Saturday, January 9, 2010

Carl Davidson's comments underscore the necessity of my blog

Carl Davidson is an estimable individual, one of our better left leaders, and someone whom I've admired since the 1960s. Yet he's not been without his confusions over the years, and those confusions are reflected in his two "Comments" to my original blog. In this he shares basic confusions about the nature of racism with far too much of the organized left as it exists today, a confusion that can only continue to undermine the left.

Specifically, he sees the status of black America as basically unchanged over all these years, and thus, transforms living black America itself into some sort of immutable, ahistorical category that, no matter what, cannot ever get out from under the heel of white racism, which is, itself, another immutable, ahistorical category. That is why he has to dwell on what happened back in the 1600s, and not utter one word on the current situation in which race and racism exist here in 2010. In doing so, he exclusively on what existed during the time of slavery, thus omitting the past nearly 400 years of history. While his characterization of what he holds as the creation of a White Race is of interest historically the way he presents it, it completely begs the question, What about now? He gets out of facing that question directly by completely ignoring my references to Clarence Thomas and Michael Steele, who, judging from how they appear in photographs, are certainly African-American, yet whose politics are certainly not those of what he would hold as "properly" African-American.

Right away, his analysis thus breaks on the shoals of what is indeed a situation where the kind of overt racism that would always seem to be unavoldable given his immutable White Race thus created eternally back in the 1600s, and never subject to change. Yet, a young black writer, Richard Benjamin, while finding the U.S. still beset with "structural racism," finds it free of "interpersonal racism." (Taken from David Sirota's interview with Benjamin, "Road tripping through Whitopia," In These Times, March 2009.) Something I would also hold to be true. And that's the rub.

It's the rub because there's no way to understand race and racism in the U.S., or indeed anywhere else, without undrestanding it as the intersection of race and class. It all goes back to a real Marxist analysis, something I would assume Davidson, a socialist activist, would thoroughly understand. But given that so much gets improperly called "Marxism" nowadays (and has been so improperly called since the 1960s, even by those on the left), Davidson's misunderstanding takes on a much larger significance. What was once true is that the class divisions in the black community were not as significant as they are now: all were more or less universally poor, and direct manifestations of racism affected the black middle and upper classes, and limited their upward mobility, as much as it did their poorer brethren. But the palpable, though limited, successes of the civil rights movement and black empowerment widened the class divisions within the black community. While some members of the black community were able to gain great advantage from the opportunities in employment and education now open to them, many were not, and they were simply left behind by both the still-primarily-white established power structure and by their better-off black brethren. Racial solidarity, when almost all blacks were in essentially the same situation, now foundered on the shoals of an increasingly accessible upward mobility that was afforded a few, but a few that was increasing in both numbers and in percentage of the black population. At the same time, the barriers of racial prejudice were also breaking down in the white community, and middle-class blacks were much more accepted than before by white middle-class Americans, while their poorer brethren were not. There was also a loss of leadership in the black community itself, as what DuBois called the "talented tenth" of the black population took their leadership and educational skills out of the black community, both physically and psychologically.

So, to make a long story short, it was now possible for a black man, Barack Obama, to live in the White House while a few miles away, other black people lived in ever-increasing squalor. Further, with the extensive loss of good-paying manufacturing jobs in the U.S. economy, a regularly-employed black proletariat sank more into the immiseration of becoming only a marginally-employed, low-wage employed proletariat, or not in the workforce at all, a lumpenproletariat. With all the social vices that kind of immiseration entails: endemic poverty, crime, drugs, dropping out of school, teenage pregnancy, social instability. Much like the situation that had prevailed before the civil rights successes, only this time without a black leadership of the stature and character of a Martin Luther King or a Malcolm X. A horrible social vacuum with devastating consequences all-round.

This is schematic, to be sure, but all too accurate I say, in its essential features. And that is the class tragedy of black America today. That is the social root of the "structural racism" that deepens, even as "interpersonal racism" generally recedes.

But this is certainly not what Carl Davidson sees, and certainly not at all what he sees when he cavalierly dismisses my notion of "whiteness" as an "attitude." For if "whiteness" is not an "attitude" that can be transformed and overcome, then how does he explain the white Abolitionists, how does he explain John Brown, how indeed does he explain the tens of thousands of white youth like himself (and me as well) who were inspired and galvanized into action by the courageous stand of the civil rights movement? Who joined that movement, and in many cases gave their lives trying to win black freedom from segregation? Who were inspired by the civil rights movement and its employment of direct action to use those same tactics, and to manifest that same courage, to protest the U.S. war in Vietnam, or to fight against the myriad social ills they saw all around them? Including in the white communities themselves? Indeed, if "whiteness" is not an "attitude" that can be transformed and overcome, then how can anyone explain at all that decade of protest called the 1960s? Indeed, if "whiteness" is not an "attitude" that can be transformed and overcome, then how can Carl Davidson even explain himself!

