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		<title>&#8220;A Rethinking of Everything Altogether&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-03-26-a-rethinking-of-everything-altogether/</link>
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					<description><![CDATA[Why hasn’t the so-called u.s. left, despite all of the efforts made over the last two years, been able to meaningfully intervene in a live-streamed genocide?]]></description>
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<p><em>Editor&#8217;s Note (USU): This is a republication of a work by Workshops4Gaza and the author Em Cohen. The original can be </em><a href="https://substack.com/@workshops4gaza/p-187700905"><em>found here</em></a><em>. This piece had been circulated internally within USU for weeks by some of our members, where it was referenced in several discussions and even shared with an author we were collaborating with to explain a position we wanted to represent. It was clear that the author and interviewer(s) of this article had articulated the core issue of the so-called US left&#8217;s current &#8220;anti-imperialist&#8221; movement better than anyone we had read in recent memory: that we must go deeper than just criticizing the tactics of peaceful protests and sporadic, disorganized resistance, but identifying where these tactics come from and what real interests they serve. Not the liberation of the oppressed, but the moral laundering of the complicit. The emphasis placed on the necessity of both subjective revolutionary development (careful, scientific study before one rushes to act) and objective revolutionary position (class suicide as a strategy we must relearn) published here demonstrate the potential for the movement to mature, reach higher, and hit harder, if we learn the real lessons of the moment.</em></p>



<p>We sat down to talk with Em Cohen, whose meta-level critiques of general movement strategy and tactics we’ve deeply appreciated, and felt it would be valuable to delve into further. While Em frequently writes about Judaism and Zionism through the framework of “philosemitism,” in this conversation we chose to focus on a question that has been on many people’s minds: why hasn’t the so-called u.s. left, despite all of the efforts made over the last two years, been able to meaningfully intervene in a live-streamed genocide? And now that u.s.-led imperialism is descending into its death throes, unleashing some of the most naked expressions of violence we have perhaps ever seen, threatening to take out Iran, Venezuela, and Cuba even as it continues its whole-sale destruction of Gaza — where are we going wrong? We urge folks to check out more of Em’s writing and analysis at&nbsp;<a href="http://medium.com/@emcohen">medium.com/@emcohen</a>.</p>



<p><a href="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!HCVG!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Feb377191-f3b2-4ec9-b04f-0d0a94926b50_1200x630.png" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image"><a class="Lexical__link" href="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!HCVG!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Feb377191-f3b2-4ec9-b04f-0d0a94926b50_1200x630.png" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><img decoding="async" src="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!HCVG!,w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Feb377191-f3b2-4ec9-b04f-0d0a94926b50_1200x630.png" alt=""/></a></figure>



<p><strong>W4G:&nbsp;</strong>To start, could you talk a little bit about your critiques of some of the underlying frameworks that you think shape the strategies and tactics of the so-called “u.s. left?” You’ve written before about the way that there is a mismatch between the revolutionary-sounding rhetoric that we use, and the liberal or reformist nature of many of these tactics, which are designed to appeal to the moral conscience of the ruling class — or as you say,&nbsp;<em>to simply</em>&nbsp;<em>register the fact of our dissent</em>&nbsp;and nothing more. Can you give some examples of this?</p>



<p><strong>EC:</strong>&nbsp;Whenever a situation provokes righteous anger, and society seems like it’s about to burst into flames, the popular protest organizations that have come to be known as the “u.s. left” jump into action. Like a well-oiled machine, they post the same graphic that they always post, with the same font and the same logos and the same endorsers, calling for another iteration of the same protest. If it’s not dubbed an ‘emergency action’ and announced that night, their faithful members spend the days leading up to the protest imploring everyone to show up and ‘bring all their rage.’</p>



<p>On the day of, they truck in loads of signs to pass out that make extensive use of radical slogans and imagery. They have a few organizers shout fiery speeches about people power, smashing imperialism, and freeing them all into sticker-covered megaphones. The crowd boos and cheers. Whenever the speakers mention some evil person or corporation or state, the crowd chants shame. Then the protest ends and everyone goes home. Over the next day or two, independent protest photographers comb through the footage they collected and make sure to post a bunch of really cool pictures and time-lapse videos showing just how many people came out.</p>



<p>The overwhelming majority of people who participate in this hamster wheel don’t think the protests they are calling for and attending will really bring about revolution. In fact, often, they’re not thinking of the protests in terms of the material at all. Think about how many times you’ve seen people chant “stand up, fight back” while marching peacefully down the street with cops next to them and when someone tries to actually act on the rage they are being told is legitimate and really stand up and fight back, the protest organizations’ safety marshals/peace police step in to stop them. It is not that they don’t understand what the words “stand up, fight back” mean, it is that they do not connect that slogan to the actual material reality of fighting in the physical world. It is simply a gesture, a representation of anger.</p>



<p>Protest in the so-called u.s. is a simulacrum of protest. While some of the components that make up a ‘protest’ are present, those that imbue the protest with its revolutionary character are absent. It is protest theater. This doesn’t just happen with protests, by the way. Rather, it happens with many different (formerly) radical methods of change-making. Over the past couple of years, many of the popular protest orgs have started calling for “strikes” that last one day, carry no strike fund, and basically only operate at the individual level—in the sense that the call is simply put out and individuals participate or don’t. These orgs put out graphics telling people to skip work and school, with ‘demands,’ and claim that this will grind the economy to a halt. The day comes and goes. No one really knows how many people actually heeded the call. No economic impact is ever really assessed. Did it work? Were the demands met? Does the organization even care? It’s a simulacrum of a strike.</p>



<p>Recently, some protest orgs did as they do and called for a protest outside of the jail where President Maduro is being held. Leading up to the protest, they talked about how Maduro must be freed by any means necessary. But at the jail, the protestors basically just stood around and chanted. None of the people who called for the protest or who showed up believed that that protest would have any impact on actually freeing Maduro. Of course, actually freeing Maduro would be quite difficult to pull off. But the difficulty of such an action is not the reason these organizations don’t earnestly try to achieve what they claim they want to.&nbsp;<em>Rather, the call to free Maduro by any means necessary is totally compartmentalized from the material task of doing so.</em>&nbsp;Again, the protest is separated from the material. Despite the chants and the demands and the slogans, the goal of the protest calling to free Maduro is not to actually free Maduro<em>. The goal of the protest is to have the protest.</em>&nbsp;To register dissent, to raise awareness, to speak out.</p>



<p>These ineffectual actions aren’t simply a product of bad organizing but rather of liberal, idealistic ways of understanding and formulating political struggle. You ask people how they are measuring if the protests they are calling for are working and they look at you like you are speaking another language. They aren’t thinking in terms of the protest ‘working.’ Rather, they protest because it is ‘good’ to protest and to show that we oppose what’s happening. There’s often this unspoken hope that the state will see how many people show up to the protests and will base its decisions on that. But then the protests happen and the state ignores them and the protest orgs keep doing the same thing over and over again.</p>



<p><em>Revolution is the process of totally upending society and this will only be accomplished with revolutionary methods</em>. But the liberal idealist way of approaching struggle treats the methods as inconsequential; it is the ideas, the chants, the slogans, the images, not the methods, that matters. So to finish this long-winded way of responding to the question—if you want to assess whether a tactic is revolutionary or just revolutionary-sounding, look at the actual methods being used. The underground railroad wasn’t people marching peacefully in the streets and chanting that slaves should be freed, it was enslaved people freeing themselves.&nbsp;<em>There were no gestures.</em></p>



<p><strong>W4G:&nbsp;</strong>I can&#8217;t help but feel that so much of what you&#8217;re describing is rooted in the class character of much of what we call the “u.s. left” — people from a middle class or petite bourgeois background, or those aspiring to such a status — who are trying to show their solidarity with poor and oppressed people, either here or abroad. In other words, at the end of the day, the issues they&#8217;re protesting or organizing around remain largely abstract because they are not materially impacted by them, and so their outlook, which necessarily shapes their tactics and strategies, is rooted in idealism. In other words, they&nbsp;<em>want</em>&nbsp;certain conditions to change, but they don&#8217;t&nbsp;<em>need</em>&nbsp;them to.</p>



<p>There&#8217;s nothing inherently wrong with middle class people&#8217;s desire to show solidarity, and of course, it&#8217;s not to say that revolutionaries or revolutionary potential has never come from the petite bourgeois class—in fact, there are many examples to the contrary—but revolutions aren&#8217;t made from ideas alone. They have to take hold of poor and oppressed people, the people with actual revolutionary potential, by speaking directly to their material conditions.</p>



<p>Ali Kadri recently said something along the lines of: revolutionary potential belongs to&nbsp;<em>the people who have no choice but to fight against the conditions of capitalism and imperialism</em>. But today, at least in the u.s., this isn&#8217;t so simple, because substantial sectors of the poor and oppressed classes have been bought off, pacified, or straight up conscripted into directly upholding some of the most violent arms of u.s. empire—which is evident if you just consider the racial and class makeup of the NYPD, ICE, border patrol, the military, or even prison guards or wardens at this point.</p>



<p>At the same time, we can also say that much of what is driving the endless repetition of ineffective strategies and tactics on the u.s. left is rooted in subjective factors, too, which include defeatism—the fundamental belief that revolution in the core isn&#8217;t actually possible (&#8220;it&#8217;s never the right time for revolution&#8221;). And no, revolution is not just &#8220;abolishing&#8221; this or that thing, or scoring an occasional win by getting some company to divest, it is the&nbsp;<em>total upheaval of the entire system and society</em>. Defeatism may be latent or unconscious, or even obscured by revolutionary-sounding rhetoric, but as you say, in the case of the Maduro protest for example, there was never any intent to actually free him, only to publicly register the fact of dissent: &#8220;The goal of the protest is to have the protest.&#8221;</p>



<p>What this ends up doing is vastly narrowing the scope of possible strategies or tactics that are even on the table. At a fundamental level, the options seem to be either mass protests or autonomous direct action, which are often framed as opposites (symbolic vs. material) but end up producing similar results. While the mass protest appeals to the ruling class through a show of numbers that is not actually backed up by the material threat of violence that would actually make those numbers consequential, the autonomous direct action appeals to the ruling class through a show of force that is not actually backed up by the numbers that would make that force consequential.</p>



<p>And of course, both of these tactics also suffer from a lack of long-term vision, a roadmap, or the kind of organizational infrastructure that would allow them to happen not just sporadically, but&nbsp;<em>regularly</em>, and in ways that gradually up the ante in attacking the real levers of the capitalist machine. And so, to the ruling class, the autonomous direct action becomes just as much of an empty or symbolic threat as the mass protest, because both are saying, &#8220;do this or else,&#8221; but the problem is there is no &#8220;else.&#8221;</p>



<p>People often respond to this kind of critique by arguing that we can’t go immediately from A to Z, and that all of these tactics and strategies are actually “building power” in a gradual way that will eventually lead to some kind of victory. But if these strategies or tactics are in fact working, and will eventually lead to some sort of revolutionary rupture, how would we know that? Is there any concrete evidence we can point to that would show us whether we are on a path that is actually leading somewhere, as opposed to running in place on a hamster wheel?</p>



<p>Occasionally, of course, we have seen impressive numbers of people coming out into the streets and engaging in militant rebellions — in Los Angeles or Minneapolis during the recent ice raids, during the George Floyd Uprisings, and before that, the Ferguson Uprising, the Oscar Grant rebellion, etc. One could go back through the decades and point to many such moments, when people get sick of the old tactics, and hope glimmers for a brief moment. But the issue is that rebellions are sporadic and largely unplanned, and therefore die out, get crushed, co-opted, etc, perhaps for lack of the kind of organization and infrastructure that could seriously defend people from state violence, allow them to strategize against the enemy in longer-term ways, and most importantly, to allow them to grow and develop the rebellion into an actual revolutionary force. But perhaps for other factors as well.</p>



<p>With all that said, what are some ways you think we can get people to reflect on and seriously engage in the question of revolutionary strategy and methods? What do you think are some of the main barriers to this?</p>



<p><strong>EC</strong>: People are so resistant to any questioning of either mass-based organizing or autonomous direct action. When you’re in an org that’s focused on mass-based organizing and say “hey, it feels like this isn’t working,” you’re immediately met with almost reflexive responses of “well what’s your idea?,” or “oh yeah? Then why don’t you go do direct action!“ as if direct action is the real answer to what is to be done and mass-based organizing is the thing we do simply because we aren’t brave enough to do direct action. This sets people up to view their options as either shutting up and doing something they don’t think is working, self-sacrifice in the form of individual autonomous direct action, or quitting entirely. This makes lots of people burn out and believe revolution isn’t possible in the first place.</p>



<p>This dynamic where people reflexively respond to criticism or even vague frustrations about things not working with attacking the criticizer, is a vicious cycle that leads to orgs increasingly being filled with dogmatic sycophants. Folks show up because they agree with an org’s rhetoric or a friend invited them. Over time, if they really are there to make change, they start to question whether what they’re doing is actually making a difference. If they bring those frustrations up, they’re immediately shut down. They either stop raising their frustrations or leave.&nbsp;<em>This happens enough times and the thinking in the org becomes so rigid that active ideological struggle is impossible.</em></p>



<p>To a certain extent, I think the “well what’s your idea?” kind of responses are fair, or at least understandable. It sucks when someone complains and criticizes what you’re doing but doesn’t have any recommendation for what you should do instead. But the requirement that people have the answer before bringing up a criticism basically makes it impossible to ever criticize the larger issues in the first place. Sometimes a vague sensation of “this isn’t working” is really all someone can give. To put it a different way, it’s only the smaller problems or issues that anyone could reasonably have a concrete solution to before bringing up. For the bigger issues, though, the answer is almost always unclear—it can only be figured out over time by actively struggling to find the answer, working through different possibilities, and testing and analyzing the results.</p>



<p>People don’t want to feel totally powerless, and I understand why they would think it’s better to “at least do something” rather than nothing. But I also think we have to simply confront the fact that we don’t have the answers. I certainly don’t know what the answer is.&nbsp;<em>But I think if you don’t know the answer to something, it’s better to spend your time trying to figure it out than to do something you know isn’t working.</em></p>



<p>There are also larger material barriers, such as the fact that lots of people who are members and leaders of the orgs that make up the so-called u.s. left ultimately benefit from the anti-Black Islamophobic colonial imperialist patriarchal world system.&nbsp;<em>It’s really easy to not care about whether the methods are working or not when your survival doesn’t depend on them.</em>&nbsp;If you don’t need the method to work, moral grandstanding is enough. I do think this plays a really big role here, and speaks to the compartmentalization between methods and rhetoric that I touched on earlier.&nbsp;<em>Because people don’t need the methods to work, it’s a lot easier to not even think about the methods as actual tools for doing something</em>. This is also one reason why so many on the so-called u.s. left are resistant to studying.<strong>&nbsp;</strong><em>Instead of viewing revolutionary theory as a resource that we can use to hone our ways of thinking, gifted to us by those who carried out successful revolutions in the past, studying theory is viewed as either a fun social activity or a chore.</em></p>



<p>Another barrier to seriously engaging with the question of how to develop new revolutionary strategy and tactics is the vulgar invocation of “the urgency of the situation we’re facing.” I have seen so many people downplay analysis and reflection and study as activities that should only take place when we “have the time.” This is the total backwards approach.&nbsp;<em>It is not that the situation is so urgent that we can’t afford to spend time studying and thinking, it is that the situation is so urgent that we can’t afford to NOT spend time studying and thinking</em>. The situation is too urgent for us to waste our time making the same mistakes that revolutionaries before us made and we can avoid making if we learn from them.</p>



<p>I do think most of these barriers can be corrected through serious study of political theory, especially studying as part of a good group. At least, I want to believe that. So, I’d recommend that people try to find others they can study revolutionary theory with. Books are great, but you can use podcasts, youtube videos, whatever. Just try to meet with people regularly and talk about what is and isn’t working, why things are the way they are, etc. Maybe set up regular phone calls with a couple of friends and talk about your political work, ask them hard questions and encourage them to do the same to you and seriously try to think through the answer without being defensive. Be curious and be critical.</p>



<p>I also think, in a very grim way, as climate collapse gets worse, as social conditions get worse in general,&nbsp;<em>more and more people will find themselves in positions where their survival depends on the methods working&nbsp;</em>and so they will have to struggle to figure out better strategies and methods.</p>



<p><strong>W4G</strong>: It’s interesting that you highlight a lack of capacity for criticism and self-criticism on the u.s. left as directly connected to the prevalence of liberal / reformist strategies, even when the lack of tangible results is staring us right in the face. I do think it’s connected to the fact that again, much of the organizations on the “u.s. left” are made up of people from a petite bourgeois background. It’s not just that either. Too often, the people who make the decisions for a lot of these organizations receive their funding from donors that are directly connected to the capitalist class, etc.</p>



<p>Obviously the ruling class is not going to throw money at an organization or project that directly threatens its material interests, quite the opposite, and so many of these organizations will have to promote strategies and tactics that are intentionally designed to be ineffective or non-threatening. It’s not an accident or case of miscalculation. It’s designed that way, as controlled opposition. If someone joins an organization naively thinking it is actually invested in creating the kind of radical change that is advertised on its website at the level of rhetoric, and then challenges the leadership a bit too much, crosses the line a bit too far, asks one too many challenging questions, they will simply be expelled.</p>



<p>At this point I have to be kind of blunt and say that what I think is really needed is for more people on the so-called u.s. left to quite literally commit class suicide. Generally speaking, as people living in the imperial core, many of us are taught to aspire to bourgeois ideals and lifestyles in one way or another, even if we don’t necessarily come from that background. You could call it class aspiration vs. class status. So we have to commit class suicide, and the other thing is that we have to seriously de-identify with being Amerikan. We have to completely reject everything we have been handed by the u.s. empire, because they give us these things precisely to buy us off, to prevent us from doing what really needs to be done, and from uniting with the very people who are best positioned to do it.</p>



<p>I mean, if you are really serious about creating the kind of world you envision, again that is not going to happen just based on vibes. Are you truly ready to give up your subsidized apartment? Your salaried NGO or academic job? Your rock-climbing membership or weekend getaway trips and Air B and B&#8217;s? Your Netflix subscription? This isn&#8217;t about romanticizing revolution — I think it&#8217;s quite literally the necessary first step that has to be taken in order to deprogram ourselves from the horrifying matrix of propaganda, co-optation, and counterinsurgency that so many of us are completely bought off by without even realizing it. I really think we have to completely reject any careerist aspirations or neoliberal self-making projects laundered through entrepreneurism, social media influencerships, or the like in order to even begin to actually interface with reality—because so much of the lifestyle that is peddled to us is so skillfully designed to hide from us the very reality that the majority of the rest of the world actually lives in.</p>



<p>I really love the Mao quote that says, “In class society, everyone lives as a member of a particular class, and every kind of thinking, without exception, is stamped with the brand of a class.” I actually feel like we need to take this much more seriously — that every idea we have is ultimately shaped by material conditions, that no one is immune from this. The idea that we can just think or imagine our way out of our class conditioning, that if we just become critical or intellectual enough, we can be immune from propaganda, is so sinister, and is really rooted in liberal idealism and individualism.</p>



<p>I’m not saying this to be defeatist or deterministic, actually the opposite. This was the whole reason they placed such emphasis on practicing “criticism and self-criticism” during the cultural revolution, because they understood how deeply capitalism and colonialism conditions people’s attitude and outlook and psychology, and that this is something we have to take extremely seriously. Again, not in a vibes-based way of “the personal is political” or “i need to work on myself” or “accountability processes,” but actually taking seriously the need to completely transform people into new human beings, that that is as much a part of the material process of revolution as redistributing land or wealth, and really understanding how long and difficult of a process that is. And maybe most importantly, that we can’t transform our consciousness alone.</p>



<p>We&#8217;re not used to relating to ourselves or each other in a way that isn&#8217;t thoroughly saturated with liberal and idealistic thinking. Which is why when someone says,&nbsp;<em>hey, I don&#8217;t think this tactic is working</em>, rather than examine that criticism for what it is (is it true that it&#8217;s not working? what is the evidence that it isn&#8217;t working? how are we interpreting that evidence? what other possible tactics could we use?) we instead become immediately defensive, and dogmatically insist that it is working, even if objective reality clearly shows otherwise. The only way we can explain this kind of reaction is that the person is motivated less by the desire to reach a tangible, objective outcome that really betters our collective conditions, and more by the desire to be seen in a certain light. So it&#8217;s individualism, idealism, and liberalism. If your goal was really to achieve change, and someone offered a criticism of your strategy to help you find a more effective one, logically speaking, wouldn&#8217;t you welcome that?</p>



<p>What you say about the need to see revolutionary theory as a resource, and that we are largely not seeing in that way, is so true. Like, we actually don&#8217;t have to start from scratch or just guess. We can build off of what people did before. Of course, conditions here are entirely different than they were in 1950s Cuba, but it is not that we live in a separate reality altogether, or that the laws of dialectical and historical materialism somehow don&#8217;t apply here. That&#8217;s just Amerikan exceptionalism. We can study what worked and what didn&#8217;t in other circumstances. We can consider whether past strategies make sense for our current context, or what about them needs to be adapted or changed. But again, we don&#8217;t just have to flail and guess and give up, or pretend like we have to invent something out of thin air, which is what it feels like we are doing a lot of the time.</p>



<p>The problem is that most of the people who are actually reading and studying past revolutionary movements with some level of seriousness and depth—the kind of study that could actually give us the roadmaps we need—are just sitting in their offices and publishing their articles on Jstor.&nbsp;<em>So these ideas never reach the masses, which is where they actually belong</em>. We need to find ways of translating these ideas to ordinary people, and largely that isn’t happening, because if a significant part of the poor and oppressed classes, the ones with actual revolutionary potential, have been conscripted into the military or ICE or the police, and the working classes have been bought off by the labor aristocracy and the spoils extracted from the global south, then the intellectuals, especially the ones who have radical ideas, have been bought off by academia or nonprofits and the like. And so while you actually need people from all of these sections of society to be working together in order to wage an actual revolution, in practice they have all been bought off in different ways by the different facets of u.s. imperialism. Because that is what it is designed to do.</p>



<p>But that brings me to my next question: in addition to strategies and tactics, you’ve also critiqued the kinds of default organizational forms that the u.s. left tends to fall into. Could you speak a little more on how we are limiting ourselves through a failure of imagination in terms of organizational forms?</p>



<p><strong>EC:</strong>&nbsp;While there are hundreds of different ostensibly radical political organizations with different names and slogans and logos, the overwhelming majority of them fall into one of two categories: There are organizations that try to recreate what once was, and there are organizations that pretend they are not organizations.</p>



<p>The former groups are filled with people who pick some historical revolutionary group to dogmatically idolize and imagine they’re the vanguard of. The latter groups are made up of people who rhetorically claim to reject hierarchy and be above organization itself.&nbsp;<em>Neither of these organizational forms are able to effectively confront the problems we face today, in part because they both, albeit in different ways, discourage active ideological struggle</em>.&nbsp;<em>Each of these types of organizations, again, in different ways, produces a rigid way of thinking that refuses to update to changing conditions.</em></p>



<p>When people start to become radicalized and search for an organization to join, they are almost always joining one of those two types of organizations, and because of the errors inherent to them, almost always end up burnt out by unfair divisions of labor (that typically fall along harmful race and gender lines), targeted by predatory creeps, or frustrated by chauvinistic behavior. After their experience, they either leave and try to find a different org, or they quit organizing entirely. But because nearly every organization falls into one of these two categories, the people who are persistent, who keep searching for better organizations, are repeatedly harmed until they either become so disillusioned with organizing entirely or they assimilate into the power structures of the harmful organizations.</p>



<p>In this way, the dominance of these two organizational forms perpetuates its own power and rigidity and endlessly chips away at any semblance of developing revolutionary potential. (So many radical organizations have absurdly high turnover rates that are only masked by the seemingly endless supply of new people who realize that the world needs to change.)</p>



<p>When you look at major cities, it appears that there are hundreds of organizations working on different political goals. But the reality is that&nbsp;<em>it’s basically just a dozen iterations of the same org,&nbsp;</em>which utilizes the same methods and tactics and which is made up of a rotating cast of the same small group of people. The different orgs are much more a product of interpersonal animosity than they are of genuine ideological, strategic, or tactical differences.</p>



<p>Over time, this failure has produced a “left” that is almost completely separated from the most oppressed masses, who (rightly) view popular “leftist organizations” as either nothing but a waste of time or as the enemy. The solution to all this is not yet another ideologically rigid organization trying to rehash the 1960’s protest movement or pretending like hierarchies are evaporated by claiming to reject them, but rather a rethinking of form—or, more accurately,&nbsp;<em>a rethinking of everything altogether</em>. Whatever it is that needs to exist for us to confront the moment we’re in doesn’t. We have to accept that.</p>



<p><strong>W4G:&nbsp;</strong>So much of what capitalism does is give us the illusion of endless choice while really giving us no choices at all. When you were describing the seemingly endless choice of leftist organizations that one could ostensibly join, that quote about freedom under capitalism being the ability to choose between 20 different brands of toothpaste came to mind, which is something&nbsp;<a href="https://emcohen.medium.com/interconnectedness-as-a-form-of-alienation-58e8e86255a1">you&#8217;ve also written about&nbsp;</a>in regards to the way social media has so deeply invaded the way we relate to each other, and thus also shaped the way we organize. You write:</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>In the same way that social media provides an endless selection of people to peruse, it provides an endless selection of political organizations to choose from. While it might seem good that there are endless organizations to choose from, allowing you to search for the organization that most perfectly matches your politics,&nbsp;<em>in reality this leads to organizations held together exclusively by superficial bonds, filled with people who don’t know each other, don’t need each other, and don’t trust each other.</em>&nbsp;And this is having disastrous effects on how people engage with political organizing.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>It is somewhat incredible that even with the hundreds or possibly thousands of Palestine solidarity organizations that exist just in the u.s—and there have been so many that have sprung up after 10/7—none of them have been able to offer any real meaningful resistance to the ongoing genocide. I should be clear that I’m not dismissing any of the organizational efforts that have managed to offer very real, material and life-saving support to vulnerable people despite all of the odds stacked against them. What I’m attempting to do instead is zoom out and look at the bigger picture.</p>



<p>Part of me wonders how much of this is rooted in a refusal to take ourselves as seriously as revolutionaries in the 60s and 70s did. These were people who committed their entire lives to struggling against capitalism and imperialism. But in 2026, the idea of a “revolutionary,” especially in the imperial core, sounds laughably naive, deluded, romantic, maybe even arrogant (?) or some combination of the above. Revolutionaries are people who existed in the past, but not today. And to attempt to aspire to anything like that today would likely be met with extreme skepticism or ridicule. How dare we think so highly of ourselves. We should be more humble and realistic—better to be an “activist,” or “organizer,” some sort of regional or local specialist in a particular issue, like environmental issues, or prison abolition, which you can then confidently command expertise in by citing the number of years you have been a member of x or y organization, or been involved in x or y issue or struggle.</p>



<p>But that’s the problem. So much of u.s. left “organizing” has this quality of a side hobby, of “volunteering.” Something you fit into your schedule between work, dating, vacations, and hobbies in order to convince yourself that you’re “doing something” (as you said) or “giving back to the community.” Of course, much of this can be attributed to the realities of life under capitalism, and the fact that so much of our time is eaten up by the obviously very real need to sell our labor to capitalists in order to survive. But I don’t think it can be completely explained by this, either.</p>



<p>How would this kind of commitment to dedicating our entire lives to revolutionary struggle transform what kinds of organizations we could create? By “entire” I don’t so much mean in the literal sense as in the ideological sense—as in, your identity is not tied up in any kind of career, your life is not divided between your work and your hobbies and your “organizing,” but revolutionary activity takes priority and precedence over everything else even while of course you must work to survive.</p>



<p>What might be possible if we we had an organization that was based not on this or that particular issue, but on truly developing people’s revolutionary potential, in the fullest sense of the term, not just in rhetoric or branding or slogans, but in an absolute and sincere commitment to transforming ourselves into completely new people in order to build a completely new society? And that we were also extremely strict and principled about where we took our money from to prevent our politics from being compromised? What if we had infrastructure and mechanisms to ensure that people could dedicate themselves to this work entirely, without distraction? What if we began with very basic questions, such as: Who are the classes with the most revolutionary potential in the imperial core? In a settler colony like the United States (as opposed to a country in the global south) what would constitute the most revolutionary outcome on a global scale?</p>



