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Abolition and the
New Society
... the primary creative force
will be the collective actions of the mass seeking to solve the
great social problems which face them in their daily lives. Intellect
will play a high role, higher than ever, but it will be the intellectual
activities of millions of men, dealing with realities. Intellectuals
will be of use to the extent that they recognize the new forces
but as a class they will recognize it only when they see and
feel the new force. The role that they played between 1200 and
today will be over, because the condition of that role, the passive
subordinate mass, will be undergoing liquidation in the very
action ofthe mass which will be creating a totally new society,
an active integrated humanism. The ideas demanded and the will
to achieve them unfold one from the other, and with the consciousness
of power ideas, hopes, wishes, long-suppressed, because thought
unattainable, but now come into the open-that is the process
... But the great masses become abolitionist now; themselves
to wipe away the conditions of their own slavery. These cannot
be abolished by anyone else.
C.L.R. James
It seems to me the idea of our
civilization, underlying all American life, is that men do not
need any guardian. Not only the inevitable, but the bestpower
this side of the ocean, is the unfettered average common sense
ofthe masses. Institutions, as we are accustomed to calling them,
are but pasteboard, and intended to be, against the thought of
the street.
Wendell Phillips
The time has come to reconsider the original
premises of what has come to be known as the new abolitionist
project. Thus far, that project (not yet ten years old) has attracted
a good deal of media and academic attention, has influenced a
number of national discussions on race, has sharpened debates
in at least some quarters and has eamed a sympathetic hearing
among relatively large groups of anti-white supremacist audiences.
At the same time, since the initiators of the project had always
intended to be guided by the axiom that "the point was to
change it," the project thus far must be considered only
a very partial success. Frankly, we had hoped that, by this time,
supporters of our project would have been able to establish functioning
new abolitionist chapters across the country and that those chapters
would have been able to develop effective public projects embodying
abolitionist politics. This has not happened.
We have some questions for ourselves and
for those we imagme to be more or less critical supporters. Is
abolitionism sufficient for the development of a new insurgency
- an insurgency that might resume where the insurgency of the
1960s left off? Is it capable of making a decisive contribution
to the return of dreams of unqualified human freedom to the popular
political imagination?
RACE TRAITOR, characterized by its founding
editors as the "journal of the new abolitionism," was
launched in the fall of 1992. What follows reconstructs the political
history of the project, evaluates its contribution and potential,
and invites others to respond and to join in what might become
a new project.
Since the initial publication of the journal,
the editors and a relatively small number of associates have
attempted to articulate an abolitionist vision for an American
revolution. They did so in the context of an observation that
almost all on the left who had imagined the necessity or desirability
of social revolution in the 1960s and early 1970s had abandoned
that goal and they hoped that a new articulation, in a distinctively
American idiom, might contribute to a rebirth of radical activism.
The following are essential elements of
the vision:
- race was an historical and social construction
and had no biological reality;
- the white "race" was composed
of individuals who partook of the advantages of the white skin;
- the advantages of the white skin were
universal and substantial and led even the most downtrodden whites
to ally themselves with their rulers;
- the white race needed to be abolished
if we hoped to make progress in the country's s social life;
- abolitionism was not anti-racism since
anti-racism implicitly admitted the existence of races; futhermore,
anti-racism often focused on groups like the Nazis and the Klan
or conservative politicians as the perpetrators of racism; instead,
we argued that race was reproduced by the principal institutions
of society-the schools, the labor market, the law, the family
and was reinforced by reform programs;
- the existence of the white race required
the all but unanimous support of its members;
- the defection of enough "whites"
would lead to the collapse of the white race and, by extension,
would lead to a profound challenge to the entirety of the established
social order;
- most white folks were not deeply nor
consciously committed to white supremacy nor were they primarily
motivated by prejudice.
