While I was digesting this �doomsday
view� from James Petras, I read another from Immanuel
Wallerstein which was a discussion on the �The World
Left after 2011� and the possible position of progressives
to the unfolding electoral cycle in the United States.
I
want to use this commentary to present the African point
of view on the changes of 2011 and the implications
in the short term for 2012. Already the eruptions of
the Nigerian workers of the most populous state in Africa
have sent signals that working people will stand up
and will not tolerate the breakup of the society so
that the looters can unleash more violence. I draw the
inspiration and optimism from C.L.R James and Walter
Rodney who taught us that the African people and their
progressive intellectuals must develop their independent
position on social struggles and how these struggles
in one region can have an impact on the rest of the
world
Africans
and progressives everywhere are this year celebrating
100 years of the African National Congress (ANC) of
South Africa. This ANC celebration is also another opportunity
for progressive humans to learn from the sustained forms
of struggle over generations and the reality that even
after the coming to power of a black government, the
struggle must continue to force the transformation of
the present social system. In this regard, the Egyptian
revolution has a lot to learn from the limited gains
in South Africa. Yet it is the clarity of the tasks
ahead that should guide us planning for prolonged organized
activity for a new social system.
Revolution
and war in the midst of the capitalist depression
When
international media were broadcasting live video footage
of Tunisians gathering by the hundreds of thousands
in front of the central office of the long terrifying
Ministry of Home Security in Tunis, and chanting in
one voice �the people want to bring down the regime,�
something had already changed and the world was not
anymore the same. The Tunisian and Egyptian revolutionary
processes pointed to the ability of the people to organize,
resist and set in motion new political directions. The
recursive processes of self-organization and self-mobilization,
along with the new networking tools for political education,
had placed the initiative in the hands of the progressive
forces internationally. Even reformist calls for regulations
and for a financial transaction tax were being vigorously
resisted because the ruling elements had believed the
fiction of the unlimited possibilities of the �free
market.�
By
the end of the 2011, it became clear that the epicenter
of the crisis was in Western Europe and that the old
thinking about reconstructing capital could not salvage
the outmoded forms of governance. The blind faith about
the rationality of markets had plunged Europe into the
greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression
of the 1930s. The European project was exposed and it
was no longer possible to plunder Africa as the colonial
masters did during the 1930s and 1940s when the African
villages were looted to save capital. Invading Libya
in order to freeze and hold hostage the US $150 billion
of the Libyan people only served to expose the European
and US capitalists further in the face of international
public opinion. Nicholas Sarkozy was so energetic in
attempting to save French banks that his actions deepened
the capitalist divide with open war of words with the
Turkish capitalists who had their own designs on Africa.
From
inside the United States, the workers of Wisconsin took
up the challenge thrown up by the youths of Tunisia
and Egypt, dramatically exposing the fact that political
change cannot come simply through elections. At the
end of 2010, the forces of racism, sexism, homophobia
and chauvinism had rallied in the United States of America
under the banner of the Tea Party. Financed by billionaires
who grasped the dangers of popular mobilization, these
billionaires such as the Koch brothers wanted to revitalize
whiteness as the central platform of political engagement
in the United States. Winning large victories in the
Congressional elections of 2010, these barons of capital
were pumping millions into the political struggles on
all fronts through entities called Super PACs (political
action committees). The conservative wing of US politics
had mobilized to use the Congressional elections to
elect leaders who stood ready to roll back the democratic
rights of workers, especially the rights to collective
bargaining.
From
Wisconsin to Ohio, the counter-revolution from the right
energized workers in the United States so that there
were new forms of mobilization to the point where the
Occupy Wall Street centralized itself as a political
force of the future. Inside Western Europe, the baggage
of racism and xenophobia held back clarity from the
Left as the bankers and speculators removed governments
at will in Greece and Italy. The specter of fascist
rule in Greece loomed with warnings from writers who
warned of �Austerity
and Fascism in Greece: the real 1% doctrine.�
Where
in Africa, the period of Structural Adjustment had attempted
to roll back the gains of independence, in Europe the
political leaders have registered their subservience
to the bankers. It is from East Asia where the anchor
of the World economy showed another dynamic. This was
the potency of the planned economy and the ability of
the Chinese society to withstand the vicissitudes of
the capitalist depression. By the end of October 2011,
with daily emissaries to China, it was clear that East
Asia had become the center of an evolving global order
.The center of the world economy shifted sharply from
the Atlantic to the Asia Pacific region.