<p>After all, this isn&#8217;t just any country we&#8217;re talking about, but a country with the most powerful military, economy, and propaganda machine that has ever existed in the history of the world. Even if it were possible, is overthrowing the state an optimal outcome? Or is the best we can hope for to weaken the u.s. from within to increase the possibility of revolution or at least sovereignty for countries in the periphery? If the latter, what are the most effective ways of weakening the u.s. from within? Given the nature of the surveillance state that we all live under now, what are the most effective organizational forms for achieving those goals? What are the most effective methods and means for communicating and spreading revolutionary ideas to people?</p>



<p>It seems to me that, like you said, rather than creating more and more leftist organizations, groups, podcasts and collectives that inevitably employ the same tactics due to their class makeup, perhaps we should begin to look at the common organizational structures—many of which will not announce themselves as “leftist” or “activist” —that already exist in oppressed communities, and by which they already organize themselves, even if not yet toward an explicitly revolutionary goal. Churches, mosques, networks of prisoners’ families, parents associations, things like this. These are all organizations, networks of people that are meeting a common, tangible need, that play a real social function for oppressed communities, unlike most “leftist” organizations, which are only based on a shared abstract ideal.</p>



<p>This isn’t to say that we should just parachute into these kinds of spaces. But my point is that maybe the organizational structures with real revolutionary potential are not the ones that outwardly announce themselves as such, and maybe more people on the u.s. left need to carefully consider and familiarize ourselves with the organizational structures that already exist among poor and oppressed communities, that aren’t led by or cater to the petite bourgeois activist networks.</p>



<p>For example, it was impressive to me to learn that the infrastructure for a state-wide work stoppage organized by prisoners in Alabama in the last decade was largely built out through pre-existing gang networks within the prisons. There are whole communities of mothers and wives in rural North Carolina who organize themselves on Facebook groups to inform each other about what is going on in a particular prison where their sons or husbands are caged. There are networks of semi-illegal buses that take people across the George Washington Bridge from upper Manhattan into New Jersey that charge a fraction of the price of the official NY bus system.</p>



<p>Let’s be honest: most of the people who exist in the worlds I described above are not going to join a self-described leftist organization. They are going to spend most of their time with other poor and oppressed people in their communities, and the networks and organizations, formal and informal, that they are going to spend the majority of their time in are ones that meet a common material need—again,&nbsp;<em>something they need to survive, not just an idea they believe in</em>. The problem with most self-described leftist organizations in the u.s. is that there is still this inherent class divide between the organizers and the communities they ostensibly serve, that can’t be overcome by just offering occasional mutual aid services. Even if these services do meet a tangible need and help to at least ameliorate some of the intolerable conditions produced by racial capitalism, they are not for the most part using the kinds of methods or tactics that would actually enable or empower whole communities to actually self-organize, to seize power for themselves, on a scale that is significant enough to really shift the balance of social and economic forces in a serious way.</p>



<p>Of course, we have many labor unions which are made up of and organize among poor and oppressed and working class communities—but these unions do not have anti-imperialist politics. They are simply fighting for a bigger share of the imperial spoils. Which is why none of them were mobilized to stop weapons shipments at any point during the last several years of the accelerated genocide in Gaza. So it is not just a matter of methods or tactics, but of politics. We can have effective methods or tactics, we can read&nbsp;<em>Secrets of a Successful Organizer</em>&nbsp;back to back, but if we are not guided by the right principles or politics, we are still going to be ineffective. Like yes, congratulations, we raised the pay of New York City bus drivers by $2/hour. Unfortunately the U.S. is still beheading babies in Gaza and cutting off the fuel supply of entire populations in the global south.</p>



<p>There are many organizations that say that they are doing things like “mutual aid” or “social investigation” — that they are actually engaging with and organizing among and empowering poor and oppressed communities. But usually this amounts to a handful of, again, middle-class activists handing out food on the weekends, or going around with a clipboard and talking to some homeless people and asking them what their concerns are, because Mao told them that was what they were supposed to do in order to be serious revolutionaries. Unfortunately, though, I don’t think this is a winning strategy, because at the end of the social investigation, or mutual aid shift, most of these people are going to go back to their gentrified neighborhood, or maybe their non-gentrified neighborhood, but they are not living among the people whose needs they are ostensibly serving. They will publish their results or photos on Instagram—again, the intention being to prove to other middle-class activists that they are doing real revolutionary TM stuff. Or they do it for a few years in their twenties, only to burn out and eventually apply to that master’s program because the class forces pushing them in that direction eventually get too strong to resist through sheer willpower alone.</p>



<p>At the end of the day, no matter how much “mutual aid” or “social investigation” they do, a lot — perhaps not all, but a lot — of these activists are not committed to actually transforming themselves on a fundamental level. They are more so acting like anthropologists of the poor. It takes a long time and a lot of dedicated effort to really get to know a community, to earn their trust, to develop a real understanding of what they are materially struggling around and then to be able to meaningfully offer the kind of tangible support that might begin to allow them to create material change — again,&nbsp;<em>for themselves</em>. You can’t just walk around a homeless encampment with a clipboard or a bag of groceries a few times, or even a few years, and then call it a day.</p>



<p>If we really and truly want to put an end to the horrors of capitalism and u.s. imperialism, we have to be honest with ourselves about a) what that will really take, and b) who is most likely to make that happen. I don’t mean in any kind of moral or idealistic sense, but from an analysis that is rooted in actual historical materialism. It is not going to be the middle class activists in DSA. It is not going to be the labor unions. It is not going to be a few mutual aid groups or autonomous direct action groups, as inspiring as they are.</p>



<p>As you say, we have have to stop projecting idealism and start taking a really hard and serious look at oppressed people’s concrete, existing material circumstances, with all the contradictions that that will inevitably entail, and then not just offering them services but actually and truly committing ourselves to being with them, living among them, studying with them, speaking with them not just a few times but continuously, again and again over a long period of time, thinking and acting with them, struggling alongside them, committing ourselves to understanding and serving them and developing some sort of honest trust that is not just based in offering a service.</p>



<p>To go back to the idea of being a revolutionary, it isn’t something to be taken lightly, or something that can just be done part-time. It’s a total life commitment. You can be a part-time activist but you cannot be a part-time revolutionary. And yet, the problem is that we lack the infrastructure and the revolutionary commitment to actually make continuous, long-term struggle a viable possibility for enough people.</p>



<p>There is a reason why so many organizations on the u.s. left are filled with people who are either extremely young, in their late teens or 20’s, or elderly, perhaps retired, in their 50’s or 60’s. You notice that there’s this huge gap in the middle, because most of these 20 year olds, when they inch closer to 30, are going to start giving into the social forces that mold their class position. They’re going to go to graduate school, and start their careers. They’re going to get married and have kids and buy houses and cars. It’s a straight escalator from one thing to another, and people think they’re making these choices independently but there are these very real and powerful social forces that exist to take them out of the struggle. Perhaps after their kids are born, they’ll occasionally show up to a weekend protest with their toddler in a stroller and tell themselves that they are doing radical parenthood. I’m not saying people can’t have kids. But all of these ideas are tied up in class and property in a particular way, and it is that way for a reason. Idealism can only last for so long.</p>



<p>On the flip side, when people finally reach retirement age and their labor is no longer productive to capitalism, they will start to feel a bit lost, lacking in purpose, maybe lonely, so they will join an activist group as a way to “get involved” or “meet people.” But again, there’s this hobbyist quality to the whole thing. None of it is really serious. The basis of analysis is always the individual, their life, their preferences, their career, their goals, their aspirations and interests. It is not the collective, or collective need. This is how capitalism teaches us to think, and this is the governing logic of much of the u.s. left.</p>



<p>How do we get rid of this kind of conditioning? I think it is very difficult to reject these social forces. They are extremely real and extremely powerful. But again I think it has to begin with a real commitment to transforming ourselves, to totally rethinking our orientation toward struggle. To engaging in criticism and self-criticism. We need to learn to enjoy serious argumentation, to welcome being wrong or being convinced out of a previously held belief, not because we love debate for its own sake, but because we are sincerely committed to getting to the bottom of something, to really finding out the truth about it and not just copping out at “we can agree to disagree” or “you have this ideology and I have that ideology.”</p>



<p>Gravity is real! That is not up for debate or a matter of opinion! It has been discovered and proven! But somehow, we don’t treat social reality with the same level of seriousness, and just fall back into this easy idealism of, oh, well, you’re an anarchist and I’m a communist so we just think differently about this. This isn’t about dogma, it’s about being committed to figuring out what is actually real and recognizing that some ideas or strategies are going to lead to better or worse outcomes for real people leading real lives, depending on whether or not we got the math right.</p>



<p>This leads me to my final question, which is something we spoke briefly about before. What, to you, does true militancy mean? What does it look like? There is this tendency to reduce the idea of militancy to either rhetoric or actions, but it seems like there is more to it than that. Can you get into this a little?</p>



<p><strong>EC</strong>: Militancy isn’t just chanting that you support the resistance or waving certain flags. It’s not something you say. I feel like there has been this really weird dynamic, especially over the past couple of years, where ‘militancy’ takes form in people trying to chant the “most radical” things at protests, and sort of laughing at or making fun of other organizations who they think chant “less radical” chants, as if the content of the chant is what matters.&nbsp;<em>But it’s all still happening in the realm of ideas</em>; It’s all still treating “the war” as something that is happening elsewhere.</p>



<p><em>So, I think militancy starts with acknowledging that we are at war, right here, right now.</em>&nbsp;The state is waging war. It is waging war on the countries it is targeting with imperialist violence, it is waging war against the people of oppressed nations living in internal colonies within the imperial core, it is waging war against potentially insurgent elements. The most oppressed masses already know this, of course. But even though some popular leftist organizations might occasionally superficially acknowledge this in political rhetoric, it doesn’t seem to impact how they actually function as organizations.</p>



<p>Once you acknowledge that we are actually at war, then I think militancy can take shape. The specific chants don’t really matter all that much. What matters is skills, training, capacity, logistics—<em>you know, the things that actually produce capable fighting forces.</em></p>



<p>Every so often, some video of Patriot Front or the Proud Boys training goes viral. I see leftist after leftist retweeting the videos of them practicing hand to hand combat or moving as a group. But the leftist response isn’t calling for the left to train, rather it’s usually simply making fun of the fascists for looking silly. The leftists laugh and shake their head about how silly the fascists look and then move on. I feel like this is another manifestation of people not really getting that we’re at war. How do you see the fascist enemy training and your response is to laugh, rather than think about what that means for you, for the most marginalized among us?</p>



<p>I also think of militancy in terms of forming objectives and assessing results.&nbsp;<em>If a military general kept calling for their troops to fight the same battle plan over and over, and every time it was tried, the results were a bunch of casualties with no real gain, that general would be fired (or worse).</em>&nbsp;But it’s normal to see the same leftist orgs call for the same protests over and over, with the same results: zero tangible gains but lots of folks getting sick, arrested, beat up, burnt out.&nbsp;<em>We should be rigorously assessing the costs of these tactics and consciously deciding if they are worth it, not just using certain tactics because those are the tactics we are used to using</em>.</p>



<p>Radical political organizations that want to embrace militancy should be studying, training, and directly trying to analyze and confront their internal contradictions. They should be trying to develop the infrastructure and skills that are necessary for struggling. They should be doing what they can to protect their members (and communities) from COVID and other dangerous health-threats—recognizing that viruses are also part of the war the state is waging. They should be thinking about loss of morale, about divisions of labor, about trying to constantly study what the state is doing and figure out why it’s doing it.&nbsp;<em>In other words, they should focus on the material.</em></p>
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		<title>Against Settler Socialism: Lessons from Minneapolis</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-03-24-against-settler-socialism-lessons-minneapolis/</link>
					<comments>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-03-24-against-settler-socialism-lessons-minneapolis/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[USU Editorial Board]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2026 14:04:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Editorial Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous Peoples]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Plains (West–Midwest)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Racial Oppression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CPUSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Four Opportunist Parties]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FRSO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ICE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settler colonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4509</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The spontaneous development of the people is breaking free of the chains long cast over the struggle for liberation by the Four Opportunists. In every corner of the US Empire, the grip of the opportunists and the tailists is weakening. We must unite the most advanced theory with the most class-conscious elements of the people and we must fight against the settler-socialism of the opportunist groups.]]></description>
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<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>We say that we must come to know the difference between mobilization and organization because the enemy will use mobilization to demobilize us. Mobilization is very easy. Very, very easy. Since we are a people who are instinctively ready to respond against acts of injustice, any time there’s one little act of injustice, we can blow it up and we will find people who will come and make some mass demonstration around it. [&#8230;] And this is what mobilization does, it mobilizes people around issues. Those of us who are revolutionary are not concerned with issues, we are concerned with the system. The difference must be properly understood. [&#8230;] Mobilization usually leads to reform action, not to revolutionary action. [&#8230;] We must transform mobilization to organization. We say the enemy will try to use mobilization to demobilize us. Many brothers and sisters who’ve been to the million and more march will say to you, ‘I was there.’ Well, what are you doing today my sister?</p>
</blockquote>



<p>&#8212; Kwame Ture</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Organizing, Not Merely Mobilizing</h2>



<p>We have all heard and seen the mass demonstrations, marches, and walkouts that erupted in the Twin Cities, signaling the start of this year of struggle. We&#8217;ve heard the tramp of ten thousand people marching against the occupation, the sounds of mobilization; but beneath it, and lasting beyond, for those who know to listen, is a steadier sound &#8212; like whispers, like chants. That of the organizers standing sentry on street corners in the aching cold, coordinating grocery runs, rapid response to raids, and transporting students and workers safely. These bands are built by grassroots organization, and it&#8217;s precisely the last lesson our enemies want us to learn.</p>



<p>Five years ago, Minneapolis erupted in response to the murder of George Floyd. For that summer, it seemed every city in the world became an uprising, as Democrats scrambled to take a knee and corporations writhed to retire racist brand mascots and grant better media representation. USU spoke with a Communist on the ground in Minneapolis who has witnessed the sweep of 2020 to the present moment. &#8220;During this period, it felt like people were taking power in a way that&#8217;d be much bigger,&#8221; they told us. &#8220;Living in south Minneapolis, a police precinct being lit and set on fire, grocery stores looted and turned into mutual aid sites, 200 buildings going up in flames &#8211; that was a lot happening. In that short period of time, it felt more than a moment, but it quickly went away.&#8221;</p>



<p>All the energy to abolish the police, or even defund them, was funneled by liberal counterinsurgents into tactics that either wasted the time of great masses of the oppressed, or narrowly appealed to the upper classes of the nationally oppressed through job prospects and investment opportunity.<sup data-fn="8f276299-2555-45a3-8634-ca0ddf85d3d2" class="fn"><a href="#8f276299-2555-45a3-8634-ca0ddf85d3d2" id="8f276299-2555-45a3-8634-ca0ddf85d3d2-link">1</a></sup> The &#8220;moment&#8221; that was 2020 evaporated into an utter defeat for the oppressed, and a complete victory for the settler-colonial ruling class that ensures daily the death of a countless unnamed Floyds. The only price paid: a handful of temporary concessions this current regime has already pried back with vengeance, and a single sacrificial pig.</p>



<p>As our comrade in Minneapolis said, &#8220;As Communists, we were not organized enough to win the masses over when they were ripe to be captured.&#8221;</p>



<p>It is the general consensus of principled Communists that this was a watershed moment wasted. Every failure is a lesson, data in the experiment of social revolution; but if no one is keeping track, if no one is recording the results and learning from past efforts, the movement might as well be hurling human lives at the wall to see what sticks and looking away at each impact. But, as it turns out, something has stuck. Something has lodged itself firmly in the communities of Minneapolis, that all resulting efforts to resist occupation have been able to grow from: organizations, persisting from the embers of 2020 to now. It&#8217;s our responsibility to learn from them.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>In Minneapolis, there was a massive wave of homelessness at the beginning of COVID. Networks of mutual aid popped up because of that. Then the uprising happened, and people started figuring out how to take care of each other. Figuring out food, how to handle work, those networks were built by organizers, and after the mobilized masses disappeared in 2020, these networks remained.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>The remarkable pace at which these networks expanded, from the handful of organizations to the intersecting community webs connecting every single city section, neighborhood, and block proves the lessons that Kwame Ture described so perfectly more than half a century ago. It also shows all of us, empire-wide, a roadmap for how to prepare as these &#8220;occupations&#8221; escalate. Every city on this land is a garrison fort, palisades replaced by cameras, automatic alarms, and barbed wire, so to call any concentration by the federal government an &#8220;occupation&#8221; is essentially a misnomer. <em>It is merely a reinforcement</em>. It is a concentration of already-existing state repressive powers. But we must not ignore the difference in form. The organizers in Minneapolis have adjusted to the reality of their new opponents.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>All law enforcement in this country can and will kill you, we know that. They&#8217;re parts of the same arm in this imperialist state. However, what has become clear with these federal agents is that they do not function on the same playing field as a local PD. They do not operate on the same playing field as the National Guard. [&#8230;] I don&#8217;t know if it&#8217;s a martyr complex or just talking shit, but I see this tendency from people who don&#8217;t live here when they say, &#8220;Stop filming and go de-arrest.&#8221; Or, &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t let this happen.&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>I&#8217;ll tell you: you would let it happen, or you&#8217;ll get killed.</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>De-arrest is more common in anarchist circles; anarchists here are not calling for de-arrest anymore that I’ve seen, because it’s understood in the city that we don&#8217;t stand any chance. You can de-arrest with the local PD. Not with ICE, because there&#8217;s a 50/50 chance they&#8217;ll kill you and the person they&#8217;re trying to kidnap. In the end, you still won&#8217;t stop who they&#8217;re trying to kidnap.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>The organizers in Minneapolis understand fundamentally the dialectic between theory and practice. They have gathered experimental data from their lives, developed practices, tried and applied this theory, analyzed the results, and developed new theory and new practices. They are at the forefront of the fight against the bourgeois government.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The Four Opportunists and the Spontaneous Movement</h2>



<p>As the press organ of the All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League, we have already taken a stand against <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-03-06-outlook-26/76504">the Four Opportunists</a>, those &#8220;organizations&#8221; <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-05-30-liberalism-and-fascism-with-communist-characteristics/">that capture revolutionary and radical energy</a>, sweep up developing Communists and the newly class-conscious, and then negate them by combining them with liberals, by denying them access to the levers of power in their own organizations, by teaching them bad theory, and by burning up their energy through endless mobilization with no strategic goals. The Four Opportunists are the CPUSA, the PSL, the FRSO, and the DSA. (See &#8220;The 2026 Outlook of the Central Press&#8221; and &#8220;Liberalism and Fascism With Communist Characteristics&#8221; in the <em>Red Clarion</em>).</p>



<p>In Minneapolis, the growth of the spontaneous movement has continued in the face of the Four Opportunists, specifically the FRSO and DSA. USU has had contact with other Communists in Minnesota who tell us that&#8230;</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>De-legitimizing action and organizing is being done by individuals acting on the behalf of FRSO (DSA was also involved on this front). The hegemony held by FRSO makes this possible, as their cadre members are involved in other orgs. There&#8217;s another Somali group in Cedar Riverside who call themselves the Cedar Riverside Protection Alliance, but are democrat adjacent and pro assimilation. They were attempting to de-escalate by gathering all the African folks into their homes for that day, telling them to stand down and not confront [Jack] Lang.<sup data-fn="bbfed1a1-7adc-40fc-a446-6abcd0fc00a3" class="fn"><a href="#bbfed1a1-7adc-40fc-a446-6abcd0fc00a3" id="bbfed1a1-7adc-40fc-a446-6abcd0fc00a3-link">2</a></sup> Cedar Riverside Protection Alliance was doing flyering, circulating statements via signal group chats or boosting messages that were calling [an] org <sup data-fn="4d42d98e-e442-4db2-9af9-869fb8eac13a" class="fn"><a href="#4d42d98e-e442-4db2-9af9-869fb8eac13a" id="4d42d98e-e442-4db2-9af9-869fb8eac13a-link">3</a></sup> outside antagonists with no right to organize in Cedar. They cut off supply lines and disrupted organizing work doing this.</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>When the fascists came to town, Jack Lang and co., the Coalition Against the Trump Agenda (A group made up of a lot of FRSO front orgs) enacted the strategy of “shadowing” the fascists.</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>Basically, this amounted to them just following them around and yelling stuff at them. However, things did not play out as FRSO planned. Roughly 1000 folks showed up (the divide between the masses and org affiliated was obvious) to counter around 10 fascists with a banner. The FRSO marshals protected the nazis&#8217; banner from the masses, until they eventually lost control and the banner was destroyed in spite of their efforts. Extreme peace policing.</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>An additional note to further illustrate the resource strangulation and white chauvinism of FRSO: [a] Somali organization that led the defense action against Jake Lang in Cedar Riverside reached out to the SRA [Socialist Rifle Association] of Minneapolis for a firearms training. They later learned that there is a strong FRSO contingency in SRA. Once SRA realized this Somali organization was the one that held the defense action, SRA informed the organization that they would not move forward since they &#8220;created confusion and gave other (FRSO) organizations a hard time.&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>



<p>From the comrade in Minneapolis:</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>One thing I can speak to is, right now, not just in Minneapolis, but nation-wide — we&#8217;re seeing opportunism. There&#8217;s this tailist need to use this term “general strike“ to try and illicit buy-in from people. For these days of action. We saw this last Friday. The labor unions involved, the orgs involved, it was never called a general strike. It was clear we weren&#8217;t calling for one. There were outside groups that decided to call it a general strike. [&#8230;]</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>When we mislead people into thinking a day of vacation is the same as a general strike, we do an insurmountable amount of damage to education and getting working people to understand the actual risk-reward of going on strike. And dealing blows to capital which is the point of a strike. That is the big criticism I Have right now. The organizations that should and do know better, continue to use words like general strike.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>PSL has pursued a similar strategy in Minneapolis: more than any other group, they have misrepresented the effort to organize petty-bourgeois businesses to voluntarily close as a &#8220;general strike.&#8221; They encouraged people to use paid time off to participate in marches. <strong>This </strong><strong>is </strong><strong>the PSL&#8217;s strategy of class struggle &#8212; not as the struggle of the lowest elements of the proletariat against the imperialist system, but as the struggle of the </strong><em><strong>petty bourgeois and labor aristocratic layers to achieve limited political aims. </strong></em><strong>This is not revolution. This is counterinsurgency</strong>.</p>



<p>The spontaneous development of the people is breaking free of the chains long cast over the struggle for liberation by the Four Opportunists. In every corner of the US Empire, the grip of the opportunists and the tailists is weakening. We must unite the most advanced theory with the most class-conscious elements of the people and we must fight against the settler-socialism of the opportunist groups. What is this settler-socialism? It is the Marxism of capitulation, a form of revisionism that sees <em>reform</em> as the only path forward and <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-3-6-revolution-in-our-lifetime/"></a><a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-3-6-revolution-in-our-lifetime/">puts the question of revolution forever over the horizon</a>. (See &#8220;Revolution in Our Lifetime&#8221; in the <em>Red Clarion</em>). In FRSO and PSL, this is partially accomplished through the <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?s=cult+form">deceptive organizational structure</a> in which access to internal documents and planning is entirely isolated and inaccessible; day to day members of these organizations are encouraged to pay into them and attend marches, but the strategic and tactical level operates at one remove from the general membership. All decisions are made by a secret group of select few &#8212; Blanquism, in other words. (See, for instance, &#8220;The Cult Building Tendency&#8221; in the <em>Red Clarion</em>). Have you seen calls for marches spring up with less than 24 or 48 hours notice? That&#8217;s the work of the Four Opportunists. Whether it is their intention or not, the material result is the bleeding off of revolutionary energy into channels that are acceptable to the ruling class. <em>In truth, it is an attempt to find accommodation with the ruling class and demand a different distribution of power within the imperialist system. </em>It is the plea of the imperialist labor aristocracy and petty bourgeoisie (who overwhelmingly command the Four Opportunists) for more spoils to be allocated to them and for a greater degree of input into the empire&#8217;s political system.</p>



<p>For more on the Four Opportunists and our criticisms, see generally <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-10-17-stagnant-parties-dont-deserve-your-time/">&#8220;Stagnant Parties Don&#8217;t Deserve Your Time&#8221;</a> in the <em>Clarion</em>, and&#8230;</p>



<p>CPUSA &#8211; <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-02-22-cpusa-hypocrisy/">&#8220;A True Accounting of the CPUSA In Its Members Own Words</a><a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-02-22-cpusa-hypocrisy/">,&#8221;</a> <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-19-why-i-left-the-cpusa/">&#8220;Why I Left the CPUSA&#8221;</a></p>



<p>PSL &#8211; <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-3-6-revolution-in-our-lifetime/">&#8220;Revolution in Our Lifetime&#8221;</a></p>



<p>FRSO &#8211; <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-01-03-the-settler-j-sykes-and-the-frso/">&#8220;The Settler J. Sykes and the FRSO,&#8221;</a> <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-24-11-forward-out-of-frso/">&#8220;Forward Out of FRSO&#8221;</a></p>



<p>DSA &#8211;<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-12-17-triumph-for-the-zionist-left/"> &#8220;Triumph For the Zionist Left&#8221;</a></p>



<p>We, and the organizers in Minnesota, reject this settler bargain.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The League Principle</h2>



<p>We require a country-wide organization to fight both the Four Opportunists and their labor-aristocratic/petty-bourgeois base <em>and</em> the bourgeois state itself. The lessons of Minneapolis are clear: it is possible to bring elements of the imperialist working class into direct and antagonistic contradiction with the state when we move our strategic goals out of the narrow realm of wage increases and into the realm of the national liberation struggle. White anarchists and Communists, petty bourgeois and labor aristocratic elements, have joined the national liberation struggle against ICE. Breaking the law for the first time, acting directly against the state for the first time, opens a new world of revolutionary potential among the labor aristocracy. Show them that it is possible to oppose the state, rather than seek accommodation with it, and we develop the subjective awareness of revolution. <em>Revolutionary potential is created within otherwise reactionary elements of the population.</em></p>



<p><em>However</em>, this is only possible with uncompromising <em><strong>proletarian leadership</strong></em>. Without the anchor of a revolutionary, proletarian organization, <em>opportunism is the unavoidable result.</em> Those members of the imperial labor aristocracy and petty bourgeoisie who will not voluntarily surrender their class-outlook and who will not voluntarily subject themselves to proletarian class-leadership <em><strong>are our objective enemy.</strong></em></p>



<p>The principle of the League is the intermediary principle between our present stage of development (scattered, ideologically incoherent, with the presence of small pockets of developed Communist organization at the local level) and the militant party-form. Yes, we need a party of the new (new) type, as the All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League has put it,</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>It’s not enough, though, to just state the obvious: that the US in 2025 is <strong>not</strong> Russia in 1917, it is <strong>not</strong> China, it is <strong>not</strong> Viet Nam, it is <strong>not </strong>a semi-feudal country or a country in the global periphery. The US is the center of world-capitalist reaction, an imperial hegemon that acts as the backstop and system of last defense for capitalism across the entire world. No metropolitan country has ever seen a successful proletarian revolution&#8230;.</p>
</blockquote>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>We must create a vanguard organization of the working class that can purge all opportunism and revisionism from its ranks, educate and elevate the working masses, defeat internal and external chauvinism, unite the liberation struggles of the colonies and semi-colonies, and prepare the reserves of the revolutionary proletariat for direct confrontation — for <strong>direct class war</strong> — with the enemy state, with bourgeois civil society, and with the world-bourgeoisie themselves, who largely reside within the US-Canadian bloc. In order to satisfy these requirements, we must <strong>creatively</strong> apply the lessons of 1905, of October, of the course of struggle in China, Viet Nam, Ghana, and the whole periphery.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>While we work to create this party, we must organize our various local organizations together and take advantage of the benefits this centralization can provide. While a League is not yet a party, it is an organization of organizations. We have discussed the formation of regional leagues in the <em>Clarion</em> in the past (see <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-05-towards-an-nyc-league/">&#8220;Towards a New York City League of Workers and Students&#8221;</a> and <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-11-4-toward-a-boston-league/">&#8220;Towards a Boston League of Workers and Students&#8221;</a>). It is through this process of regional organization that we can build our capacity to resist the state <em>as well as </em>the class forces that tend to drag Communist-oriented projects in the US empire toward opportunism.</p>



