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Title: Bern Notice Author: Anonymous Date: March 4, 2016 Language: en Topics: anti-fascism, capitalism, civilization, critique, editorial, USA, white supremacy, It's Going Down Source: https://itsgoingdown.org/bern-notice-building-a-material-force-age-of-trumpism/
Blood soaked the sidewalks of Anaheim last weekend, only several miles
from Disneyland, after a brawl broke out between protesters and members
of the Ku Klux Klan, who attempted to conduct a âWhite Lives Matterâ
march. By the end of the altercation, over a dozen people were arrested
and several stabbed. Only several hours later however, five Klansmen
walked free, as anti-fascist youth who suffered stab wounds, faced
criminal charges and expensive medical fees. Later that night, people
marched and protested outside of the police station, calling for the
release of their friends.
The next day, ârespectable community members,â non-profits, and unions
took to the streets as well, trying to calm down the anger of young
people who had confronted the Klan and seen their friends attacked. Many
were worried that the same fires that sparked the riots of 2012, when
anger at police for killing Manuel Diaz boiled over in the streets,
would return to Anaheim. For the official organizations of ârespectable
protest,â those that dared to physically fight the Klan were even
scarier than the Klan itself; they couldnât be controlled.
While Anaheim has a well documented history of KKK activity, this event
didnât happen in a vacuum. Across the US, the far-right is growing, both
in numbers, influence, as well as in militancy. While the Trump campaign
is acting as a means for these groups to congeal and also as a space for
them to intervene in, their trajectory has been on the rise well before
this election cycle. Meanwhile, on the Left, people wring their hands
about the ongoing predictable defeat of Bernie Sanders.
This essay will argue that Sanders, who politically resembles a New Deal
Democrat that promotes an imperialist foreign policy and possesses a
nationalist anti-immigrant streak, never stood a chance at being elected
in the first place. But regardless, the role of Sanders runs much
deeper, as his candidacy is designed to bring back into the Democratic
Party youth and low wage workers; both in terms of votes and support.
These are the same people, who by and large, have become totally
disillusioned after 8 years of Obamaâs âhope and changeâ reign.
If we strive to create a material force within the social landscape; an
autonomous anti-capitalist and anti-colonial movement that builds
counter-power and new forms of life, then we must take stock of the
other emerging forces in the current terrain. We have to think about how
we can fightâand win, against the growing rise of the autonomous
far-right, especially after Trumpâs presidential run ends. For after
Trump returns to being a real estate billionaire baron full-time, the
cadres that gathered their forces during his campaign will take further
shape autonomously, as backlash will surely build against Hilary,
assuming that she takes the Presidency. At the same time, as we take a
position in this âthree-way fight,â we must make sure that our
resistance to the far-right is also linked to our struggle against the
state and capital; attacking white supremacy as a neo-colonial system
and not simply a fight against white nationalist formations on the
fringes.
Itâs Going Down was launched in a period of rising white nationalism and
far-right activity. In the aftermath of the Charleston, SC massacre in
June of 2015, a wave of attacks, vandalism, and raucous protests began
against flags, statues, and symbols of the Confederate past. This latest
episode in the black liberation struggle, which proceeded the Baltimore
uprising by only two months, pushed many within the often fractured
white nationalist movement together as they sought to intervene in the
largely white push-back against denunciations on the vestiges of the
Confederacy. As we have stated in the past, this struggle against white
supremacy in the US has taken on the appearance and feeling of civil
war; and it is within this war that people have chosen sides. Some take
the side against it, as those who took to the streets and fought with
the Klan and members of the National Socialist Movement (NSM), several
months after the Charleston Massacre, as the fascists rallied in support
of the Confederate flag in South Carolina. Others, fight to uphold the
racial caste system that America is founded upon, such as those that
burned numerous black churches throughout the American south as these
struggles raged.
