Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
Well, I just returned home and turned on the TV to see what else was said about what appears to be a terrorist attack in El Paso. I don’t have cable so I watched some news reports on You Tube that were about two hours old and then checked the Internet.
Afscme Local 444, retired
Well, I just returned home and turned on the TV to see what else was said about what appears to be a terrorist attack in El Paso. I don’t have cable so I watched some news reports on You Tube that were about two hours old and then checked the Internet.
I saw on CBS news a report
about vigils being held and it showed a couple of people walking toward the
vigil site with candles. The news report also gave some information about the
numerous vigils that are being held in the area. People were praying and lighting
candles.
I mean no disrespect to
people who pray. I don’t do it because I don’t believe there’s anything
listening. But I have a lot of friends that pray and my view is that if this
praying gives you the strength to act (and more than vigils as I think we are beyond that) then that’s good
praying. But I have to say this. Do you think in reporting on a strike the mass
media would give the public the locations of the strike solidarity committee
meetings in the area? I don’t think so. That alone should warn us about putting
too much emphasis on the ritual of prayer.
On CBS, the newscaster, or
more accurately, the story teller talked about the “horrific nature” of the killings and said that investigators were “trying to determine a motivation.” (I
think this was CBS but they’re all the same).
Now I am not a university
graduate. I have no degree except the GED I got when I came here. But when I
heard about this, I never heard the guy was a Muslim so I assumed he was
white/European. Then, and I know my geography as I wasn’t educated here, I said
to myself, “El Paso is across the Rio
Grande from Mexico”. This could well be an attack by some white fascist on
Mexicans as it is as close to the border you can get without going through a
check point; not an easy task with an assault rifle.
I came over to the computer
and the Internet. It turns out, as I suspected, the terrorist is a white dude
and he has a manifesto. He wrote about the, “Hispanic
invasion of Texas.”, in this manifesto. He wrote, “if we can get rid of enough people, then our way of life can be more
sustainable.”
The New York Times writes
that, “What brought him to a crowded
shopping center in El Paso is one of the many questions on the minds of
investigators.” Is that so say I with my GED and my certificate as a
backhoe operator under my belt? I’ll tell you what brought him, Latinos, he wanted to
kill some, spurred on by Trump and his sycophants in the Administration. They
are all murderers.
This is the extent they will
go not only to ignore the problem; the insecurity and alienation that the
capitalist mode of production creates, but they have to try to obscure the
fact that this was a white European. This is not because the white racist
ruling class in the US loves white European workers any more than any other
worker, the Irish have white skin so do English workers whose children worked in coal mines as young as 10 years old. It is because at this point in time they are the most numerous. Their
propaganda, for centuries has been that white people are superior. They even
created the idea that there is such a thing as a “white race” in order to undermine unity between both white workers
and workers of color in order to divide and rule, to exploit us all. Sexism
plays the same role.
When in 400 years has the
English ruling class, who happen to have white skin, considered the Irish, who
also have white skin, of the same race? Never, that’s when. Their own working
class, the peasantry and then the wage laborer were always lesser human beings
to them.
As I wrote some time ago on Facebook, we had a shop steward fired for making a comment that was
threatening to his boss. It was a stupid comment and everyone knows it was no
threat. He was shackled at his home in front of his kids. A restraining order was taken out against him and he lost
his job.
Watch Trump's posture in this video when the crowd starts yelling "Send them home, send them home". He's been watching Mussolini videos.
Trump is not the root cause of this. But he as placed racism, xenophobia and misogyny front and center. He has relied on the base and appeals to it every day. In that sense he is responsible for this mass killing, not the second amendment. I will not even discuss this issue to any length at all as it is not the problem.
The last thing I read in the
New York Times article was, “once again
on Saturday, America’s epidemic of mass shootings intersected with the divisive
issues of race and immigration.”
Oh such liberal claptrap. I
have lived and worked in this country for 47 years. Racism is a problem not because individuals
are racist, but because racism is endemic to capitalist society. Racism is
built in to the system we can see it in the reporting on these events. The
white racist ruling class needs to convince the white worker that our fortunes
are linked but that is false and it is getting harder and harder to make that
case. If it wasn’t color it would be something else, in Northern Ireland it’s
religion. Integration of people in the USA in the workplace and socially is greater than ever before.
Lastly I have to say this.
The heads of the trade unions with 14 million members are a disgrace. It is
beyond that; they are criminally negligent. I have written enough about this
subject and their disastrous role so I am not going to go in to it here. They
are not simply “inefficient” or “moderate” as Eric Blanc, a DSA member
like myself described them in a recent Jacobin article. But if you are in a
union and if your are an activist, socialist, militant, shop steward or even a
left Democrat politically. If you are not working to get your union to take up
this issue and offer an alternative, if you are not confronting the present
leadership (the dogs that never bark) and condemning them for their inactivity not
only on wages hours and working conditions, but social issues and what we are
witnessing here, the rise of white nationalism and fascist terror, then you are
not fighting for your members or the working class as a whole. You are not
fighting for the future.
We can blame people for not acting, but history shows that without organization and leadership rooted in and out of its own ranks, people put up with a lot until their backs are against the wall and they have no alternative to fight.
I spoke with a good friend
tonight who wrote in response to this awful racist killing that “I’m not sure the US can make the change.
But we have to!”
Like me, I don’t think she has a PhD but she is honest, has lived a life, raised kids and so on and shares what she sees and she’s right. Personally, I’m not sure either. Not because I think the US working class not will move into struggle to change the situation, to resolve the many crises we face, but because in such situations leadership is crucial. Because there is no organizational form that the anger in US society can turn to let alone a leadership with any real semblance of a plan; the working class will have to go through a tumultuous struggle to find its feet and out of this movement a new leadership steeled in struggle will come to the fore.
But, there are no guarantees
are there.
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