Unfortunately, what did happen is but another aspect of the palpable success of much of white America actually overcoming its "whiteness": it happened with an infusion of counterproductive guilt. But much as we may feel sorry for the crimes committed against black America, as much as we may feel guilty because of it, guilt is a poor substitute for a political and economic program that addresses both the racial and class realities of the U.S. and the world today. It is simply a dead end, and only ends up, quoting Angela Davis from 1995, "automatically exonerat[ing] those who do harm to self and others." And that only leads the left into a cul-de-sac on this vital question of race. Or rather, race and class.

12 comments:

  1. George, I assure you, I don't find anything about a people of a society 'immutable.' Everything changes in time, including people, although as Mao Zedong once put it, rather than change, 'some people die first.'

    And as someone who marched 250 miles through Mississippi in 1966, I'm quite aware of the changes that have been wrought even there, especially by harsh and bitter struggles.

    But one thing still in need of change is that the 'equality' won in our society still has a white top and a Black bottom, and a white blindspot persists in a large majority of our population in their inability to see it, or if they do, commit themselves to do something about it. Visit any prison or jail, and it will hit you in the face.

    I base my views not only on history books, but my social practice today. I live in Raccoon Township, Beaver County, in Western PA. In 1960, it was the most proletarian county in the whole country, and I grew up here, and know more than a little about class. Most of my relatives worked in the mills, and a few of them died there.

    Raccoon is 99 percent white, and even the one percent isn't Black. It's more than 90 cent 'white' workers, and I worked this area in the election. When I set up a PDA voter registration table at the township fair, complete with Obama literature, the first message I got an elderly woman was that I was a disgrace, a 'traitor to my race'. Views were more mixed after that, especially among the young. In the end, we got a large minority of voters for Obama, 48 percent, mainly because of the newer and younger workers.

    So yes, racism as personal 'attitude' can change. When we went door to door and confronted it, we took the union's line and told people if they had racist fears to 'sit on them, vote your interests, not your prejudices.' It worked fairly well, but not well enough with a good number.

    They continue to cling to these 'attitudes' for a reason, namely because there is a social basis for them, which is a Marxist way to look at ideas and attitudes, and this is the heart of my argument with you. As low-income and distressed as workers are in my township, every one of them knows that if they go into Aliquippa, where only Blacks live now, the conditions are far worse. And the Blacks in Aliquippa know, even if they could afford the mortgage on a very modest old house in Raccoon, of which there are plenty of empty ones, and that housing discrimination is illegal, they would look elsewhere rather than put up with the grief they would suffer from those who want to cling to segregated conclaves, however modest they many be.

    Is this special status or privilege or inequality or whatever you want to call it in the class interest of my working-class neighbors in Raccoon? No it is not. Not any more than a worm on a hook is in the interests of a fish.

    But it is the anchor for their self-defeating 'attitudes' and the secret of the bourgeoisie's rule over them. White identity politics is what imprisons them from seeing their own class interests and the need for solidarity with all the exploited and oppressed. And challenging the structures and policies that identity or 'system of attitudes' rests upon, however difficult, is the key element of our eventual victory.

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  2. I think George is right. The creation of a black middle class that has become increasingly isolated from lower class ghetto blacks throughout the 70 and 80s and culminated in the election of the "post-racial" Obama is part of the dynamics of the cooptation and suppression of resistance. Certainly the fact that Obama
    has not fulfilled the hopes of his progressive supporters, but rather is implementing -- with a smoother style -- the policies of Bushism would seem to indicate that the elevation of a small stratum of educated blacks to positions of high social status and even ruling class leadership(prefigured by Sharpton,Jackson and Colin Powell)
    poses a new obstacle in attempting to forge a multi-racial campaign against the neo-liberalist policies that are leading to the immiseration of US working and middle classes and poor and transformation of US into a third world country. (The future of new right-wing populism remains uncertain, but its scapegoats are,more likely to be immigrants than African Americans.)
    Seth
    www.sethHfarber.com

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  3. I haven't said anything for a while, as I've had overtime at my job that cut into writing time. But Seth Farber gets it right more than Carl Davidson. While he's partly right about racism, he's also substantially wrong as well, which is perhaps why he fails to comment on African American rights who are far more akin to McCain/Palin than to Obama/Biden--and whom I specifically referred to, Clarence Thomas and Michael Steele. Seth Farber got this right. This "small stratum of educated blacks to positions of high social status and even ruling class leadership" is not miniscule, and certainly without influence. As for Davidson's anecdotal tales about Racoon Township, still Davidson concedes 48% of the white workers living there voted for Obama. What does he want, a North Korean-style election where Kim Il-sung got all but 7 votes cast for him, and these 7 were not "no" votes, they were, according to the official announcement, merely spoiled ballots! Obama carried Pennsylvania as a whole 55% to McCain's 44% (CNN News).

