Solidarity, as weapon and practice, versus killer cops and white supremacy

Cindy Milstein blogs about the wave of protests against police killings in the Bay Area, in the wake of the killings of Mike Brown and Eric Garner.

Submitted by Cindy Milstein on December 12, 2014

Last night, December 10, 2014, after marching for about four hours from downtown Berkeley to downtown Oakland, with only about three hundred people at most, as the #BlackLivesMatter #BrownLivesMatter demo was seemingly winding down, some folks courageously outed two undercover cops (not infiltrators, mind you; they blend in much better and disrupt in much more subtle, long-term ways, including by building trust and friendship with various protesters). One of the undercovers got spooked and whipped out a gun; they also arrested one or two black people -- seemingly at "random" (i.e., due to the logic of institutional racism). There are many photos of this, such as the one here. Oakland police are scurrying to deny it was one of theirs, and word is that these are California Highway Patrol cops. Still, many Oakland cops were on hand, on foot, in cop cars and vans, and overhead in the ever-present helicopter. They watched their or someone else's cop do this, and didn't intervene.

This incident is surprising and not surprising.

The cops seem tired; they admitted it themselves in an article on December 9 (http://www.insidebayarea.com/my-town/ci_27103750/protests-bring-hardship-cops-police-departments). Our nightly protests these past two weeks have already cost the Oakland police department $1.36 million in overtime alone -- and that's just one of the many police departments, city, state, and federal, out there every night following us visibly and in the shadows (http://www.insidebayarea.com/my-town/ci_27112469/protests-costing-oakland-nearly-100-000-per-day).

This vibrant, dynamic movement sparked by the courage and resolve of #Ferguson is raising the social and economic costs of the US business as usual of police murdering black and brown people, in particular, on a daily basis without cause, save for white supremacy. So many people are stepping up and stepping out -- from the thousands of newly politicized high school students yesterday in Berkeley who walked out of their classes and into the streets, decrying the violence of policing and its relation to "the whole damn system," to the families of those who have lost loved ones to murderous police and who have long known, intimately, that "it's not a bad apple; it's the whole damn tree."

It is not surprising that individual, exhausted cops are "freaking out" and making such "mistakes" as pulling out a gun on protesters. Nor is it surprising, as happened on December 9 in Oakland, that groups of uniformed cops are given orders to shoot "nonlethal" bullets from their perch on a freeway down on to protesters on the street below -- bullets that injured, and have been known to permanently maim and kill. For the moment at least, the police forces have lost control and are on the defensive, and the only way for them to strive to regain it is to bring their frequently hidden violence (or hidden, at least, to many who are now protesting) into the light of the nightly marches, to be captured on Twitter, Instagram, and mainstream media cameras galore.

This is, as they say, a "teaching moment" for the US public -- or it should be, if people are even remotely listening, witnessing, or participating in this remarkable uprising.

And make no mistake: it is an uprising.

As the nights wear on, you see more support, both in the streets but also, tellingly, from passersby in cars, folks leaning out their windows or doorways to cheer protesters on, in casual conversations overheard or classroom discussions. It is weaving its way into the social fabric, and making for many new "recruiters" to the side of #BlackLivesMatter #BrownLivesMatter. It not only isn't stopping; it is spreading.

That is why, unsurprisingly, the police are getting more and more serious about using every weapon in their tool box, from ammo to lies, to stop it -- to divide and hence stop us.

What is surprising is not the police violence, not that the police use guns aimed squarely at people, not that the cops daily murder people of color in the United States. That is the reason we millions are out on the street -- our bodies as a massive exclamation mark that "enough is enough is enough is enough. It has to stop!"

And it is not at all surprising that because we are spotlighting police violence, the police who are on the streets with us are none too happy. They are, in fact, enraged -- a rage that probably puts the best of our rage to shame. They are not there to protect protesters, as some seem to still think, nor even hinder them from demonstrations about topics at a remove from policing. Police themselves, or more exactly, the institution of policing as a whole, is precisely the target.

They know that. And when cornered, as they increasingly are, they are going to get even more freaked out, more violent, and sloppier, based on their correct belief (backed by courts, states, nonprofit industrial complex, and other organizations and powerbrokers) that they are immune to criticism, much less responsibility, much less having to worry about suffering any consequences if -- when -- they kill people -- again and again and again.