Intensified struggles in China
For
the past thirty years, the Chinese economy has registered
an average of 10 per cent growth every year. This has
been the most sustained transformation in any economy
in the history of human societies and few of the western
economists will accept the reality that it was the socialist
foundations that guaranteed this impressive change and
the ability of the society to lift hundreds of millions
out of the crudest forms of exploitation (called poverty).
The relevant point about the Chinese transformation
is that the building of socialism is still in its infancy
and that there are many different twists and turns in
the struggle to build socialism; there has been no prescribed
roadmap. Whether this search takes the form of Great
Leaps Forward, the four modernizations or the new experimentation
of opening to western capitalism, the reality is that
it is the strength and cohesion of the Chinese socialist
system that is the firewall against complete collapse
in this historical moment.
In
the last years of the leader Deng Xiaoping, some of
the Chinese leaders embraced the idea that China must
become more open to the �free market� and make strategic
partnerships with western capitalists. This partnership
is now manifesting in the growth of a vibrant capitalist
class within China. It is this small capitalist class
that projects itself overseas and extended aspects of
Chinese capitalism to all continents. These groups in
China accepted the view that there was no alternative
to capitalism. So when Lehman Brothers fell in 2008,
these elements were seduced to purchasing worthless
assets in the United States. The corporate forces in
China, like their class allies in the West, were in
denial, and considered the crisis simply a cyclical
downturn. They were poised to �bail out� European capitalists
before there was an outcry inside the country that China
had to bail out its own people prior to bailing out
capitalists in Europe.
Moreover,
when the Occupy Wall Street Momentum reached the gates
of China and took the streets of Asia, including Hong
Kong, the top strategists of the Chinese Communist Party
took a second look at the long term implications of
the Occupy Wall Street Movement. By the end of 2011,
there were new debates within China with President Hu
Jintao, repeating the official position that China was
on the road to building socialism. This restatement
was a reflection of the intensified debates within the
Communist Party as the evidence of class polarization,
corruption, environmental decay, political restlessness
from the workers and outright political struggles of
workers and farmers were erupting with the now publicized
occupation and demonstration of Wukan. After months
of demonstrating for their rights, the Communist Party
leadership in Beijing retreated,
exposing to the Chinese poor that they can win victories
if they stood up for their rights.
These
social struggles in China strengthened the Left forces
in the society who never abandoned the task of building
a new social system. It is from the province of Chongqing
where the Left is now seeking to challenge the reverence
for private property. There is a conscious effort to
reverse expropriation of land from poor farmers. This
municipality is the weakest link in the chain of imperial
planning. The capitalists have over-extended themselves,
so there are rebellions all over the society. For the
Communist party to remain relevant, they will have to
support the poor as they did in Zukan. This will strengthen
the Left that is now building an axis around Chongqing.
Our
task in the anti-imperialist front is to know which
China we are speaking to. Is it the China that is compromised
by financialization and their extension into Goldman
Sachs and the overseas Chinese capitalists in Singapore,
Hong Kong and the rest of Asia?
Internationally,
the revolutionary forces will have to differentiate
between the rising forces in China and be clear as to
how our platform coincides with the desires of the Chinese
working peoples. Our engagement with China through our
networks will assist those inside China who want to
understand the world beyond the idea of �modernization.�
The African workers will have a lot to do to contribute
to the consciousness of Chinese workers. It is this
same consciousness that will push others just as the
youth of Tahrir square became the forerunner to the
present global resistance.
The
internal political dynamics of the Chinese road to transformation
is central to the current Left strategy in the face
of the growing information war against China by the
most conservative militarists who are creating hype
about Chinese military power in Asia. These conservative
and anti-communist forces want to derail the pace of
transformation in China by engulfing the world in war.
Depression and War
There
is a lot to be learnt from the last capitalist depression
during the 1930s, when some economists and political
leaders believed that militarism and investment in military
capital could resolve the crisis. Indeed, some economists
today credit the militarism of the German society with
ending the crisis without mention of the huge price
paid by humans in the Second World War. Between 1933
and 1939, the world witnessed trade wars, competitive
devaluations and other protectionist measures that cascaded
into open military confrontations. The military triggers
that started with the Japanese invasion of China (1931)
and the Italian invasion of Abyssinia (now Ethiopia
- in 1935) must be studied so that the same slow motion
to war does not overtake humanity. In this regard, it
would be in the best interest of progressives everywhere
to heed the warning of those who note that there are
capitalists internationally who want the pretext for
war against Iran so that a wider conflict could cascade
from Iran and the Middle East to Pakistan and wider
afield.