In addition, we have:
- reasserted the new abolitionist project's
connection to nineteenth- century abolitionism and to the politics
of John Brown;
- expressed an appreciation for the essential
contributions made to the American freedom struggle by Afro-Americans;
- associated ourselves with the conviction
that the ordinary people of the nation were prepared to rule
the society;
- acknowledged the potential and the limitations
of cultural "crossovers"-whites who embraced and/orbecame
participants in traditional and contemporary black cultural practices;
- asserted that "a new world, and
nothing less, is worth fighting for." At the same time we
never detailed what this new world might be like. This refusal
in part reflected our reluctance to be associated with those
who saw the new society as a series of ever more ambitious five
year plans, in part our realization that many poets and revolutionaries
in the past had suggested ways of imagining the future more beautifully
than we might, and in part our conviction that the new world
would be made by the people who created it and could not be predicted;
- developed a critique of whiteness studies
(embodying critiques of post-modernism and multi-culturalism
as political positions that reflected despair over the possibility
of radical change);
- argued that whiteness was primarily made
and re-made by those who wanted to be white and was not foisted
upon them by clever rulers;
- argued that various "new" immigrants
were in the process of being incorporated as whites, and opposed
analyses informed by a view of the U.S. as a "multiracial"
society;
- suggested that whiteness was analogous
to European social democracy in the sense that it represented
an accommodation by some of the exploited to their continuing
exploitation at the expense of still others of the exploited;
- recognized that the privileges of whiteness
had been eroded during the last twenty-five years and that the
erosion had occurred simultaneouslywith the erosion of social
democracy;
- qualified our estimate of the erosion
of whiteness with an appreciation of the significance of what
might be considered "sedimented" social relations-insofar
as they, for example, contributed to continuing inequalities
in wealth between white and black while income differentials
tended to decline;
- recognized that the turns to the right
that had occurredin both the US and Europe were, in part, the
result of these erosions of privileges but, unlike some others,
we insisted on the importance of distinctions between what might
be considered the conservatives and the fascist revolutionaries;
- reaffirmed a conviction that the appeal
of the fascists would not likely be countered by a defense of
the institutions and, to the chagrin of some, argued that relying
on the state to defeat the fascists would only strengthen the
state and, ultimately, the fascists themselves;
- welcomed and published the views of those
who argued that "white" rebels had perhaps shed some
of their whiteness in the course of their rebellion.
A Balance Sheet
Looking back upon this record, we believe that much of what we
have said appears sound. Nonetheless, there are some shortcomings:
- We failed to take account of the full
significance of what might be considered a world-historical break
in 1973 - a break that initiated real development in what had
until then appeared to be a permanently undeveloped third world,
the de-industrialization of a substantial part of what had previously
been the industrial bases of the capitalist world system, the
rebuilding of central American cities (concomitant with gentrification)
and the incorporation of Afro-Americans into the ruling strata
of the United States.
- We too infrequently acknowledged the
ways in which we saw ourselves as the inheritors of what might
be considered the Johnsonite tradition in American politics.
That tradition was begun by C.L.R. James (using the pseudonym
of J.R Johnson) and other colleagues in the late 1940s and early
1950s. Its distinguishing elements can be summarized as follows:
[1] a challenge to the existing order will develop as a result
of the self-activity of the workers by which they will overcome
intemal barriers to their development as a potential ruling class
(and not as the result of the work of political vanguards); [2]
a deep appreciation of America as the country where the development
of the productive forces (including both the means of production
and the workers) was most advanced; [3] an appreciation of the
centrality of the black struggle to the self-realization of the
proletariat.
- Although we have said that our aim was
not racial harmony but class war, we have not managed to project
effectively our view that whiteness was the key "internal
barrier< to be overcome in the process of proletarian self-development
and that our abolitionism was directly connected to our revolutionary
vision. As a result, we have attracted support from individuals
who would be upset if they understood the implications of our
undertaking. Those individuals include some people who retain
deeply held convictions about the unfulfilled promise of the
American system and others who oppose all forms of discriminatory
thought and behavior (for example, those who oppose "classism"
as much as they oppose "racism").
- We were unprepared for the emergence
of the new anti-globalization movement and have found ourselves
to be relatively insignificant external commentators on its strengths
and weaknesses. We would not want to underestimate this failure.