But, it seems, too many people on the streets still don't get it. They are surprised when an outed undercover cop pulls a gun.

That is the surprise here. How can the nightly street lessons not firmly be underscoring the reason we are already on the streets?

Instead of being able to plainly see the relationship between the clear-as-day institutional pattern of cops as killers, cops as violent enforcers of everything from racism to gentrification, and our contestation of that fact -- and thus why police on the streets with us are absolutely the violence, absolutely the violent ones, absolutely going to violently target people of color and especially black males -- the "peaceful" protesters last night started quickly tweeting and circulating myths about the undercover cops who were outed last night. Here is how my Facebook friend and comrade Tio Brooke, Oakland, put it today:

"Undercovers are outed by militants at great personal risk, get a gun pulled on them by freaked out cops and the story already being propagated online is the asinine conspiracist/peace police fantasy of the cops 'instigating looting' with absolutely zero supporting evidence.

"Yeah, I know all about police tactics and cointelpro. Been intimately acquainted with that shit for my 30 years of street action and organizing. Keep your armchair theories to yourself and recognize propaganda when you see it.

"'Outside agitator' or 'cop agitator' . . . both are red herrings and not only don't capture the complexity of what is going on but both are dangerous and stupid tropes being used to confound and divert."

Tio is right. We are being diverted. The police probably laughing over their doughnuts and coffee about how easily we are diverted. That, alas, is one of the best tools in their box.

Let's give police departments more of a run for their money, confounding and diverting them, not vice versa.

We need to confound the logic of state and its police apparatus by stepping up the concept of "solidarity" -- not merely in name but unfailingly in practice, whether on the streets or elsewhere. Everywhere. We need to have each other's backs, just like the folks who bravely outed these undercover cops, putting themselves in harm's way to try to ensure everyone makes it home after a night on the streets.

We need to remember why we are on the streets to begin with: cops will and do kill, every single day in this United States, and often more, with near-complete impunity. They do it to uphold the system that has, from the start, stolen land and stolen lives in the name of colonialism and capitalism, social control and social domination, wealth and power for some, and misery and impoverishment for many.

Solidarity is a strong weapon. It is likely our best weapon. Even if the state doesn't have a full monopoly on violence, as anarchists of old contended, it has a vast arsenal of violence, ranging from teargas and tanks to torture, from endless amounts of guns and endless amounts of prison cells.

Solidarity is what initiated #Ferguson protests across this continent and now world; it's what is keeping our fires of resistance burning; it's what is fueling our desires for a new world. Solidarity has built a movement against killer cops and white supremacy, and that's no small achievement given the history and legacy of genocidal racism in the United States. If we can craft smarter, stronger, more empathetic, higher walls of solidarity to surround and sustain us, together in our differences, we might just succeed in walling out the world of hierarchical social forces intent on breaking us down and ripping us apart.

What does solidarity look like?

For one, it looks like not jumping to conclusions, especially based on things you didn't see, rumors you overhear, reports from mainstream media, or spins on events by the police.

It means not letting your own discomfort(s) get in your way of being there for others, even if that means you need to walk away from something for a few minutes to collect yourself, or skip a street protest to rest and do some self-reflection, which then might better allow you to push past your discomforts.

It means being precise in your language about what is troubling you about various strategies. "Peace" is a vacuous word in light of all the violence forced on people daily, from killer cops to homelessness to domestic assault and rape, to climate-change disasters and diseases. The list is long and painful. "Peace" is poor shorthand, in our protests, for "this act/behavior feels hard for me."

Think about what makes it feel hard for you. Think about why something that feels hard for you -- like dumpsters being put in the streets for a barricade to hinder ongoing riot cops and protect you, the demonstrator, and your friends -- isn't different from you helping to put a picnic table on I-80 earlier in the week to block traffic several hours and, yes, keep riot cops at bay so as to protect each other and hold the street. Think about why a fence being ripped open so people can escape a police "kettle" (i.e., when police surround us on all sides, with no exit, in order to contain or arrest) or climb up on to a freeway for another takeover isn't substantively any different in terms of "peace" or "not peace" than some other piece of lifeless property being broken, often as symbolic point about complicity with racist gentrification and police as the enforcers of "cleaning up" neighborhoods for rich people to move in.

