COINTELPRO
101, produced by Freedom Archives.�
Click here
to order.
I
read The Autobiography of Malcolm X when I
was 13 and realized at that moment that I needed to be an
activist for social justice, and particularly in the cause
of Black Freedom.� I was almost simultaneously moved and
inspired by the politics of the Black Panther Party, a radical
organization formed in 1966 that best seemed to represent
the politics that Malcolm X advanced at the end of his life.
Though
I never joined the Panthers I was in their circle.� And
it was on one occasion that I visited the Mount Vernon,
New York offices of the local Panther chapter and stumbled
across something that was called The Black Panther
Coloring Book.� The book was targeted at young children
and, among other things, it showed children shooting police
(the police were drawn as pigs with police uniforms).� Though
I had no great love for the police I was very much taken
aback by this, especially since this was supposed to be
a children�s book.� Years later I found out that the book
had not been produced by the Panthers:� it was produced
by provocateurs as part of what came to be known as the
COINTELPRO (Counter-Intelligence Program) operation that
the US government designed to, among other things, destroy
the Panthers.� It was, however, made to look as if it had
been produced by the Panthers and was, as a result, distributed
by and within the Panther Party.
Although many of us who came of age during the late 1960s/early
1970s became familiar with COINTELPRO, later generations
have, at best, only a vague sense of the project.� It is
for this reason that COINTELPRO 101, a brilliant
film by The Freedom Archives, is so very important.� COINTELPRO
101 fills in blanks that many people have when it
comes to the history of progressive social movements.� It
also dispels many myths.
COINTELPRO was not originally designed to be used against
people of color but was part of a larger effort to squash
left-wing and left-leaning movements, particularly the Communist
Party.� Yet, beginning in the 1950s and early 1960s, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), then led by J. Edgar
Hoover, saw in rising social movements among people of color
a potential danger to the status quo.� The bull�s
eye was, as a result, shifted.
One thing that makes COINTELPRO 101 unique
is that when identifying social movements that were targeted
by the US government it does not begin with the Black Freedom
Movement, which is usually where the discussion of COINTELPRO
commences.� Instead, and very appropriately, it starts with
the Puerto Rican independence movement.� Many people on
the mainland have not a clue about Puerto Rican politics,
let alone the independence movement that actually dates
back to the late 19th century.� Yet Hoover and others saw
in this movement a dire threat and went about targeting
this movement.
It is important for readers under 50 to understand the nature
of COINTELPRO.� It was not a project aimed at gathering
information, though certainly that was part of it.� It was
a pro-active project aimed at destroying individuals and
organizations.� The film takes us through various targets.�
In addition to the Puerto Rican independence movement, COINTELPRO
was most well known for having been used against the Panthers,
the American Indian Movement, and also white student radicals,
such as those in the original Students for a Democratic
Society.� The tactics ranged.� They included the use of
rumor-mongering and defamation (which is something that
all progressives should guard against), blackmail, entrapment
and murder.� Activists were sometimes tricked into illegal
acts that they would have otherwise shunned by individuals
who later turned out to be police agents.� In one of the
most egregious cases, Illinois Panther leader Fred Hampton
was drugged and then murdered by attacking Chicago Police
in one of these operations.
I not only learned new information from COINTELPRO
101 but I also found my blood boiling.� There are
individuals who, as the film documents, remain in prison
to this day due to repression that was connected with COINTELPRO.�
Not only that, despite the revelations concerning COINTELPRO
that surfaced in the 1970s, no one from the federal government
ever went to jail for participating in, let alone designing,
this notorious program.
COINTELPRO 101 is not only a film to see, but
it is one that would be very useful as a �trigger� for a
discussion.� You cannot watch this film and then remain
silent.� You immediately want to discuss what was just addressed
and think about the implications for today.
During
the late 1960s/early 1970s, many progressive and radical
activists were accused of being paranoid when we suggested
that there were, in fact, government undercover and provocateurish
operations that were aimed against our various movements.�
Our claims were often dismissed with no serious inquiry.�
History had the last laugh.� While it may have been the
case that some people were paranoid, it also turns out that
we were right.� Or, to put it another way, even if some
were paranoid it did not mean that someone else was out
to get us.
You have to see the film!
COINTELPRO
101, produced by Freedom Archives.�
Click here
to order.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with
the Institute for
Policy Studies, the immediate past president ofTransAfrica Forum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in
Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice(University of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized
labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher. |