Progressives
everywhere must penetrate and fully understand the western
media hype about the attempts by Iran to develop nuclear
weapons. Progressives must instead call for the dismantling
of the nuclear arsenal in Israel. One of the most relevant
lessons to be learnt from the German capitalists of
the thirties is the fact that certain sections of the
capitalist classes will go to war in order to save capitalism.
However,
the US military has been degraded by the humiliations
in Iraq and the war of attrition that bogs down more
than one hundred thousand military personnel in Afghanistan.
These reversals for the US military did not come about
by accident, and although the US boasts the strongest
military force in the world, the military has suffered
massive morale problems compounded by the fact that
many veterans now suffer from post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). With the rise in mental illness from
veterans, young US citizens have no appetite for war.
It is for these reasons the peace and justice forces
are not simply following the war drums over Iran and
sinking into despair but clarifying to the peace forces
the need for contingency planning to inspire the ordinary
US soldiers to oppose the present drumbeat of war against
Iran and send clear signs of refusing to fight if the
militarists actually create incidents to precipitate
war.
James
Petras, in his commentary on the scenarios 2012, focused
our attention on the Israeli lobby and their allies
in the military. The military information operations
of the mainstream media are part of the psychological
warfare against US citizens, while a full-blown covert
war against Iran gathers pace. The focus of Petras on
Iran and Israel is appropriate and different from commentators
such as Michael Klare, who are already pointing to scenarios
about the closing of the Straits of Hormuz, as if the
progressive forces are simply bystanders in the face
of the right wing call for war, and tightening sanctions
against Iran. Daily provocations against the people
of Iran by the Israeli government continue with cyber-attacks,
the assassination of scientists, threats against the
leaders of Iran and a simmering war, along with the
same kind of information warfare against the citizens
of the world that had been a prelude to the attack against
Iraq. The major difference today is that the top sections
of the US military are not on board with the vitriol
that is emanating from the most conservative sections
of the US military / financial / complex.
If
one follows closely the ravings of Prime Minister Netanyahu
of Israel, one can see that the ratcheting up of tensions
against Iran is also part of a plan to suck in the political
leadership in Washington and remove the Presidency of
Barack Obama. One writer for a Jewish newspaper
explicitly commented, that �Israel could order President
Barack Obama assassinated so that it would be free to
act against Iran. Andrew Adler of the Atlanta Jewish
Times laid out the scenario
as one of three options Israel has to ensure it can
protect itself from a nuclear Iran.�
Although
this editor has since resigned, it is an indication
of the depth of feeling in some quarters of the United
States and Israel that Barack Obama is an impediment
to the all-out war against Iran. Implementation of unnecessary
sanctions and the vacillation of Obama is not enough
for these conservative forces. For this branch of the
ruling plutocrats, the John F Kennedy option is on the
table and this option follows the path of sections of
the military and security establishment who want war
to protect the �financialization of energy markets.�
Are
there many Bradley Mannings in the US Military?
The
progressive forces in all parts of the world must oppose
the sanctions and militarism against Iran because this
war has all of the hallmarks of escalating and cascading
far beyond Iran. The interconnections between the Israeli lobby and those who are setting the
belligerent tone of the US against China in the South
China Sea can be seen from the output of some of the
Washington think tanks, from the Islamophobia forces,
and from the branches of the armaments culture that
thrive on war. There is a definite link between the
New York Police Department training their officers with
a film called the Third Jihad and the
build-up for war in the Middle East. Yet, every such
action serves to mobilize peace and justice forces and
isolate those intent on whipping up anti-Islam sentiments
in preparation for war.
Not
even the allies of the United States such as India,
Japan, Korea and Brazil will follow this aggressive
rush to all-out war, so in reality, it is the Israeli
government along with their allies who are being isolated,
and not Iran. Pepe Escobar in his article �Banking
on sanctions� spelt out the lunacy of the US sanctions
scheme and drew attention to the fact that this diplomatic
ploy will only strengthen China in the international
system.
Far-sighted
elements of Wall Street understand this just as Pepe
Escobar, so they are working on two options. On one
side they are seducing the children of the leaders of
China to be partners of Global Sachs while on the other
leg there is preparation for war.