Likely what is hard, really, is that certain actions trouble your own life experiences and especially socialization; that's OK! None of us are immune from being socialized, badly, by racism in a racist society, even if disproportionately so.

For instance, with places like UC Berkeley costing tens of thousands per year, many students now come from sheltered and/or upper-class backgrounds, whether they are white or people of color. They are gaining degrees within an institution that is now structured to manufacture the next generation of wealthy and powerful elites, whether in business or the nonprofit industrial complex. So you might, as a student, not have been exposed to what it means to have your kids be target practice for every cop who walks by, simply because they are black or brown. You might not get how it feels to be evicted from your home, made homeless, made criminal. It might feel scary, challenging, or discomforting to now be exposed to ideas, people, and varied life experiences and upbringings that are far from your own underlying assumptions and lived experienced. That's OK.

You can walk through and beyond those assumptions; you can choose solidarity not charity, to be on the side of the dispossessed, as accomplices and co-conspirators in shaping an egalitarian and self-organized society. As a student who has already chosen to step into the street, despite the odds of that happening given the reactionary state of "higher" education, you can choose to become a rebel who thinks and acts for themselves, collectively with others -- and stay one, even if it takes you a while to work through your prickly feelings.

What's not OK is what students and others are doing with their prickly feelings on the streets to their purported fellow protesters.

It is not OK to take out your own personal limits on others who are trying, like you, to create a better form of social organization, especially when those others are often people who are the precise targets of policing because of skin color and/or class and gender, politics and/or tactics -- or whatever.

So rather than yelling "peaceful protest" and waving fingers at people who are doing things that discomfort you -- tactically and politically -- see your discomfort as your own growing pains, as a wake-up call, as all of us becoming different and better people through the many beautiful, varied, powerful acts of making social change toward a better world as we discomfort ourselves and society.

For example, several nights ago, right in front of the Berkeley police station and lines of riot police, a black person tossed a bit of garbage in the direction of the cops. A white person who looked visibly shaken by that act quickly screamed at the top of their voice, while gesturing frantically toward the black person, "Provocateur! Stop them!" and so on, whipping many other people up to do the same thing. Fortunately, the black person wasn't arrested, and two white people stood behind the person who was loudly outing them. Also fortunately, the white person realized just as quickly that they were putting the black person in profound danger. "I was feeling upset," the white person said. "But I should have walked away for a minute or two instead of yelling. I won't do that again."

A lack of solidarity can also be traced to disagreements about strategic symbols, strategic choices, and/or forms of organization, and wanting to see things go a certain way. Perhaps this is not the kindest way to put it, but such an outlook, at heart, relies on notions of control: protesters wanting things to go their own way -- a singular way that fits with what they think is the best thing to do. That translates into a sentiment: "we" need to do something [fill in a single tactic or strategy] that "people" can understand.

Yet as should be apparent from all the rainbow of strategies, tactics, protests, and direct actions as well as prefigurative politics flowering across the United States, different direct actions and tactics speak to different people. That's precisely why this gorgeous (albeit always messy) movement is staying so strong, growing so much. Indeed, it is dynamic because people have been innovating tactics, sharing them across the continent via social medias, and then borrowing them for their cities and towns, to further innovate. Some people are moved by die-ins in malls; others by trains or freeways or bridges being blocked, or kids walking out of their schools in defiance of their teachers; others are touched by seeing a new luxury restaurant's windows smashed, knowing that such places mean more policing, criminalization, and evictions of people of color and the poor; still others are moved by graffiti on the side of police cars, because it signals that the police aren't thoroughly in control as an invading army; and on and on. Mostly, many are simply moved by the fact -- and therefore are starting to join enthusiastically in the protest, too -- that millions of feet are pounding many miles of pavement night after night after night against killer cops and white supremacy.

We haven't stopped, though the police are working overtime to divert and confound us.

