Note: Have the whites that are claimed to have played a significant role in inciting the melee been arrested?
by Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
Many of us have already seen the video of the McKinney Texas cop dragging a young African American girl to the ground, treating young people like dogs and drawing his gun on unarmed black kids who were clearly concerned about the way the young 15 year old was being treated. This cop was so frenzied it's hard to believe he wasn't on pcp or some other drug. Hopefully he'll get tested.
There will be the usual defenders of the police, mostly
European/white Americans on the basis that kids should do as they’re told and
that those who challenge them deserve what they get. Despite eons of police brutality,
particularly directed at people of color much of it kept out of the public eye until
the advent of phone cameras, these apologists for institutionalized racism
still fail to overcome their own racial bias. In fact, they refuse to even
consider it. It is the hardest thing in the world to consciously change one’s
own worldview, the way we have been taught to think. I know, I have been
through that.
My grandaughter is a couple of years older than that young
girl. She is, like the victim, young, impressionable and bright eyed. She is
intelligent, has a mind of her own and she is a strong personality. This could have been her.
Things have changed over the last 40 years in the US. I am
retired now and not active in the labor movement like I once was. I have a diverse group of friends including
white middle class people, white collar workers and of course blue collar white
workers as that’s what I am. I can say
with all honesty, so many of the white people or European Americans to use a
better term, that I am around in my everyday life are horrified and at least
sympathetic to the fears and anger among the black population at the police
brutality and outright murders of young black men and also to the general
economic crisis that weighs more heavily on people of color. My experience over
the last 40 years is that the white working class and sections of the middle
class have been savaged by the so-called free market. Many have also come to
understand that racism is institutionalized in our system--------it is endemic
to it.
This is of little solace to black folks who at this point
are in the line of fire (have they ever not been?) and who, with just cause, feel
isolated and alone with so many of them in prison, or in the criminal justice
system, unemployed, lacking opportunity etc. How can they not feel this way? While there is growing support among white Americans in terms of becoming involved in
the struggle against racism (and sexism I would add, which is probably more
pervasive), more often than not this group is composed of those
ideologically driven, by progressive political or religious views. The masses, the millions of working class
people in this country are still dormant.
So I am optimistic that there are many more Americans
equally distressed with the situation and not unsympathetic to the victims of
racial oppression but where do they turn?
Of course there is individual responsibility but we are talking about
mass consciousness and mass action here. People see no significant social force
taking up this issue in an active way, one that can unite us across racial,
gender and other socially divisive lines. At best people just get on with their
lives thankful it’s not happening to me. Like electricity, humans tend to seek
the line of least resistance. Most Americans never supported the wars, but they don't act on it. The presence of a unifying power can change this.
Is there such a force in US society?
I want to inject something here. I have been accused by some socialists of having a principle of attacking the heads of organized labor. But to ignore the role that the labor officialdom (I’ll use that term throughout) plays in society, in actuality an absent role, is wrong as is being neutral in a just war of resistance. I’ll go further; abstentionism in such conflict is supporting the oppressor.
Most youth, like those attacked by the cop in the video, and
the 88% or so of workers unorganized, never give the labor officialdom a
thought. Why would they? They are absent from the lives of most people
especially the youth. Many socialists
and others on the left also refuse to take up the officialdom’s role openly, refuse
to campaign against their policies, they do not want the conflict for one
reason or another. Some are too busy building a revolutionary
party that has no influence among the working class whatsoever and never will as one can't be built using the present long since failed methods.
No doubt the internal struggle in any organization is the most
difficult-----it’s like a civil war in a way.
With regards to the ongoing murder of blacks,
institutionalized racism and sexism, the corporate wars and the
offensive of the 1% on every aspect of our lives from the hedge fund managers,
the Goldman Sachs crowd and the assault on the environment and the corporate
wars in the interests of profits, on all these issues the silence of the labor
officialdom is deafening.
I went to the website of Afscme my former union today. Not a
mention of the events in Texas. Same with SEIU and the AFL-CIO site. Afscme has
1.6 million members in 3600 locals. SEIU has 2 million members and the AFL-CIO
12.5 million members. All these workers are in key industries. These workers
stop work----- the mighty US economy comes to a halt.
Here in California the AFL-CIO state labor federation, one
of 51 state federations, has 2 million workers affiliated to it. There are some
1000 county labor councils of the AFL-CIO last time I checked. The LA labor
council has around 800,000 members, the Chicago labor council 500,000 members
both bodies have hundreds of locals affiliated to them with roots in our
communities.
Despite having practically nothing to say about the ongoing
police brutality and the crisis in the black and other communities, the
President of Afscme Lee Saunders, did have this to say about Hilary Clinton
announcing her run for president in April:
Statement of AFSCME Pres. Lee Saunders on Secretary
Clinton’s announcement.
Washington, D.C. —
“Secretary Clinton
offered a strong message for working families in her announcement today. Voters
are looking for candidates from both parties to bring serious, proven solutions
to the table that level the economic playing field and ensure every American
has a free and fair shot at the American Dream. Among these proven solutions is
making it easier for workers to organize so that they can share in the
prosperity of their own productivity. America's public service workers look
forward to hearing where the candidates stand.” http://www.afscme.org/news/press-room/press-releases/2015/secretary-clinton-offered-a-strong-message-for-working-families
SEIU’s vision says the following:
We believe in and will
fight for a just society:
Where all workers are valued and all people are respected.
Where all families and communities thrive.
Where we leave a better and more equal world for generations to come.
Where all workers are valued and all people are respected.
Where all families and communities thrive.
Where we leave a better and more equal world for generations to come.
Well how is this to become a reality? Magic? Ferguson, Baltimore, Eric Garner in NYC,
Oscar Grant. On these issues and the institutionalized racism in US the labor
officialdom is absent. And as for gang activity and young people being drawn to
them in the urban centers, the alternative rather than prayer circles and
candlelight vigils is jobs and massive social infrastructure investment to
provide them as well as training and education centers for youth who can learn
the skills needed to work. The trade unions can provide training through their
apprentice schools by locating them in communities. The public sector unions in
conjunction with agencies can also direct funds and resources in this direction
rather than providing, hundreds of thousands of volunteers and millions of
dollars getting people like Obama and Hilary Clinton elected. This is what we
must fight for in the trade union movement. By doing so openly we will be brought
in to conflict with the officialdom but we cannot avoid this fight.
The officialdom’s has meant untold hardship for all workers
of every race, color and creed as they generally support the bosses’ arguments.
In actuality, the labor officialdom not only refuses to fight racism in a
serious way except by spending $400 million of their members’ money getting
Democrats elected, the press releases of the present head of Vatican City are
to the left of organized labor’s pronouncements.
A point we raise repeatedly on this blog is that the police
and state security forces in general have been beefed up in the aftermath of
the Seattle WTO protests and more recently, the Occupy Movement. This is in preparation for the wider protests
that are ahead as the austerity agenda of the 1% is carried out through both political
parties. What we are witnessing in the communities of color and the inner
cities we will be seeing more and more in the suburbs as the assault on the
living standards of all Americans intensifies.
We can be sure that as these events arise, the old divide
and rule tactics of racism and sexism will shift from the back burner to the
front. Their media will play the role it normally does in order to shape public
opinion. But these are not such the game winners they once were. In the
aftermath of the struggle for women’s rights and the civil rights movement,
increased mixing of families and communities and after years of attacks on
living standards, US capitalism is not in the same position it once was.
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