|
|
Workers Vanguard No. 1027
|
12 July 2013
|
|
|
TROTSKY
|
LENIN
|
U.S. Capitalism: Racist Divide-and-Rule
(Quote of the Week)
Writing during the outbreak of the 1950s civil rights struggles,
George Breitman, a leader of the then-revolutionary Socialist Workers Party,
explained that the bourgeoisie’s strangling of Reconstruction in the years
following the Civil War signified that anti-black racism would endure as a
fundamental feature of American capitalism. Today, the deepening immiseration of
the black masses and the rollback of many gains of the civil rights movement
underscore that genuine equality for black people will be achieved only through
a socialist revolution carried out by the multiracial proletariat.
The striking thing about the Reconstruction period which followed
the abolition of slavery was the speed with which old ideas and customs began to
change and break up. In the course of a few short years millions of whites began
to recover from the racist poisons to which they had been subjected from their
birth, to regard Negroes as equals and to work together with them amicably,
under the protection of the federal government, in the solution of joint
problems. The obliteration of anti-Negro prejudice was started in the social
revolution that we know by the name of Reconstruction, and it would have been
completed if Reconstruction had been permitted to develop further.
But Reconstruction was halted and then strangled—by the
capitalists, acting now in alliance with the former slaveholders. No exploiting
class lightly discards weapons that can help maintain its rule, and anti-Negro
prejudice had already demonstrated its potency as a force to divide, disrupt and
disorient oppressed classes in an exploitative society. After some vacillation
and internal struggle that lasted through most of Reconstruction, the capitalist
class decided it could make use of anti-Negro prejudice for its own purposes.
The capitalists adopted it, nursed it, fed it, gave it new clothing, and infused
it with a vigor and an influence it had never commanded before. Anti-Negro
prejudice today operates in a different social setting and therefore in a
somewhat different form than a century ago, but it was retained after slavery
for essentially the same reason that it was introduced under the slave system
that developed from the sixteenth century on—for its convenience as an
instrument of exploitation; and for that same reason it will not be abandoned by
the ruling class of any exploitative society in this country.
—George Breitman, “When Anti-Negro Prejudice Began,” Fourth
International (Spring 1954)
|
No comments:
Post a Comment