Leftists (white) and Black Liberation, was Re: Civil Rights

Carrol Cox cbcox at ilstu.edu
Mon Nov 5 16:34:49 PST 2001


Hakki Alacakaptan wrote:
>
> That's exactly why I retracted my counter-insult. Listen to the guy, he's
> angry as hell but he's also telling us clearly why, if you care to read
> between the epithets. He's blaming the white left of having auto-destructed
> by deserting the blacks.

Those from an SWP background dispute this hotly, but I have always argued that (regardless of one's estimation of the Panthers) the anti-war movement's failure to take a stand against the repression of the Panthers in the fall of 1969 marked the beginning of the death of the '60s left. The end of that slow death was the failure of the ERA -- a failure which in part at least reflected the switch in the women's movement from militant tactics to "sensible lobbying," which necessarily included a de facto betrayal of the black movement.

Around November 20 1969, at a fairly large meeting of the Moratorium here at ISU, Jan, I and a couple SDS students urged the local moratorium to take a stand against the ongoing repression of the Panthers; we were defeated rather overwhelmingly. (It would confuse the focus on the war we were told, and it might turn off some people who otherwise would support us. Hah!) Two weeks later Fred Hampton was dead, murdered by Cook County and Chicago Police. At the large Moratorium rally in San Francisco on November 15, David Hillyer of the Panthers was booed loudly by a largely white audience when he declared the right of blacks to self-defense. Things were, I believe, slightly better in Los Angeles, probably because of the strength of ATM -- the Chicano Moratorium, but I don't know any of the details.

The limit of CIO organizing in the '30s was the limit of its willingness to take a stand against racism and to organize black workers. Some black workers in Memphis (I only know the details of this hazily) had on their own organized a local of the Tobacco workers (not the name, which I don't remember), were having considerable success, and were beginning to organize white workers. The national union took over the local and stopped the the racial mixing. On this list and elsewhere one runs into endless metaphysical quibbling about whether a "black community" exists, and various triumphalist statements are made about large black support for the death penalty, for Democrats, etc. with sneering questions about who speaks for the black community. Etc. ETc. Etc. Etc.

I haven't been following this thread closely, and Art does seem a bit overwrought this time on this particular mini-topic -- but yes the general point is wholly correct that over and over again "the white left [has] auto-destructed by deserting the blacks."

Carrol



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