We refer to these forces as the autonomous far-right, because they
operate, organize, and exist outside of and sometimes are even hostile
to the state, although just as often they may feed into it, or attempt
to organize within these existing institutions. The growth of these
formations, as well as their militancy is striking, and points to the
fact that those fighting for liberation in communities across the US
will have to not only contend with the police, the Leftist bureaucrats
and managers, but now also potentially, fascists.
In the past year, we have seen this play out in the streets several
times. In Olympia, we watched as Neo-Nazi skinheads took to the streets
in support of the police. In Minneapolis, white nationalist members of
the Patriot movement (and Trump supporters), fired upon demonstrators
during the #JusticeforJamar occupation. In Seattle, members of the
Hammerskin Nation attempted to march in a predominantly queer
neighborhood. Moreover, in the face of almost a total media blackout, a
wave of arson attacks against black churches was carried out throughout
the South. In short, the far-right has hit the streets more in the last
two years than they have since the 1990s. Its also important to note
that in all of these instances, as it was in Anaheim, it took people
physically confronting them to drive them out. These actions took
organization, they took planning, and they took people working together
across racial, geographic, and ideological lines, but more over, they
also took people being ready to physically fight.
But these events are only part of the larger picture. From the recent
of the Paris ISIS attacks, the Bundy Ranch and Mahleur Refuge
occupations, and the a rise in KKK activity and recruiting drives, the
far-right has become emboldened beyond just an ideological hardcore or
one specific group.
From the KKK, to skinheads, Neo-Nazis, Christian fascists, Menâs Rights
Activists, to the Patriot Movement and anti-abortion militants, whatâs
important is that these groups are learning from their weaknesses and
attempting to reach out into larger society. This is a push that has
been growing for some time now and thus it is important to remember that
it is not caused by Trumpâs candidacy. What Trump has done instead is
simply create more of a sea in which these groups can swim in and a pool
of potential recruits for the white nationalist cadres of the future.
Make no mistake, this is a force that continues to grow more violent.
Only several days after the Anaheim showdown, Neo-nazi skinheads
screaming, âHeil Hitler!â attacked Latino youth in an southern
California park. In the wake of these attacks, other white nationalists,
from both the caviar suit and tie fascists like Jared Taylor of American
Renaissance to old guard former Klansman and Louisiana State Legislator
David Duke, also gained headlines. This time for calling on their
supporters to not only vote for Trump, but to take a role in organizing
with his supporters and putting in work at campaign offices much as
Neo-Nazis and KKK members had done for Duke himself, Pat Buchanan, Barry
Goldwater, and George Wallace.
Heading the call, Klansman soon showed up outside of Trump rallies
holding signs of support. In return, Trump continued to share on social
media fascist and Neo-Nazi imagery, this week, it was a quote from the
Italian fascist Mussolini, which he later refused to disavow. Then on
CNN, Trump refused to back down from support he had received from David
Duke and the KKK. And, it seems that no turn towards racist demagogy or
fascism seems to hinder support of âThe Donald,â as only days later,
white basketball students chanted âTrump! Trump! Trumpâ after defeating
a multi-ethnic basketball team. Then on Monday in Georgia, Trump had
whole groups of black students removed from one of his rallies before
they could even protest.
The very next day in Kentucky, a group of black youth that came to
protest Trump at a campaign rally had their signs snatched and destroyed
by a group of supporters. Captured on camera in the middle of the melee
was Matthew Heimbach, a leader within the White nationalist movement and
the fascist group, the Traditionalist Worker Party. Part of a group of
5, and all wearing TWP shirts and passing out flyers, Heimbach and
others reportedly attacked the black youth, pushing, spitting on, and
taunting them. Shaun King wrote of the incident:
âI was called a nââ and a cât and got kicked out,â said Shiya Nwanguma,
a respected student at the University of Louisville to a local
interviewer in a video posted on Facebook. âThey were pushing and
shoving at me, cursing at me, yelling at me, called me every name in the
book. They were disgusting and dangerous.â
Another demonstrator, Molly Shah, watched as Heimbach tried to recruit
other attendees. âI watched him for hours recruit Trump supporters with
five of his buddies,â said Shah. âThey later attacked the group I was
with. The Neo-Nazis threw punches and kicked us. I am still awake now
because my body is sore.â
[T]he crowd was taking their cues from Trump â who repeatedly barked,
âget them out of hereââŠSo flippant in his directive, it appears that
attendees simply began taking it upon themselves to manhandle protesters
and force them out of the rally.