During
the wars against the people of Vietnam, the peace and
Justice forces matured and developed tactics to educate
all sections of the society. These tactics survived
to educate the population on the lies that were being
peddled to embark on the occupation of Iraq. Despite
the humiliation of wasting thousands of lives and expending
trillions of dollars in useless war, the impetus for
war is so ingrained that the United States is being
pushed on to another war. The difference for the war
planners at this moment is that the combined forces
of peace and social justice forces are much stronger
than the pessimists make out. So when George Soros is
warning other billionaires to take preemptive action
because financial collapse could bring clashes in the streets and lead
to a crackdown and �strong arm tactics to maintain law
and order,� this is not a future scenario for black
and brown peoples. This is the reality of the New Jim
Crow and the prison industrial complex.
The
progressive forces have inspired anti-war sentiments
to the point that there are hundreds of Bradley Mannings
in the US military. There are other veterans from the
military who have served capital overseas only to see
the reality at home. When ex-Marine, Scot Olsen was
assaulted in the Bay area for expressing his right to
participate in the Occupy Wall Street Movement, there
were hundreds of serving Marines who listened to his
interviews and took note that they will not fight to
defend the banks. This assault further educated the
rank and file of the military as to the true purpose
of the military. The existence of sympathy for the Bradley
Mannings and Scott Olsens among the top officer class
of the US military ensures that the top echelons of
the US military will not go along with the Israeli lobby.
They know the pulse of the armed forces and want to
avoid a situation of 1860 where the officer corps was
divided. While the conservatives are
putting pressures on the US public to go to war against
Iran, the generals and the top brass are pushing back
against any planned attack to the point that in January,
Barack Obama cancelled planned military exercises between
Israel and the United States.
I
have already given one indication of the deep divisions
in my contribution to understanding the differences
between the Rocks
and Crusaders.
Those
sections of the US military who believe in the US Constitution
are reading the implications of voices such as Andrew Adler of the Atlanta Jewish Times. This is not the place for progressives
to spell out contingency planning to oppose wars, but
our writings should not be of the doomsday type to demobilize
our forces with �worst case scenarios.� The plans to
remove collective bargaining from workers and the drumbeat
to war against Iran are two sides of the capitalist
depression and progressives must continue to oppose
austerity at home and war abroad.
The
scramble in Africa
Many
on the Left in the United States are now writing to
oppose the war plans by the Israeli lobby in the USA.
However, because these writers excluded Africa, there
is no appreciation of how the revolution in Egypt has
sharpened the alternatives in North Africa and Arabia.
During the 20th century, in every revolutionary situation,
capital fomented war to weaken the revolutionary forces.
The pace of change in Egypt has created nervousness
in Israel and war is one option to inoculate the Israeli
population against long term protests for peace and
justice inside Israel. It is the alliance between the
peace and justice forces in Israel and Palestine, along
with the revolutionaries in Africa, that will be the
biggest constraint on Israeli action in Iran.
In
order to whip up diversions, Israeli actors are busy
in the Sudan and East Africa covertly working with the
remnants of the US petroleum companies and private military
corporations who want to recreate the international
conditions for a war in terror.
Already,
there are some quarters in the USA seeking to deepen
the militarization of Kenya by identifying Lamu as a
potential military outpost for the Chinese. Anti-imperialist
and progressive forces on the ground in Kenya and even
those involved in the political game will have to be
strategic in their planning, just as our forces have
been strategic in Nigeria. There is a reason why we
interred Tajudeen Abdul Raheem in Funtua, in the North
of Nigeria. Tajudeen had worked tirelessly against the
manipulation of religious differences and we should
be publicizing the book of the writings of Tajudeen
in this revolutionary moment. We must keep his ideas
alive as one part of our arsenal.
The
objective conditions of real exploitation in Africa
intensify social struggles for better conditions so
that the contours of revolutionary change will expand.
Thus, while the media insists on delinking the Egyptian
and Tunisian revolts from the wider African struggles
by writing on the �Arab Spring,� worker protests envelope
numerous African states with those such as the struggles
in Swaziland, Uganda, Burkina Fasso, Gabon, Kenya, Senegal,
Mali, South Africa, Nigeria and Ethiopia, percolating,
awaiting the right moment for the maturation and regime
intervention as in Egypt.
The
contingency planners for international capital understand
fully the implications of what Pambazuka has documented
in the book, African
Awakening: The Emerging Revolutions
. Hence, the US Africa Command is working overtime
to build allies within certain social sections to prepare
for these emerging revolutions, while think tanks pontificate
on possibilities of Egyptian-style uprisings in other
parts of Africa. From Africa to Arabia, the stirrings
and eruptions from Yemen to Bahrain, Syria and Saudi
Arabia have signaled that there will be no quick return
to the old neo-liberal order. For the strategic planners,
while the Israeli conservatives plan covert war in Iran,
the nightmare continues to be fear of revolt by the
poor and exploited in Saudi Arabia.