Yes, maybe we need to "stop" to now better self-organize, so that certain groups or voices don't end up commandeering marches or megaphones. So that we can do deeper, sustained jail and court support as follow-up to arrests. So that we can strategize on how to really shut down this system, in myriad ways, and practice, at the same time, new ways of being and living, a new society that makes this old one truly look as brutal as it is and that ultimately makes it history. So that we can share ideas and tactics with each other on how to better outwit the police as we struggle against them. So that we can do trainings on how to offer forms of mutual aid, from medic to legal to educational to standing by those who already, always, bear the brunt of state violence.

Yes, maybe we should "stop" in order to stop handing comrades over on the streets, directly or indirectly, to those same policing agents who injure, imprison, abuse, and kill.

Let's practice solidarity, and if you don't understand how that looks: Ask others! Learn! Listen! Read about past and present movements! And then test out how it feels to be in solidarity with others (good! always good!).

Because almost more than anything, solidarity means having each other's backs when our backs all look quite different from each other -- as they should. Aren't we aspiring toward "a world in which," as the Zapatistas have joyfully proclaimed time and time, "all worlds fit"?

Yes, we are far from that place of autonomous and caring communities. That reality undergirds why we are nightly on the street -- that striving, that aspiration. But we can start experimenting with what it looks like, in micro-ways, in the many micro-moments we are handed (usually by riot police) on the streets together.

We are not provoking the police; they provoke daily, which is why we are on the streets, where as should be self-evident, they will continue to provoke.

Given this, we need to stay extra powerful in our resolve to keep up daily pressure, on the streets and elsewhere, to craft an ever-more imaginative diversity of tactics, to encourage many forms of resistance in many cities at the same time, complementing and sometimes contradicting each other but in concert, and we need to reflect on more savvy strategies.

But most crucial, we need empathy and solidarity among all of us.

Here's some pithy thoughts on street solidarity by Shareef Ali, who gave me permission to quote and share:

"Let's say you disapprove of property destruction as a form of protest or resistance, whether because you think it morally wrong, you think it hurts the movement, or something else. I don't agree with you, but set that aside for a moment.

"If you are at a protest and you choose to take pictures or record video of people doing illegal things, you may end up putting that person in jail.

"That is, because you disapproved of someone's behavior, because you thought it was 'violent' towards inanimate objects, or because you thought it might hurt the movement, you are choosing to assist the state in sending that living, breathing person to one of the most violent places in the world, for the *expressed purpose* of destroying the movement.

"Even if you're right about the ethics or efficacy of property destruction -- and I don't think you are -- that is totally, utterly unconscionable, and it is far more violent and counter to the cause of justice than smashing a window ever could be."

There are as many ways to lend solidarity (as opposed to charity or self-preservation) as there are people on the streets. So let's renew our efforts to practice, as the chant goes, "sol-sol-solidarity."

Let's not promote our own sectarian group and its ideology at the expense of cohesiveness, so that one tendency, say, sets all the march times and places, and races at top speed for hours, leaving many behind. We need to stick together, the better not to be picked off by police, the better to actually have the power to push police back so that we can, for one, get on to freeways night after night, or better yet, invent all sorts of new disruptions of the status quo.

Here's one example, among many, of how solidarity ends when one group is more concerned about promoting itself.

Last night, at the start of the march, protesters in Berkeley decided to disrupt -- and did! -- a talk by an uber-wealthy venture capitalist being held in Wheeler Hall, to a packed audience of would-be uber-wealthy capitalists. Many protesters stood on the stage in that auditorium, as the student audience yelled angrily and simultaneously tweeted out insults that were PowerPoint illuminated on a giant screen above the protesters' heads. Folks from one nonlibertarian left tendency (or less politely, authoritarian anticapitalists) who had the bullhorn in hand departed from the auditorium quickly and began to march away, leaving others inside to face potential arrest by police or attack by overheated young capitalist-students. When confronted on not staying outside Wheeler to lend solidarity until all were out of the building, the self-appointed leaders said, "But we said we'd march; they choose to stay inside." (That same group, sadly, also has been putting out its own legal number, rather than using the one that everyone of various political perspectives does -- the National Lawyers Guild at 415-285-1011 -- and also not providing the same accountable, ongoing legal aid for folks in jail and once out. Again, problematic solidarity at best.)