<p>Since 2025, the All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League has worked to integrate local organizations and propagate, develop, and advance the theory necessary to combat the opportunists and the bourgeois imperialists. In areas with a high concentration of developed local organizations that are actually engaged in class struggle against the state, we urge them to band together to resist opportunism and form centralized organs of class power.</p>



<p>In regions where the struggle has not yet been heightened to the same degree as in Minneapolis, we urge local organizations to prepare for the same degree of struggle. Our sources on the ground warn that unless we prepare in advance, we will be caught off guard. Washington is willing to kill to suppress class-consciousness and solidarity between the imperialist labor aristocracy and the US proletariat. We have to be ready to counter that violence with the main weapon we have: organization!</p>



<p>Footnotes:</p>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="8f276299-2555-45a3-8634-ca0ddf85d3d2">Black, Too and Rasul A. Mowatt. Laundering Black Rage: The Washing of Black Death, People, Property, and Profits. Routledge, New York, NY, 2024. Introduction, xi-xxiii and 138-145. <a href="#8f276299-2555-45a3-8634-ca0ddf85d3d2-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="bbfed1a1-7adc-40fc-a446-6abcd0fc00a3">Jack Lang is a pardoned January 6th rioter and fascist agitator. <a href="#bbfed1a1-7adc-40fc-a446-6abcd0fc00a3-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 2"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="4d42d98e-e442-4db2-9af9-869fb8eac13a">&#8220;[&#8230;] a group of communists who have been organizing in Minneapolis and Saint Paul who are critical of the established Left in the region and are actively attempting to build a viable decolonial Marxist alternative[&#8230;]&#8221; &#8212; From the Communists in Minneapolis. <a href="#4d42d98e-e442-4db2-9af9-869fb8eac13a-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 3"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
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		<title>Unifying Principles</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/unifying-principles/</link>
					<comments>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/unifying-principles/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The River Valley Liberation Organization (RVLO)]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 15:28:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International Communism and Social Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing Theory]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[struggle]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4501</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Without points of unity, an organization cannot make headway. It spends all of its time treading water, debating over and over again on topics that should be closed.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Or, &#8220;what the hell&#8217;s a &#8216;point of unity,&#8217; anyway?&#8221;</h2>



<p>Whenever an organization is founded for the purpose of advancing revolutionary struggle, you have to establish minimum principles with everyone involved (&#8220;what&#8217;s an organization?&#8221; <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-03-15-organize/">start here!</a>). These are usually written out in a form that all the prospective members read over and agree to. The list of principles is called the organization&#8217;s <em>points of unity</em>. It represents <em>the issues around which membership is unified</em>. These should be as broad as possible to permit continued internal struggle over details.</p>



<p>In order for an organization to function, it must be ideologically coherent. Every meeting can&#8217;t be a relitigation of the basic questions (do we support violent revolution? are we reformists? what theory do we agree on?) &#8212; that way lies both madness and liberalism. Without points of unity, an organization cannot make headway. It spends all of its time treading water, debating over and over again on topics that should be closed.</p>



<p>You&#8217;ve probably been in meetings like this. Something is proposed that seems like it should be agreeable. People start to agree to move forward on it as an action item. Suddenly, someone takes the floor and questions the <em>very principles on which the proposal is made</em>. The meeting quickly devolves into a debate club about whether or not the organization &#8220;has the authority&#8221; to &#8220;make this kind of decision,&#8221; or whether &#8220;we really want to be opposing the police directly&#8221; or some such pablum. The entire night is wasted. You won&#8217;t even be able to address other potentially actionable items because you don&#8217;t meet again until next week.</p>



<p>Points of unity spell out the ideological commitments that all members of the organization agree to in order to become and remain members. They allow the membership to ensure it has a sufficient ideological coherence that it can come to agreement on actions. The points of unity essentially create the basic ideological character of the organization, and help ensure that even new members adhere to the ideological direction that it intends to move in. These are <em>critical</em> in a revolutionary organization, because the immediate horizon must always remain <em>revolution</em>, and deviating from that goal is what creates rampant opportunism and tailism (like that experienced within the <a href="https://unity-struggle-unity.org/outlook-2026/">Four Opportunists</a>).</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What Do We Need to Agree On?</h2>



<p>Your organization, in order to be an effective revolutionary fighting-force, and in order to express class-power, should<em>, at the very minimum</em>, be prepared to agree on the fact that Marxism-Leninism is the revolutionary theory that guides your actions, and that it is a living doctrine comprised of the culmination of all experiences and theory from the entire history of the class struggle rather than a dead orthodoxy to be transmitted from dusty books.</p>



<p>The minimums required for a principled formation with a proletarian outlook in the imperial center are:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Decolonization</li>



<li>Sex liberation</li>



<li>Disability liberation</li>
</ul>



<p>Other commitments are up to your individual organization to determine based on its theoretical understanding of what is necessary for a revolution and for total liberation. Remember, without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What Other Purposes Do Points of Unity Serve?</h2>



<p>When you are ready to begin work with another revolutionary organization, you should <em>compare your points of unity</em> and determine what degree of unity exists between the two organizations. Understanding strategic and theoretical overlap can help you quickly identify shared areas of work.</p>



<p>We are in a moment when the Communist movement for liberation in the US, Canada, and Mexico needs to unify. This is the period in which we must unite all that can be united. If your points of unity show sufficient unity with another organization&#8217;s, you may be able to <em>simply unite the two organizations</em> and operate with more available resources and labor, coordinate more efficiently, and accomplish greater and greater feats of revolutionary action.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">For Example&#8230;</h2>



<p>If you need help drafting your points of unity, we have an example from a real, existing organization.</p>



<p>The River Valley Liberation Organization has the following points of unity that help it remain coherent and ideologically aligned:</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">Article I. Ideology.</p>



<p><em>Section 1. </em>The ideology of the RVLO is Decolonial Marxism-Leninism.</p>



<p><em>Section 2. </em>Marxism-Leninism is a living body of revolutionary theory and method; it is the culmination of revolutionary experience from the whole history of the class struggle.</p>



<p><em>Section 3. </em>This cell shall take ideological and practical guidance from the relevant experiences and contributions of revolutionaries from every land and region.</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">Article II. Self-Determination.</p>



<p><em>Section 1. </em>All peoples have the right to self-determination.</p>



<p><em>Section 2. </em>This cell shall work toward the universal realization of that right within and without the existing US empire and its junior partners of Canada and Mexico (the US-led bloc), that is, the decolonization of North America, as a precondition for a just society.</p>



<p><em>Section 3. </em>The anti-colonial and national liberation struggles constitute a special stage of the social revolution.</p>



<p><em>Section 4. </em>The social revolution includes the liberation and self-emancipation of the Black nation of New Afrika, all pre-columbian Indigenous peoples, and the US Empire’s colonial territories.</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">Article III. Sex Liberation.</p>



<p><em>Section 1. </em>This cell shall study a revolutionary materialist feminist theory and work to enumerate and expand it.</p>



<p><em>Section 2. </em>The materialist feminist theory shall be distinguished from the reformist and unscientific feminist trends by: (i) recognition of gendered oppression as structural and (ii) recognition of the failure of reforms to bring about true emancipation.</p>



<p><em>Section 3. </em>This cell is committed to depatriarchalization, entailing the full legal emancipation and structural liberation of women, LGBT persons, and gender-variant persons, and all efforts will be taken to ensure this is practiced in the cell organizations.</p>



<p><em>Section 4. </em>This cell shall vigorously defend the rights of women, LGBT persons, and gender-variant persons within its membership and shall endeavor to make study and work accessible and safe for such persons through a process of internal depatriarchalization.</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">Article IV. Disability Liberation.</p>



<p><em>Section 1. </em>This cell agrees that the abolition of disability as a social structure and the liberation of disabled persons is a vital component of the social revolution.</p>



<p><em>Section 2. </em>This cell shall ensure that disabled comrades and members are included and empowered to participate in all branches of this organization’s work and study.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Towards the Formation of a League</h2>



<p>The RVLO is a Member Organization of the <a href="https://linktr.ee/aeworkersleague">All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League</a>. By joining the League, the RVLO adopted the League points of unity as well. The League principle allows small local organizations to band together in a form that is more coherent than a coalition, but something less than the militant party-to-be, which must still be formed out of the broadest possible consultation with Communists across the US settler-empire.</p>



<p>We urge all local primary organizations that have compatible points of unity to begin building or joining secondary organizations that allow them to coordinate their efforts and move toward organizational unity. The AEWL is an all-empire secondary organization, collecting and coordinating the efforts of a number of local organizations with the plan of building up the necessary consensus to form the militant party of the (new) new type necessary to confront the settler state.</p>



<p>If you believe your organization is already unified around a line that is compatible with that of the AEWL, we urge you to reach out and begin discussions. If it is not yet unified, we urge you to work on your internal development until you reach unity on these questions.</p>



<p>The AEWL points of unity are:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li>The overthrow and total abolition of the fundamentally illegitimate and irredeemable United States and its junior partner, Canada;</li>



<li>Black and Indigenous sovereignty over their respective indigenous homelands and/or rightfully claimed national territories, in forms that will be collectively and democratically decided by each people, nation, and community on its own terms, on the basis of mutual respect for the right of all peoples to self-determination;</li>



<li>Partition of any remaining (that is, unclaimed) territories into a centralized union of local socialist states, wherein self-determination for all oppressed peoples, nations, and communities is guaranteed;</li>



<li>Reparations in the forms of wealth, land, and labor, to be forcibly extracted from the U.S.-Canadian imperialist and settler bourgeoisie, landed colonial aristocracy, and other exploiting classes, as well as from the colonial police and imperialist military, and justly redistributed to the victims of U.S.-Canadian colonialism and Western capitalist imperialism;</li>



<li>A program for structural depatriarchalization, focused on true emancipation for women and LGBTQ+ people; the reorganization of social labor, the labors of production and reproduction, on gender-equal lines; the abolition of all outmoded institutions, industries, and medical, professional, and cultural practices that rely on gendered violence and maintain gendered oppression; justice for all victims and survivors of sexual violence — in short, the beginning of the end of gendered oppression in all its forms;</li>



<li>Preparation for humanity’s collective survival of the ecological devastation wrought by modern colonialism and capitalism in the pursuit of worldwide environmental justice through internationalist cooperation and reparations;</li>



<li>Abolition of outmoded and inhumane models of “justice,” including modern police, jails and prisons, psychiatric “hospitals,” and other such institutions, to be replaced with models of revolutionary justice;</li>



<li>Defense of the revolution, including the ruthless defeat and suppression of all reactionary classes and counter-revolutionary forces, especially the forces of white supremacy, within North America, through an organized and sustained campaign of Red Terror;</li>



<li>Internationalism, put into practice by supporting the independent economic development and self-reliance of the world’s underdeveloped countries and regions, by forming comradely alliances with socialist countries, and by supplying aid to revolutionary struggles across the world;</li>



<li>The democratically self-determined, cooperative, ecologically sustainable development of socialism in every state that emerges from the total decolonization of the North American continent, planned and administered by the revolutionary Dictatorship of the Oppressed.</li>
</ol>
]]></content:encoded>
					
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		<title>A Social Investigation into the Hartford Region</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-01-28-social-investigation-hartford-region/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The River Valley Liberation Organization (RVLO)]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 16:46:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Hartford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ICE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[insurance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Israel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Louis Berbice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mass meeting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mohegan Nation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mutual aid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Narragansett Nation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Afrika]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Haven]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Occupied North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Palestine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pequot Nation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pratt & Whitney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Puerto Rican]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Raytheon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Aid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[River Valley Liberation Organization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[RVLO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Samuel Colt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settler relation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settler-colonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[slavery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Smith & Wesson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social investigation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spencer Arms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sukiag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Winchester Repeating Arms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[zionist entity]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4414</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Beginning each outing with a briefing of goals and logistics, we set out in both directions along Park Street and the surrounding area. ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>&nbsp;Local History</strong></h2>



<p>The Connecticut River Valley was home to many Indigenous tribes before European settler colonialism. The area now known as Hartford was held by the Suckiag Tribe until they were ethnically cleansed by Dutch and English settlers. Suckiag was valuable due to its prominent position along the Connecticut River. Ever since the displacement of its Indigenous populations, the city now known as Hartford has been a “rearguard garrison”<sup data-fn="cc7d17a5-1f74-48b6-b635-cd7072261d41" class="fn"><a href="#cc7d17a5-1f74-48b6-b635-cd7072261d41" id="cc7d17a5-1f74-48b6-b635-cd7072261d41-link">1</a></sup> for settler colonialism in Occupied North America and imperialism across the globe. When English Hartford was founded in 1636, the Connecticut colony consisted of scattered settlements along the Connecticut River. These towns acted in self governance for the first time to declare war against the Pequot Nation, which governed what is today southeastern Connecticut. Settlers from the river valley towns sent delegates to Hartford, where the colonial court issued its decree to recruit 30 men from each town to commit genocide of the Pequot. The English also recruited hundreds of soldiers from the Narragansett and Mohegan Nations to assist in the <a href="https://pequotwar.org/about/timeline/">war effort</a>. Together, they killed most of the Pequot and forced the survivors into slavery, with the English seizing all their land. The English successfully took advantage of the competition between Indigenous nations in Connecticut, a tactic of exploiting existing contradictions the modern U.S. state now regularly employs to destabilize nations. Of course, the temporary allies, the Narragansett and Mohegan, also saw all of their land &#8211; at first slowly, then all at once &#8211; stolen by settlers in the ensuing, decades-long land grab.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Hartford’s dominant industries at this time were agriculture and rum distillation. Both were dependent on slave labor; in Hartford, Black and Indigenous enslaved people worked the farms, while in the Caribbean they harvested sugarcane that was fermented and shipped up the eastern coast to Hartford and other northern cities. These Caribbean plantations were made dependent on such cities for food supplies, because even though the islands could grow ample food, sugar was the only crop produced on the land since it was more profitable to sell. The Caribbean experienced waves of manufactured famine that continue to this day. <a href="https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1790/number-of-persons.pdf">Census data</a> for slavery in Hartford only goes back to 1791. In that year there were 263 enslaved people in Hartford out of 2,764 in the state. There were 430 “free persons” (free Black citizens) in Hartford who were members of the city&#8217;s proletariat and sub-proletariat. The <a href="https://shoeleatherhistoryproject.com/2019/08/17/hartfords-original-sin/">first recorded murder</a> victim in Hartford was a Black man named Louis Berbice, murdered by his enslaver in 1639. The enslaver, Edward Opdyck, faced no punishment.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>From Garrison Town to Inventor’s Workshop</strong></h2>



<p>Hartford became a manufacturing city beginning around the 1850s, when Samuel Colt opened the largest private gun factory in the world. Colt revolvers were key to westward expansion, used by both individual settlers and the U.S. army. A half century earlier, Eli Whitney initiated the local mass production firearms industry with the interchangeable parts design, developed out of a factory in New Haven. A year later, he would invent the cotton gin, kickstarting an exponential expansion of slavery production and New Afrikan misery. Additional companies, such as Billings and Spencer, Spencer Arms, Winchester Repeating Arms, and Smith &amp; Wesson have bestowed a historic tie between settler militarism and Connecticut. </p>



<p>The city’s <em>role</em> in colonial occupation did not change, but its <em>form</em> of service took on a new, advanced appearance. Amerika’s new settler armies needed advanced, mass-produced weaponry that could overwhelm the western Indigenous nations still fighting for their national territory. Tucked away safely in the Northeast and bolstered by several centuries of superprofits, Hartford was well-positioned to serve as an inventor’s workshop for the next era of military technology.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We see the same transition fulfilled today by “israel” in Occupied Palestine. The zionist entity is both a garrison launchpad for the U.S. in Asia, and the empire’s principal inventor of military technology. Their weapons are primarily used against Palestinians to continue the Zionist occupation of Palestine. Their secondary purpose is that of testing and experimentation; advanced technology is exported from occupied Palestine to wherever in the world the empire needs them for asymmetric violence, including U.S. cities such as Hartford.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>From Inventor’s Workshop to Financial Hub</strong></h2>



<p>Hartford’s modern image as a finance center is characterized by massive insurance companies whose offices take up most of the city skyline. Connecticut’s capital is the birthplace of the insurance business itself. River captains, dealing in enslaved people and foodstuffs for slavery plantations, wanted to avoid the expectable financial hits from the dangerous sailing business; storms, piracy, and disease were threatening enough to the capitalists’ fortunes that it benefited the overall class to compensate one another when an individual merchant lost their investment. Thus, they created a system of profit and risk sharing among the merchant class. The financial logistics of slavery laid the foundation for the emergence of the insurance industry. Hartford is still considered the insurance capital of the world, although there are fewer actual insurance employees working in the city than in the past. 150 of these companies generate $16 billion a year combined. They are centered in the downtown area and housed in the largest office buildings. This industry is, of course, white dominated.</p>



<p>Lastly, Hartford and Hartford county continue to serve the U.S. war machine with several weapons manufacturers. In West Hartford, the Colt factory produces M4 rifles that are continuously sent to Occupied Palestine. The modern “inventor’s workshop” has moved across the Connecticut River to East Hartford, where Raytheon operates a five-story “research” facility to engineer new weapons systems like radars, missiles, and drones for the US and its vassals. A short walk away, Pratt &amp; Whitney builds engines for the F35 fighter jet. While many of these weapons workers are commuters, it is also the perception among community members that the companies are too powerful and entrenched for anti-imperialists to challenge them.&nbsp; Tracking the city’s development from garrison fortress, to inventor’s workshop, to financial hub of global imperialism, can we really say Amerika was ever not fascist? No, we cannot; it is only the form and proximity to genocide that has changed.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Demographics</strong></h2>



<p>The city has 17 neighborhoods, which are more sharply segregated by national and class contradictions than the average U.S. city. Population maps show that the New Afrikan population is primarily segregated to the north end of the city. The New Afrikan neighborhoods are separated from the Hispanic neighborhoods by insurance offices and the I-84 highway, constructed in 1964 to connect the downtown offices with the white suburbs in West Hartford. As in many cities, the construction of the giant highway through the city devastated the “minority” neighborhoods it crossed over.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>National Groups in Hartford according to 2020 census</strong></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="835" height="1024" src="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-835x1024.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-4418" style="width:599px;height:auto" srcset="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-835x1024.jpg 835w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-245x300.jpg 245w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-768x942.jpg 768w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-1252x1536.jpg 1252w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2.jpg 1290w" sizes="(max-width: 835px) 100vw, 835px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption"><em>Green = New Afrikan</em> <br><em>Orange = Hispanic</em><br><em>Blue = White</em><br><em>Red = Asian</em></figcaption></figure>



<p><strong>Map of the I-84 Highway through Hartford</strong></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img decoding="async" width="1024" height="726" src="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-1024x726.png" alt="" class="wp-image-4416" style="width:566px;height:auto" srcset="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-1024x726.png 1024w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-300x213.png 300w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-768x544.png 768w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2-1536x1089.png 1536w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-2.png 1600w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /></figure>



<p>Although the downtown area saw the highest rate of population growth between 2010 and 2020 (increasing by 53%), this area is still notoriously empty at night and on weekends, when office commuters leave for the suburbs. Downtown is the only neighborhood with a majority white population in Hartford. Note that the North Meadows neighborhood has no official population, since the area contains the Hartford Prison and commercial businesses. (See below.)</p>



<p><strong>Hartford Neighborhoods, Population Change 2010 &#8211; 2020</strong></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img decoding="async" width="699" height="1024" src="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-699x1024.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-4415" style="aspect-ratio:0.6826203312260016;width:508px;height:auto" srcset="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-699x1024.jpg 699w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-205x300.jpg 205w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-768x1125.jpg 768w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1049x1536.jpg 1049w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image.jpg 1080w" sizes="(max-width: 699px) 100vw, 699px" /></figure>



<p>We began our social investigation at the intersection of Park and Main St. In 1969, this intersection was the site of an uprising of the Puerto Rican community against a white biker gang. As the story goes, a white man belonging to the Comanchero biker gang assaulted an elderly Puerto Rican, and the community decided they had had enough. The groups confronted each other in the streets, but Hartford police only arrested Puerto Ricans. This agitated the community even further. The cycle of protesting, followed by police repression, followed by even heavier protesting, would continue for weeks, until an even greater escalation occurred. On August 29, 1969, West Hartford police shot Dennis Jones, a 16 year old New Afrikan, to death. Two days after the murder, a slumlord tenement building burned down, killing three people. These two events were too much for the community to bear, and people took to the streets against both police and white-owned businesses in the north end. But unlike the “Comanchero clash,” this time New Afrikans and Puerto Ricans fought together. The protests spread from the Clay Arsenal Neighborhoods, through downtown, and into Charter Oak and South Green. By September 5, over 500 people had been arrested and 4 people were shot.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>1969 Hartford Uprisings, August-September 1969</strong></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1024" height="708" src="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1-1024x708.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-4417" style="width:568px;height:auto" srcset="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1-1024x708.jpg 1024w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1-300x207.jpg 300w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1-768x531.jpg 768w, https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1.jpg 1398w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption"><em>Circle at top of South Green: Comanchero Riot</em><br><em>Squares: Labor Day Riots</em><br><em>Arrows show the protest’s physical movement</em></figcaption></figure>



<p>This one and a half month period marks the most significant uprising of the oppressed communities in Hartford. Since then, Puerto Ricans have gained representation on the Hartford City Council, giving the community a chance for a larger “piece of the pie” of imperial superprofits. They now have a place in government to address economic inequalities and police oppression. Of course, representation in local politics has not smoothed over the glaring contradictions between different nations in Hartford. Puerto Ricans are still concentrated in specific neighborhoods that receive lower investment ratings than nearby white neighborhoods, and the contradictions of homelessness, drug addiction, and poverty are more present in the Hispanic neighborhoods than in the white-dominated West End. Puerto Ricans make up 74% of the Hispanics in Hartford, but there is a significant Dominican population (8%) now as well.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Beginning each outing with a briefing of goals and logistics, we set out in both directions along Park Street and the surrounding area. Below are the major contradictions we observed.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>A Note On Methodology&nbsp;</strong></h2>



<p>Methodology refers to a system of methods used in a particular area of study or activity. As Scientific Socialists, our area of study is <em>the material world</em>. <strong><em>Our activity is Social Revolution</em></strong>. This means that we study the material world in order to apply the data we perceive — creatively and usefully — towards our material goals. In the context of a social investigation in Occupied North America, our methodology guides us to find those pockets of space and human groupings which could be the situs of a Communist beginning.&nbsp;</p>



<p>In practice, this means we need to do a cursory study of the local area before committing to a social investigation on the ground. This introductory investigation may require more than just visual information (the phenomena we can see with our eyes in a community). Most often, we will need to study economic and political data as well. For example, studying that an area has an average household income which is significantly less than bordering neighborhoods could clue us in towards an investigation in that area.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<p>We chose Park St. for several reasons:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li>The area has a high proportion of nationally oppressed people, primarily from Occupied Puerto Rico, but also from the Dominican Republic and other Spanish speaking countries.&nbsp;</li>



<li>ICE has kidnapped more immigrants in Hartford than in any other city.&nbsp;</li>



<li>Most of our political education work occurs in Hartford, making it the best area from which to draw labor.&nbsp;</li>



<li>Visibly, we observe a high degree of homelessness in the Park St. area.&nbsp;</li>



<li>The street has a number of empty residential buildings, indicating ongoing gentrification.</li>
</ol>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Homelessness</strong></h2>



<p>Roughly one third of the people we interviewed were experiencing homelessness of some sort. Some were living in a shelter or a halfway house. Others reported living outside in parks or under building edifices. One person reported an incident of homeless displacement by the city. According to the community member, a group of people were previously sleeping in tents at Barnard Park. The city reportedly moved them and their belongings to a larger park elsewhere in the city, after complaints of drug use. Of course, these community members reported huge difficulties finding housing in Hartford and Connecticut.&nbsp;</p>



<p>For every one homeless person, there are 28 abandoned properties. At the site of the Comanchero riot, a new luxury apartment building sits empty. Buildings just like it are being built in several neighborhoods, increasing rent beyond what people can afford. For example, in the North End Blue Hills neighborhood, aging and starved of government investment, the Bowles Park Public Housing Complex was torn down to be replaced with Willow Creek. The new development having fewer dwellings is part of the reason why the Blue Hills population decreased 13% between 2010-2020.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Of the people we spoke to who did have housing, many reported homelessness as the biggest issue in the city. Some had been homeless previously themselves. We also spoke to people who disparaged the homeless, to varying degrees, for presumed drug use and lack of social etiquette. Most, however, assign blame in both directions; they might blame the individual for poor choices, while the government is blamed for not helping them. There was a common understanding that the shelter and post-incarceration assistance programs do not help people find permanent housing. To this, several people brought up abuse that takes place within the shelter system.</p>



<p>In connection with the lack of housing, another major contradiction we observed is the dominance of slumlords. Just about everyone we spoke to who had housing was a renter. Most, if not all, complained about their rents going up every year. We could have asked more follow up questions about people’s specific living conditions, such as whether repairs are made, whether security deposits are returned, etc.&nbsp; At times, our investigators were too focused on getting a general sense of the neighborhood’s problems, and this likely caused us to leave certain wells of information untapped. One reason for this error was that we were looking for <em>broad</em> themes of oppression, themes that could take center stage in a future agitation program. But any possible theme would depend on the experiences of individuals in the Park St. area, therefore we should have sought a detailed explanation of exactly <em>why </em>housing access is such an issue in the neighborhood. The individual and the whole are two ends of the same dialectic, and we should ruthlessly investigate both if we expect to organize in any community. Going forward, we have a better idea of when we need to ask more follow-up questions, and we declare our intention to do so in the future. As part of our investigation process, some of our investigators created a hotline for community members to report incidences of abuse by the structures that be. People can now report slumlords, police brutality, ICE activity, and other instances of oppression to this hotline. This reporting would not only continue the investigation process, but refer us toward material injustices which could form the basis of a future program. A future program could take on one of several forms: agitation, Mass Meetings, Community Defense or CopWatch, <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-06-26-red-aid/">Red Aid</a> (Communist form of Mutual Aid), or another experimental program that solidifies our contacts with the masses.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Police</strong></h2>



<p>Several community members reported feeling a sense of danger on and around Park St., especially at night. They reported high rates of crime and heavy drug use. When asked about solutions to these problems, several responded that more police were needed. This was a relatively prominent idea of a solution for many people. A slightly lower number of people had nothing but bad things to say about the Hartford police. They reported corruption, harassment, and a lack of material assistance from the police. Based on these conversations, the contradiction between police and the oppressed communities is not the sharpest contradiction in this part of the city, currently. However, this is an issue that needs to be “brought back” to the people in subsequent outings. Hartford currently has 3.42 police officers for every 1,000 residents, while the national average in cities of similar size is 1.6. Hartford already has over twice as many police officers as comparably sized cities. The city spends 8.8% of its budget on police. Hartford is happy to throw as much money as possible into the police force.&nbsp;</p>



<p>However, the community either does not perceive this outsized number of police, or the police do not prevent crime in the way community members expect. We know that the latter is the case, and that police do not prevent crime. In order to bring this issue back to the community, our investigators need to explore some tactical questions that get to the heart of the fundamental antagonism between the community and the police force. Some questions we may wish to put forward are:&nbsp;</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>What kinds of crime do you perceive most in the community?&nbsp;</li>



<li>If the current number of police is not enough to prevent crime, how would increasing their numbers address the problem?</li>



<li>How could the community itself perform the task of protecting local residents?</li>
</ul>