What
if the people of Saudi Arabia changed the political
calculus and started their call to enter the spaces
of political participation and expression? The questions
of the politics of inclusion can and will shift decisively
from Iran to Saudi Arabia. Is the Left preparing for
this by working with our allies in the mosques who will
be ready for this entry on the political stage?
The
Progressives and the US elections
While
the talking heads of the western media are wallowing
in despair, peoples in all continents are seeking alternatives
beyond neo-liberal domination. The current European
struggles will sharpen the struggles in Latin America
and Africa. In all of these arenas, neo-liberalism has
been discredited so they have no answer but to call
for more austerity. These calls also heighten the consciousness
of workers. Black and indigenous persons in Latin America
will push the democratic struggles to the point where
the current content of the politics of Latin America
will change considerably.
The
consolidation of the limited democratic gains in Bolivia,
Paraguay, Venezuela and Brazil will sharpen the choices
before the peoples of Latin America. Haiti will remain
a flashpoint of popular anti-imperial struggles and
out of these struggles in the Caribbean, there will
be pressures for the removal of the UN occupation forces.
At
the same time, the peoples of South America are experimenting
with new forms of economic relations, while in East
Asia there is no section of the political leadership
(even the most avowed capitalists) that accepts neo-liberalism.
In East Asia there are strong memories of colonialism
and the prolonged wars of the 20th century. Subsequently,
despite the propaganda against China, there is no appetite
for war in Asia.
It
is from Africa where there is clarity on the tasks ahead.
Reflecting on the challenges and opportunities, Samir
Amin called for �Audacity and more audacity.� His essay
was the theoretical guide to support that mobilization
of the youths in the streets of Cairo and Wisconsin.
In calling for the socialization of the �ownership of
the monopolies,� Amin spelt out how �the historical
circumstances created by the implosion of contemporary
capitalism requires the radical Left, in the North as
well as the South, to be bold in formulating its political
alternative to the existing system.� While economists
in North America continuously complain that the barons
of Wall Street socialize losses while privatizing profits,
Samir Amin spelt out in great details for citizens of
all continents,
If
one reads an economist such as Samir Amin and others
who are progressive (in the US context) such as Robert
Reich, one can see that Amin is drawing from the depth
of the oppression on the world scale to elaborate alternatives.
The challenge of the Left is to understand the outline
of the alternative social project and translate this
into practical day to day programs, so that wherever
one lives and works, one should not succumb to despair
and pessimism. Robert Reich critiqued Geithner�s view
of critical risks by stating, �the European debt crisis
and Iran pose risks to the American economy in 2012.
But they aren�t the biggest risk. The biggest risk is
right here at home � which most Americans will continue
to languish.�
The
word languish is but a mild way to describe what millions
are suffering.
It
is in the midst of this suffering where the formal process
of the US Presidential elections is taking place. The
power of US imperialism dictates that in all corners
of the world, humans are paying attention to this election
in the midst of a depression.
Because
of the depth of the economic crisis, there are divisions
among the Left about their engagement with this process.
Immanuel Wallerstein in his review, The
World Left After 2011, spelt out the reality that
as long as the rank and file relate to the electoral
process, the Left must find ways to promote the issues
that clarify to the working the people that the push
to remove basic rights such as collective bargaining
cannot be separated from war planning.
In
short, I would agree with the position of Wallerstein
and urge that the progressives be engaged in the electoral
processes in the USA in the same way that Harriet Tubman
and Frederick Douglass were engaged with Abraham Lincoln
at the moment before the impending split in the military
in 1860. Today, the progressives have better tools than
Harriet Tubman, and with the kind of long-term planning
to isolate the racists.
With
clarity, the progressives can strengthen our access
to cultural expressions and our links to the youth to
sharpen the consciousness of the failures of Lloyd Blankfein,
Corzine and Wall Street. Murdoch and the News Corp conglomerate
will be weakened further. The planning of the insurgent
internet revolutionaries who continue to inspire more
Bradley Mannings and want the internet to be a highway
for peace will challenge the subservient and fawning
corporate media. There is no reason why the Murdoch
networks should be free to foment hatred and divisions
when these corporate forces should be before the court
of law. Even in the midst of the elections, the platforms
of cable Television bear the hallmarks of inter-capitalist
rivalry. On the wider cultural level, cultural artists
are now coming out and will be just as engaged as Michael
Moore.
