problem of racial discrimination, the benefits
accruing to the Blacks will lag behind those of the class as a whole. In the
Labor Committee schema, Blacks are given the role of residual claimants on the
social and economic gains of the working
class.
Black Rights as Class Demands
The Labor Committee's
belief that racism is simply a result of economic insecurity and will disappear
when that insecurity is alleviated is as naive and wrong as the Weathermen's
view of racism as the radical equivalent of original sin. The Machinists and Shipbuilders unions attempted
to maintain their white-only policies in shipyards and aircraft plants even in
the middle of the World War II employment boom! On the other hand, some unions were established on an integrated
basis during the Depression. The widespread racial oppression in the
labor movement isn't going to be eliminated without a political fight in the
trade unions. Economic prosperity makes that
fight easier to win. It doesn't make it any less necessary.
The Labor Committee's propaganda presents
the economic effects of racial equality as only negative— namely, that such gains come only at the expense
of white workers. It appears the Labor Committee has taken the arguments
of racist demagogues too much at face value or that, for all their pretensions
to expertise, they know very little about the economic facts of life. The
upgrading of Black workers provides a higher floor for general wages and strengthens
the competitive position of all workers. From the integration of the Mine
Workers in the 1890s, the main factor bringing Black workers into the trade
unions has been a desire to eliminate
cheap, non-union labor, not moralism. One doesn't have to be very sophisticated
to see the connection between the systematic terrorization of the Black
population and the maintenance of the South as a bastion of anti-unionism, low wages, and the runaway shop. If
the indirect benefits of Black equality are not as obvious to white
workers as the direct losses, part of our job is to make them obvious.
Socialists have a responsibility to refute
the lies of racist demagogues like [Alabama
governor George] Wallace, that Black liberation means white workers will
lose "their jobs, their money, and their women." SDS should present
the economic case for combattmg racial
oppression in the most attractive manner possible.
Black Liberation and Upward Mobility
An important aspect of the oppression of
Blacks is the small size of the Black middle class. Not only are Black workers concentrated in lowest paid jobs,
but there is a relatively small percentage of Black professionals, administrators
and businessmen. Moreover, much of the Black middle class is restricted to the
Black communities rather than being
integrated into American corporate society.
Given the
petty-bourgeois leadership of the Black movement, it is not surprising that
many demands of that movement are aimed at increasing the upward mobility of
the Black population. In its reaction against bourgeois aspirations in the
Black movement, the WSA has made a major error—namely, it has refused to oppose
thoseaspects of racial
oppression expressly designed to keep Blacks out of the middle class. It is
correct and necessary to denounce expanding
the "Black bourgeoisie" as the solution to the problems of the Black
masses. However, the WSA has taken
the further step of refusing to fight discrimination against Blacks for
middle-class positions. (Their
position recalls a section of the French Marxists who thought they should be
indifferent to the Dreyfus Case of
anti-Semitism in the French officer corps. This sectarian disorientation
actually facilitated their later collapse into opportunism.) The
petty-bourgeois "hustlerist" aspect of the Black movement must be defeated politically, by being rejected by the
Black masses. It will not and should not be defeated by erstwhile revolutionaries making a de facto alliance with
the most reactionary sections of the ruling class to keep Blacks out of middle-class positions.
There is a parallel between the Labor
Committee's reaction to white workers' fear of economic integration and the WSA's approach to bourgeois goals in the
Black movement. Both begin with correct premises, but reach conclusions which mean tolerance for certain
forms of racial oppression. Thus, the Labor Committee opposes the CCNY
solution because they don't want educational resources redistributed against
the white population, while the WSA opposes it because they don't want more
black B.A.s. Of the two positions, the Labor Committee's
is worse because it leads to acceptance of the worst forms of economic
exploitation. However, the WSA's
position is also fundamentally sectarian.
The Worse the Better?
The principle of not opposing racial
discrimination to the extent equality would strengthen the upward mobility of
the Black population is impossible to implement. This is so because any improvement
in the condition of the Black masses provides a basis for upward mobility. If
the quality of ghetto primary school education
is improved, for example, Black youth will be better able to compete for
college admission. If Black workers
have access to better-paying jobs, more of them will send their children to
college.
The WSA's position on this question is
also incorrect at a higher theoretical level. Socialists have usually contended that racial oppression is inherent in
capitalist society. The WSA, however, seems to be afraid that the ruling
class is going to seriously ameliorate the oppression of Blacks. The whole line
of argument has a "the worse, the
better" flavor to it—Blacks should be kept down so they'll be more
revolutionary. It is similar to the position one usually associates with
the Socialist Labor Party—opposition to reforms for fear that they may work! Coming from people who consider themselves
orthodox Leninists, this faith in the ability of reformism to dampen class
struggle and change class structure is as surprising as it is false, to say the
least.