<p>We should also bring forth the current statistics that show an already outsized police force to cast doubt on the idea that more police would reduce crime.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<p>Occasionally, the people we were interviewing would ask us about our ideas for solutions to these contradictions. We generally responded with a critique of state institutions and the fact that they do not help the people. We highlighted the need for grassroots organizing that did not simply participate in the election cycle. Most responded positively to these ideas, and were happy to share their contact info to keep up with our progress. On this note, we could have done a better job at seeking the community’s participation in the social investigation itself. A common goal of social investigation is to recruit those you are interviewing &#8211; the people who actually live there &#8211; into the project itself.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Individualism&nbsp;</strong></h2>



<p>Individualism was a very common outlook among the people we spoke to. In regards to problems in the city, one person phrased it as “caring but not caring.” We have heard nearly verbatim reports from other social investigations in the past. Previously, someone phrased it as, “It’s like I give a fuck but at the same time I don’t.” This tells us that community members perceive the contradictions around them, but do not believe there is any movement currently capable of addressing them. The result is a recognition of existing oppression, and perhaps feeling bad about it, but not yet taking the crucial step of organizing the community.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Mutual Aid Groups</strong></h2>



<p>We encountered one mutual aid/ charity group, Food4Lives, conducting a free lunch program in Barnard Park. The organizers were from a different area, considering the large amount of cars they brought. They serve meals once a week, drawing crowds of over 50 people each time we see them. We did not interact with the group, mainly because all of the members were busy serving meals to the large crowd. We were also somewhat skeptical of what information the organizers could provide on the local community. In hindsight, this was an error on our part because we should not neglect interacting with organizers who may be from outside the community, especially considering <em>we</em> are also not residents of the Park Street neighborhood. We did speak to some community members who were waiting in line for food, who reported that the group has been serving meals consistently for several months.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Based on their website, Food4Lives does not appear to have a firm ideological standpoint besides feeding the homeless through regular meal services. Their vision is “a community where homelessness is addressed with compassion, empowering every individual to rebuild their lives.” We will make sure to interact with the group the next time we see them in person. In the meantime, our investigators should brainstorm ways in which we can constructively struggle alongside existing charity groups such as Food4Lives.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>From Investigation, to Agitation, to Organization</strong></h2>



<p>Social investigation is an important first step to community organizing, but we cannot investigate forever. Once enough information has been gathered and the key contradictions are identified, the organizers should collectively synthesize this information before returning to the community with the “new” information. To “synthesize” means to combine a number of things into a coherent whole. By synthesizing contradictions, we are taking the reported issues and connecting them to the capitalist system as whole. Therefore, when we return to the community with this synthesized information, it is not “new,” but it is being presented in a different form.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<p>The agitation stage can take the form of speaking with people, posting flyers, or other creative means of propaganda. Whereas social investigation is primarily about <strong>listening</strong> to the concerns of community members, agitation requires a more <strong>mutual conversation</strong>. Social investigation is listen, listen, listen, while agitation is listen, respond, listen, respond. It is a conversation in which we expose the contradictions in their barest form, while gauging the community member’s own opinions and political consciousness.&nbsp;</p>



<p>For example, we know that homelessness is a fundamental law of capitalist development, that this sub-proletariat serves as a reserve labor pool for the capitalist, and that the Amerikan welfare system tries to paper over this contradiction with a small percentage of imperialist superprofits. In the social investigation phase, we hear all varieties of opinion on the homelessness question. We hear both sympathy and chauvinism from property owners. In the agitation phase, we may push back on chauvinist ideas from the petit-bourgeois, in order to investigate which, if any, progressive causes can be used to organize small property owners. For example, a renter may say something along the lines of, “I feel bad for the homeless and I know pushing them out won’t solve the problem, but I hate it when they trespass on my property.” A statement like this shows at least some level of consciousness on the homeless question, but there is still a clear element of respect for private property and a short term interest in labor discipline against the homeless. This sentiment is also another example of individualism; empathy for the homeless person is subverted because they are being personally impacted in a negative way. While we may not fully challenge these ideas on a social investigation, we should challenge them when we return to the community for agitation.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Among those already displaying a revolutionary, or at least anti-state, consciousness, we can take the conversations much further, and even begin to approach the person’s thoughts on organization.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We should expect the politically advanced individual to hold unacknowledged contradictions in their ideology. For example, a person may agree with the need to organize the community, and to hold mass meetings outside the electoral framework. In this same conversation, the same community member might express the long term goal of setting up a non-profit organization, applying for grant money, and other forms of integration with the state. We would agree with the need for grassroots organizing and mass meetings, but would almost certainly disagree with the notion of embedding ourselves in the non-profit complex. Those grants generally come with strings attached. The agitation stage is the correct time to pose these problems to the community member, to start a conversation around correct organizing models.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The agitation phase should be used as a precursor to more grounded and collective forms of organization. We have identified the mass meeting as one possible method having significant potential in many oppressed localities. The mass meeting is not a new concept, having been utilized by Indigenous nations for centuries, as well as among the “heretics” in Medieval Europe. In more recent times, both the American Indian Movement (AIM) and the Black Panther Party (BPP) took their original forms through a series of mass meetings. For more information on the Mass Meeting, read <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-11-28-the-mass-meeting/">The Mass Meeting</a> by the Red Clarion.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Investigation Never Truly Ends</strong></h2>



<p>While we emphasize the need to create organizing models that extend beyond the initial investigatory phase, there is also the need to continuously analyze the situation through a dialectical lens. The contradictions are fluid; they may be exacerbated or reduced by a number of factors, especially the state, which may or may not make concessions depending on the situation. To say that the investigation never truly ends means to affirm our role as dialecticians, always looking to criticize and improve our past analyses.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League encourages all its member organizations to conduct propaganda among the masses with revolutionary potential. If you or your organization are interested in beginning or refining a social investigation, do not hesitate to reach out.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Dare to Struggle, Dare to Win!</p>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="cc7d17a5-1f74-48b6-b635-cd7072261d41">A garrison refers to a fortified location from which military campaigns are planned and enacted against outside groups.<br> <a href="#cc7d17a5-1f74-48b6-b635-cd7072261d41-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>A Structureless Movement</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-07-01-a-structureless-movement/</link>
					<comments>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2026-07-01-a-structureless-movement/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The Communist League]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2026 20:32:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[On-the-Ground Reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacific Northwest]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[a15 action]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economic blockade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gaza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Israel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kwame Ture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mobilization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Palestine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[puget sound]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Report]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SeaTac airport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[structureless]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[zionist entity]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4380</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Lessons from the A15 Action]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><em>Statement from the editors: We urge everyone reading this report to treat these lessons with the highest priority. The genocide against Palestine continues, the war against Venezuela escalates, and we must learn the lessons of our failures of both and rid the anti-imperialist movement of the tyranny of structurelessness once and for all.</em></p>



<p>On April 15, 2024, a series of coordinated but autonomous actions were conducted across the globe with the goal of disrupting the genocidal war machine propping up the zionist entity’s genocide in Gaza. The tactic of choice was economic blockade. Initially concentrated within the so-called United States, organizers hoped to have enough of an economic impact to force the imperial superpower to rescind its unconditional support of its colonial outpost. As word spread between organizers and activists internationally, the scope expanded to include a number of actions in other imperialist and settler countries. While the hope of forcing imperial powers to stop their support for genocide ultimately failed to materialize, there are a number of lessons to be drawn from this moment of decisive and principled escalation. We hope to highlight these lessons so that future actions may build upon them.</p>



<p>At the core of A15 was a dialectical navigation between national and local organizing levels. Organizers understood the necessity of collective action to effect meaningful change, and with this understanding started an ambitious project in the pursuit of a free Palestine. Recognizing the necessity for actions to be tailored to the material conditions of the regions in which they were occurring, organizers established a strategy of regionally-bound autonomous actions to facilitate collective national (then international) action. This resulted in an implicit national-local organizing structure lacking strong centralization, but which ensured action <em>did </em>happen.</p>



<p>It worked like this: national-level organizers spread the word of their intention to facilitate a nation-wide economic blockade. Organizers and activists from all over the so-called U.S. were invited to an initial online “All Cities” meeting where the idea was more thoroughly fleshed out: autonomous actions would be regionally organized against the largest, most influential, local economic target. The target didn’t have to be explicitly tied to the zionist entity and its genocidal pursuits, since the U.S. Empire’s war machine is ultimately powered by the entirety of the imperialist economy. The idea was to <a href="https://youtu.be/_5NCZn9Qrsk?si=CVYj_mffgg9aBZ6y">“stop pulling the levers of the machine,”</a> even if only for a day, in the hopes of frightening the parasitic class facilitating genocidal violence. Actions were coordinated to occur symbolically on April 15th, tax day, in acknowledgment of the role U.S. tax dollars play in carrying out the genocide.</p>



<p>Several cities dropped out during the short period allotted for planning, but when April 15th arrived, dozens of cities around the world (including Melbourne, Dublin, London, and Toronto to name a few) saw blockades temporarily stop the flow of capital, or rallies, marches, and walkouts in solidarity with blockades. Participating groups took a variety of strategic approaches with different types of targets, but physical blockades emerged as a common strategy. Many arrests were made, and at time of writing, some legal battles are still being fought as a result of the A15 actions. For the purposes of this analysis, we will be focusing on national level organizing and the blockade of the SeaTac airport which was organized and executed in the Puget Sound. We invite those familiar with other actions to consider contributing their own regional analysis.</p>



<p>The ambitious scale and scope of A15 was admirable, and in some ways a wild success. Dozens of autonomous blockades were coordinated around the world, the significance of which cannot be overstated given the difficulties and barriers of mobilizing even one large group in one city. The size and spread of the mobilization garnered widespread mass media attention and, despite the undefined parameters, successfully centered economic impact as the primary strategy. At the same time as we celebrate the successes of A15, we feel it necessary to analyze its failures.</p>



<p>Critique is a necessary part of continuously improving our strategic orientation and tactical approach in order to learn and adapt in the pursuit of liberation. Through an analysis of available evidence, we’ll articulate both the successes and shortcomings of A15. Ultimately A15 proved the will of organizers and activists to escalate in their effort to <em>shut it down</em> for Palestine. Successes were shaped and limited by a number of strategic oversights and shortcomings, such as an extremely limited timeline for planning and execution. A number of social, cultural, and interpersonal barriers also emerged, including communication pitfalls, aversion to conflict and critique, and most prominently, the myriad troubles that emerge from a lack of coherent and mutually agreed upon structure. While A15 demonstrated the willpower and capacity of people to come together for wide-spread and coordinated collective action to stop a genocide, it also demonstrated prominent barriers the imperial core’s “Left” must directly address and overcome in order to effectively strike the beast from within its own belly.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Communication is Key</h1>



<p>The A15 actions can claim a number of successes. At the national and international levels, organizers tapped existing connections to establish a broader communication network and coordinate collective action. Given the scale and number of actions, A15 quickly gained widespread media attention, presenting organizers an opportunity to make their actions double as propaganda. The communication network allowed organizers to coordinate support, resources, and messaging to the public. Here in the Puget Sound, local successes were due to existing affinity groups and informal activist communities. Their existing connections with one another and experience in mobilizing for previous movements supported quick mobilization. Ultimately, the execution of a collective action on such a scale proved its efficacy in terms of uniting a movement and proves the capacity for future actions.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">An International Solidarity Network</h2>



<p>One of the key factors in A15’s success at the national and international level was the establishment of an international communication network to coordinate collective action. National organizers had stated an intention to maintain the A15 network for the purposes of facilitating similar direct actions in the future. While this intention hasn’t manifested in the wake of the action, the network’s use leading up to and during the action contributed to the overall success of A15. Additionally, because of how widespread the A15 Actions were, organizers were able to garner substantial mass media attention, if only for a short time. The principal success of the A15 Actions at this level, however, was in demonstrating the strength of collective action and international solidarity, highlighting the strategic necessity of building these kinds of connections and strengthening our ability to do so.</p>



<p>Organizers were able to effectively collaborate and coordinate on a global scale because of the existing connections that organizers and activists built during previous mass movements, such as the George Floyd Uprisings. Information about the initial “All Cities” meeting was disseminated to different organizations and individuals in cities across the country, and eventually around the world. At this initial meeting individuals from the same city were able to connect with one another to build regional organizing teams which would then take the lead on planning an economic blockade tailored to their region’s material conditions. Communication networks that balance centralized coordination with regional autonomy enable organizers to collaborate and act collectively across regional boundaries, but the finer details must be determined at a local level to ensure the efficacy and relevancy of the action and its impact on the locale.</p>



<p>Routine national meetings ensured organizers across the world clearly understood the goals of A15 and dispersed ideas for what actions might look like, as well as a generalized understanding of the legal needs of direct actions, such as legal observers, bail funds, and other legal support. These meetings served to fortify the collective element of the action. During meetings some groups were connected to necessary legal resources (or given information on how to do so), and those with less organizing experience were able to connect with more experienced peers to facilitate knowledge and resource sharing. The A15 network was always intended to be a hub of support and solidarity and this was most evident in the early days of organizing.</p>



<p>At the time of this writing, the surviving A15 network exists in the form of an “All Cities” group chat. Members share updates about ongoing campaigns related to Palestine (such as one group’s project to bring potable water into Gaza) along with ways to support those campaigns and requests to connect with organizers in different cities or nations. For quite a while the chat appeared dead, but it came back to life on the night the Freedom Flotilla seeking to bring aid into Gaza was targeted by a zionist drone strike (the first of multiple such attacks) with detailed emergency calls to action being shared. Similar calls have since been shared. At one point, there seemed to be an effort to coordinate another mass economic blockade which failed to take off with the same gusto as the original A15 plan, with only a few responding to the initial proposal and discussion dying off rather quickly. To our knowledge, no action manifested from this, though the particulars of why this might have been remain unclear.</p>



<p>Just as important as internal organizing communications are external communications. Direct actions such as these pose a powerful opportunity to communicate to the world at large about our causes. Organizers should be adequately prepared to utilize captured media attention to this end, with materials designed to educate and agitate, not simply to spread awareness. It is therefore important to think about highly visible actions in terms of propaganda. As communists, our goal is to lead the masses in a revolution; such leadership requires trust that our actions are for their betterment. This is not to say that we should obsess over the optics of our actions, especially characterized by bourgeois media. Rather, consideration should be given to reaching the masses through an antagonistic media apparatus. Messaging should make our intentions clear in order to support raising bystander consciousness, cultivating understanding, and instilling revolutionary optimism. Creating a plan to interface with the public through media is critical to maintaining a level of trust with an organization and swaying other workers.</p>



<p>As a result of this national and international collaboration and solidarity, groups acting autonomously across the world executed dozens of direct actions despite short notice. This international coordination for Palestinian liberation was a potent indicator of what is possible through intentional, focused collaboration and unwavering solidarity. This was by and large only possible as a result of a communication network linking organizers together. Solidarity is our strength; we can’t build a new and just world alone.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The Strength of People Power</h2>



<p>In the Puget Sound, major successes revolved around tapping established communities to quickly and effectively mobilize a significant number of participants. On very short notice, organizers were able to pull together an airport blockade that shut down traffic into the airport for around five hours with no injuries and no confirmed security leaks.</p>



<p>For this action, organizers cultivated maps of the target area to survey and select an ideal choke point. Later, reconnaissance was conducted to establish a more thorough understanding of the area, identify staging locations, and plan for action execution. Organizers tapped pre-existing affinity groups and reached out to some additional Palestine-focused organizations to rally forty-six people to participate.</p>



<p>Accounts of the action indicate that a car may have been used to create an initial stoppage in traffic, with organizers feigning that the car had stalled to create cover for deployment of the blockade. Protesters “locked in” at the site using the sleeping dragon tactic: they chained themselves together with their arms threaded through PVC pipes to ensure responding police couldn’t simply cut the chains. This lengthened the duration of the blockade and increased the resources required to remove the protesters from the site.</p>



<p>Operational security practices were implemented at a heightened level, with a keen awareness of the risk of leaks and potential impacts thereof. Encrypted Signal chats with disappearing messages were used for some communication early on, and a pivot was made to all in-person communication due to concerns about the spy-ware nature of much of modern communications technology.</p>



<p>The successes of the SeaTac airport A15 blockade were largely due to the numbers available to organizers. Not all actions will have as many organizers or participants available, nor do all actions require such numbers. The key take-away here is that actions must be scaled to the real capacity of the moment. This fact also works in tandem with the level of centralized organization required for particular actions. How many people do we need to be successful in a particular time frame? How centralized does the planning need to be to achieve its goals? What level of operational security is required to protect organizers and participants? Setting achievable goals allows for sustainable and consistent work and victories. As Mao teaches us in <em>On Guerrilla Warfare</em>, we must only engage in battles in which we are guaranteed victory.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Informal Structures and Movement Security</h1>



<p>There were many lessons learned not only from the successes of A15 actions, but also from some critical failures in the planning phases that luckily did not result in worst-case scenarios. Excruciatingly short timelines bred a number of issues at the national level, from poorly considered media strategy to inability to fulfill promises and achieve unspecific, difficult to measure goals. On the local level in the Puget Sound, a complete lack of structure facilitated interpersonal breakdowns which posed a number tactical and strategic barriers. In consideration of these oversights and critical failures, there were many areas for improvement we can learn from. The most powerful lessons learned center on the necessity of giving ourselves time to develop effective strategies, be intentional in choosing targets and tactics, and more.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Communication is a Practice</h2>



<p>At the national and international level, many identified shortcomings stemmed from the short timeline for planning and executing a national, then international, economic blockade. There was a little less than two months&#8217; notice that there would be an “All Cities” meeting outlining the idea and intention behind a forthcoming national economic blockade against the United States — <em>The</em> Empire. Paired with the time needed to plan and host these initial meetings, this left organizers at the international, national, and local level with about a month and a half to identify targets, gather intel, set goals, plan, and execute.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">On Urgency</h2>



<p>The short time allotted for organizing these actions undermined the potential of a wide-spread and well-coordinated economic blockade in a number of ways. There is an undeniable urgency when people are being murdered en masse, but the way that urgency was treated in this case reflects a common tendency of organizers within the imperial core to treat the fight for liberation as a sprint rather than the marathon it is. Urgency requires not just timely action, but effective action. The minimal time allotted to plan and execute these actions had multiple impacts. Limited time to recruit participants meant many actions were quite small and therefore limited in what they were able to do. The pressure to pull together actions quickly meant that some organizers weren’t able to pull any action together at all, resulting in a number of cities dropping out altogether when they realized the severity of this limitation. Limited time to do recon and establish contingency plans also meant that riskier targets with larger potential impacts were off-limits for many. Finally, there were a number of actions which were sloppy and ineffective, not because the organizers themselves were sloppy or ineffective, but simply because they didn’t have the time to coordinate something better. The key takeaway from this is that we must be honest about and take seriously the time needed to effectively set our goals, plan for them, and accomplish them. Failure to do this undermines our efforts and betrays the people we are fighting for.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">On Logistics</h2>



<p>National organizers had offered in All Cities meetings to provide local organizers with support in accessing or connecting with resources including bail funds and legal support. Although never explicitly mentioned, offers of mentorship were implied. While some areas were able to receive support and guidance from the national level organizers, others in need of similar support were left with little or none. Many actions were able to coordinate their own support with the help of experienced organizers on their teams, but for others, the inability to access rigorous legal support was a deterrent to planning higher risk actions with more potential for greater impact. While the autonomous method of organizing was successful overall in this instance, more time and resources could have improved centralized organization and increased support and guidance from national level organizers. This would have supported better developed and more effective actions.</p>



<p>Furthermore, the economic impact of the blockades was much smaller than organizers had intended, and as a result, these actions were not successful in applying economic pressure great enough to threaten the Butchers of Gaza or their enablers. The idea of not limiting targets only to businesses directly participating in the slaughter of Gaza was simple, straight forward, and well intentioned. However, without greater numbers (both of actions and of participants) this spread the movement thin and diluted the message being sent. More time to plan and coordinate between cities would have enabled more robust, targeted actions, and as such, would have produced a greater economic impact. Consider the effect of multiple cities coming together to target their state’s largest weapons manufacturer rather than staying focused on unrelated industries in their own cities, for example.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">On Propaganda</h2>



<p>A banner reading “Our Taxes Are Funding Genocide” was displayed alongside Palestinian flags at the SeaTac airport blockade, highlighting the significance of tax day for the action and reminding onlookers of the way in which the United States government makes its citizens complicit. There was little planning or strategy for communicating to the media or the masses beyond this, however. Unfortunately, the opportunity to also highlight the ways in which the imperial core’s <em>whole </em>economy supports genocidal colonial and imperial violence, the intricacies of which aren’t easily recognizable or intuitively understood by the majority, was missed. In cases where targets aren’t explicitly related to the genocide in the same way a target like Boeing or Microsoft might be, it’s important to consider how to communicate these complex economic relationships in a way that is concise and accessible to your average working person.</p>



<p>Though there was mass media attention to the A15 actions, it was short lived and confused. Reporters identified that these blockades were coordinated and therefore connected, but at the outset not all reporting outlets seemed to understand that these were actions for a free Palestine (though eventually this was reported more confidently). This confusion spread to non-mainstream commentators as well, including supporters of a free Palestine, whose confusion or misunderstanding of the actions at times led to reporting and analysis that was frustrated and failed to recognize successes. Many actions lacked banners, signs, or other means of clearly communicating the causes and intended effects of the actions, leading to confusion rather than clarification. Ultimately these actions largely failed to utilize the opportunity for effective propaganda.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">On Organization</h2>



<p>This high intensity, unbalanced planning is a consistent habit of the imperial core’s “Left.” This strategy of reacting rather than acting leads to intense burnout among organizers and difficulties sustaining long-term activity. Paired with rumors of conflict and infighting among the national level organizers, it’s unsurprising that the communications network has declined to the degree it has. This all gestures to the problem of structurelessness that followed A15 from the beginning: with no clear roles, guidelines or expectations on conduct, and no system for accountability, the A15 movement inevitably became a one-off moment with minimal continuing impact or legacy.</p>



<p>Though the international network that was meant to be established through the course of this action technically still exists, its current form is a far cry from what organizers originally set out to build: a space for continued national and international collaboration for increasing escalation in the pursuit of a free Palestine. Some of this collapse reflects a general need in leftist spaces in Occupied North America to build conflict resolution skills, increase distress tolerance, and implement effective methods for addressing harm. It also demonstrates the importance of understanding and identifying roles, and formulating a clearly understood and articulated structure to support adherence to expectations around conduct, facilitate conflict resolution, and effectively make and execute plans. Unfortunately, these issues of interpersonal and structural development have been repeatedly observed as serious barriers to building or implementing successful strategy, let alone building a successful revolutionary movement in the so-called United States.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">On Structure</h2>



<p>The issue of structurelessness appeared at the national level as rumors of conflict and infighting, but was well and truly on display at the local level. Without a clearly defined structure for organizers and action participants to operate within, one member was able to flood the Puget Sound organizing committee with their previously existing Affinity Group (AG). This ultimately led to the abandonment of all democratic processes and the <em>de facto</em> establishment of an in- and an out-group. The seizure of power by this AG led to a litany of safety and security concerns for organizers, participants, and the general public, ultimately resulting in an insignificant economic impact despite being publicly celebrated as a resounding success. Many of the issues discussed here are a result not necessarily of bad strategy, but of structurelessness. In essence, the failings of the Puget Sound A15 action is a case study validating <a href="https://www.jofreeman.com/joreen/tyranny.htm">Freeman&#8217;s thesis: the absence of a formal democratic structure only invites an informal reactionary one.</a></p>



<p>Once the original planning committee was flooded by the AG and a de facto leader emerged, an implicit social hierarchy quickly followed. While there was no intentionally defined structure, that does not mean an absence of structure. Rather, what formed in the absence of openly discussed and agreed upon structure was an unspoken but recognizable in- and out-group dynamic with deference to the implicit leader, who was then able to assume control over planning. This resulted in the discarding of the democratic process in order to focus on the preferred target of the unspoken leader, as well as select participants enjoying the privilege of having their ideas, concerns, and suggestions regarded seriously. The original lack of structural development appears to have arisen out of organizer naivety, and many of these original organizers withdrew from the project or were pushed out by the toxic dynamics that emerged in place of well-considered structure.</p>



<p>Citing security concerns, the group pivoted to in-person communications only, including daily meetings and sometimes multiple daily meetings with no plan (or apparent intention) to communicate with participants unable to attend. As a result, a culture of exclusion emerged. Working individuals, individuals with disabilities, and individuals with care-taking duties were effectively barred from participation. This strongly favored members of the aforementioned in-group, with some members of the out-group not being alerted to in-person meetings due to text communications being almost entirely abandoned. As such, many individuals who were not members of the in-group were pushed out of planning altogether. In essence, heightened security culture practices became an implicit enforcement of in-group/out-group dynamics and functioned to assure in-group dominance in the organizing process. Poor communication also resulted in numerous people appearing to be on completely different pages about how to handle the issue of independent press on the scene, leading to questions of what else people weren’t on the same page about. When participants voiced concerns about inaccessibility and exclusivity, they were roundly ignored, and no effort was made to find a resolution, increase accommodation, or improve communication. There was no follow-up with the individuals leveraging these critiques after they left the group.</p>



<p>Structurelessness also resulted in inadequate responses to safety concerns. One stark example of this was the handling of concerns about the potential for <a href="https://www.capradio.org/news/npr/story?storyid=880963592">vehicular violence</a>. When a member of the out-group raised this safety concern, it was brushed off as a matter of privilege. Later, a member of the in-group raised the same concern and was praised for doing so (though it is not clear that this concern was addressed in any practical way). Not only did such incidents reaffirm the in-group/out-group dynamic, it highlighted a lack of regard for participant safety or sustainability in the movement for Palestinian liberation overall. Beyond the tactical value of striving for safety, this example also highlights the fundamental strategic oversight of valuing high-risk adventurism over actions designed with safety and efficacy in mind: quickly burning through the risk tolerance of participants runs the risk of ultimately reducing our own numbers in the name of a spectacle, fundamentally weakening our position in future actions.</p>



<p>Many of these shortcomings would have been avoided with explicit communications about roles, expectations, decision making processes, and issues of accountability. Explicit communication would have supported more intentional collaboration, more effective adaptation in the face of critique, and could have avoided pushing people out, increasing the number of on-the-ground participants.</p>



<p>As previously noted, a greater allotment of planning time would have likely yielded a more robustly designed action capable of achieving greater success — this too was directly impacted by structurelessness. Already working on a tight timeline, a democratically selected target was rejected during an in-person meeting where only a fraction of participants were present. The time and effort spent on the original target had to be scrapped and restarted for the new target, leaving organizers with just weeks to plan.</p>



<p>Rallying forty-six people to join an action like this is a feat on its own, but the action would have been even larger with more time to recruit. More time would have allowed organizers to connect with local orgs and build better working relationships. With more time organizers could have also expanded their network rather than solely relying on existing affinity groups, increasing access to support, resources, and recruitment. There would have been more time to establish contingency plans in case something went wrong, and more time to work on additional materials to support the barricade or create clear and effective messaging.</p>



<p><a href="https://archive.is/qpWZK#selection-2845.73-2845.255">It’s also worth noting that the Seattle Police Department developed an Apparatus Removal Team specifically to deal with sleeping dragons, making them uniquely capable of dealing with this tactic quickly and efficiently.</a> This highlights the necessity of knowing our enemy. If this particular method must be employed in the Seattle area, utilizing a more effective variation is preferable. Styles of sleeping dragon which utilize barrels filled with cement through which the PVC pipes and chains are threaded, creating additional barriers to removal, have been used elsewhere and could serve as inspiration for out-maneuvering the Apparatus Removal Team. Researching SPD capabilities, getting materials, building these more robust sleeping dragons, and establishing and practicing methods for transporting and deploying them quickly and efficiently would have been viable with more planning time. This could have greatly increased the amount of time required for responding police to remove the protesters, increasing overall economic impact. Imagine if there had been time to plan for deployment of such a tactic with sixty, seventy, or even eighty participants.</p>