Let's conspire together to bring more and more folks out each night, in more and more places, for new and inspiring direct actions -- to shut it down while at once prefiguring other social relations and forms of social organization. Indeed, solidarity looks like organizing collectively and cooperatively with others, time and time.

Let's not create internal, self-appointed police who cry "peaceful protest" while pointing out comrades to riot cops, or try to initiate vigilante "justice" toward those they disagree with. Let's not be those "peace police."

Let's not take pictures of other protesters who are engaging in illegal activities. Remember: even walking in the street or doing a sit-in on a freeway is illegal! Indeed, the entirety of the night protests are illegal. And let's not post such images online, making it easier work for policing agencies to surveil, catalog, and catch us.

Let's not fall for and then parrot mainstream media propaganda, likely seeded by the police forces, that try to divide us into "good" vs "bad" protesters. All of us who are out there care (save for the police). Let's all be subversive and rebellious protesters, fully dedicated to constructing a new society.

Let's not verbally and physically try to assault other protesters who push mainstream media cameras out of their own faces. It's their choice not to be filmed. Such film gets found, saved, and later used by police to bring charges, often months or years later, against protesters. And when the mainstream media doesn't stop filming, despite being asked again and again, let's not intervene when a protester tries to block a camera lens. That, too, is their choice. It is neither hurting anyone nor "provoking the police" (again, we are on the streets because it's become vastly self-evident that police do not need any provocative to murder black and brown people on an everyday basis).

Such interventions often seem like parodies in light of the overwhelming proof positive of police violence and policing as violent. For instance, last night, after several unheard requests to a TV camera, a protester tossed some water from a water bottle toward the camera. Several people self-identifying as "peaceful" ran to verbally and physically go after the protesters and others nearby defending them. These peace folks claimed that the water -- a small amount, too -- was "violent" even as, a few minutes later, we were yet again faced with a line of police in full riot gear, with weapons in tow, and most people felt uncomfortable even chanting "fuck you" at them.

Let's not hinder those creating barricades with their bodies, dumpsters, fires, or plastic garbage bins (even if some litter gets on the ground!). They are, in fact, usually building them so as to protect everyone else on the streets from the police violence that we are all (allegedly) contesting: state violence in the form of killer cops, prisons, a legal system that doesn't indict, and other barbarism. Things in the streets slow police down when they are trying to stop, contain, arrest, beat, or teargas people. The greatest act of kindness and solidarity, in fact, is putting oneself at risk to create such barriers so that many others might feel safer and get away.

Those who are most willing to do such acts are extending a hand of solidarity, and by and large not serving as cops, paid or voluntary. As someone remarked to me today, "solidarity is love." I couldn't agree more.

I am not sure of this, of course, but if social movement history in the United States is any guide, undercover cops who look super mainstream can easily be planted as "peaceful protesters" to whip crowds into fighting among themselves -- a far more likely scenario than putting masked-up people into the mix. Those who mask up by and large, if you take time to discover for yourself, are the ones most looking out for others on the streets and not initiating the call-out of others' tactics. They are simply trying to shield their identity from police so as to avoid arrest and prosecution -- something we would all be well to avoid!

Plus many in masks, when the masks aren't in place, are the ones making and sharing food, doing indie media and acting as street medics, organizing in their neighborhoods against all sorts of injustices, raising bail money and doing court support, setting up social centers and other autonomous spaces, deschooling and free schooling, regularly targeted by police because of their race or class or gender, doing Copwatch, and on and on. They are most often the ones who most believe in and practice a do-it-ourselves sensibility as prefigurative experiments to replace hierarchical structures of domination and death.

We are tired too, like those "freaked-out" cops, undercover and in their riot attire, but not of the streets. We are not tired of fighting for a free society of free individuals. Instead, we are weary beyond words and slogans about all the violence of state, capital and white supremacy.

Solidarity should look like us not chanting anymore "this is what democracy looks like," because US-style democracy is murdering people at home and elsewhere. Any sort of self-governance will have to look far different, engaging in practices of solidarity that's about self-determination too.