    As for Aliquippa, how many Black doctors, lawyers, businesspeople, or professionals live there?

    Carl Davidson's comments harken back to the 1960s-1970s call for white workers and other whites to "give up their white-skin privilege." That still means nothing programmatically, just as it did then.

    And in the meantime, Obama, man of African descent, shows which class attitude he prefers.

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  4. George asks: 'As for Aliquippa, how many Black doctors, lawyers, businesspeople, or professionals live there?'

    Hardly any, George, I could probably count them on my fingers, out of the 7000 or so low-income Blacks still trapped there. The only well-to-do Blacks that came from here are a few football players, like Tony Dorsett. But those I can count on the fingers of one hand.

    Moreover, I don't talk to workers about 'giving up' white skin privilege. I talk to them about fighting it. It's the snare that keeps them trapped and isolated from their best allies. 'Giving it up' suggests it's something worth keeping, but as I explained, it's no more in their interest than the worm on the hook is in the interest of the fish.

    Everyone around here, for instance, needs jobs. So I argue that we start with winterizing homes, getting the first money to where it's needed most, to the Black unemployed, but not limited to them. If it goes first to the road-building crews, then it only goes to whites, and the Blacks are passive, because they know they'll see none of it. But if you start with Green Jobs, you can unite the unemployed, white and Black, and on the basic of that, fight for the road crews as step two, and get some Blacks in those apprentice programs to get some of that, too.

    One way ignores the structures of white privilege; the other way challenges them as a key to unity and wider gains for all.

    But back to the Black upper crust, so what if Aliquippa had more of them? As part of the Black nationality, they're still held back by the structures of institutional racism, even if the terms aren't as harsh as those with less income, or no income at all. Why do you seem to want to make a target of them, rather than seeing them as an ally as well?

    George, when the time comes that you, as part of the oppressor nation working class, spend the bulk of your energies taking down the white identity politics that imprisons those majority millions who think they're 'white,' then I'll take you critiques of the Black upper crust and Black identity politics more seriously. But as long as I've known you, you have yet to do so. You're still aiming your main fire at a sector of the Blacks, as if they are the main problem, while the actual main problem remains invisible to you.

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  5. Oppressor nation working class? But, as the Communist Manifesto says, "The workers ["workingmen" in the standard English translation, dating from the 19th Century] have no country." Far too much confusion on his conflating of class and nation! Botched-up Lenin on national self-determination, if you ask me, and that's at the heart of the bad theories on race and privilege that have come out of the left.

    But I'm glad you've seen the primacy of economics and enlightened economic self-interest of black, white and brown workers as primary to interracial/inter-ethnic unity. There really can be no other, and on that you advocate a program that I would also advocate. Thus does practice carry the day and save the moral exhortations on brotherhood for the preachers!

    Again, and last, I can only mention that structural racism (which can affect all African Americans, but quite differentially)and individual racism are two different entities. And structural racism is a class as well as a race issue, and must be fought as a class issues as well as a race issue.

    Moreover, I don't think of myself as "white," I think of myself as underemployed and not having enough money, or in the words of the great black blues singer Sleepy John Estes, "I'm broke and I'm hungry/I'm ragged and I'm dirty too." (By the way, I live in an integrated neighborhood here in Indianapolis, where not only is there much de facto segregation, but also much self-imposed segregatation, by blacks as much as by whites.)

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  6. I assure you, George, that the various working classes of this world do in fact belong to nations, regardless of what the Communist Manifesto slogan expresses as an ultimate goal. Nations exist in this world and they are made up of all classes, bottom to top. And the one you belong to is a 'great nation,' an oppressive superpower, and its arrogance is bred into us with our mother's milk.

    Nations are brought into being by the growth of capitalism and its national markets that over-rode feudal divisions. Some became oppressor nations over others among the oppressed and the colonies--and if you don't like Lenin on the topic, despite his being very good, then read his inspiration, which is Marx and Engels on the Irish and the English, or England, including the English workers, in relation to their colonies.

    You have the classic 'class essentialist' left liquidation of the national question. It leads to all sorts of chauvinism. It's past time to stop being a prisoner of old ideas and free yourself from it.

    After the travesty of World War One, the International changed the slogan from 'Workers of the World, Unite!' to 'Workers of the World, and Oppressed Nations and Peoples, Unite!

    There was a good reason for the change, and it still stands today. Most of our workers not only self-identify as 'white;' they also identify as 'Americans.' Our task is to help them see the limitations here, and break on through to worker and human solidarity worldwide. But the starting point has to be the reality, even if it's socially constructed, and not wishful thinking.