<p>The ultimate financial impact of the action was estimated to be in the low hundreds of thousand of dollars. To us working people this is a lot of money, but for the corporate ghouls being targeted it is barely even pocket change. It is significantly less than what was hoped for, yet it was celebrated as a resounding success, echoing concerns such as the false victory claimed at the earlier Block the Boat action. These concerns indicate two main areas for growth: 1) the ways in which goals are established, and 2) the ways in which we evaluate success.</p>



<p>Too often we’ve seen actions designed without clearly articulated goals in mind, or alternatively, with unrealistic goals. Setting clear and concise goals not only supports organizers in designing and executing an effective action, it provides a metric against which success can be measured. In the case of the Puget Sound A15 action, the goal was simply to “have a financial impact.” The fact that as little as a $100k impact could be called a success highlights how vague the goal actually is; despite discussion of the financial impact organizers hoped to achieve, specific numbers were never mentioned. This was a significant strategic weakness in the action design and planning. Without a specific and measurable goal, it wasn’t possible for organizers to calculate how long a blockade would have needed to be held. As a result, organizers did not design the blockade according to any specific length of time intended to meet a realistic goal. Furthermore, organizers must have a truly honest assessment of their successes and failures — victories should not be inflated and failures should not be minimized. To do so would be avoiding criticism and self-criticism, which is an integral part of successful revolutionary organizing. Refusing to engage in this process of (self) criticism, we lose the ability to facilitate learning, growth, and greater future adaptability and success. If we are to be serious about the cause of liberation for Palestine and all peoples, we must be serious about how we engage with critique.</p>



<p>Many of the issues discussed in this section would have been minimized had organizers established even a loose sense of structure, with identified roles and responsibility, decision-making processes, and systems for accountability. This is largely an issue of naivete on the parts of different organizers, but the constraints of an extraordinarily short timeline certainly didn’t help. Organizations require structure in order to effectively achieve their goals, and democratic processes must be core to the pursuit of equitable and just interpersonal dynamics within an organizing group. Organizers must maintain clear and effective communication to ensure that people understand what is expected of them and what they should expect from the organization. Organizers must also ensure that no one gets left behind. Security culture should be practiced in dialectical balance with consideration to accessibility needs of the people who make up the masses, most especially those with jobs, disabilities, caretaking duties, etc. Barring this, an action will never become a movement, and will instead become a quickly forgotten historical blip.</p>



<p>It is vital to note that all of these issues aren’t only a barrier to creating a successful action or movement, they are a barrier to developing effective strategy at all. Without an effective strategic outlook or orientation, getting something as ambitious as A15 off the ground <em>and </em>meaningfully achieving goals is next to impossible — as we have unfortunately seen in the aftermath of the day of action.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Building Movement Resiliency</h1>



<p>The metrics for success and failure regarding the day of action were ill defined, but ultimately we understand that the broader goal was to mobilize in support of a free Palestine; in that regard, the A15 actions succeeded. The failures and shortcomings of the A15 movement lie not in the mobilization, but rather in the organization. Throughout much of her work, Jane McAlevey details the distinction between the two (see <em>No Shortcuts</em>), but to put it succinctly, <a href="https://youtu.be/fdHaFxsP5Bc?si=Y3pOqiQlmJB2vDNY">Kwame Ture teaches us that “mobilization [is] temporary. Organization is permanent and eternal.”</a> A15 was able to <em>mobilize</em>, but it was not able to <em>organize</em>. Without a clearly defined and democratic structure — both of which are equally essential to the health, longevity, and power of an organization — we are doomed to repeat the same mistakes <em>ad infinitum</em>.</p>



<p>The reason we see so much turnover and burn out among our organizers is not from an inability to mobilize, but a critical failure in establishing and maintaining organization. This is why we continue to see these outbursts of activism (e.g., Battle of Seattle, Occupy Wallstreet, George Floyd Uprisings, etc.), but not a sustained movement that will lead to revolutionary change. To remedy this, we must learn these important lessons and move forward to build stronger organizations that are capable of winning while withstanding repression.</p>



<p>In light of the lessons learned from this study, both in terms of successes and failures, we propose the development of regionally-bound organizations to facilitate the development of militant cadres capable of rapidly and effectively responding to <em>and</em> leading mass movements. While organizers in this case were able to get the word out to various cities, there have been countless other such attempts which have either fallen far short of their goals or failed entirely. The success of such future endeavors cannot be left to chance. These new organizations — free from the capitulationist, revisionist, and dogmatic tendencies of our movement’s leading organizations — could facilitate such communications, disseminating empire-wide calls to action in a more secure way than posting to social media, and structuring a response in collaboration with local coalitions and other ideologically- or issue-focused organizations. Beyond simply acting as a means to mobilize, putting time and effort into such development will lead our movements toward permanent organizational structures that can be adapted to the needs of the moment, helping to avoid the pitfalls of structurelessness observed in this study. These organizations will need to develop themselves based on their local conditions: organizational needs, barriers, available resources, class composition, geographic context, as well as a continually updated understanding of friends and enemies in the area. Such development will improve our overall strategic position, facilitate ease of collaboration within and across regional boundaries, and bring us closer to the permanent revolutionary organization we need.</p>



<p>It is evident, now more than ever, that we need our Party — the Communist Party that will lead our revolution and the liberation of this continent from colonial occupation and the world from imperialism. But as we are now still disjointed, uncoordinated, and disorganized, we <em>must </em>build the structures necessary to allow for its formation. This is possible only through developing our local means and capabilities, thus elevating class consciousness and proving we are deserving of leadership. Furthermore, principled organizations must coalesce into Intermediate organizations — an organization of organizations. This is the embryo of our new, revolutionary party. But what <em>is</em> the Party, what does it do, and what does it look like?&nbsp;</p>



<p>The Party is the organized, conscious, and revolutionary vanguard of the working class — an essential instrument for the proletariat to seize and maintain power. Unlike our movement’s current leading organizations, who are unfit for revolutionary struggle, our new Party — a Leninist Party — will emerge as a militant, disciplined force prepared for revolutionary conditions. It is the most advanced organization of the working class, composed of its most devoted and politically conscious members. The Party leads, educates, and unites the working masses, serving as their leaders in the class struggle. It embodies revolutionary theory and action, guiding the proletariat beyond trade-unionism and reformism toward the overthrow of imperialism and the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat.</p>



<p>The Party is a tightly structured, disciplined organization with clearly defined and understood roles, centralized leadership, and structure that efficiently supports party work, mobilization, and both systemic and interpersonal conflict resolution. An ability to withstand internal struggle toward a unity of will is vital, with discipline toward minority compromise with majority will in the pursuit of much needed revolution. To support this, time and effort must be directed toward building robust, resilient communication networks, networks structured in consideration of striking balance between centralized coordination and regionally-bound material resources, needs, and autonomy. It is not a loose collection of sympathizers but a coordinated system of organizations bound by the principles of democratic centralism, adapting to shifting material conditions, and effectively coordinating collective action across regional boundaries. The Party functions as the highest form of class organization, uniting and leading all other proletarian institutions — trade unions, cooperatives, mutual aid networks, and more — under a single revolutionary direction. The work of the Party entails guiding the proletariat to power, consolidating socialist rule, and maintaining discipline by filtering out opportunist and reformist elements and investing the political education and development of its members and their associated communities. In short, the Party is both the mind and the will of the proletarian revolution: the organized force through which the working class acts as one to destroy the old order and build socialism.</p>



<p>We are not utopians, we are scientific socialists. Every action we take serves to better inform our practice. All self-conscious struggle brings us closer to fulfilling our historic task in overthrowing the imperialists. To end the tyranny of capital, we must first end the tyranny of structurelessness.</p>
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		<title>Triumph for the Zionist Left</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-12-17-triumph-for-the-zionist-left/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cde. Winter]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:18:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Zohran Mamdani]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4353</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The Democratic Socialists of America is far from a dysfunctional organization. It is a well-oiled machine of settler-colonial annexation.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>Zohran Mamdani&#8217;s victory in the November 2025 &#8220;New York City&#8221; (occupied Lenapehoking) mayoral election is a landmark moment in the ongoing struggle for decolonization, communism, and liberation within the borders of the US empire. This “victory for socialism&#8221; contains all-important lessons and strategic insights that cannot be ignored by individuals and organizations serious about winning the war imposed on us by colonialism and imperialism.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The Pied Piper is arguably more dangerous than the hunter, and neither should be discounted.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Background</h1>



<p>Mamdani&#8217;s campaign started with a surge of popularity riding on radical anti-zionist talking points. A long-time &#8220;pro-Palestine&#8221; activist, supporter of BDS, and critic of zionist settler violence in Palestine, Mamdani has been a member of the New York City Democratic Socialists of America since 2017, and the New York State Assembly since 2020. Using his elected position to amplify his particular brand of &#8220;radical&#8221; politics, Mamdani&#8217;s public visibility quickly ramped up following his condemnations of the genocidal zionist reprisals following the October 7, 2023 Al-Aqsa Flood uprising. By repeatedly stirring controversy within settler power structures and zionist media, Mamdani has spent the last two years building a popular image of a radical &#8220;socialist&#8221; Muslim within a key hotbed of settler political struggle, carefully ramping up the controversy to keep himself in the media spotlight by spouting radical rhetoric such as &#8220;globalize the intifada&#8221; and &#8220;abolish the police.&#8221; In October 2024, he announced his candidacy for the 2025 Mayoral race, winning the Democratic Party primary in June 2025.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Surprising no-one paying attention, Mamdani began walking back his phony radicalism as soon as his candidacy was assured, currying alliances with <a href="https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/30/politics/zohran-mamdani-police-nypd-defund">key members of the NYC police force</a>, <a href="https://demstate.com/article/zohran-mamdani-plans-to-include-zionists-in-his-administration">choosing open zionists for his staff</a>,<sup data-fn="aa3730a9-dc32-4788-9a22-3154aabcc1c7" class="fn"><a href="#aa3730a9-dc32-4788-9a22-3154aabcc1c7" id="aa3730a9-dc32-4788-9a22-3154aabcc1c7-link">1</a></sup> <a href="https://www.middleeasteye.net/trending/do-you-think-israel-has-right-exist-nyc-mayoral-debate-question-sparks-backlash-over">announcing his support for the zionist occupation&#8217;s &#8220;right to exist,&#8221;</a> and declaring his intent to <a href="https://vinnews.com/2025/06/26/mamdani-pledges-major-increase-in-hate-crime-funding-amid-jewish-community-concerns/">greatly expand the police budget for prosecuting anti-zionist activities</a>. </p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Principles of Settler Opportunism</h1>



<p>The &#8220;socialists&#8221; who run for office are little more than political adventurists and opportunists. A political adventurist here means an individual who sees themselves as a heroic figure setting out to save the masses from their oppression. They believe they can &#8220;make a difference&#8221; by struggling within the system, so long as they retain their “principles.” They set aside the necessity of first constructing a class that is conscious of itself and able to coordinate political action according to a definite plan, and try to instead champion what they individually perceive to be the interests of this class (which does not yet exist!). This necessarily produces an eclectic undisciplined political line, because one individual, or group of individuals (like the many so-called &#8220;communist&#8221; parties) is not capable of producing a correct political line. Only a vanguard party with the backing of the masses, acting in their interests according to their will, can do this. Adventurists either do not know this, or do not care. They believe that by &#8220;showing the way,” the masses can be inspired to spontaneous action in support of their own liberation. They believe that by spurring the masses to all go to the polls, they are at the same time building working class unity, solidarity, consciousness, or whatever. Inevitably, they are ultimately defeated: either they fail to gain any purchase within the system and wash out, or they realize the futility of pushing a &#8220;revolutionary&#8221; line all by their lonesome and turn to opportunism. To this end, political adventurism is materially indistinguishable from opportunism.</p>



<p>Opportunists are in it for whatever they can get. They may agree in principle with a revolutionary line, but in practice they are more than willing to discard inconvenient segments of the masses in the interest of political expediency. Often they can be found eagerly doing this in anticipation of what they believe will win the most &#8220;support&#8221; at the polls. Inevitably, their most radical edges are rounded out and dulled by constant contact with the inertia of bourgeois/settler governance. <strong>In the game of musical chairs that is settler colonial privileges, the most vulnerable people are the first pushed out of the way, and the opportunists are the ones who take up the task of doing the pushing.</strong> Because it may be &#8220;politically inconvenient&#8221; to militantly struggle against the settler colonial occupation and genocide against Palestine, they tell us that these issues must be set aside &#8220;for now,&#8221; to be pursued &#8220;later&#8221; when the movement has built more momentum and mass power. Of course what they fail to mention here is that in doing this they are dividing the masses, weakening the movement by directing mounting class struggle into dead-end reformist avenues down which only a small section of the masses can advance. Their actions lead to the sacrifice of all principles on the altar of “pragmatism.”</p>



<p>Besides Mamdani’s tepid criticism of some of the most depraved zionist acts of violence, the key reforms he promised (and those which have won him such widespread support among the imperial left) are as follows:&nbsp;</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>To freeze rents and build &#8220;affordable&#8221; housing</li>



<li>To crack down on &#8220;bad&#8221; landlords </li>



<li>To establish city-owned grocery stores</li>



<li>To establish free public transit</li>



<li>To raise the city&#8217;s minimum wage to $30 by 2030. (This in particular appears to be why the &#8220;progressive&#8221; settlers are so thrilled.) </li>
</ul>



<p>A full explanation of the flaws in the rent freeze is well beyond this article, but suffice to say that whatever attempt he may or may not make at expanding and stabilizing the private property regime, it won’t put a dent in the empire-wide land speculation that is the real cause of the housing crisis. Cracking down on “bad” landlords is laughable, considering the socialist position is not to hound out malfeasors, but to liquidate entire classes. And rather than feeding people directly, Mamdani would prefer to compete on the market by creating his own NYC brand grocery store!</p>



<p>This minimum wage increase will mostly benefit the service workers in the empire&#8217;s finance capital, the people who keep the gears turning in the nerve center of global imperialism. The claim being made by the settler &#8220;socialists,&#8221; is that this push for higher wages for some&nbsp;of the city&#8217;s workers is building the mass base necessary to push through some &#8220;real&#8221; reforms—just later on, at an unspecified date and time. There&#8217;s no word on how&nbsp;that&#8217;s to be accomplished or what the demands will be, but never mind that, they say, we&#8217;re getting paid. How exactly is socialism advanced by the appointment of a bourgeois politician as the mayor of the bourgeois finance capital of the empire <strong>in the middle of a holocaust being waged against Palestinians?</strong> That this disgusting mockery of human decency is being held up as a beacon of hope for the socialist cause hinges on the idea that wage increases are a victory in themselves, that advancing the conditions of <em>some</em> workers is always an advance for the socialist cause. We contend that this is simply not true. <strong>Let’s ask the real question: wage increases </strong><strong><em>for who</em></strong><strong>?</strong></p>



<p>Simply being employed, however wretched that employment may be, is itself a position of privilege and power in the imperial system. Yes, the bourgeoisie remain the top dogs, but people who &#8220;work for a living&#8221; in the colonial economy are still a privileged group: their class position depends on the continued exploitation of people who can&#8217;t work for a living.&nbsp;</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>There has never been a challenge to the employment problem, and a major reason why is that following along to the plans of the Imperialists keeps wages high and development uneven, securing employment while simultaneously securing unemployment. </p>



<p><a href="https://x.com/probablykaffe/status/1995926767249621187">Example scenario:</a> Capitalist introduces labor saving machines that double productivity. Rather than overproducing, they cut the workforce in half and raise the wages of the leftovers by 50%. Overall, the capitalist just reduced aggregate wages by 25%. The business operates at the same level. They don&#8217;t overproduce and break their market position, the workers who didn&#8217;t get cut have a huge wage increase that puts a contradiction between them and their laid off siblings.<sup data-fn="6c40e54c-c40e-4efa-9d9c-5f74efd8eee3" class="fn"><a href="#6c40e54c-c40e-4efa-9d9c-5f74efd8eee3" id="6c40e54c-c40e-4efa-9d9c-5f74efd8eee3-link">2</a></sup></p>



<p>– @probablykaffe</p>
</blockquote>



<p>Many people are excluded from the &#8220;productive&#8221; sphere on the basis of nationality, gender, ability, etc. We know that a Black person is much less likely to have access to employment than a white person—in fact, the Black unemployment rate in New York City is <a href="https://edc.nyc/sites/default/files/2025-04/NYC-Economic-Snapshot-April-2025.pdf">more than&nbsp;<em>double</em>&nbsp;that of whites (8% vs 3.5%)</a>. Disabled people are often completely excluded from a livable income, with <a href="https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2025/22-7-percent-of-people-with-a-disability-were-employed-in-2024.htm">less than 25% of people with any disability being employed</a>, and fewer than <a href="https://www.advancedautism.com/post/autism-unemployment-rate">1 in 5 autistic people</a>. According to the <a href="https://ustranssurvey.org/report/jobs-housing/">2022 US transgender survey report</a>, trans people in the US face a whopping 18% unemployment rate, more than four times the empire-wide average, which frankly should be considered a demographic crisis.&nbsp;These are entire populations of people who are excluded from the privilege of accessing employment, and those who do gain access are often limited to part time or sporadic/seasonal work. And all of this is before we even get into the issue of <a href="https://globalinequality.org/unequal-exchange/">the role of US imperialism in inflating worker wages inside the empire at the expense of billions of global south workers</a>.&nbsp;</p>



<p>It can&#8217;t be dismissed how difficult it is to be a low wage worker in New York City. There&#8217;s a very good reason people are clamoring for this reform. But as the grip of capital tightens around your throat, disabled people who have been suffering under brutal austerity conditions for years are dying at atrocious rates under <a href="https://peoplescdc.org/no-mask-bans/">state eugenicist campaigns</a>. The fact that these plans don&#8217;t address the needs of the most oppressed, and in fact perpetuate their oppression in a mystified and more acute form, should be a warning that Mamdani doesn&#8217;t deal in social revolution but rather in reinforcing the capitalist state with a “kinder” face. How does the &#8220;socialism&#8221; of Mamdami do anything to build solidarity between oppressed groups? What is the plan for carrying this movement to a higher stage of struggle? What is being accomplished here, except grabbing more for a select few while the most vulnerable people continue to languish and die in ever-increasing poverty and homelessness? Is the wealth supposed to trickle down from people with jobs to those without? <strong>Everyone needs to eat before you reach out your hand for seconds! If any group is forgotten or sacrificed on the altar of &#8220;progress&#8221; then </strong><strong><em>inequality is reproduced and oppression persists</em></strong><strong>.</strong> What does &#8220;universal emancipation&#8221; mean to you, seriously? If your &#8220;socialist&#8221; candidate isn&#8217;t running on the democratic mandate of the masses of the exploited, and held to account by that democratic mandate, following a definite plan to continually heighten the struggle and broaden the involvement of the masses, then they aren&#8217;t a socialist. Unfortunately, the democratic institutions necessary for this, a vanguard party or socialist state, do not yet exist in this land. Our efforts, therefore, should not be to run candidates accountable to no one, but to <a href="https://unity-struggle-unity.org/unity-prospectus/"><em>build the party</em></a> capable of holding leaders accountable, so that we can finally <em>seize </em>the state. </p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Whose Side Are You On?</strong></h1>



<p>We must be very clear on this point: Palestinian sovereignty is non-negotiable, just as much as all anti-colonialism is. There is no middle ground or compromise with the settler colonial system. Either we destroy it or it destroys us. Any position which leaves room for the continued existence of &#8220;israel&#8221; in any form is a denial of the sovereignty and humanity of Palestinians. In tossing out this issue, by “compromising” with genocide, they draw a line between themselves and the Palestinian people. They separate international humanity into two groups pitted against one-another: &#8220;us,” and &#8220;them.” In the arena of class warfare this division is fatal. When one section of our forces advances while leaving another behind, reactionary forces are afforded room to encircle and defeat both groups, usually by absorbing the opportunists and killing off the rest. Either all the oppressed advance in unison, or we get picked off one-by-one. <strong>Genuine revolutionaries demand that every oppressed group be respected, uplifted, and empowered; this will be done in opposition to the dominant groups, who recognize every gain for the oppressed as a loss for their profit. On the other hand, opportunists are content to allow reactionaries to pick off &#8220;inconvenient&#8221; groups, so long as they personally benefit in the end.</strong></p>



<p>This strategy of divide and conquer, directed from the rear by the bourgeoisie and spearheaded by opportunism, goes back to the earliest days of the anti-capitalist movement. In particular it has come to dominate and define imperial politics over the last century. When the interests of those privileged enough to have jobs are prioritized ahead of those who aren&#8217;t, the material division between the two widens. The privileges of the advantaged group are reinforced at the expense of the disadvantaged group, <em>which produces an incentive to keep it that way</em> in the privileged group. This is how reaction breeds. The issue with homelessness is not “the lack of supply” but <em>the capacity for landlords to evict tenants</em>. Ensuring everybody is housed and safe needs to come ahead of reducing market prices on apartments.<sup data-fn="93d1976b-648e-44c4-871a-87e6b8ee6f3b" class="fn"><a href="#93d1976b-648e-44c4-871a-87e6b8ee6f3b" id="93d1976b-648e-44c4-871a-87e6b8ee6f3b-link">3</a></sup> The speculative value produced by rent extraction is what drives the constant inflation of property prices, not “undersupply.” When the health and safety of disabled people is considered a secondary concern to the &#8220;comfort&#8221; of abled people, and (for example) masking is not enforced, disabled people are excluded from the movement, further weakening it. When trans rights are considered a &#8220;token&#8221; issue and worth ceding ground on in exchange for concessions for &#8220;the majority,” the movement further fragments as trans people are left behind to struggle to survive and to die alone. When Indigenous sovereignty is treated as a secondary concern, or a threat to the property &#8220;rights&#8221; of &#8220;the majority,” the settler-Indigenous divide deepens, and one of the most revolutionary elements of all human society is ejected from the movement. It is this way that, in the name of &#8220;the majority,” the opportunists carefully and meticulously carve up the movement into bite-sized chunks that the reactionaries are only too eager to devour. The bourgeoisie and settler masses will always demand that we sit down and shut up and in exchange they will grant some privileges to those of us who acquiesce while they slaughter those who won&#8217;t or can&#8217;t. Every &#8220;temporary&#8221; retreat from solidarity turns into a strategic defeat for the movement.</p>



<p>In the coming months, Mamdani supporters may pretend to be shocked at his complicity in settler violence and his leadership in maintaining the colonial occupation of Lenapehoking, just as they are now pretending to be critical of his zionism. The signs pointing towards his opportunism were always there for those willing to see. While he did condemn the zionist reprisals on October 8, 2023, he was quick to also condemn the Palestinian resistance within the weeks following, and since then has eagerly participated in spreading zionist propaganda lies about supposed &#8220;war crimes&#8221; committed by the resistance.<sup data-fn="c0215482-dfd1-4350-823a-08b53a36878d" class="fn"><a href="#c0215482-dfd1-4350-823a-08b53a36878d" id="c0215482-dfd1-4350-823a-08b53a36878d-link">4</a></sup> Mamdani has carefully and consistently played both sides, spouting anti-zionist rhetoric out one side of his mouth while materially aligning himself with colonial hegemony with the other. This barefaced opportunism, and its inevitable tragic outcomes, should be wearily familiar by now to those of us with the slightest of principles. It&#8217;s plain as day now, just as it has been for years, that Mamdani is just another lying settler pig—perfectly content to take advantage of public outrage against the Palestinian Holocaust for his colonial ladder-climbing career. </p>



<p>For as much ink that has been spilled and attention monopolized for this man, little mind has been paid to the social processes underlying his ascent to international fame and infamy. Mamdani&#8217;s popularity and controversy could well serve as a case-study in how the left wing of capital uses radical window-dressing to conceal maintenance of the status quo, <a href="https://jacobin.com/2025/10/platner-maine-senate-reddit-media">but we&#8217;ve had enough such case studies to fill a library</a>. What is happening to us on the ground? Whether you&#8217;re cheering and applauding or booing and hissing, <em>you&#8217;re watching the show — </em>so how has the so-called &#8220;revolutionary left&#8221; become so enraptured by what amounts to performance art on a stage inside a colonial garrison? The complete hegemony of the settler empire&#8217;s cultural influence continues to mislead and dull the senses of our aspiring revolutionaries, but not by lying to us to convince us that one settler politician or another is a radical. Even the most ineffectual liberal &#8220;socialist&#8221; will openly admit that they don&#8217;t believe Mamdani will deliver anything resembling a radical break. After all, they&#8217;ve &#8220;learned their lesson&#8221; from former DSA campaign outcomes, such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez&#8217;s vile opportunism. But if they&#8217;ve learned their lesson and &#8220;don&#8217;t expect much&#8221; from Zohran Mamdani, what exactly are they doing? The answer is <em>a parallel to Mamdani&#8217;s career.</em></p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">The Social Technology of Settler Socialism</h1>



<p>The mass base of Democratic Socialism is the lower and middle strata of settler colonists.<sup data-fn="2c181c5f-0da4-44b8-b78c-009210786474" class="fn"><a href="#2c181c5f-0da4-44b8-b78c-009210786474" id="2c181c5f-0da4-44b8-b78c-009210786474-link">5</a></sup> These people are genuinely discontented with the system, but pay attention to their grievances! &#8220;Housing is unaffordable, wages are too low, social safety nets are not robust enough, and  education is too expensive.&#8221; Wealth and capital have become too concentrated in the hands of a minority, &#8220;the 1%,&#8221; and they aren&#8217;t getting what they see as their due share. Are these the grievances of a revolutionary, or of petulant settler youth and failed settler aspirants? Are these demands aiming towards the complete destruction of the colonial system and the restitution of Indigenous land sovereignty, or are these demands aiming at a &#8220;fairer&#8221; redivision of the spoils of colonial conquest and imperialist exploitation? Are the grievances rooted in a desire to end class society or to simply make it more comfortable for those fortunate enough to live within the colonial jurisdiction at which their reforms are aimed?</p>



<p>The DSA professes to be a “socialist” organization, so on the surface it appears to be approaching an alignment with national liberatory, decolonial, and communist struggles. But is this really the case? <em>Remember to always analyze the class position of a given organization by the actions it takes</em>, not by the ideology it professes. Ideology is always a more or less accurate reflection of class alignment, but recall the scientific tenet that the appearance of a thing does not perfectly match its content—therefore we have to look deeper. The reflection can be, and often is, inverted. Zionism purports itself to be a liberatory movement, which is an inverted reflection of reality. Amerikan liberalism purports to be interested in universal democracy, which again is an inverted reflection of reality. So, is DSA really socialist? What are the outcomes of DSA&#8217;s political activity? As of this writing, no militant organizations or movements have emerged from the DSA, and decades of organizing has yielded little but a few “more radical” Democratic politicians in colonial office positions. The standard explanation given by “communists” within the DSA for its lack of revolutionary action is that the masses have yet to be radicalized, and therefore struggle within the DSA is necessary to bring them the consciousness they need to begin to take revolutionary action. In 43 years, however, the DSA has largely remained ideologically stationary.</p>



<p>This “failure” to radicalize the masses is a constant point of debate and analysis. Many individuals and organizations within the communist milieu but outside the DSA contend that the source of this failure is because the organization is ideologically democratic socialist (i.e. not revolutionary in ideological outlook), and therefore a different, “more communist” organization is required to impart the necessary revolutionary outlook in its adherents. But this is putting the cart before the horse! Ideology does not dictate material alignment, <em>material alignment dictates ideology</em>. The DSA is not a stagnant ineffectual organization because of its backwards ideology—instead it has a backwards ideology because this is necessary to fulfill its actual goals. What are its goals? <em>The purpose of a system is what it does</em>, especially a system which has remained more or less stable and self-reproducing for over four decades. So what does the DSA do? It reels in members of oppressed groups (trans, queer, disabled, Black, Indigenous, etc) and disciplines their activities into serving the interests of its colonial middle-class leadership by mixing them into a single “organization” under middle-class leadership. The profession of “socialist” aims is a <em>smokescreen</em> to obscure the actual aims of the organization, which is ultimately little more than colonial, careerist ladder-climbing.</p>