The
right wing conservatives have been so demoralized and
discredited that the Republican Party cannot come up
with a viable candidate. They have no coherent argument
other than to call for the same deregulation of financial
markets that hastened the current crisis. From within
the ranks of the Republican Party they have thrown up
the most racist elements. Newt Gingrich, (one of the
contenders for leadership and former Speaker of the
House of Representatives) wrote his doctoral dissertation
on the Congo during the time of the genocide of the
Belgians and believes that King Leopold brought progress
to Africa. Gingrich is supported by the most conservative
Israeli forces and he has courted the most rabid anti-Castro
elements in Florida.
It
is here where I agree with Robert Reich that there must
be total opposition to Newt Gingrich; one should not
entertain even a 10 per cent chance of Gingrich becoming
the US President.
Gingrich
is attempting to win the hearts of white racists with
a 21st century Southern Strategy, but the abject conditions
of unemployment and insecurity have undermined old racist
references for the mobilization of white supremacists.
Mitt Romney, the standard bearer of Wall Street is so
removed from the day to day reality of the lives of
millions that he has openly boasted of his millions
and offshore bank accounts. Romney openly stated that
he does not care about the poor, believing that their
�safety net� is adequate. The other two Republican candidates,
Congressman Ron Paul and former Pennsylvania Senator
Rick Santorum, are public officials who have not been
shy to express racist and misogynistic views.
With
candidates such as Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Rick Santorum
and Mitt Romney, the Democratic Party has remained smug,
hoping that the working people will have no choice but
to vote for Barack Obama. It is in this discussion of
politics where ideas such as those put forward by the
Occupy Wall Street movement must be promoted to point
out that real democracy will emerge from the day to
day struggles, so that progressives are not focused
on the election circus with the millions of dollars
being spent by the corporate elements.
We
must define the issues and we must ensure that the idea
of the one per cent dominating the political spaces
becomes the number one issue in the electoral campaign.
The
progressive forces in the US made their voices heard
in Ohio, Wisconsin and in other places.
We
of the Left cannot pontificate on elections per se,
but on the issues that will strengthen labor and the
global rights campaign. Capital is global and acts as
such to defend its interests. Working people must continue
to organize and the global rights initiative of Bill
Fletcher, Jr.and other Pan African revolutionaries in
the USA holds the seeds of the creation of a new and
strengthened network against international capitalism.
Small
victories over questions of the Keystone pipeline from
Canada to Texas and the struggles for environmental
protection must be deepened so that the intellectual
and political initiative remains with the progressive
forces. In this way, progressives will point the way
that the election is not about the election of Obama
but whether the society can be pushed into an unnecessary
war abroad in order to implement austerity and political
repression at home.
Progressives
must brace for intensified struggles in 2012.
In
the final analysis, we must go back to the Middle East
where an alliance between women in Bahrain, Israel,
Yemen, Iran and Saudi Arabia holds promise for a new
platform. The women of Egypt gave us that notice when
they mobilized to come out in forces across religious
and class lines.
These
women are opposed to fundamentalists who want women
to cover up but will disrobe them and beat them if they
fight for their rights.
Watch
the Nigerian Poor in 2012. In January of 2012, the baton
had been taken from Cairo to Lagos with the Nigerian
poor who were entering the new political stage. Their
cultural artists such as Fela had led the way and the
alliance between cultural workers and oppressed masses
is creating a new dynamic in West Africa.
There
will be skirmishes but no major war. Our forces should
mobilize to ensure that if war comes, the revolution
that will shake the world will make 1917 look like the
real Tea Party. We are culturally and intellectually
prepared for that eventuality. Che Guevara, Walter Rodney
and Mao inspired and prepared us for this capitalist
depression. Now we need to go with Rosa Luxemburg, Rosa
Parks and Harriet Tubman who were clear that all social
struggles, whether at home or at the work place, are
interconnected. We are in a revolutionary moment and
revolutionaries cannot be pessimistic. Walter Rodney
taught us well.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board Member, Dr. Horace Campbell, PhD, is Professor of
African American Studies and Political Science at Syracuse University in Syracuse New York. He is the author of Barack Obama and Twenty-first Century Politics: A Revolutionary
Moment in the USA, and a contributing author to African Awakening:
The Emerging revolutions. He is currently
a Visiting Professor in the Department of International
Relations at Tsinghua University, Beijing, China. His website is horacecampbell.net. Click here to contact Dr. Campbell.