In an interview with the New York Daily News, Chanelle Helm, a protester
and respected activist who attended the rally, said that she and others
were not just spat on, but were cursed at and demeaned repeatedly by
Trump supporters. She distinctly remembered one disturbing chant, which
was lead by the white supremacists, âYouâre scum, your time will come.
Youâre scum, your time will come.â She went on, âWe were there alongside
them for hours and hours waiting for the rally to begin. They would
regularly bump into us on purpose, step on our shoes, accidentally wave
signs that smacked us in the face. We actually heard them talking about
us for hours. It was eerie.â
Henry Brousseau, another protester, said âI was actually punched by
fascists wearing T-shirts from the Traditional Workers Party.â After
being removed from the event, Helm actually saw Brousseau vomiting
afterward. âSome of us who were taken out of there by police, by black
officers I might add, were actually told that they wanted to get us out
there for our own safety.â
One thing is clear, white nationalists and fascists have moved from
simply supporting the Trump campaign and trying to intervene within it,
and are now physically trying to entice others to racialized violence.
In doing so, they are preparing for when Trump leaves the stage and the
next phase of their struggle will begin.
The question then becomes, what are we going to do about it?
This Tuesday, many pundits rushed to read a death sentence for Bernie
Sanders, as the âsuper delegatesâ predictably cast their votes for
Hillary Clinton. While months are left in the Presidential race, for
many, itâs already over. The millions raised by online donors will all
be for not, and many people will go back to feeling as if politics was
all completely pointless once more.
Towards that end, its important that we fully understand the political
role of Sanderâs campaign and how by and large it was a step back from
constructing anything that could make a real revolution a reality. As
Joseph Kishore wrote:
One further statistic points to the essential political role of the
Sanders campaign: Forty percent of voters in the Democratic primary
identified themselves as âindependent/undeclaredâ (that is, not
registered as a Democrat), and these backed Sanders by 72 percent. The
Vermont senator has repeatedly said the principal aim of his âpolitical
revolutionâ is to bring voters back into the fold of the Democratic
Party.
The growing support for Sanders is an initial political reflection of
deep tensions in the United States, which have been artificially
suppressed for decades, as social inequality rose to levels not seen
since before the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Particularly since the 2008 financial crash, the American ruling class
has engaged in a restructuring of class relations that has seen
trillions funneled to the banks while the vast majority of the
population faced falling wages, attacks on health care and pensions,
mass unemployment and rising indebtedness. Young people, who back
Sanders by a wide margin, have known nothing but economic crisis, war
and attacks on democratic rights. An eighteen-year-old new voter would
have been four years old when the âwar on terrorâ began and 11 at the
onset of the global financial crisis.
Sanders is not the first to speak of a ârevolutionâ in politics while
participating in it. Several years ago, Ron Paul did practically the
same thing. But what Sanders proposes is not a revolution; it is a
reconfiguration of disaffected millions back into the political
apparatus. While many applaud Sanders for his use of âeveryday languageâ
which speaks to the âclass issuesâ of low wage workers, students in
debt, and the poor, this is by and large riding high on the legacy of
the Occupy movementâ a movement that was smashed and attacked by the
Democratic Party. In Bernie Sanders, these movements did not find their
exhalation â they found their demise.
Bernie Sanders has never offered either a tangible threat, or
alternative to, the capitalist State. Moreover, throughout itâs history,
the Democratic Party has been used to destroy, strangle, and smother all
movements for liberation that it has gotten its hands on. In terms of
physical repression, state surveillance, and in recuperation. We canât
âOccupy the Democrats,â we can only leave this entire system behind,
once and for all. We should also be clear that for Sanders, âsocialismâ
is not a movement, struggle, or set of ideas which seeks to do away with
capitalism, white supremacy, patriarchy, or class society. Instead, for
Sanders, socialism is simply a reordering of capitalism which provides
more in terms of social programs and welfare than it currently does now.