<p>What of the internal criticisms levied at the organization? Many of the members are often very dissatisfied with the outcomes of their political activity, and among the common refrains is the need for more centralized leadership, for the ability to enforce a political line on the politicians they get into office, and for the organization to divest itself from cooperation with zionism. Yet despite a <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dQO_nuhN-DdlpbvrlaGuFwIbUYIGRRb1T0bNdvLNDwU/edit?tab=t.w3ibfjqb4wyr#heading=h.btf7v3bd6y69">resolution passing in August</a><sup data-fn="ac5af470-9325-442c-a831-e7c9ef2d4a96" class="fn"><a href="#ac5af470-9325-442c-a831-e7c9ef2d4a96" id="ac5af470-9325-442c-a831-e7c9ef2d4a96-link">6</a></sup> enabling the expulsion of zionist membership (which was barely successful, succeeding with 56% percent of the vote), the openly zionist Mamdani continues to be backed by the DSA, and the overall strategy of the DSA continues to be to maintain its involvement in the zionist Democratic Party. The reality of the matter is, despite professing anti-zionism for the first time in its long history, the DSA remains a zionist organization, and its new “anti-zionist” mask is the same “anti-zionism” of the broader imperial left—an anti-zionism that affirms the necessity of the occupation to continue. Little more than a barefaced lie.</p>



<p>This is not exactly a new phenomenon. The settler empire has long since perfected the social technology of penetrating organizational and community structures built by, or being built by, the oppressed, with the aim of taking them over from within and submitting them to colonial interests. Where the oppressed see a dire need for unity and solidarity in the face of colonial genocide against our siblings in Palestine, the lower and middle strata of settlers see an upsurge in laboring subjects available to fill the ranks of their latest campaign for redivision of the imperialist spoils. <strong>That, in essence, is what the Democratic Socialists of America is: far from a dysfunctional organization which routinely fails to meet its goals, the DSA is a well-oiled machine of settler-colonial annexation</strong>. In which revolutionary currents among the oppressed are carefully cultivated within a narrowly bounded arena of struggle, both in order to prevent a dangerous rupture of the colonial system, and in order to ultimately benefit the settlers served by the DSA. That this process occasionally settlerizes individuals from oppressed demographics is part of the point—in order for the DSA to function as intended it&#8217;s necessary that the occasional individual from an oppressed demographic attains an internal leadership position or a colonial office position, but this is <em>always</em> predicated on the condition that they closely adhere to the interests of colonial maintenance; they must not engage in illegal activities, such as organizing and arming militant struggle. “Class peace” remains the priority ahead of anything else, even when the lives of tens of thousands of innocent Palestinian men, women, and children hinge on the taking up of armed struggle. To the settler socialists, their deaths are water under the bridge so long as wages are increased enough to broaden the number of people who can access the colonial land exchange.</p>



<p>For revolutionaries, what the success of the DSA and Mamdani&#8217;s campaign represents is a complete capitulation of the “Free Palestine” movement to settler annexationism and zionism. We&#8217;ve failed to differentiate between friends and enemies, failed to take the actions necessary to expel enemies from our organizations and communities, failed to build up the militant organizational capacity necessary to wage armed struggle against zionism, and in doing so failed to defend the lives of our Palestinian siblings in their hour of greatest need <em>for two years ongoing. </em>And yet, Mamdani&#8217;s electoral success is lauded as a victory for the left! Indeed, this is a triumph for the left wing of zionism. With hardly a word to the contrary, we&#8217;ve rolled over and allowed this travesty to unfold for two years, all the while repeating the inane mantra that “any day now” the masses of settler oppressors will “radicalize” and join forces with the oppressed to aid in the overthrow of their colonial system. In doing so, we&#8217;ve demonstrated our own willingness to be complicit in a holocaust so long as this complicity keeps us out of the prison cell and out of the line of fire.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Our Place in History</h1>



<p>When freshly stolen land became scarce and prices rose in the late 1700s, the lower and middle masses of settlers eagerly aligned with the planter bourgeoisie to oppose British rule and expand the colonial system. Indigenous peoples bore the cost of their genocidal brutality.<sup data-fn="ba452a9d-8c3f-4375-8ada-a94e2eb8f68a" class="fn"><a href="#ba452a9d-8c3f-4375-8ada-a94e2eb8f68a" id="ba452a9d-8c3f-4375-8ada-a94e2eb8f68a-link">7</a></sup> Since then this pattern has repeated itself over and over. At each moment of crisis in the colonial system, the dispossessed and poorer settlers will seek out temporary alliances wherever they can find them to bulk up their ranks for coming confrontation with the ruling strata, but always with the sole aim of securing their own slice of colonial land and their own share of imperial wages.<sup data-fn="2d77785e-9ec7-4df6-8773-7ceccb616598" class="fn"><a href="#2d77785e-9ec7-4df6-8773-7ceccb616598" id="2d77785e-9ec7-4df6-8773-7ceccb616598-link">8</a></sup> As times change and ideologies shift and develop, the colonial redistributionists will find alliances in different places. During the period of protracted economic crisis in the 1930s, the redistributionists found alliance with rising Black nationalism, only to cast off their allies the moment a fresh flood of booty came pouring in following the empire&#8217;s successful conquests at the close of the Second World War, and by the 1950s the Communist Party USA had successfully liquidated all revolutionaries from its ranks and disavowed national liberation. In the 1960s, a new wave of national liberatory struggles rose, and by the 1970s, settler &#8220;radicals&#8221; had successfully played out their role in crushing all resistance. The defeated liberation movement became a victorious “Civil Rights Movement” in the settler history books.</p>



<p>Today the same pattern plays out yet again in real time before our eyes: with the colonial system&#8217;s internal stratification at historic highs, and faced with the objective necessity of violent armed struggle in support of the Palestinian resistance and against the US empire, the settler &#8220;left&#8221; floods into our organizations and our discussion spaces, reads our literature and learns our language of resistance, claims to be our allies in struggle, and spends two years marching in circles to maintain the facade, while shoring up support for their preferred reformist. Time and energy and resources that could be spent serving the needs of the most oppressed, building dual power institutions, organizing guerilla strikes against weapons manufacturers and zionist finance institutions, etcetera, gets repeatedly diverted into the same century-old discussions about whether socialists should vote. Those of us aiming to build the revolutionary forces necessary for winning this war find ourselves surrounded by the most dishonest dregs of humanity, grabbing and pulling us back from struggle to keep our labor squarely aimed at shoring up the structures of oppression holding us down. Make no mistake, when $30/hr is firmly in hand, these so-called radicals will ride into the sunset towards their very own mortgages on stolen land and pensions funded by imperialism.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Zohran Mamdani&#8217;s campaign for personal gain at the expense of the Palestinian resistance is not a betrayal of the &#8220;socialist&#8221; movement, but <em>the blueprint to be followed</em> by each of its adherents. We&#8217;ve already failed to lend Palestine the support it needs for two years ongoing. If the aspiring revolutionaries of our new rising wave of national liberation <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-05-30-liberalism-and-fascism-with-communist-characteristics/">fail to recognize the myriad methods that settler opportunism uses</a> to exploit our labors for individual gain, we too will take our place in the history books as the defeated &#8220;extreme fringe&#8221; of a successful movement to redistribute the spoils of genocide and oppression.</p>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="aa3730a9-dc32-4788-9a22-3154aabcc1c7"> Julian Gerson, political director for Mamdani&#8217;s electoral campaign, previously served as a campaign manager for US congressman Jerry Nadler. Nadler describes himself as <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/05/jerry-nadler-trump-antisemitism">a “committed Zionist” and “a strong supporter of Israel as a homeland for Jewish people.”</a> Gerson is on record saying, “Jerry embodies the idea that one can absolutely be pro-Israel and progressive simultaneously.” <a href="#aa3730a9-dc32-4788-9a22-3154aabcc1c7-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="6c40e54c-c40e-4efa-9d9c-5f74efd8eee3">From Kaffe in the same thread: “<a href="https://x.com/probablykaffe/status/1984729759612555566">The ratio of the sub-employed population</a> has been roughly the same for the last half century, even as the role of &#8216;housewife&#8217; has eroded (good riddance), with the shift in joblessness going mostly to the Nationally Oppressed. The abolition of unemployment (a Soviet right), is so little entertained for two reasons:<br>1. The Labor Aristocracy refuses to let go of wages and security, even if that value could be re-allocated for increased employment, and erase the security problem. <br>2. The work that desperately needs to be done (i.e. land healing), would reduce dependency on Imperial relations, making it more difficult to compel the working class to reproduce them.<br>Instead: insecure-security, stratified wages, uneven development (the cause of high economic migration &#8212; the medium of insecurity and stratification), and the &#8216;public works&#8217; cages a million people yearly, militarizes the population, and (re)builds Bourgeois terrorism.&#8221;  <a href="#6c40e54c-c40e-4efa-9d9c-5f74efd8eee3-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 2"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="93d1976b-648e-44c4-871a-87e6b8ee6f3b">Hence why housing was a right in the USSR, &#8220;Thus a worker cannot be put out of his room, even for non-payment of rent. His wages can be attached, but if he is unemployed his rent is free. He cannot be charged more than a certain low sum, fixed in proportion to his wages.&#8221; Anna Louise Strong, <em>The First Time In History</em>, (New York: Boni and Liverlight, 1924),<a href="https://archive.org/details/firsttimeinhisto009889mbp/page/n153/mode/2up">149</a>. <a href="#93d1976b-648e-44c4-871a-87e6b8ee6f3b-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 3"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="c0215482-dfd1-4350-823a-08b53a36878d"> <a href="https://www.mediaite.com/media/tv/zohran-mamdani-condemns-hamas-after-view-host-confronts-him-on-evasive-answer-and-inflammatory-statements/">“&#8230;of course I condemn Hamas. Of course I have called October 7th what it was, which was a horrific war crime,&#8230;”</a> <a href="#c0215482-dfd1-4350-823a-08b53a36878d-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 4"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="2c181c5f-0da4-44b8-b78c-009210786474">According to the <a href="https://www.dsanorthstar.org/uploads/1/1/8/2/118222942/2021_member_survey_gdc_report.pdf">2021 DSA Member Survey Report</a>, 85% of membership is white, compared with only 4% Black representation. 28% of members are full upper-PB with household incomes of $100k or more. 80% of respondents had bachelor&#8217;s degrees, and approximately 60% of respondents occupy petty bourgeois or labor aristocratic positions, split between scholars, academics, white-collar, tech workers, non-profit organizations, public sector employees, healthcare or social work, self employed, writer, performer, arts, and political org/union. <a href="#2c181c5f-0da4-44b8-b78c-009210786474-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 5"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="ac5af470-9325-442c-a831-e7c9ef2d4a96">See resolution R22. <a href="#ac5af470-9325-442c-a831-e7c9ef2d4a96-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 6"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="ba452a9d-8c3f-4375-8ada-a94e2eb8f68a">“This pretense toward ‘freedom’ continued in 1776 when settlers revolted when London seemed to be loath to continue funding their wars of dispossession against indigenes and the constant conflict with enslaved Africans that was an adjunct of that process” Gerald Horne, <em>The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism</em>, (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2017), <a href="https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/e355ddf3-88d2-4dd3-b317-a96bbb51e0c5/downloads/The%20Apocalypse%20of%20Settler%20Colonialism%20The%20Root.pdf?ver=1618437166475">154 in the PDF</a>. <a href="#ba452a9d-8c3f-4375-8ada-a94e2eb8f68a-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 7"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="2d77785e-9ec7-4df6-8773-7ceccb616598">See J. Sakai <a href="https://readsettlers.org/ch4.html"><em>Settlers</em> Ch. 4.4</a>, describing the process of the settler economy importing Chinese labor to displace the Mexican population of the southwest, only to then violently expropriate Chinese industry and landholdings. Afterwards, the same participants in these genocidal purges urged “unity” with Afrikan labor, as the next phase of the developing industrial unionism movement: “Terrance Powderly, the Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor (who had personally called for wiping out all Chinese in North America within one year), suddenly became the apostle of brotherhood when it came to persuading Afrikans to support his organization: ‘The color of a candidate shall not debar him from admission; rather let the coloring of his mind and heart be the test.’” <a href="#2d77785e-9ec7-4df6-8773-7ceccb616598-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 8"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<item>
		<title>The Mass Meeting</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-11-28-the-mass-meeting/</link>
					<comments>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-11-28-the-mass-meeting/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cde. G. Gracchus]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Nov 2025 18:09:38 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Global]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing Theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA["Proletarian Fusion"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FRSO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[labor aristocracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[labor unions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Left Wing Communism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maoist Study Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mass meeting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mass work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[masses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert's Rules]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settler-colonialism]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Vladimir Lenin]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4333</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The labor movement has been exhausted of its revolutionary potential, in most instances actually serving as a buttress for reaction and a pillar of imperialism, but because our Communists are mechanical in their application of historical materialism (often in the service of opportunism), they focus on recreating the precise tactics of past revolutionaries rather than drawing lessons from revolutionary history and applying them creatively.]]></description>
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<p>There are numerous incorrect theories of revolutionary organizing that pervade the Communist milieux (we hesitate to call it a movement due to its extreme incoherence) in the US-Canadian bloc. The labor movement has been exhausted of its revolutionary potential, in most instances actually serving as a buttress for reaction and a pillar of imperialism, but because our Communists are mechanical in their application of historical materialism (often in the service of opportunism), they focus on recreating the precise tactics of past revolutionaries rather than drawing lessons from revolutionary history and applying them creatively. Thus, we have everything from blind political opportunism justified by misreading Lenin’s <em>Left Wing Communism</em>, to the incomprehensible <a href="https://frso.org/main-documents/class-struggle-on-the-shop-floor-strategy-for-a-new-generation-of-socialists-in-the-united-states/">&#8220;proletarian fusion”</a> and direct entry into economic struggle that is the foundation both for the FRSO’s misguided strategy <em>and</em> that of the Gonzaloite fragments of the shattered <a href="https://redlibrary.info/works/usa/">Maoist Study Group</a>.</p>



<p>The labor union, prior to the entry of the US-bloc into the capitalist-imperialist competition at the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th centuries, served as the “school” of collective worker action in Europe. It was never so in the US, because the US capitalists simply sent restive workers westward to conduct the continental equivalent of European imperialism but amongst Indigenous peoples. The early 19th century unions were illegal, confrontational, and engaged in direct battle with the bourgeoisie and their capitalist states. Although the western countries reeled from this conflict, they were able to manage the contradiction by doling out the rewards of imperialist exploitation. In Europe this manifested as social democracy; in the US, it took the form of Indigenous genocide and the internal Black colony. By the beginning of the 20th century, it was increasingly in the form of the creation of a “white” (Euro-Amerikan, as opposed to the earlier Anglo-Protestant) national project.</p>



<p>By this time, labor unions had become instruments, not of working class power, but of labor discipline. Unions were legalized and given a stake and a share in the US imperialist project. In this way, the unions were “housebroken” and the mass of the labor aristocracy was broadened just as the frontiers were closed and entry into the petty bourgeois homesteader class was restricted. Failure to recognize this fact (which is obvious to anyone who bothers to investigate for even a moment; see, for instance, the rates of equity held by US workers in real property — the average home equity held in the US is $300,000 — has driven many would-be Communists directly into the arms of reaction.</p>



<p>But what were the <em>features</em> of the labor union that made it a school of communism?</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li>Workers were organized and developed experience organizing and running meetings, coming to collective decisions, and exerting power.</li>



<li>Collective grievances were compared and conclusions could be collectively drawn as to their source — the contradiction between workers and owners.</li>



<li>It was a venue through which the advanced elements and conscious Communist could draw intermediate elements and develop their class consciousness by propagandizing, not only the abstract, but around specific conditions affecting those particular workers.</li>



<li>It was directly antagonistic to the continued existence of the bourgeoisie and their state, at least until it was captured.</li>
</ol>



<p>Present-day labor unions do not possess any of these features. Meetings are pro forma affairs, ill attended, and run by bureaucrats. The unions themselves are managed by professional union hustlers whose job security depends on their capacity to (1) deliver beneficial contracts, (2) come to an agreement with management, and (3) not break any laws, like the ones making it illegal to advocate for revolutionary consciousness or suggest a strike unless the union contract is up.</p>



<p>There is, however, an organ of working class power that possesses these features: the Communist-led mass meeting.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">What is a Mass Meeting?</h1>



<p>A mass meeting is a gathering of people in one place where they are led by the meeting’s organizers to debate and decide on issues that affect them. The character of the meeting will be determined by, in the first instance, the class character of those in attendance and, in the second instance, by the class standing of the meeting’s leaders. We can think of this as, (1) the potential character of the meeting and, (2) as the direction of change or realization of that character.</p>



<p>A single mass meeting occurs over a period between forty minutes to several hours and is a one-time event. There’s no guarantee that it will develop into a standing organ of working class power, but this question depends on whether the organizers have taken care to answer several underlying issues which will be explained below.</p>



<p>There must be advanced preparation. First, it is important to identify the locality from which the meeting’s attendants are to be drawn. This is ideally an urban working class neighborhood with a high number of nationally oppressed workers and a low rate of real property ownership. This is the mass base of our organizing efforts, and focusing on these areas will ensure a good attendance as well as both a receptive class composition at the meeting and increase the likelihood that anyone drawn into the organization as a result of the meeting will have a revolutionary class standing.</p>



<p>Next, efforts must be made to identify the most pressing concerns affecting the community in question. This is traditionally done by conducting a social investigation. During a social investigation, the organizers go into the community and have detailed conversations with residents and workers. The organizers must keep good notes and direct the topics of conversation into the following areas: (1) the biggest problems the interviewees face on a day-to-day, week-to-week, and month-to-month basis; (2) the interviewees’ views on local political figures and bastions of state and civil authority (police, relief workers, religious institutions, local politicians, big politicians, etc.); (3) avenues of relief that are available for community members like local shelters, food pantries, etc.; (4) other local conditions that are particular to that area.</p>



<p>Then, the organizers must analyze the data they’ve gathered. It’s not enough to understand what people say on a surface level. To stop there would be to engage in workerist tailism. The data must be subjected to Marxist analysis, and problems must be understood not only in their surface manifestations, but also in the fundamental contradictions that are causing the problems identified in the reports and investigations. The sharpest contradictions responsible must be sought. The organizers must make explicit the links between these problems, the contradictions that underlie them, and the general tasks of the social revolution in the US bloc: national liberation, sex liberation, and proletarian internationalism. The organizers must have a firm grasp on decolonial, antipatriarchal, Marxist theory in order to avoid the reactionary-opportunist pitfalls that will present themselves.</p>



<p>This analysis is the same kind that’s done when an organization performs other general propaganda work. It is the linking of a particular grievance to the general capitalist system, as embodied concretely in the state and civil society, in such a way as to orient toward proletarian internationalism and a revolutionary outlook.</p>



<p>Once this analysis has been performed and an organizational “line” has been developed which connects the most acute problems of the area with the necessity for organized, antagonistic class action, the necessity to overthrow the bourgeoisie through revolution, the necessity for supporting or attaining national self-determination for the oppressed nations, of national-suicide for the oppressor nation, anti-patriarchal action, etc. — once this has been done, the organization must begin a campaign of mass agitation. A date, time, and place must be set for the mass meeting. Flyers and handbills must be drawn up and copied. Members of the organization must go into the community, armed with this material, and hang posters, have conversations, and hand out literature. The call should be clear: <em>This</em> is the problem; <em>here</em> are its causes; <em>come to a mass meeting</em> to decide (or learn) how to combat it.</p>



<p>If the investigative and analytical stages are carried out correctly, the agitational stage is sufficient, and the date and time are selected with careful attention to the general availability of the masses in the area, then the meeting should be successful. That is not to say that the first few calls for a meeting may not be unattended or sparsely attended. This is not only because of the errors an inexperienced organization is likely to make on their first or early attempts, but also because the organization will not be known and will not yet have currency among the masses.<br>It is worth noting that the Soviets and councils of the successful Communist revolutions were essentially mass meetings that took on standing form. Indeed, Indigenous nations have been holding mass meetings as the primary method of political engagement for <em>centuries</em>. (See, for instance, Kathleen Duval’s <em>Native Nations: A Millenium in North America</em>, for a survey of Indigenous practices. Random House, 2024).&nbsp;</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">What Do You Need?</h1>



<p>First and foremost, in order to run a mass meeting you must be <em>organized</em>, that is, you must be a member of a Marxist-Leninist cell that has a defined membership in which labor duties are required of members, has regular and consistent meetings and keeps records, and has written internal rules that govern its structure and actions. Without an organization, it’s impossible to direct a mass meeting effectively or to elevate a mass meeting from a one-time event into a mass organization capable of embodying the will of the working class, which is the ultimate goal.</p>



<p>Your organization must have a sufficient number of real, actually-working members to carry out not only the preparatory tasks, but also to run the actual meeting. We have found that five dedicated cadre-level members is an appropriate benchmark. Each of these five members should be capable of mass work, trained in historical materialist analysis, able to conduct searching social investigations and keep detailed notes, perform analysis on the fly, and have training managing a crowd.</p>



<p>You will also need at least rudimentary graphic design and printing capabilities to prepare the flyers and literature. Your organization will require the use of a large space, whether indoors or out-, to hold the meeting and should secure at least a simple PA system — a megaphone with a detachable mic will suffice. Preferably, all organizers should be able to dress in a manner that marks them out as members of your organization, whether it is a single article of clothing or a shared color. This will allow them to stand out at the meeting and help manage it.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Running the Meeting</h1>



<p>It is wise to formally open the meeting by announcing that it’s beginning and asking the attendees to gather around the speaker. Ideally, the speaker will be elevated above the rest of the crowd for visibility and there will be room for at least one other person to stand up there with them.</p>



<p>A short speech is a good way to open the meeting. This should lay out the main topic, any critical ancillary topics, and connect the issue to the imperialist state and the oppressor bourgeoisie. This is a good time to begin getting the crowd involved. Simple questions that can be easily answered (even with just a “yes!” or “no!”) will prime the listeners for engagement and signal that this meeting won’t be a passive affair.</p>



<p>Once the stage is set, the meeting leader should ask the crowd if anyone present has experienced the issue which is the subject of the meeting. If the organizers recognize anyone in attendance who has a particularly good and demonstrative experience, it&nbsp; can help to call that person to speak first. From this point, tactics will diverge depending on what the organizers intend to do with the meeting. If the goal is just to use the meeting to propagandize, generally elevate class consciousness, test the organizer’s own organization, and make connections with the masses, then the meeting can be comprised almost entirely of calling individuals up to the PA system to speak about their experiences while the meeting leader interposes questions, clarifications, and reframes the issues in a Marxist lens. Once the crowd has been sufficiently propagandized and exhibits a high degree of energy, the meeting leader can deliver a short closing speech to summarize what was said, to draw a broad connection to the capitalist state, to identify the ruling class as the collective enemy, and to stress the need for organization. The meeting leader should propose further meetings and discussions and clearly articulate what organization entails. These somewhat restrained aims are a good target for an organization’s first mass meeting, and may help it develop internal rigor.</p>



<p>That being said, the organizers should <em>never</em> attempt to restrain or repress the organically-occurring maturation of the masses. If the attendees want to engage in debate, discussion, adopt an organizational form, or even settle on concrete steps that can be taken to begin addressing the problem presented, they must not be delayed or put off. The organizers must be ready to capture the energy and foster any kernel of consciousness with real suggestions and real action. This should not turn into a run-away meeting in which the attendees decide to go to war with the state immediately, but neither should the organizers offer platitudes. <em>Real steps</em> may be required.</p>



<p>To that end, it would be wise for the organizers to become familiar with rules of procedure for running mass meetings <em>as an organizational form</em>. These may be home-made, but the latest edition of <em>Robert’s Rules of Order </em>contains <a href="https://westsidetoastmasters.com/resources/roberts_rules/chap16.html">good rules for a mass-meeting form</a> that can help an organization run a meeting, maintain a good flow of conversation, and ensure that decisions are made collectively.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">The Meeting is Not the End</h1>



<p>The most important thing to impart is that the first meeting is only the <em>beginning</em> of organizing. If the organizers wish to push further with their meeting and the mood of the attendees permits it, they should call for a debate on action, set further meeting dates and times, and even consider calling for volunteer officers to serve as an interim executive committee to carry out decisions adopted by the meeting. This body of officers should hopefully contain a mix of the organizers and attendees, and should be subject to <em>elections</em> at the soonest possible opportunity (generally the next scheduled mass meeting).</p>



<p>The organizers should also urge attendees to join any public-facing political education classes they offer. Indeed, this is an excellent opportunity to urge attendees to assist in or join any of the organizers’ other initiatives: Red Aid, community self-defense, etc.</p>



<p>The critical thing is to continue holding meetings, to develop the attendees, and to drive struggle to an ever higher degree. The more meetings are held, the more the class consciousness in the area will be fostered. It is important to ensure that this consciousness does not develop in a reactionary direction, which is why the organizers must be well trained in the most advanced decolonial theory. Armed with the advanced theory and the energy of the masses, the mass meeting is the chief organ of class power available to us at this time.</p>
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		<title>Toward a Boston League of Workers and Students</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-11-4-toward-a-boston-league/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cde. G. Gracchus]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2025 23:13:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New England]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing Theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CP Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CPUSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FRSO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4297</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[It is necessary to strike at the chains the workers of the imperial centers have helped forge and to draw them away from the side of their “own” bourgeoisie.
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Introduction</h1>



<p>The existing countrywide formations that claim to represent some form of proletarian class-power (in whatever embryonic state) are hopelessly compromised. It has been one of the major labors of Unity–Struggle–Unity Press to investigate each of these organizations to determine the theoretical rigor, organizational design, and strength of principle. Since the foundation of this Press in 2022, we have investigated and determined that each of the major “Marxist-Leninist” groups — PSL, FRSO, CPUSA — suffer not only from fatally anti-democratic structures, but also from terminal and fundamental errors of theory that <strong>cannot</strong> be corrected because of the entrenched leadership and opportunism or chauvinism that still reigns in each formation. We have witnessed CPUSA’s disastrous embrace of social fascism at and after its last “convention” and the expulsion of the pro-democracy clubs, precisely <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-06-05-claim-the-convention/">as we predicted</a>, and following the very same pattern laid out by the CP Canada a year earlier <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-06-05-claim-the-convention/">during<em> their</em> bankrupt “convention.”</a> Indeed, by analyzing the conditions of CPUSA and CP Canada, we were able to warn that the CPUSA would repeat the errors of CP Canada and the result would be the same: <strong>that is what occurred.</strong></p>



<p>Last year, we published a <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-05-towards-an-nyc-league/">pamphlet</a> (“Towards a New York City League of Workers and Students”) in which we established an analytical framework and plan for local organizing in a major U.S. city. This pamphlet applies the same methodology to the city of Boston.</p>



<p>It is necessary for the working class to possess a weapon to confront the ruling class. It is necessary for the working masses in the U.S.-Canadian bloc to be educated (and to educate themselves) on the duty of internationalism and to chart a path not toward the aggrandizement of their current positions, but towards the destruction of the imperialist state itself, in order to bring about not only the liberation of the oppressed masses of the Global South, but to secure its own liberation. <strong>It is necessary to strike at the chains the workers of the imperial centers have helped forge and to draw them away from the side of their “own” bourgeoisie.</strong></p>



<p><strong></strong>The formation of this weapon of class-power is already under way. League-type organizations have been formed in several cities and localities in the U.S. This Press has been continuously reaching out to existing local Marxist-Leninist organizations in an effort to knit them together, to realize the completion of that weapon. The fact remains, however, that the number of existing organizations that are prepared to adopt a sufficiently (decolonial) Marxist-Leninist program is still too low. More organizations must still be formed. The advanced ranks of the working classes must be united with the most advanced theory. In order to overcome our numerical deficiency and the theoretical deficiency of the currently arch-chauvinistic movement, we urge the formation of advanced study groups in the major cities of the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.</p>



<p>We urge our readers to begin by reading our pieces on organization: “<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-03-15-organize/">Organize!</a>”, “<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-06-06-what-is-organizing/">What is Organizing?</a>”, <a href="https://unity-struggle-unity.org/the-study-group-a-guide-for-revolutionary-cadres-by-cde-j-katsfoter/"><em>The Study Group</em></a>, and “<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-05-towards-an-nyc-league/">Towards a New York League of Workers and Students</a>.” The purpose of the study group is not to simply remain a study group, but to gather who can be gathered and set the right foot forward in formation.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Why the City?</h1>



