“History
is the only true teacher, the revolution the best school
for the proletariat...Marxism is a revolutionary worldview
that must always struggle for new revelations.”
-Rosa
Luxemburg
“Industry
required ever greater skills, thus closing their
doors to the poor. Unions, fearing automation,
warded off the poor; their predominantly White
members often developed a paranoiac racism.”
-Introduction
by Franz Schurmann for the book, To
Die for the People, by Huey P. Newton
Being
euphorically oblivious to the inherent contradictions of
class struggle in a corporate-capitalist society is a certain
recipe for perpetuating hypocrisy and assuring catastrophe.
While
it is certainly heartening to see some people making and
taking a stand in Madison, Wisconsin,
this does not mean that Wisconsin has
somehow become Egypt.
It has not. There are numerous inherent contradictions that
have yet to be forthrightly addressed in Wisconsin,
U.S.A., and which strongly impact the most
economically and politically dispossessed and despised of
people in Wisconsin and throughout the United States.
A
major portion of the so-called “progressive” media has thus
far committed an enormous disservice to the poorest
and most downtrodden of everyday Black, White, Brown,
and Yellow people by pretending that the struggle in Madison,
Wisconsin, is truly reflective of the aforementioned everyday
people. It is not. It is perhaps an important
beginning-awakening of a kind, but it is not
a people’s movement led by and for the most dispossessed
of that state or of the United States as a whole. Nor is the clash in
Wisconsin, fundamentally one between the Republicans
and Democrats [i.e. the Republicrats]; as the Democrat and
Republican parties there have worked have worked together
for many years - particularly with reference to disenfrachising
and incarcerating Black and Indigenous people in that
state. It warrants taking a closer look at Wisconsin,
the home state of the former and notoriously infamous U.S.
Senator Joseph McCarthy.
Though
meticulously ignored by both the corporate-stream media
and the so-called “progressive” media, Wisconsin,
despite its relatively small Black population, has the highest
proportional rate of Black incarceration in the
nation, followed closely by the “liberal” state
of Minnesota (with
its own outrageously high rates of racial disparity relating
to Black and Indigenous incarceration). This is absolutely
no coincidence, and has been consistently supported
by Republican and Democratic party politicians alike.
A similar massively disproportionate and horribly high rate
of racial disparities can also be found in Wisconsin, as
they pertain to unemployment, under-employment, and police
brutality afflicting the Black and Indigenous populations
there. Let us not be euphorically oblivious. Wisconsin
is not Egypt. Indeed, most
everyday brown and black-skinned North African-Egyptians
would be hard pressed to live in Wisconsin,
being accorded real dignity and respect.
And
what of the economically disenfranchised White farmers and
their families in Wisconsin,
many of whose farms have been nefariously gobbled-up by
the avaricious multinational corporations of agribusiness
et al? What of them?! These people, like many others, do
not even have union jobs or protections, no matter how tenuous
such jobs might be. Their lives are cynically toyed with
by both Democratic and Republican party politicians, as
if they are expendable ping-pong balls. They must not be
forgotten!
Notwithstanding
the historical (and still present) racism on the part of
far too many unions in this nation; everyday rank and
file union members of all colors and both genders
have nonetheless tenaciously struggled and given
their very lives for the right of collective bargaining,
only to be often sold out by “concessions” made by much
of their own union leadership. The right of collective
bargaining should be viewed as a fundamental human right,
not only in Madison,
Wisconsin, but throughout this nation.
However, there is a very real danger, as has been consistently
demonstrated, particularly in the past thirty years, of
unions becoming the hapless political pawns of most especially
the Democratic Party, which patronage is always at the expense
of their rank and file union membership. Whether
this will occur or not with respect to the struggle in Madison,
Wisconsin, remains
to be seen. What is clear is that there needs to be a concerted,
clear, educated, and consistent struggle for bringing about
an end to corporate-capitalism in all of its odious forms,
not a revising or reforming
of it. This applies not only to unions but also to any organization
engaged in a viable people’s struggle for real, systemic
change. The
corporate-capitalist pie is a filthy and poisonous one that
is utterly and wholly politically bankrupt in favor of a
relatively tiny corporate / military elite. If the
leadership of unions in Madison, Wisconsin, or in any
other part of this nation for that matter, fails to steadfastly
demand and organize for the right of collective bargaining
and systemic change - said leadership should be swiftly
and uncompromisingly replaced - without missing a beat!
Observing
much of the so-called “progressive” and/or Left media in
this nation falling all over itself as it proclaims that
the struggle in Wisconsin is somehow the same as the people’s struggle in Egypt
and other parts of North Africa and the ‘Middle
East’, etc. is inaccurate, disingenuous, and utterly hypocritical.
The “activists” in Madison, Wisconsin, may want to seriously consider,
as a part of the struggle there, exposing, for example,
the connection between corporate capitalism, the
corporate weapons research and/or development carried out
at the University of Wisconsin
and the U.S. corporate-government’s
ongoing support for repressive puppet regimes around
the world. To be sure, the ongoing struggle in Egypt
is a legitimate and much-needed and wonderful inspiration
to the people of Wisconsin and no doubt
elsewhere, but it is definitely not the same as Wisconsin.
Moreover, “progressives” and Leftists in this nation must
openly and forthrightly address the contradictions
contained within any genuine “class struggle” in this society,
with a view towards eradicating them, not
ignoring them and pretending they don’t exist. Being in
solidarity with struggles of oppressed peoples worldwide,
including in Egypt, is extremely important.
But it is quite a different thing from being
Egypt, or Tunisia,
or Haiti,
etc. We must not be infantile or “romantic” in the
political sense. We must be real.
Let
us hope for and work to ensure that the struggle
in Wisconsin becomes a national one that encompasses
and, in a major way, is led by, the everyday dispossessed
Black, White, Brown, Red, and Yellow people of this land,
even as we grapple with our own contradictions while being
in active solidarity with struggling peoples globally.
In this struggle, recognizing and addressing contradictions,
be they class, gender, or, color contradictions, serves
to sharpen [e.g. clarify] the struggle. Clarification
in this ongoing struggle is enormously important. After
all, this people’s struggle for economic and political justice
and human rights - is a process, not an end to itself.
Remember,
as Rosa Luxemburg stated, “history is the only true teacher,”
even as we maintain a “worldview” in “this struggle
for new revelations.”
Onward
my sisters and brothers! Onward!
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial
Board Member, Larry Pinkney, is a veteran of the Black Panther
Party, the former Minister of Interior of the Republic of
New Africa, a former political prisoner and the only American
to have successfully self-authored his civil/political rights
case to the United Nations under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights. In connection with his political
organizing activities in opposition to voter suppression,
etc., Pinkney was interviewed in 1988 on the nationally
televised PBS News Hour, formerly known as The
MacNeil / Lehrer News Hour. For more about Larry
Pinkney see the book, Saying No to Power: Autobiography
of a 20th Century Activist and Thinker, by William
Mandel [Introduction by Howard Zinn]. (Click here
to read excerpts from the book). Click here
to contact Mr. Pinkney.
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