A âScandanavianâ styled social democratic US wouldnât drastically
changeâor stopâthe current crisis in capital and the ecological crisis
of global warming from unfolding.
To do this, we will have to come up against both the full power of the
state and its forces and also against the very real ways in which
capitalism organizes our lives and bodies. In order to change the world
and create a genuine revolution, weâll have to destroy capitalism and
the very governments which manages and protects it.
For those that worked with Sandersâ campaign, we state plainly that
nothing they have done has gotten us closer to this goal. With Sandersâ
defeat now official in the eyes of many, the Democrats are now in a
position to finally harness all the grassroots mobilization that the
Bernie campaign has developed, and push people in the millions to pull
the level for Clinton. âAnybody but Trump!,â will be the new rallying
cry, as millions will choose to either drag their feet or tow the party
line.
In this way, Sanders will have served his biggest role: playing
revolutionary for the most counter-revolutionary party in history.
As we speak, economists are predicting an impending global economic
crash. Bloomberg, the capitalist news group, reported recently that they
soon expect another crash on a global scale. After nearly ten years
since the economic meltdown of 2007-8, the ârecovered economyâ has
really only recovered for those on the very top. While the system has
continued to expand and make more goods, the workers who the system
depends on to buy all these goods, from suburban homes to hooverboards,
by and large canât afford them anymore. What few dollars we do have left
in our piggy banks after paying for rent, food, transportation, or what
little money is freed up by things like (for the moment) lower gas
prices, by and large only goes to pay off our debts that we have
accumulated while simply trying to survive. The endless growth of
capitalism hits a wall of its own design.
Within this crisis, the system has responded to declining conditions and
increasing class and racial inequality with an ever-broadening campaign
of counter-insurgency. The militarization of the police, as seen
dramatically in both the crushing of the Occupy Movement as well as in
the attempts at pacification of insurrections such as in Ferguson and
Baltimore, have only increased in the last year, not shrunk. As in the
1980s under the reign of Reagan, the attacks against reforms made by the
civil-rights movement through the rolling back of social benefits and
the so-called âWar on Drugs,â really equated to the re-establishing of a
âcolor-blindâ white supremacy and systems of mass incarceration.
Meanwhile, degradation of the environment and the theft of land and
resources continues in Native communities and on reservations,
deportations against migrant workers grows, and working black families
have lost more wealth in the last 8 years since they have since the
great depression. Even for white workers, conditions and even life
expectancy has started to degrade.
Bourgeois politics will continue to push to the Right; itâs the only
place left for it to go as civilization unravels.
Trump terrifies the Republican establishment because he has the
potential to destabilize it. Recently, Mitt Romney (a figure on the
far-right himself) declared Trump to be âa fraudâ and claimed he was
playing US voters and workers âfor suckers,â a move which will further
break apart the GOP. Trumpâs antics promote not only vigilante violence
but stoke the fires of possible fight back; from student walkouts to
migrant worker wildcats to urban riots. The elites would much rather
stick to their version of âsocial peace,â than risk more fires in the
streets.
But Trump also plays another role, as he generates more room for the
Democrats (and everyone else) to move even farther to the Right. Under
another Clinton administration, the Democratic elites will further
attacks on workers, the poor, the oppressed, the environment, and the
rest of the world. What are mass ICE raids and growing immigrant
detention prisons against the horror that was Trumpâs supposed plans?
On the side of the right-wing rank-n-file, many declassed Whites, mostly
from the middle-class but also increasingly from the working-class, have
responded to the continuing crisis over that last near-decade along with
the growing Black Lives Matter movement by also turning sharply to the
right. Bolstered by their own insurgent mobilizations, from attacks on
abortion clinics, the Malheur wildlife refuge occupation near Burns,
Oregon, to the growing racial violence that has accompanied many Trump
rallies, the Right has taken on both an expanded array of autonomous
groupings and movements while at the same time feeding into Trumpâs
âlegitimacyâ in the presidential race. But just as KKK members,
Neo-Nazis, and white nationalists of all stripes poured millions of
dollars and hours into the campaigns of Duke, Buchanan, Goldwater, and
Wallace, when these campaigns failed, they were often left with nothing.