<p>Marxist parties and modern socialism are the products of the cities. Even in semi-feudal or semi-colonial countries, the parties that eventually won the countryside were formed in the cities. Advanced workers are naturally to be found in greater concentration in the urban areas. This is where advanced industry, even in the “late capitalist” United States, is to be found.</p>



<p>The reasons for the primacy of the cities at this stage are many:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li>The living, working, and transportation accommodations of cities are <strong>social</strong>, as opposed to individual. Apartment buildings encourage the mingling of interests as well as social groups. Public transportation throws together all manner of people, but mostly working ones. Public spaces provide the opportunity to meet, interact, and spread ideas and literature. This is in sharp contrast to the atomization-by-design suffered in the suburbs where each “family” is cabined off from the other.</li>



<li>The absolute numbers of people living in urban areas mean there are more advanced workers overall available for organizing. When bystanders are drawn into the struggle by our actions in the cities, <strong>more</strong> of them are involved incidentally (and thus radicalized) than in rural areas.</li>



<li>Communication and meetings are both easier in areas with strong internal linkages — public transportation and public meeting places.</li>



<li>The supply lines of cities are narrower and more tenuous, easier to disrupt. Cities represent “nerve centers” of capitalist enterprises. Therefore, organized action in cities also benefits from a force multiplier as it can more easily affect larger numbers of capitalist organizations.</li>



<li>Politics are more “concentrated” and it is therefore easier both to exert leverage on politicians by means of class power where they live in the midst of the people or in places easily accessible by the people, and it is easier for local organizations to seize local political power. The degree by which workers outnumber the ruling class is heightened in cities where more workers are concentrated.</li>



<li>As the masses increase in size in an urban area, the state repressive machinery cannot keep pace. For instance, in 2022 Boston had 301.3 police officers per 100,000 residents, as comparable to the average for cities in the Northeast under 10,000 people (300 per 100,000). Because of the additional influence and power of large groups of people, this represents a force <strong>far less capable</strong> than that in small and medium-sized cities.</li>
</ol>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">Class Analysis of the Boston Metro Area</h1>



<p>The total population of the metropolitan area of Boston is roughly 4.9 million people. Of that, some 250,000-350,000 people are students in attendance to one of the 50+ schools of higher education in the region. The absolute population of students is higher than many mid-sized U.S. cities!</p>



<p>However, we must be cautious about the class-character of Boston as a whole. It is overwhelmingly petty bourgeois and labor aristocratic. This necessitates concrete considerations as to which professions to begin to organize in and around, which localities are necessary to organize, etc.</p>



<p>Here it becomes critically important to examine the question of national oppression: In 2015, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston reported that median net worth for white households in the metro area was $250,000, while Black households held a median net worth of $8.</p>



<p>There are, therefore, two routes toward establishing the primary organizations required to build a league in Boston. Both avenues should be pursued simultaneously by different groups, with the decision of which avenue to be dictated primarily by the differing access of the involved organizations to different communities, resources, and tools. Essentially, organizing must start among the proletarian/sub-proletarian populations <em>and </em>the petty bourgeois population and work toward unification into the league-form.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Boston Metro Is Over One-Third Petty Bourgeois</h2>



<p>Taking data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wages reports, we can quickly see that the predominant minority of productive relations in Boston are petty bourgeois. There are, for instance, 276,210 management workers (8 of which are actually bourgeois CEOS), 234,750 business and finance workers, 136,640 technical workers in computers and mathematics, 64,870 architects and engineers, 64,140 scientists, 26,730 petty bourgeois legal workers, 40,070 media workers, 184,560 healthcare practitioners, and several thousand post-secondary teachers.<sup data-fn="f157b716-9c05-4b8d-8d59-7c759993d299" class="fn"><a href="#f157b716-9c05-4b8d-8d59-7c759993d299" id="f157b716-9c05-4b8d-8d59-7c759993d299-link">1</a></sup> The total number of petty bourgeois occupations is around 1,023,528, which comprises 36% of the 2,794,300 members of the Boston metro labor force.</p>



<p>The petty bourgeoisie must be organized not along wage struggles, workplace improvements, etc., but rather along their progressive ideological lines. As we know, the petty bourgeoisie are a vacillating class; they are sometimes progressive, sometimes regressive, as befits their position between the waged workers and the ruling class. In order to organize them as a class, we must be attentive to the positions they have that are progressive; by focusing on these and directing their energy to ever-escalating struggle in that arena, it opens an opportunity to introduce political education into their midst. While we cannot expect the majority of the class to shed their petty bourgeois ideologies, there are benefits to the radicalization and education of even a minority, as this class has access to resources (both material resources and social connections) that would otherwise be denied a Communist league.</p>



<p>Most of the students in the Boston metro area are also from petty bourgeois households, and the temporary nature of being a student means that even when they are not from petty bourgeois extraction, they have a tendency to adopt a petty bourgeois outlook. Thus, student organizations should consider themselves to be part of this class-stratum and address their political development and strategies accordingly.</p>



<p>Those groups organizing among the Boston petty bourgeoisie must identify the most pressing progressive issues that confront that class or into which that class is willing to get involved. This will likely include confrontation with the federal government over the withdrawal of imperialist superprofits in the form of school funding, attacks on cherished liberal institutions, reproductive health, childcare support, etc., as well as LGBTQ+ defense and forms of anti-ICE defense. We should be striving to organize them along lines of national and gender solidarity: 1) nationally oppressed community defense, 2) ICE defense, and 3) defense of transgender people (and the sex-oppressed, to fight against the encroachment of patriarchal reaction). These defense organizations would be the most progressive and most liberatory of all possible lines the petty bourgeoisie can be drawn into.</p>



<p>By drawing the progressive petty bourgeoisie into illegal and anti-governmental actions, the mental deadlock that surrounds their inability to conceive of radical social revolution will be broken up. When they no longer trust the institutions of class-governance, they will become amenable to political education on the abolition of class society itself. This doesn’t, of course, mean that they should be immediately integrated without proper proletarian education!</p>



<p>Once a strong, proletarian core of organizations has been founded to provide itself as the anchor of a Communist league, those organizations that are primarily petty bourgeois or which are primarily organizing and drawing on the petty bourgeois class can effectively act in support of the proletarian interests in the area to relieve the immediate hardships affecting nationally oppressed workers and the lower strata of the proletariat, which include the presence of capitalist police in their communities, food and housing instability, etc.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Who are the Proletarians?</h2>



<p>To determine where the revolutionary proletarian line falls, we first take those who are employed in proletarian (waged) labor and then compare the present income of that labor against the superprofits redistributed to U.S. workers by weighing it against the global median income. The global median yearly income is around $18,000 per household.<sup data-fn="13ab1da0-d983-457c-844e-dbb60a734eb7" class="fn"><a href="#13ab1da0-d983-457c-844e-dbb60a734eb7" id="13ab1da0-d983-457c-844e-dbb60a734eb7-link">2</a></sup></p>



<p>We must then calculate the value of socialized services that are currently private and paid for out of wages in the Boston metro area: rent, healthcare, food, transportation, utilities, and childcare. These are…</p>



<p>Boston metro rent: $42,336/year</p>



<p>Healthcare: $18,000/year<sup data-fn="c382d640-8c92-4fd1-bcad-0826519784ba" class="fn"><a href="#c382d640-8c92-4fd1-bcad-0826519784ba" id="c382d640-8c92-4fd1-bcad-0826519784ba-link">3</a></sup></p>



<p>Food: conservatively, $9,000/year<sup data-fn="ce8c9ef7-62bd-487c-b721-4055ce3c5781" class="fn"><a href="#ce8c9ef7-62bd-487c-b721-4055ce3c5781" id="ce8c9ef7-62bd-487c-b721-4055ce3c5781-link">4</a></sup></p>



<p>Transportation: $13,575<sup data-fn="9122ec86-cace-4dbc-8f8a-40f2eff54588" class="fn"><a href="#9122ec86-cace-4dbc-8f8a-40f2eff54588" id="9122ec86-cace-4dbc-8f8a-40f2eff54588-link">5</a></sup></p>



<p>Utilities: $1,560</p>



<p>Childcare: $22,000<sup data-fn="919fb9c7-c32f-4dab-8079-0d1696eb195c" class="fn"><a href="#919fb9c7-c32f-4dab-8079-0d1696eb195c" id="919fb9c7-c32f-4dab-8079-0d1696eb195c-link">6</a></sup></p>



<p>The total costs of these services, which would be provided by a socialized government and proletarian class-dictatorship, is $106,471. Even if the median Boston household income of $78,000 were reduced to the global average of $18,000 (a $60,000 loss), the median income proletarian in Boston would still gain $46,471 worth of services and socialized guarantees if the regime of private property were overthrown tomorrow.</p>



<p>This means that greater than half of all proletarian workers in healthcare support (184,000 total), food preparation (212,080 total), grounds and buildings maintenance (78,720 total), sales (216,980 total), administrative support (299,890 total), production (101,830 total) and transportation of materials industries (166,340 total) are in the strata of the immediately revolutionary proletariat.</p>



<p>Even if only 1% of those above workers were able to be mobilized, that would represent some <strong>12,500 workers</strong>, a sizable revolutionary force.</p>



<p>Obviously, this is somewhat complicated by the ownership of substantial real property (a house or apartment) or other investment capital. Those proletarians who own real property must be generally excluded from the revolutionary strata and considered to be labor aristocrats, as they will obviously stand to lose that real property in the near term of any revolutionary movement.</p>



<p>The rate of homeownership in the entire metro area is only 35%. There are variations within the city, the highest area being West Roxbury (63.6%), the lowest Fenway/Kenmore (8.6%).<sup data-fn="ad9379f6-8e68-46f2-a1a3-3eaa9f514457" class="fn"><a href="#ad9379f6-8e68-46f2-a1a3-3eaa9f514457" id="ad9379f6-8e68-46f2-a1a3-3eaa9f514457-link">7</a></sup> The eight regions of the metro area with the lowest homeownership rates are Fenway/Kenmore, Allston/Brighton (21%), Roxbury (33%), Central (27%), East Boston (27.5%), the South End (33%), Back Bay (33.8%), Jamaica Plain (34.9%), and Mattapan (35.5%). According to the 2023 U.S. census data, Fenway/Kenmore has a median household income of $59,612, Allston/Brighton has $74,672, Roxbury $52,364, East Boston $92,079, South End $90,142, Back Bay $118,367, Jamaica Plain, $130,533, and Mattapan $50,946.<sup data-fn="b6d09527-8e11-4f87-b587-e9f80722ca22" class="fn"><a href="#b6d09527-8e11-4f87-b587-e9f80722ca22" id="b6d09527-8e11-4f87-b587-e9f80722ca22-link">8</a></sup> It should come as no surprise that the nationally oppressed New Afrikan population in the Boston metro area is highest in Mattapan, Roxbury, and Dorchester.</p>



<p>Organizing is highly encouraged in the Fenway, Allston, Roxbury, Mattapan, and Dorchester areas. Oppressed national groups should be organized into fighting formations by Marxist-Leninists and made capable of ejecting bourgeois state agents, particularly police, from their communities. At the same time, organizations must be established by workplace in all areas where the contradictions are sharpest for the working class. These must be geared toward an eventual all-out confrontation with the forces of capital on the economic front (production, transportation).</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Billionaires in their Midst</h2>



<p>Of the class of big imperialists, 24 live in the Boston metro area. These include Abigail Johnson, CEO of Fidelity, Robert Kraft, CEO of the Kraft Group, Jim Davis, owner and chair of New Balance, John Henry, owner of the Fenway Sports Group (married to the CEO of the Boston Globe) and Stephane Bancel, the CEO of Moderna. There are 27,000 millionaires living in the metro area, cheek to jowl with the working classes of oppressed nations that support their extravagant and wasteful lifestyles.</p>



<p>This means that mobilization against the ruling class can begin <em>inside the metro area itself</em>.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading">The Noose Is Being Fashioned</h1>



<p>We have seen the continuous expansion and increase of local police departments on the ground over the past 25 years. In June of 2000, local U.S. police departments had 565,915 employees, including 441,000 officers.<sup data-fn="643ecb63-87d1-4e48-b43d-626a92e982eb" class="fn"><a href="#643ecb63-87d1-4e48-b43d-626a92e982eb" id="643ecb63-87d1-4e48-b43d-626a92e982eb-link">9</a></sup> As of 2024, there are now 808,700 local police across the country.<sup data-fn="732322ca-01b7-4bc3-aaa0-170e96cc9c5b" class="fn"><a href="#732322ca-01b7-4bc3-aaa0-170e96cc9c5b" id="732322ca-01b7-4bc3-aaa0-170e96cc9c5b-link">10</a></sup> That is nearly a two-fold expansion of local police officers alone. There were 17,654 officers employed by INS in 2000, 10,820 employed by Customs, and 11,523 employed by the FBI.<sup data-fn="997dab6a-7123-46be-8831-3bcd91ca9093" class="fn"><a href="#997dab6a-7123-46be-8831-3bcd91ca9093" id="997dab6a-7123-46be-8831-3bcd91ca9093-link">11</a></sup> In 2020, there were 66,215 Homeland Security officers (which absorbed INS and Customs) and 13,575 FBI agents.<sup data-fn="79f5a671-fbbe-4a07-b1c6-3f0e93f436eb" class="fn"><a href="#79f5a671-fbbe-4a07-b1c6-3f0e93f436eb" id="79f5a671-fbbe-4a07-b1c6-3f0e93f436eb-link">12</a></sup> <strong>There is no question: the local and federal police state is being expanded.</strong> Now, it is increasing with ever-growing speed. The proliferation of the Homeland Security “fusion centers” (see the <em>Clarion</em> article, <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-15-state-of-control/">“State of Control”</a>), as well as “cop cities,” is accompanied by ever-expanding budgets for police departments to outfit themselves as soldiers ($65.7 billion in 2000, $176 billion in 2024).<sup data-fn="af2fe2fb-5e8e-481c-b466-a2be6c8f3085" class="fn"><a href="#af2fe2fb-5e8e-481c-b466-a2be6c8f3085" id="af2fe2fb-5e8e-481c-b466-a2be6c8f3085-link">13</a></sup> Now, the White House is federalizing National Guard units and deploying them to occupy U.S. cities — presently in the District of Columbia, and soon to be deployed in Chicago.</p>



<p>We must realistically consider whether the old planter ideology of racists like Thomas Jefferson (the “peaceful” extermination of Black slaves to remove the threat of rebellion), most recently reclaimed by open fascists and white nationalists (beginning with Charles Manson, but continuing with <em>The Turner Diaries</em>, <em>SIEGE</em>, etc.) has been adopted by the leading clique of the ruling class. These expansions of the police and their integration into a country-wide network and the federal armed forces are the opening moves of the complete liquidation of the oppressed and colonized nations. The Euro-American nation will operate the U.S. empire as an overseer <em>herrenvolk</em> state; an acknowledgement that the nationally oppressed constitute an internal threat to capitalist order.</p>



<p>The fact that this system is being assembled without significant opposition from any of the ruling class “progressives” or “centrists” (including the entire roster of Democrats and Independents) suggests that all elements of the ruling class are at least passively onboard with this project, and we should expect no relief from that quarter. This makes it all the more pressing to organize Communist groups that can, and will, combat it. Only with conscious elements in the lead can we ensure that Euro-American workers are broken away from “their own” bourgeoisie, the leading imperialists.</p>



<p>The urgent tasks of Communists are, with respect to the white “great” national workers (the national-oppresser, Euro-American proletariat), to break their dependence on the captured unions and to set them at odds with the big bourgeoisie, to instill consciousness of internationalism and national solidarity with the internal colonies and semi-colonies. With respect to the nationally oppressed and colonized people within the U.S., the task is to establish self-defense units and organizations capable of uniting into a leading party that will strike back at the state and its operatives.</p>



<p>There is presently an opportunity to do just that in Boston; to create local organizations that can unify into a metro-wide league, capable of acting in concert and preparing the way for the unification of all local leagues into a Decolonial Marxist-Leninist party.</p>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="f157b716-9c05-4b8d-8d59-7c759993d299"> According to the 2023 survey by the BLS.<br> <a href="#f157b716-9c05-4b8d-8d59-7c759993d299-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="13ab1da0-d983-457c-844e-dbb60a734eb7"> World Population Review, calculated at roughly $9,000 per individual.<br> <a href="#13ab1da0-d983-457c-844e-dbb60a734eb7-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 2"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="c382d640-8c92-4fd1-bcad-0826519784ba"> Calculated per capita at $9,097 according to researchers at JAMA. “Tracking U.S. Health Care Spending by Health Condition and County,” Joseph L. Dieleman, Meera Beauchamp, Sawyer W. Crosby, et al. (Feb. 14, 2025).<br> <a href="#c382d640-8c92-4fd1-bcad-0826519784ba-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 3"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="ce8c9ef7-62bd-487c-b721-4055ce3c5781"> According to the USDA.<br> <a href="#ce8c9ef7-62bd-487c-b721-4055ce3c5781-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 4"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="9122ec86-cace-4dbc-8f8a-40f2eff54588"> Bureau of Labor Statistics.<br> <a href="#9122ec86-cace-4dbc-8f8a-40f2eff54588-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 5"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="919fb9c7-c32f-4dab-8079-0d1696eb195c"> Per child, according to a LendingTree study.<br> <a href="#919fb9c7-c32f-4dab-8079-0d1696eb195c-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 6"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="ad9379f6-8e68-46f2-a1a3-3eaa9f514457"> All homeownership rates taken from the City of Boston, Research Division and Planning Department, “Boston by the Numbers: Housing,” 2013.<br> <a href="#ad9379f6-8e68-46f2-a1a3-3eaa9f514457-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 7"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="b6d09527-8e11-4f87-b587-e9f80722ca22"> According to U.S. census data collected during the 2023 American Community Survey.<br> <a href="#b6d09527-8e11-4f87-b587-e9f80722ca22-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 8"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="643ecb63-87d1-4e48-b43d-626a92e982eb"> Bureau of Justice Statistics, “Local Police Departments 2000.” <br> <a href="#643ecb63-87d1-4e48-b43d-626a92e982eb-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 9"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="732322ca-01b7-4bc3-aaa0-170e96cc9c5b"> According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.<br> <a href="#732322ca-01b7-4bc3-aaa0-170e96cc9c5b-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 10"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="997dab6a-7123-46be-8831-3bcd91ca9093"> Bureau of Justice Statistics “Federal Law Enforcement Officers, 2000,” (Jul. 1, 2001).<br> <a href="#997dab6a-7123-46be-8831-3bcd91ca9093-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 11"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="79f5a671-fbbe-4a07-b1c6-3f0e93f436eb"> Bureau of Justice Statistics, “Federal Law Enforcement Officers, 2020 &#8211; Statistical Tables,” (Sept. 29, 2023).<br> <a href="#79f5a671-fbbe-4a07-b1c6-3f0e93f436eb-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 12"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="af2fe2fb-5e8e-481c-b466-a2be6c8f3085"> U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, “Government current expenditures: State and local: Public order and safety: Police,” retrieved from FRED 9/2/25.<br> <a href="#af2fe2fb-5e8e-481c-b466-a2be6c8f3085-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 13"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>CPUSA Resignation</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/cpusa-resignation/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Anonymous Contributor]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2025 16:04:11 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CPUSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joe Sims]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kansas Communist Party]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rossana Cambron]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4285</guid>

					<description><![CDATA["I am tired of making excuses for a bunch of liberals and pork choppers more interested in what they consider journalism and singing than in the success of communism. I’m tired of trying to build a party only interested in perpetuating itself for the benefit of a few in leadership while taking up space in activism. I’m just plain tired."]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><em>Statement from the Editors: This is a republication of a document originally written by Comrade Disco upon his resignation from the Communist Party USA, and shared to spread awareness of his principled criticisms. While we do not endorse all the positions in this piece, we are republishing this letter to bring greater attention to the anti-democratic rot at the core of the CPUSA. We strongly encourage the reader to also read our other republished CPUSA exoduses (&#8220;<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-08-01-on-why-im-leaving-the-party/">On Why I&#8217;m Leaving the Party</a>&#8221; by Khadija, &#8220;<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-19-why-i-left-the-cpusa/">Why I Left the CPUSA</a>&#8221; by Comrade Birb, and &#8220;<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-16-austin-moving-on/">Austin Moving On</a>&#8221; by Red Help ATX) as well as our own criticisms of them (<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-02-22-cpusa-hypocrisy/">here</a> for history of this anti-democratic opportunism, <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-06-14-against-cpusas-colonizer-communism/">here</a> for a critique of their chauvinistic theory, and <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-10-17-stagnant-parties-dont-deserve-your-time/">here</a> for the republication of a powerful argument to abandon the dead and stagnant formations).</em></p>



<p><em><strong>We urge all principled Communists to form a primary organization or take their existing primary organization out of the dead &#8220;parties&#8221; and begin the work of unification. Please contact us if you have questions.</strong></em></p>



<p>To: CPUSA National Committee &amp; District Leadership</p>



<p>From: &#8220;Disco Ambition&#8221;</p>



<p>Re: Formal Resignation</p>



<p>Date: 09/07/2025 (effective immediately)</p>



<p>After due consideration of the facts and my experiences within this organization, I hereby resign from any role in the Communist Party United States of America (CPUSA). Currently that role is chair of the Sedgwick County Club.</p>



<p>I am a Revolutionary Communist, in that while I recognize the usefulness of acting within the political field for delivering the message of Communism and reaching the masses, I do not hold to the idea that our liberation can be achieved via democratic or political means. I have no respect for the opinion that we can achieve anything by voting in a nation that has never had a real democracy, and I hold a commiserate level of respect for those who hold that view.</p>



<p>I came into the party, as many do, because of its legacy within the world communist movement. A legacy I see now is capitalized on by those in charge to serve their own ends. I was also foolishly unaware of the party’s entanglement with liberal politics and deviation from Communist principles until much later. I wanted to fight fascism. But fascism is here.<sup data-fn="2f184fff-5095-4c85-87c9-48d7f67dcc10" class="fn"><a href="#2f184fff-5095-4c85-87c9-48d7f67dcc10" id="2f184fff-5095-4c85-87c9-48d7f67dcc10-link">1</a></sup> People are dying in the streets while the party that is supposed to be fighting it commits itself to singalongs and holds hands with the kinder face of the capitalist class in their vile support for the Democrat Party.</p>



<p>A Communist party is supposed to be the vanguard of the workers revolution. It must therefore be capable of meeting the needs of any moment in time by adapting to current material conditions. It is also supposed to maintain its independence from bourgeoisie movements and political parties. The current CPUSA is structurally incapable of meeting any of those requirements. This is because the leadership is an inbred structure composed entirely of liberal democratic apologists put in place through non-democratic means based on loyalty to leadership rather than competence<sup data-fn="2dad396f-cade-4733-9008-85b2ffccc4c6" class="fn"><a href="#2dad396f-cade-4733-9008-85b2ffccc4c6" id="2dad396f-cade-4733-9008-85b2ffccc4c6-link">2</a></sup> or Marxist-Leninist views. More unfortunate is the fact that the general bulk of the party is made up of passionate and committed Communists, which creates a revolving door of members as they come to realize the limitations the party has imposed on them and the movement as a whole. All this has resulted in an organization that takes up space in the cause for Communism while being at its heart distinctly anti-Communist in its refusal to conduct open dialog (material dialectics) and rejection of democratic methods of decision making (while decrying itself as conducting “democratic centralism”). These good members are left blindly organizing their communities while party leadership continues its uselessness.</p>



<p>Due to the time and effort I had invested in this organization<sup data-fn="7fdc3134-9d80-4491-bb57-e3046874a7f3" class="fn"><a href="#7fdc3134-9d80-4491-bb57-e3046874a7f3" id="7fdc3134-9d80-4491-bb57-e3046874a7f3-link">3</a></sup> and my belief in the need to change it from the inside, I too long ignored the lack of democratic decision making and stagnant leadership in the hopes that I could help build the party to the revolutionary Communist organization that it purports to be, problems which result in the party being impossible to change, even if there were enough people attempting to do so. In order to allow that new trajectory for the party, I saw as important two main goals. Those were the eventual reunification of the many Communist organizations in the U.S. and the reorganizing of the current party under a more democratic and flexible system, built to develop leadership and facilitate advancing Communist theory. My attempts at initiating formal procedures to those ends were met with years of neglect due to the incompetent and indifferent leadership of this organization at all levels.<sup data-fn="189e1d4e-6f17-4b86-931b-fffebfaf9f50" class="fn"><a href="#189e1d4e-6f17-4b86-931b-fffebfaf9f50" id="189e1d4e-6f17-4b86-931b-fffebfaf9f50-link">4</a></sup></p>



<p>At the local level, I tried initiating a system similar to that which I outlined in a <em>Reorganizing Proposal</em>,<sup data-fn="c4aa7e2f-d279-49b1-8c92-ceb3ecf5ceeb" class="fn"><a href="#c4aa7e2f-d279-49b1-8c92-ceb3ecf5ceeb" id="c4aa7e2f-d279-49b1-8c92-ceb3ecf5ceeb-link">5</a></sup> hoping to demonstrate its benefits to national leadership. However, it has become more apparent that leadership is made up of people not interested in developing the party or advancing the cause past writing articles for a newspaper nobody reads or giving lectures on topics they are not qualified to give&nbsp; in a desperate bid to remain relevant.<sup data-fn="e79fa8f6-b33f-4cf1-96ab-94e4f23dc04f" class="fn"><a href="#e79fa8f6-b33f-4cf1-96ab-94e4f23dc04f" id="e79fa8f6-b33f-4cf1-96ab-94e4f23dc04f-link">6</a></sup> Using the methods I outlined there, we had taken our club from two people holding infrequent meetings at a bar, to within three years a group that is playing a leading role in local activism composed of dozens of people across the state of Kansas. We did this while our apathetic district leadership were members of a defunct club of retirees.</p>



<p>While I was spending mental energy and time trying to convince non-members of the virtue of our organization and prove that virtue with tangible action, I faced accusations of having bad intentions regarding this party, being called a “wrecker” or participating in factionalism.<sup data-fn="e7bc12a8-21ec-4a0c-96b0-e15673327333" class="fn"><a href="#e7bc12a8-21ec-4a0c-96b0-e15673327333" id="e7bc12a8-21ec-4a0c-96b0-e15673327333-link">7</a></sup> The patronizing attitudes I have seen expressed to myself and others trying to effect change in this organization is demonstrative of a culture of elitism and a focus on dogmatic adherence to a misconception of Communist theory and its processes, where structure has been replaced with formality and work has been replaced with words, despite the known dangers of bureaucracy becoming the focus of a party.<sup data-fn="bef52bf9-eec1-48d6-9803-02a076adb8a4" class="fn"><a href="#bef52bf9-eec1-48d6-9803-02a076adb8a4" id="bef52bf9-eec1-48d6-9803-02a076adb8a4-link">8</a></sup>&nbsp;</p>



<p>More patronizing was the constant attempts at gas lighting by some of our members demanding concrete proof of instances of undemocratic actions that we personally witnessed, such as those that occurred at the 32nd National Convention. I will not beat that dead horse more than necessary, but suffice to say that calling something a democratic decision does not make it so, and trying to convince people that witnessed it that they require proof of what occurred for their views to be considered valid is a childish act of bad faith. It is revealing of the direction of this party that most of those I met at that convention, people chosen by their Districts to represent them at the national level, have been either forced out of the party<sup data-fn="5b44dab3-eb8b-4cb0-aeac-24e26f2fc390" class="fn"><a href="#5b44dab3-eb8b-4cb0-aeac-24e26f2fc390" id="5b44dab3-eb8b-4cb0-aeac-24e26f2fc390-link">9</a></sup> or have left due to their own frustration with it.<sup data-fn="4888592e-05e5-4043-9f13-ee0a14fa809f" class="fn"><a href="#4888592e-05e5-4043-9f13-ee0a14fa809f" id="4888592e-05e5-4043-9f13-ee0a14fa809f-link">10</a></sup> I had remained in an attempt to raise the objection to the way things were done while hearing from my now non-member Comrades of the success they have experienced in different organizations that are more committed to ML doctrine.</p>