While people in the hundreds, if not thousands, were prepared
to confront directly the organized power of the state, we had
no role to play. Those activists may be unaware of important
political matters but they were the ones taking the risks and
there were precious few abolitionists or revolutionaries fromother
traditions alongside them.
- We were also unprepared for the extent
of the erosion of white privilege and the concomitant appearance
of blacks in positions of authority within traditionally white-dominated
institutions.
- We have not yet fully understood the
significance of the erosion of whiteness being done to the working
class and not by it. We also did not reconsider whether our "all
or nothing< characterization of the white race had stood the
test of time. Put it this way: what did it mean if some were
no longer white but the white race had not collapsed?
- We have developed only the most tentative
of programmatic demands that might serve as the basis for the
development of more or less sustained popular campaigns.
Abolitionism and the New Society
We need to reconsider abolitionism one more time. We hope that
it is clear that we fully understand that the great mass of the
abolitionists consisted of the slaves, the runaways and the free
blacks who worked tirelessly in more or less open fashion to
destroy slavery. Abolitionism was the first great moment of black
liberation in this country. Then, as later, it served to inspire
others not oppressed as blacks to join together with the oppressed
in a common struggle for freedom and, more or less simultaneously,
to embrace dreams of a new world-a world without fixed gender
identities, a world characterized by new understandings of the
relationship between the individual and the society, a world
infused with a new understanding of the spiritual, and so forth.
Consistent with the Johnsonite tradition, we believe this was
no accident. In spite of the fact that the Afro-Americans were
branded as no other Americans were, they nonetheless became the
most fully American and, when they engaged in popular struggle,
gave expression to the deepest desires of the larger American
population:
The great unsatisfied desire
of the American population is for social organization, free association.
for common social ends, It is the only means whereby the powerful
and self-destroying individualism can find fulfillment The Americans
are the most highly self-organized people on earth. Every city,
every suburb, every hamlet, has organizations of some sort, Elks,
Shriners, Rotarians, clubs for everything under the sum. But
the Negroes are the most highly organized of Americans. Government
statistics show that ofsome I 4 million Negroes in the United
States, over 10 million are listed as belonging to some organization.
Whatever the variety of these organizations every one has openly
or implicitly as part of its program the emancipation o fthe
Negro people.
C.L.R. James
On the one hand, the blacks are those
who express the desire of all for all and, on the other, they
are the people who are often denied everything that is given
to everyone else. The contradiction is an excruciating one:
Thus, on all the basic economic
and political problems of the day, the Negro, segregated as he
is, is an integral part of American life And it is this contradiction
between this fundamental need for complete and total integration
demanded by the whole modern development in conflict with the
powerful interests which demand and perpetuate segregation that
lies the sharpness and the intolerable strains of the whole Negro
question.
C.L.R. James
So long as the issue is not confronted
directly and completely, things endlessly appear to become better
and worse at the same time.
... the fact above all which
so demoralizes the modern world, that the greater the efforts
made, the more terrible are the new forms in which the old social
problems reappear.
C.L.R. James
So, What To Do?
From the beginning we have drawn support from many who, whether
they call themselves communists, anarchists, surrealists, or
something else, consider themselves revolutionaries. If abolitionism
without a vision of a new society is incomplete, the new society
without abolitionism is impossible. It follows that we unequivocally
welcome the erosion of whiteness no matter what quarter it comes
from, and oppose any attempts to respond to the relative weakening
of the white position by rearticulating a new whiteness.
We would like to invite those who read
this reconsideration and believe that it represents, however
imperfectly and incompletely, a useful starting point to get
in touch with us, to write in response, to come together in more
or less formal meetings to discuss what we have written and to
think seriously about the possibility of developing a new political
project that preserves and transcends the new abolitionist one.
We are especially interested in hearing from those who were
active on the streets of Seattle, Washington, Philadelphia and
Los Angeles.
January 2001
The editors wrote this statement in
consultation with Chris Niles and Joel Olson, aided by correspondence
with other abolitionists.
From RACE TRAITOR no. 12 (Spring 2001)
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