Solidarity should not look like chanting "whose streets, our streets," because the police state, colonialist and/or capitalist, has already stolen those streets, and the land below time and again, and owns them yet as private property, increasingly gentrified into enclaves for the super-rich. Those streets are killing fields, whether for those made homeless who now have to make those streets their homes, or for those who lives are stolen repeatedly on the streets, like Mike Brown's.

There are so many other ways that solidarity can tangibly be practiced. I've named only a few, and I'm learning -- by watching and being on the receiving end of acts of solidarity -- some forms every day while on our illegal night demos. Let's bring bold imagination to bear on the project of implementing solidarity among us, as our weapon par excellence.

Let's get some rest during this storm that has come, but not get so comfy that we forget why we are on the streets to begin with.

I want to walk in the streets nightly, exhausted and exhilarated, forging trusting social relations, becoming new people in a new culture that we are trying to create with each mile, opening up possibility and holding strong, together, against those forces that would destroy all that is life affirming.

I want to be part of what scholar James C. Scott calls an "anarchist calisthenics" while we walk the miles, in which whether one is an anarchist or not, we practice together what it means to feel more and more comfortable in breaking the laws that aren't just, the very structural logic that's never going to be just by definition, so that we can build up rebel muscles for the harder and harder fight ahead -- the fight for freedom.

I want to love and rage and grieve and fight, with millions of others, against this killing machine, until we shut it down for good -- replacing it with a social goodness that we can barely yet envision, and armed with do-it-ourselves steel-hard solidarity as shield, aid, humanity, ethics.

* * *

For a good read on being accomplices in solidarity with each other, see http://www.indigenousaction.org/accomplices-not-allies-abolishing-the-ally-industrial-complex/.

For a good flyer, ready for copying and distributing, basically on solidarity through not being any "kind of pig" toward other protesters, see https://www.dropbox.com/s/ywfwn43ybcy10qe/morethanonekindofpig.pdf?dl=0.

For one history lesson on why "diversity of tactics" makes us strong, more diverse, and more inclusive, see piece on Quebec City 2001, https://cbmilstein.wordpress.com/2014/12/09/something-did-start-in-quebec-city-north-americas-revolutionary-anticapitalist-movement/.

And if you're new to social movements, welcome! Try to take some time to read about past uprisings, rebellions, and revolutions, and all the forms of solidarity that they entailed in the messy process of social transformation, or at least watch a few good films about them. Talk about it with friends you trust and new friends you are getting to know on the streets. (I know it's hard to find time to read in this incredible moment).

* * *

p.s. I too am tired -- from nightly marching, but far more, due to this world "as it is." I, too, have at times lacked empathy and solidarity on the streets because of that, and perhaps in this piece (which due to my exhaustion, may not be as thoughtful as I'd like). If you've experienced any absence of solidarity on my part, I apologize. We are all, all of us, always learning and growing, or should be. That said, I am going to intervene, whether I make friends or not, in striving to bring more and more solidarity to the streets. But I'm all about making friends and building trust, so I'll aspire to be more patient. One of the best parts of being on the streets together for hours and miles is the autonomous space it creates for us to have face-to-face conversations, so if you see me, feel free to say hello and let's talk about solidarity, strategy, and myriad political dilemmas -- and be sweet to each other.

(Photographer unknown; FTP, Oakland, December 9, 2014.)

This piece originally appeared on my blog, Outside the Circle, at https://cbmilstein.wordpress.com/…/solidarity-as-weapon-an…/, where you can sign up to receive notices when I post new words. Enjoy, share, reprint, post, tweet any of my writings . . . as long as it’s free as in “free water” and “freedom.”

Comments

Gregory A. Butler

9 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Gregory A. Butler on December 14, 2014

I'm in New York, I'm a Black man and I've been a labor militant and a communist for most of my adult life.

I'm no pacifist and I'm not going to wag my fingers at spontaneous rebellions.

That said, I don't see street fighting with the police as a useful tactic for us.

It's very useful for the police - and the capitalist class.

It gives them an excuse to arrest us and give young activists lifetime criminal records.

It makes us look like a bunch of criminals to the White silent majority watching the protests on TV at home.

It scares away working class Blacks and Latinos who can't afford to get arrested - immigrants, the parents of small children, people who work for the city ect.