<p>Recently, I brought up a question for discussion on our club chat concerning a phone call I had just had with a club member who is part of the National Committee. In the effort to present the options for actions we could take in regards to our use of “Kansas Communist Party”<sup data-fn="28c3bbec-a43c-419c-9ea4-3194286ca949" class="fn"><a href="#28c3bbec-a43c-419c-9ea4-3194286ca949" id="28c3bbec-a43c-419c-9ea4-3194286ca949-link">11</a></sup> vs “Sedgwick County CPUSA”.<sup data-fn="833e5c9f-161e-4bb6-aeb1-2dcb57d37966" class="fn"><a href="#833e5c9f-161e-4bb6-aeb1-2dcb57d37966" id="833e5c9f-161e-4bb6-aeb1-2dcb57d37966-link">12</a></sup> As it pertained to our relationship with our close allies in the local activist community, I also asked for their views on the matter in order to inform my own.<sup data-fn="8c8a6a08-1d9a-4f5d-b67c-9184497c5f95" class="fn"><a href="#8c8a6a08-1d9a-4f5d-b67c-9184497c5f95" id="8c8a6a08-1d9a-4f5d-b67c-9184497c5f95-link">13</a></sup> This was seen as a breach of club discipline. This member has, in nearly every instance, raised objections to the presentations of questions or actions before the club or has attempted to subordinate the club to the views held by the leadership he is so unquestioningly devoted to, even when those views run counter to those held by the club members. Many of these objections have been based on an unoriginal devotion to obscure party lines or rigid readings of theory that this party has widely misapplied.<sup data-fn="ae5ad688-442b-4fdf-af90-f7927fff2507" class="fn"><a href="#ae5ad688-442b-4fdf-af90-f7927fff2507" id="ae5ad688-442b-4fdf-af90-f7927fff2507-link">14</a></sup> It is tedious and interrupts the work being done, but at least it’s in keeping with the party leadership as a whole.</p>



<p>Another instance which now shines bright in my memory is my experience attending the “Peace Conference” in New York City in 2023. During my stay in the assigned dorms, I overheard “Noah”, a member from Illinois speaking about how they had purged members for not being sufficiently supportive of the Democratic Party. When I brought up my concerns with that claim at a club meeting in which Joe Sims was in attendance, Joe called me a liar and demanded proof of those statements, perhaps thinking that I would be carrying a tape recorder wherever I went, but more transparently in an attempt to silence any criticism or concerns with the party (this is made all the more hypocritical due to articles written in which he makes even more damning and unsupported claims, including accusing Kansan clubs being led by “ex-communists”, and other outright lies<sup data-fn="6584e331-5de5-46f7-a167-b89f175503ae" class="fn"><a href="#6584e331-5de5-46f7-a167-b89f175503ae" id="6584e331-5de5-46f7-a167-b89f175503ae-link">15</a></sup>). I later met that same Comrade at the 32nd Convention,<sup data-fn="e7e54af4-dc22-4b99-a7fd-8c8d1c6c11d6" class="fn"><a href="#e7e54af4-dc22-4b99-a7fd-8c8d1c6c11d6" id="e7e54af4-dc22-4b99-a7fd-8c8d1c6c11d6-link">16</a></sup> in which he called me “chauvinist” for questioning the leadership&#8217;s continuing hold on power despite the obvious stagnation we are experiencing.</p>



<p>These stories outline a repeating pattern in the Party in which its leadership ignores its own bylaws and processes and then works fast to expel, silence, or otherwise exclude any member who raises objections to their policies. In the immediate past, the Party has done things like putting people in governing roles as a reward for loyalty, rather than due to competence or the will of those they will be governing, or refusing to issue the required financial reports to what is supposed to be the organizations highest authority<sup data-fn="efe90f75-bfbe-4698-89ee-135539e7f12c" class="fn"><a href="#efe90f75-bfbe-4698-89ee-135539e7f12c" id="efe90f75-bfbe-4698-89ee-135539e7f12c-link">17</a></sup> (the Delegates of the National Convention). For an example, when the District Organizer position was about to open up in the Kansas/ Missouri district, rather than consult the membership, as is required by the CPUSA Constitution,<sup data-fn="d4e79a0c-0b88-4fa0-94e8-e70ba7d19140" class="fn"><a href="#d4e79a0c-0b88-4fa0-94e8-e70ba7d19140" id="d4e79a0c-0b88-4fa0-94e8-e70ba7d19140-link">18</a></sup> the leadership unilaterally and unanimously decided to put in place the previously mentioned local club member without any vote or consultation with the membership.<sup data-fn="80fabaa8-2946-4f3b-9e20-57bb43d3c57f" class="fn"><a href="#80fabaa8-2946-4f3b-9e20-57bb43d3c57f" id="80fabaa8-2946-4f3b-9e20-57bb43d3c57f-link">19</a></sup> Due to these types of actions, we see good members leaving the party in favor of those who do not delve too deeply into the Party’s history or methods of “activism”. The Party cannot fathom itself as anything but the leader of any and all movements, even as they continue to prove themselves unworthy of leadership.</p>



<p>A great Comrade of mine once asked me “at what point [am I] fighting for an acronym”. I can no longer offer my support or participation in the CPUSA. I am tired of making excuses for a bunch of liberals and pork choppers more interested in what they consider journalism and singing than in the success of communism. I’m tired of trying to build a party only interested in perpetuating itself for the benefit of a few in leadership<sup data-fn="f5a4dd5d-f312-44be-9c87-4da1d785f381" class="fn"><a href="#f5a4dd5d-f312-44be-9c87-4da1d785f381" id="f5a4dd5d-f312-44be-9c87-4da1d785f381-link">20</a></sup> while taking up space in activism. I’m just plain tired.</p>



<p>I know it will not happen, but I would encourage this document to begin a series of self-criticism within the party leadership. I would also encourage the present membership to use the structure we have built in the Kansas Communist Party as an example of the way to unite the U.S. Communist movement (at least locally) rather than putting it into the control of the CPUSA.</p>



<p><strong>Update:</strong> Since sending this letter to the District and National leadership of the CPUSA, they have engaged in the predictable course of accusations against me, declaring that I am a “wrecker” and removing me from chats they control (overriding a club vote to do otherwise), as well as attempting to gain control over all the assets I created for the use of all local activists (they are claiming that my work was the work of the party, in an echo of the claims used by capitalist corporations when an employee leaves). Furthermore, they claimed entitlement to the name “Kansas Communist Party”, and have decided that they will not work with any organization I am a part of without permission from the national leadership , who will now directly oversee all local elections. They are perhaps forgetting that the entire sequence of events around my final decision here involved the confusion created around having two names for the same organization, and how we created the KCP to be under the sole control of the members as a group and not the national party, even including bylaws to that effect (objected to from those close to leadership). It is clear that the Leadership takes issue with any club acting independently, even when those clubs are doing the work they are supposed to be doing. It does not matter to Joe Sims or Rossana Cambron if the cause is benefiting, if they themselves are not getting the credit and a cut.</p>



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<p>&#8220;Disco Ambition&#8221; – Previous Chair Sedgwick County, KS CPUSA</p>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="2f184fff-5095-4c85-87c9-48d7f67dcc10">We live in a heavily militarized police state ruled by oligarchs &amp; currently engaged in a genocide. <a href="#2f184fff-5095-4c85-87c9-48d7f67dcc10-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="2dad396f-cade-4733-9008-85b2ffccc4c6">Ex: After over a year, we were unable to get a list of present members contact information from the National or the District. <a href="#2dad396f-cade-4733-9008-85b2ffccc4c6-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 2"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="7fdc3134-9d80-4491-bb57-e3046874a7f3">Spent-cost heuristic is something I knew could happen, but ignored. <a href="#7fdc3134-9d80-4491-bb57-e3046874a7f3-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 3"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="189e1d4e-6f17-4b86-931b-fffebfaf9f50">My contacts in other clubs had faced the same, even when we proposed similar plans. <a href="#189e1d4e-6f17-4b86-931b-fffebfaf9f50-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 4"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="c4aa7e2f-d279-49b1-8c92-ceb3ecf5ceeb">See: <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1lUUdEysez5dQsz7H5P28X10_UIe3UFh1/view?">Reorganizing Proposal</a>. S.G.G. II. <a href="#c4aa7e2f-d279-49b1-8c92-ceb3ecf5ceeb-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 5"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="e79fa8f6-b33f-4cf1-96ab-94e4f23dc04f">Such as the arrogance required for coastal city dwellers to talk about things such as <a href="https://www.cpusa.org/party_voices/gmr-today-liberals-abandoned-rural-workers-marxists-cannot/">rural engagement</a> (&amp; how Obama was good for us). <a href="#e79fa8f6-b33f-4cf1-96ab-94e4f23dc04f-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 6"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="e7bc12a8-21ec-4a0c-96b0-e15673327333">Despite the party leadership itself having seemingly little understanding of that term. <a href="#e7bc12a8-21ec-4a0c-96b0-e15673327333-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 7"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="bef52bf9-eec1-48d6-9803-02a076adb8a4">See: <a href="https://thecommunists.org/2022/01/25/news/history/fight-against-bureaucracy-soviet-union-stalin-ussr/">The fight against bureaucracy in the Soviet Union under Stalin | The Communists</a>. Carlos Rule. 01/25/2022. <a href="#bef52bf9-eec1-48d6-9803-02a076adb8a4-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 8"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="5b44dab3-eb8b-4cb0-aeac-24e26f2fc390">I’m constantly told that these purges were “<a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-16-austin-moving-on/">District Actions</a>” in another patronizing and transparent attempt to protect the national leadership. <a href="#5b44dab3-eb8b-4cb0-aeac-24e26f2fc390-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 9"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="4888592e-05e5-4043-9f13-ee0a14fa809f"><a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-08-01-on-why-im-leaving-the-party/">On Why I’m Leaving the Party – The Red Clarion</a>. Comrade Khadija. 08/01/2024. See also <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-07-19-why-i-left-the-cpusa/">Why I Left the CPUSA – The Red Clarion</a>. <a href="#4888592e-05e5-4043-9f13-ee0a14fa809f-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 10"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="28c3bbec-a43c-419c-9ea4-3194286ca949">Registered openly as the “Kansas Communist Association” Kansas nonprofit, rather than by use of <a href="https://www.peoplesworld.org/">shell companies</a> (<a href="https://www.intpubnyc.com/board-of-directors/">see also</a>) owned by <a href="https://www.cpusa.org/authors/john-bachtell/">party leadership</a> (there are no Communist entities <a href="https://apps.dos.ny.gov/publicInquiry/#search">registered in NY</a>). <a href="#28c3bbec-a43c-419c-9ea4-3194286ca949-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 11"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="833e5c9f-161e-4bb6-aeb1-2dcb57d37966">My analysis of the question can be found <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cBzJ9W9U2sW62t5VCif7G7rJb5zTjw0F/edit">here</a>, and the response can be found <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Af3kvC1lCLuhViYwOdd7c_HXJoupl5nt/view?">here</a>. <a href="#833e5c9f-161e-4bb6-aeb1-2dcb57d37966-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 12"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="8c8a6a08-1d9a-4f5d-b67c-9184497c5f95">I, whenever possible, attempt to inform my opinions with those of people around me connected to the issue. <a href="#8c8a6a08-1d9a-4f5d-b67c-9184497c5f95-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 13"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="ae5ad688-442b-4fdf-af90-f7927fff2507">I have long wondered if anyone constantly citing “<a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/">Left Wing Communism</a>” has actually read it. <a href="#ae5ad688-442b-4fdf-af90-f7927fff2507-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 14"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="6584e331-5de5-46f7-a167-b89f175503ae"><a href="https://www.cpusa.org/article/cp-national-committee-says-keep-your-eyes-on-the-prize/">CP National Committee says “Keep your eyes on the prize” – Communist Party USA</a>. Joe Sims. 07/22/2024 <a href="#6584e331-5de5-46f7-a167-b89f175503ae-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 15"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="e7e54af4-dc22-4b99-a7fd-8c8d1c6c11d6">Where he was made a member of the NC for his devotion. <a href="#e7e54af4-dc22-4b99-a7fd-8c8d1c6c11d6-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 16"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="efe90f75-bfbe-4698-89ee-135539e7f12c">Violating the <a href="https://www.cpusa.org/party_info/cpusa-constitution/">CPUSA Constitution, Article VII, Section 1</a>. (accessed 2025) <a href="#efe90f75-bfbe-4698-89ee-135539e7f12c-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 17"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="d4e79a0c-0b88-4fa0-94e8-e70ba7d19140">Violating the CPUSA Constitution, <a href="https://www.cpusa.org/party_info/cpusa-constitution/">Article II, Section 4, &amp; Article V, Section 4</a>. (accessed 2025) <a href="#d4e79a0c-0b88-4fa0-94e8-e70ba7d19140-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 18"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="80fabaa8-2946-4f3b-9e20-57bb43d3c57f"><a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LOhc_knPfiv-4zuk8yBQBIxudCLuJ9eI/view">Minutes of the CPUSA National Executive Board. September 3, 2025</a> <a href="#80fabaa8-2946-4f3b-9e20-57bb43d3c57f-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 19"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="f5a4dd5d-f312-44be-9c87-4da1d785f381">Ex: John Batchtell, the head of The People’s World and <a href="https://www.gawkerarchives.com/talking-politics-with-the-head-of-the-communist-party-u-1723918251">committed democrat</a>, (I previously had access to IRS records indicating his income, but have since lost that access). <a href="#f5a4dd5d-f312-44be-9c87-4da1d785f381-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 20"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Ruling Class Conflict: the Voting Rights Act</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-10-23-ruling-class-conflict-the-voting-rights-act/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cde. G. Gracchus]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 20:43:26 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Racial Oppression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Belt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Panther Party]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Reconstruction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brown v. Board]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Charles E. Cobb Jr.]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil Rights Act]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democrats]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Donald Trump]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FDR]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Franklin Delano Roosevelt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Griswold v. Connecticut]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lawrence v. Texas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Louisiana v. Callais]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loving v. Virginia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lyndon B. Johnson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Malcolm X]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obergefell v. Hodges]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pan-Afrikanism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reconstruction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republican Reconstruction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republicans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shelby Counter v. Holder]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Soviet Union]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Supreme Court]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Supreme Court of the United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed: How Guns Made the Civil Rights Movement Possible]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thomas Jefferson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USSR]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Voting Rights Act]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VRA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[white supremacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World War II]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=4276</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[With the open and legal disenfranchisement of Black voters in the South and other right-fascist strongholds, the layer of mystification that promised government responsiveness to the people will be gone.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>On August 6, 1965, Lyndon B. Johnson, president and chief executor of the federal U.S. government (and, therefore, the chief executive officer of the entire class of U.S. capitalists) signed the Voting Rights Act into law. In the Senate, this law passed with 77 votes for and 18 against, with the overwhelming support of 47 Democrats and 30 Republicans. The 18 votes against (16 Democrats and 2 Republicans) were all senators from the occupied U.S. South, representing the ruling class within the semi-colonial territories of the Black Belt. The passage of the VRA was part of the struggle between two economic systems that had begun when the 13 English colonies on Turtle Island joined into a single state, unified by a common ideology of white (English) supremacy. The conflict was one between <em>slave power</em> and <em>free labor</em>, that same conflict that, one hundred years prior, had erupted into the American Civil War.</p>



<p>By 1965, the old slave power had managed to beat back Reconstruction and establish itself as a constellation of terror-states in the U.S. South. While the capitalist ruling class in the North was content to hide or mystify the national oppression the U.S. system relied on, for the defeated Southern planter class and their petty-bourgeois hangers-on, this sublimation wasn’t enough. They were either ideologically incapable or materially incapable of joining the northern capitalists in adopting grand-sounding language about equality while maintaining the national oppression of New Afrikans and Indigenous Peoples; their deep-seated ideological commitments required them to constantly express their white supremacy in overt and terroristic ways. Sitting atop a semi-colony of brutally oppressed people, the ruling class in the U.S. South had, as the slaver Jefferson said, “the wolf by the ear.” In order to <em>feel </em>safe in that great prison, the Southern ruling class had to maintain absolute, <em>fascistic</em>, political supremacy over the Black population.</p>



<p>Indeed, the southern whites had been more or less permitted to do just that in the long period between the overthrow of radical Republican Reconstruction in 1877 (the period known to the Southern whites as “Redemption,” that is, redemption of the white supremacist power and the defeat of New Afrikan self-governance) and the alliance that emerged between Black World War II veterans returning to the South and the growing Black petty bourgeoisie. This period lasted from roughly 1877 until 1950.</p>



<p>In 1941, the racist policies of the FDR administration were challenged by A. Philip Randolph and his Black March on Washington; in 1954, the Supreme Court ended the legal basis for segregation in public schools when it decided <em>Brown v. Board</em>. Northern capitalists were insistent on bringing the southern slaveocracy into the modern day, not for moral reasons, but for economic ones. In 1957, the federal government passed the Civil Rights Act, the first signed into law since 1875. These decrees from on high were motivated by the need to free up labor in the Black Belt from the regressive agrarian prisons that the colonial relations still kept them in; but none of these decrees changed the balance of power in the South. Black New Afrikans in the semi-colonial states were held in a vice of property and labor theft, rape, arson, lynchings, and undisguised murder. In the U.S. South, the state ruled by terror. Despite the promise of the amended U.S. constitution, Black people who registered to vote <em>took their lives in their hands</em>.</p>



<p>At the end of the 1950s, the militant streams of Black resistance gained more and more currency and began to unite. These were often spearheaded by Black veterans or radical Black students, many of whom were explicitly Communists — Marxist-Leninists or otherwise. This period saw the rise of Malcolm X, the Black Panther Party, and of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.</p>



<p>The passage of the Voting Rights Act was the result of a tightening labor market in the U.S. at the same time that militancy was increasing and the consciousness was widening for the support of a Black national movement.<sup data-fn="45e9b544-ebbd-4049-990d-49840487c0b3" class="fn"><a href="#45e9b544-ebbd-4049-990d-49840487c0b3" id="45e9b544-ebbd-4049-990d-49840487c0b3-link">1</a></sup> Economic pressure joined with the Black drive for liberation. There was a real fear in the halls of power that the U.S. state could face a Black domestic insurrection and an increasing desire to see the fragments of the Southern planter class and their dependents defeated entirely, to consummate the triumph of free labor, as opposed to low-productivity sharecropping and semi-slave labor that still reigned in the South. Even the former planters themselves had begun to realize that they couldn’t continue to manage their sections of the country by relying purely on terror. They realized they needed to find a way to accommodate the <em>form</em> and <em>appearance</em> of equality while maintaining the white supremacist <em>content</em> of the slaveocracy.<sup data-fn="73e15a8f-c262-4248-b2a4-26420efa3021" class="fn"><a href="#73e15a8f-c262-4248-b2a4-26420efa3021" id="73e15a8f-c262-4248-b2a4-26420efa3021-link">2</a></sup></p>



<p>The VRA established a relation between the planters and the federal government that was similar to that of Reconstruction. Its general provisions under section 2 of the law prohibit state and local governments from enacting any law or rule that denies or abridges the right of any citizen to vote on account of race, color, or membership in a language group. Other general provisions outlaw literacy tests and poll taxes. The special provisions granted the federal U.S. Attorney General and the District Court for DC power over Southern elections, redistricting plans, and so forth, that essentially put the Southern states into a kind of federal receivership for the purposes of voting.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The War on the Voting Rights Act</h2>



<p>Although the VRA was a necessary concession to save the capitalist state by creating a veneer of participatory democracy in the US South, it wasn’t fully implemented all at once. This gave the ruling class time to find ways to empty the vote of its power. There remained, however, a significant faction within the broader US capitalist class itself for whom the VRA remained ideologically intolerable. Existence of international pressure from the Soviet Union and the national liberation and Pan-African movements forced the US to maintain this veneer. With the fall of the USSR and the declining world-position of the US ruling class, this clique of ideologically devoted racists has gained more and more adherents from their bourgeois colleagues.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The Federalist Society is one of the bastions of the movement to reverse the changes in the US legal landscape and return to the early 20th century when capital openly ruled the courts.<sup data-fn="d87a5390-27d6-4c51-8292-574cf4bbb2ce" class="fn"><a href="#d87a5390-27d6-4c51-8292-574cf4bbb2ce" id="d87a5390-27d6-4c51-8292-574cf4bbb2ce-link">3</a></sup> In 2013, the US Supreme Court, that bastion of ruling-class power,<sup data-fn="36c5e46e-2da9-41ed-9f72-c91d0601368a" class="fn"><a href="#36c5e46e-2da9-41ed-9f72-c91d0601368a" id="36c5e46e-2da9-41ed-9f72-c91d0601368a-link">4</a></sup> nullified the powerful special provisions of the VRA in <em>Shelby Counter v. Holder</em>. In the 2021 decision <em>Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee</em>, the Supreme Court weakened the general provisions of section 2 of the VRA. Now, the court is poised to rule on the constitutionality of section 2 as a whole. The legal war waged by the growing right-fascist bloc for half a century is nearing its conclusion. We must ask: does it matter if section 2 is struck down? If it does, why and how? Is there any way we can agitate around this issue? Does it mean we Marxists must join hands with Democrats and other fragments of the ruling class?</p>



<p>To briefly answer each in turn: firstly, yes; secondly, it is a sign of how advanced the imperialist decay is; thirdly, yes again; and, finally, <em>absolutely not!</em></p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What Will Be the Outcome?</h2>



<p>Despite the fact that the VRA in and of itself cannot guarantee anything, and despite the fact that its passage was an accommodation that was fashioned as part of an overall effort to pacify Black militancy and disarm the Black national revolutionary consciousness of the 1950s and 60s, it is actually of great importance to us whether or not the fascist court strikes it down. Oral arguments in <em>Louisiana v. Callais </em>have already signaled that the court does intend to roll back this final element of the VRA. This is part and parcel of the right-fascist drive to restore capitalists to open and undisguised power in all aspects of political and legal life. It dovetails with the same right-fascist attack on the administrative state presently being carried out under the guise of the shutdown, a political “conflict” in which the left-fascist Democrats are playing the role of useful idiot.<sup data-fn="54db86ca-bb97-4c1a-88f4-99c9511df899" class="fn"><a href="#54db86ca-bb97-4c1a-88f4-99c9511df899" id="54db86ca-bb97-4c1a-88f4-99c9511df899-link">5</a></sup> Given the disposition of political forces and the economic situation (increasing inflation and unemployment) it is likely that the VRA’s section 2 will be struck down.</p>



<p>The fate of the VRA is a bellwether for the degree of decay of the old US imperialist system that prevailed from 1991 until today as well as the balance of power between the left- (Democratic/Progressive) and right- (GOP and MAGA) fascist cliques within the ruling class. If the VRA is struck down, Democratic Party operatives will ceaselessly and breathlessly fund raise and proclaim their old doctrines about emergency organization in the face of “Trumpist” fascism and the need to permit people from both sides of the color line to participate in and enjoy the capitalist system. In private, of course, they will signal more cynically that it’s just good strategy to give the nationally oppressed the illusion of democracy. <em>After all</em>, they will say to their donors in closed-door dinners, <em>it&#8217;s not as if the masses of Black people — or for that matter, any working-class voters — actually have any way to influence the important policies of the US state.</em></p>



<p>If the VRA is struck down, it signals the right-fascists are extremely advanced on their path toward carrying out the genocide of the nationally oppressed that they have been preparing for Black and Indigenous people in the US.<sup data-fn="0289a6d5-3be4-47de-8cec-15b1e7222133" class="fn"><a href="#0289a6d5-3be4-47de-8cec-15b1e7222133" id="0289a6d5-3be4-47de-8cec-15b1e7222133-link">6</a></sup> Striking down the VRA would remove entire layers and battlefields of intra-bourgeois political struggle — layers that are “wasteful” in the eyes of the ruling class, just like the “waste” of the administrative state that they are dismantling — but would also strip away the illusion that the US state can be altered by the oppressed voting in any meaningful way.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What Is Our Task?</h2>



<p>If the VRA is defeated, the Democrats will attempt to lead the movement that organically emerges in reaction. Many will rightly be afraid of what the loss of the final provisions of the VRA mean for the nationally oppressed and other groups openly targeted by the right-fascist government. <em>We cannot allow this to happen</em>. Democrats will naturally frame the question as one of government participation. They will start new voter registration drives, demand mobilization to defeat the right-fascists at the ballot box, and exercise a full-court press for the election of Democrats to the Congress and in local government.</p>



<p><em>We must instead first agitate against the new terror-government directly, then propagandize to expand the consciousness of the masses to connect the striking down of the VRA with the entire rotten system. </em>It will be clear to many that there are no self-correcting measures available. With the open and legal disenfranchisement of Black voters in the South and other right-fascist strongholds, the layer of mystification that promised government responsiveness to the people will be gone.</p>



<p>Now is the time to prepare for the VRA to be removed. Now is the time to lay plans. If it is not, and the right-fascists instead uphold the remaining section to buy more time before carrying out a direct assault on the ballot box, then our preparations won’t have been in vain; we can still carry out agitation and propaganda on the basis that the VRA <em>could have been</em> struck down, and likely <em>will be </em>struck down in the near future. We must broaden the call to include other landmark rulings and laws that were offered during the heyday of empire — <em>Griswold v. Connecticut, Lawrence v. Texas, Loving v. Virginia</em>, <em>Brown v. Board</em>, and <em>Obergefell v. Hodges</em> — and warn that they too stand to be struck down by the right-fascists.</p>



<p>The moment is ours; the Democrats must not be allowed to stand at its head.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">Footnotes</h4>


<ol class="wp-block-footnotes"><li id="45e9b544-ebbd-4049-990d-49840487c0b3">The tightening labor market put the pressure on to mobilize and “free” tied up labor; business interests wanted to draw from the pool of sharecroppers in the Black Belt.<br> <a href="#45e9b544-ebbd-4049-990d-49840487c0b3-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 1"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="73e15a8f-c262-4248-b2a4-26420efa3021">“By the 1950s the language of white supremacy was gradually softening in some quarters, becoming less shrill in an attempt to gain respectability for racism. Phrases like ‘states’ rights’ and concepts such as the need to protect ‘constitutional liberties’ from communist subversion and federal intervention were becoming stand-ins for raw racial rhetoric.” Cobb, Charles E. Jr.<em> This Nonviolent Stuff&#8217;ll Get You Killed: How Guns Made the Civil Rights Movement Possible</em>. Duke University Press, 2015.<br> <a href="#73e15a8f-c262-4248-b2a4-26420efa3021-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 2"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="d87a5390-27d6-4c51-8292-574cf4bbb2ce">See <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/the-society-behind-the-court-the-federalists-and-the-supreme-courts-fascist-blitzkrieg/"><em>The Society Behind the Supreme Court’s Fascist Blitzkrieg</em></a> in the <em>Clarion</em>.<br> <a href="#d87a5390-27d6-4c51-8292-574cf4bbb2ce-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 3"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="36c5e46e-2da9-41ed-9f72-c91d0601368a">See <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/capitals-supreme-defender/"><em>Capital’s Supreme Defender</em></a> in the <em>Clarion</em>.<br> <a href="#36c5e46e-2da9-41ed-9f72-c91d0601368a-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 4"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="54db86ca-bb97-4c1a-88f4-99c9511df899">See <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-08-10-this-land-aint-your-land/"><em>This Land Ain’t Your Land: The US Government Shutdown</em></a> in the <em>Clarion</em>.<br> <a href="#54db86ca-bb97-4c1a-88f4-99c9511df899-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 5"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li><li id="0289a6d5-3be4-47de-8cec-15b1e7222133">See <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2025-10-14-dc-occupation/"><em>DC Occupation: Coming to Your City Next</em></a> in the <em>Clarion</em>.<br> <a href="#0289a6d5-3be4-47de-8cec-15b1e7222133-link" aria-label="Jump to footnote reference 6"><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" />︎</a></li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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