Moreover, from the
standpoint of proletarian socialists, the expansion of the Black middle class
would not be an unmitigated
disaster. To the extent that the social structure of the Black population
resembles that of the white population, class rather than race consciousness
will be strengthened among both Black and white workers. The split between those Black Nationalists who consider
themselves revolutionary and the "pork chop" Nationalists occurred precisely because the
government was successful in co-opting large sections of the Black liberation movement. A Black worker who slaves
for a few years under a Black boss is much more likely to see class, not race, as the fundamental division in
American society.
The converse is also
true. A white worker striking with fellow Black workers against a company which
had a significant percentage
of Black executive and managerial personnel would develop a more
class-conscious attitude toward the Black
population. It is precisely the overwhelming concentration of the Black
population at the lowest social
levels that tends to cause white workers to view Blacks with feelings of fear
and contempt. The integration of sections of the ruling class would be
paralleled by increased Black-white unity in the working class.
Trade Unions and the State
One of the most difficult problems facing
American radicals is the widespread racial discrimination in the trade unions. In dealing with this problem, there
is considerable social pressure, particularly on a campus-based group, to
follow the lead of the liberals and use government action against
discriminatory unions. Thus, most of the
California left, including the Independent Socialist Clubs (now called
International Socialists [predecessor of the International Socialist Organization]), supported a suit against
Harry Bridges' International Longshore and Warehouse Union under the Civil Rights Act. Likewise, there has been no
significant left-wing opposition to the Nixon Administration's
"Philadelphia Plan" for the construction industry [aimed at breaking
union hiring halls by setting quotas for
minority hiring].
That liberals should look to the state to
enforce equal rights in the labor movement is understandable. The fundamental
principle of liberalism (and all other forms of capitalist political
philosophy) is the supreme authority of the state over all other social
institutions. However, Marxists consider the state an instrument of class oppression and regard the labor movement as
the legitimate source of all social authority. In calling upon the state
to integrate the unions, radicals are calling upon the capitalists to fight
their battles for them, in a movement radicals eventually intend (or should
intend) to lead against that very state. This is a contradiction that cannot be reconciled. Any increase in state
control over the unions, regardless of the ostensible reason, must strengthen capitalism politically and
ideologically.
A section of the ruling class realizes
that the civil rights issue is an effective way to weaken the unions by turning
Black people and middle-class liberals against them. Thus, a recent issue of Fortune
magazine—an authoritative organ of the
liberal bourgeoisie—contained an attack on the monopolistic abuses of the
building trades unions. It concluded
with a ten-point program, addressed to construction companies, on how to break
the power of the unions. One of the
ten points was union de-certification for failing to comply with the 1965 Civil
Rights Act.
As the above example shows, ruling-class
efforts to control the unions in the name of "public good" are usually a cover for union busting. The Nixon
Administration is openly wooing Southern racists and doesn't even pay lip service to civil rights. The only area of
American society where Nixon is pushing civil rights is where unions are the target. This indicates that the
motives behind the "Philadelphia Plan" are neither concern for the welfare
of Black workers nor response to pressure from below. Rather, the only purpose
is to discredit and weaken the labor
movement.
When the ruling class
seeks to weaken the power of the unions, they do not openly state they're out
to gouge the working class.
They look for an attractive-sounding pretext. We are all against organized
crime and for internal democracy in the unions. But the Landrum-Griffin Act
hasn't reduced gangsterism in the labor movement. Its principal effect has been
to railroad Jimmy Hoffa, a tough and troublesome business unionist. And these
laws would be used faster and harder against a communist union leadership than
they will ever be used against the Mafia!
Permitting the
government to determine the racial policies of unions gives the state a
powerful weapon for union
busting and influencing the selection of union leadership. And this weapon will
not be used in the best interest of the
working class. Whatever doubtful immediate gains Black workers get by the
government opening up some jobs for them will be more than offset by the
losses sustained by the entire working class due to the long-run effects of expanding state control over the labor movement.
The only force on which we can rely is an organized, militant,
class-conscious rank and file defending the gains of their unions against the
bosses, the bureaucrats and the state.
Resolutions
I. In its propaganda and actions, SDS must concentrate on
fighting concrete acts and practices of racial oppression, rather than simply opposing racism as a pervasive social
attitude.
II. It may at times be necessary to support gains against
Black oppression even if they imply short-term economic losses for sections of the white working class. However, our
basic propagandistic thrust must be to keep
gains for Blacks from being counterposed to white workers' interests by raising
the appropriate demands, and to seek
to unite Black and white workers in common struggles.
III. SDS must oppose all forms of racial inequality,
including those that are specifically designed to limit the upward mobility of the Black population.
IV. Under all
circumstances SDS must oppose the expansion of state control over the labor
movement, even when this is done in the
name of the rank and file (e.g., fighting corruption, securing racial justice).
No comments:
Post a Comment