They'll go to legal protests, but not the illegal ones.

I'd rather march peacefully and make the cops look bad when they violate their own laws and attack us

Also, its easy for White activists like Sister Milstein to be gung ho about violence.

In general, American police are far more likely to attack a Black or Latino person than a White person - even if the White person is armed and violent. So White folks get a lot more leeway when it comes to hitting cops - or even yelling at them- then Blacks or Latinos are. Even when it comes to deadly force, cops will risk injury or even death to take down an armed White suspect, even an active shooter, while they'll quickly shoot a suspect of color, even if they're unarmed

The Brown and Garner cases are living proof of that - both men were unarmed, both were killed, Brown had a pistol emptied into him, Garner was choked to death by four cops.

At least on this coast, Caucasians who want to brawl with police have been asked to leave rallies by the Blacks who organized those events.

Black Americans do not and never have had the ability to have Chuck Norris style brawls with the cops - Whites have that privilege, but if they bring their violence to our rallies, it will be Black heads that get split open and Black bodies in jail cells or coroner's slabs

if you want to brawl with cops, go have an all White riot in your neighborhood, and give us advanced notice so we can avoid it.

We'd rather demand that America give us the right to march peacefully without being shot or choked, if that's not too much trouble.

olive

9 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by olive on December 28, 2014

Gregory A. Butler wrote: "[...] Black Americans do not and never have had the ability to have Chuck Norris style brawls with the cops - Whites have that privilege, but if they bring their violence to our rallies, it will be Black heads that get split open and Black bodies in jail cells or coroner's slabs
if you want to brawl with cops, go have an all White riot in your neighborhood, and give us advanced notice so we can avoid it.
We'd rather demand that America give us the right to march peacefully without being shot or choked, if that's not too much trouble."
____________________________________________________

This, while making some good points, potentially gives way to the worst sort of identity politics. It's the same as using the activities and infiltration of the black bloc as an excuse to divide the less politicized and less militant from those willing to fight. Though here we are given the example of the very real difference in the level of repression heaped on black militants vs that faced by others. This has very real historic roots.

It takes always a continual effort to be able to separate the provocateur from the genuine militant, while at the same time not giving ground to the state by causing unnecessary divisions between revolutionaries and those newly radicalizing whom they wish to win over.

As well, it seems from what we can see in the news, these divergences in approach are not simply between white militants who want to fight the cops and black militants who want to demonstrate peacefully, but in many cases between black militants within the black community itself.

This should be understood in a historical context where the most savage class repression over the last hundred years has been in those incidents and those strikes where blacks and whites, immigrants and native-born united in struggle.

All the attacks on blacks and the black community are not just a legacy of slavery and its racist justifications, but are an extension of the penury system that followed the destruction of the reconstruction governments after the civil war, which continued until 1973. (We usually know it in the form of the chain-gangs of the american south), continuing to this day with the current prison system with its over 2 million incarcerated -- a booming growth industry. A growing industry of cheap slave/inmate labour. A continuation of slavery by other means. This is the underlying explanation and economic basis where we see black militants being far more savagely repressed than their white counterparts, and as well informs all those day-to-day aspects of life such as harassment and arrests for 'driving while black', 'walking down the street while black', 'reaching for your cellphone while black', etc.

It's in exposing this aspect of the 'new slavery' as part of the race to the bottom in terms of wages, working and living conditions... that the working class faces internationally that needs to be the focus.

Effective actions with large numbers of participants are necessary to keep the struggle generalizing and growing -- desirable to spread the ideas, although this won't accomplish much if it remains on the terrain of identity rather than class. This is particularly important in the US where historically every effort has been made to erase the very idea of class and class struggle.

jojo

9 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jojo on December 29, 2014

This curious article seems to have forgotten, or perhaps never new, that the real enemy is capitalism itself. The cops are there to protect it, that's all. And their unpleasant and violent attitude towards just about everyone who isn't obviously supporting capitalism uncritically, is what they're payed to do. They pick on nonwhites as the traditionally most obvious victims to go for. But ultimately their real target is the colorless working class. The emergence of the working class as a class, and it's class solidarity, is what the cops are really fighting against, and struggling to thwart, because that is what their paymasters fear most.