    All this is ABC's as far as Marxism goes. That doesn't mean you have to go along with it; just don't claim the Marxist mantle for yourself in case you want to disown it.

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  7. My, Carl, you certainly have become testy!

    As for your characterization of me as "hav[ing] the classic 'class essentialist' left liquidation of the national question"--I don't know whether to laugh or to cry, but I think I'll laugh and drolly thank you for the indirect compliment. I have no use for "analyses" drawn up in the language of 1930s Stalinism as refurbished by 1970s Maoism, language which so tellingly undermines the political Carl Davidson I so admire for his insights into cybertechonlogy and left tactics and stragtegy for our time which he expresses as a leader of CCDS--a group the formerly Maoist Carl Davidson would've denounced as "revisionist"!

    Carl, you and I are both ex-Catholics; but the difference between us is that when I left Catholicism I permanently left behind reliance on Holy Writ and "authoritative" theological leaders. Call me an "anarchist" if you will, but I fully embrace the liberatory anarchist notion of "No gods, no masters!"

    As for reading me out of the "Marxist " church, all I know is that I've been positively influenced by a critical reading of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Mao--and also Trotsky, Bukharin & Luxemburg. I stand with the Chinese Communist Party leader Liu Shaoqi, who paid with his life for noting, "Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, and Chairman Mao have all made mistakes."

    Carl, your last two "Comments" have shed more heat than light on the subjects of race, racism and "whiteness;" I suggest we cease the discussion of these and comradely agree to disagree. Last, I refer you to my latest blog entry, "Travesty: Healthcare 'Reform,'" which I hope you will read.

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  8. So what's your view of how Marx and Engels discussed the English workers and the 'Irish Question'?

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  9. As regards your last comment--that's precisely the kind of "theological debate" over interpretation of "sacred" Marxist texts I wish to avoid, and which runs exactly counter to the purpose and intent of my blog.

    What Marx and Engels (and by extension, Lenin, Mao, Stalin, Trotsky, Bukharin, etc.)wrote on an issue is relevant only if the following conditions are met: 1) that what was originally said by these "sacred" writers can be shown to be directly relevant to analogous conditions currently at hand; and 2) that the comments made by the original writers had a positive impact at the time of original writing that directly relates to and positively informs our currrent situation. Without these, the "sacred" textual references are of historical interest only.

    A brief note on Ireland, where the famed Easter Rebellion for Irish independence from the British didn't occur until 1916, long after the deaths of Marx and Engels, and where the independent Irish state was/is not a socialist republic at all, but a bourgeois republican state that did ill to its working class; and where the Catholic Church's predominance and incestuous relationship with the nominally secular Irish state led directly to the present crisis resulting from the long and sorry record of Catholic sexual and physical abuse of its charges in the state-funded Catholic orphaniges, hospitals, and homes for "wayward" youth.

    As for the struggle in Northern Ireland, here is a clear case of class oppression of the primarily-Catholic Irish working class justified and continued under the aegis of the state-dominant Protestant religious ideology--demonstrating the perspicacity of Marx's well-known critique of religious belief as "the opium of the people."

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  10. George, the Orangemen in Ulster didn't attack their feared opposition because they were workers, but because they were Catholics or identified with Ireland to the South. As to how this in its inception nearly 400 years ago became the model for how the 'white race' was invented in the U.S., I recommend Ted Allen's 'Invention of the White Race', Vol 1 (Verso) as an original work of Marxist historical materialism.

    I'm the last one to be for dogmatism or book worship. Philosophically, I'm an instrumental pragmatist, seeking truth from facts and social practice. I was simply challenged your assertion that the 'nation question' policies were simply a product of the Comintern and were separate from Marx and Engels themselves.

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  11. Carl, your most recent comment to this seemingly-endless-but-going-nowhere discussion on race and racism is dated August 12, nearly 5 months after my last comment! Carl, since then, I've posted 3 new blog entries--have you read them? I would suggest you read my latest entry, "Dregs," as that would be far more fruitful for you to give a response on. And while you're at it, why not go to the previous entry, "Special Celebrity Pizzas," and perhaps have a chortle at my political satire? And look over my blog entry n healthcare. All of these have followed the blog you're responding to, a blog entry now over 8 months old. I'd really appreciate some good discussion on "Dregs," which I consider a very important entry, and also a very telling one about the state of the left today. Discussion on it would be far more fruitful than just another discussion/retort on the "national question."

    By the way, I do have Ted Allen's book, The Invention of the White Race. It's on my "to read" list, along with much more.

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  12. Good. Let me know what you think of it.

    I posted a brief comment to 'dregs' but it hasn't show up.

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