They inherited no organizational apparatus, no money to use for the next
campaign, and largely lost the spotlight which had given them a
microphone. The new generation however, has no plan to repeat this
mistake.
A new generation of white nationalists will rise out of Trumpâs defeat,
and proliferate further still after Hilaryâs expected victory.
Such a recomposition of far-right forces has happened many times in the
past. For instance, during the campaign to support the segregationist
George Wallace, Neo-Nazis, KKK members, and white nationalists staffed
support and campaign organizations in droves. Out of this support, came
the National Youth Alliance for Wallace, which was headed by the likes
of the Liberty Lobby (a DC-based racist, pro-nazi, Holocaust denying,
and anti-Semitic outfit) and former supporters of the American Nazi
Party, namely, William Pierce.
After the Wallace campaign collapsed, the White nationalists fought over
the scraps that remained of the organization that had once raised
thousands and garnished massive white support. Out of the power struggle
rose the National Alliance, with Pierce at its head. Pierce would go on
to pen The Turner Diaries that inspired various white power
revolutionaries such as the murderous group The Order in the Pacific
Northwest and the Oklahoma City bombing carried out by white nationalist
and militia enthusiast, Timothy McVeigh. The far-right views Trumpâs
campaign not as the end, but the start of something. As in the past, the
established organizations will milk these fascist and racist formations
for members, money, and support, and drop them as soon as it comes out
in the open that there is a direct connection (just as Dukeâs,
Buchananâs, and previous campaigns have done).
But at the end of the day, the far-right formations that stand to gain
ground in the current terrain are those can pick up supporters, social
networks, and money after Trumpâs fall and continue on beyond the moment
created by his campaign. The Left, who largely places all their hopes in
the few cosmetic changes the established system allows ordinary people
to make, and then reverts back into consumer politics or protest
ghettos, will by and large return to business as usual, with a few
socialist groups picking up new adherents and cadres. The official
organizations, such as the AFL-CIO and the Democratic Party, as well as
the heads of non-profits (such as the official Black Lives Matter
leadership), will retain their stranglehold on social movements, helping
to contain them in an effort to prevent the establishment of a genuine
autonomous anti-capitalist force that rejects state power and electoral
politics all together.
But this is exactly the kind of force that we need.
The creation of such a force isnât going to fall out of the sky. We are
not going to see a candidate on TV talking about it, nor are we just
going to find it on the internet. It will have to be built by people
that come together in the areas where they live and then expand out into
all avenues of social life. But moreover, we need something that has the
ability to transcend just one moment; that lasts beyond individual
struggles, campaigns, social movements, and generations. We have to
engender something that has the ability to bring together people across
different walks of life while at the same time surviving repression and
supporting those who are attacked by it.
In creating an autonomous anti-capitalist force, we have to break out of
the strangle hold of the symbolic, demand based, and spectacular mode of
activism and push towards building autonomy. This means getting
organized on our own terms and carrying out our own actions, outside of
and against the union bureaucrats, Democratic Party managers, non-profit
career activists, and religious leaders. We need to leave not only the
two corporate political parties behind, but mainstream electoral
politics altogether.
Moreover, we will also have to leave behind the trappings of the
âradical milieuâ completely, from itâs moralistic nihilism to its
activist careerism. We cannot wait for the radical scene to catch up or
come around, much of it wonât; weâll have to push together with those
around us we share affinity with, reaching out while in struggle with
those outside of politics, radical or mainstream. In doing so, we must
work to find commonality with other people while building new forms of
life through shared and lived conditions and the struggle to free
ourselves from them.
We are in for some wild times ahead.
Itâs only just started to go down.