Daily Archives: 15 Feb 2021

AOC Blamed Trump for Assaults on Elderly Asians; The Attacker was Muslim

Here we go again. If anybody gets attacked or robbed or threatened, it is a white Trump supporter. No matter the facts, its all about the soundbite that gets the press attention. And when you are on the left, the press runs with it with no reconciliation of the facts surrounding the incident.

AOC Blamed Trump for Assaults on Elderly Asians; The Attacker was Muslim

SPLC Shows Its Colors Again. Not Surprised!

So here we go again. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) is trying to ensure their relevance in the world of politics. Not like they needed too as every agency believes their rhetoric and uses their rhetoric for no other purpose than not doing any factual research. This SPLC has morphed over the years into the lefts attack dog agency. If they decide you are a threat to the left leaning politicos, you are staged on a list that is distributed to many three letter and local agencies.

NOW they are showing the world that they are truly ruled but these communist critters that reside in the democratic system of OUR REPUBLIC. My very own Senator (sic) Booker, aligns himself with the likes of Black Lives Matter (BLM), socialist as seen here, and antifa. As seen here,

The SPLC’s move dismantles the last remaining shred of credibility of the organization, but it also comes after Democrat politicians and activists, including Senator Cory Booker and Kamala Harris pressured the FBI to stop monitoring black nationalist hate groups before several murderous antisemitic attacks by members of the Black Hebrew Israelite hate group.

If ever there was a need to purge our country of these vermin, that time would be now.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2021/02/southern-poverty-law-center-stops-monitoring-black-daniel-greenfield/

Black Lives Matter and Marxism

Adapted from a document drafted by Eljeer Hawkins and approved by Socialist Alternative’s National Committee, February 2015

We have entered a new phase in the struggle against racism and capitalism in the United States. “Black Lives Matter” (BLM) started after the death of Trayvon Martin and then became a protest movement. The BLM banner is a powerful affirmation of the humanity of black workers, poor and youth. Every 28 hours a black or brown person is killed by police, vigilante or extra-judicial violence. Police kill black Americans at nearly the same rate as the lynchings during the Jim Crow era; young black men are 21 times more likely to be shot dead by police than white men. BLM has captured the imagination of a generation of new activists in the U.S. and globally.

This is a re-emergence of the black masses onto the scene of U.S. history after decades of defeat, sell-outs, decimation and mass incarceration. The current radicalization must be seen in the context of the limits given by the immediate past of a low-level of general class consciousness in society and a historically very low level of struggle in the black community. This is further complicated by the lack of militancy of the remaining civil rights leadership from the 1960s and 70s; those who weren’t assassinated or imprisoned have largely been bought off and co-opted by the establishment. The Obama Presidency both signifies the limits of pro-capitalist identity politics but also gives confidence to black youth that they could get support in society and can defeat racism.

The revolt against police violence took new form in Ferguson and New York in recent months, with daily determined demonstrations and a new layer of activists emerging. There is partial rejection of the old civil rights leadership, which is uneven geographically and generationally, and new organizations thrown up by struggle.

The mood to fight is influenced by the economic crisis and Occupy. At its height, the protests took mass direct action to block highways and occupy symbols of police violence, economic inequality and racism. Now, the movement is in at least partial retreat. There is a danger that the advanced activists will cut themselves off from the broader masses by taking isolated direct action. We should advocate tactics and a strategy that give the activists an approach that can bring broader layers along with them.

The first phase of the movement is over, but the new activists aren’t going away, and a new phase will emerge. This has been only one wave of struggle. There will be more atrocities, more protests, more movements in the coming months and years.

Socialists, while building actions to indict the killer cops and win demands against racist policing, also need to boldly connect the dots to a program that can defeat racism in all its forms. We must connect the battle against police violence to clear economic demands: for a $15 an hour minimum wage and massive jobs programs as well as quality education and housing. We must put forward tactics of mass action while calling on unions and organizations like the NAACP – where they have influence – to support this struggle. We put forward our slogans and demands to be taken up by the broader movement because we want to point towards victories in the here and now. But we must also boldly point to a socialist solution and the need to build a multiracial socialist force in the fight to once and for all end poverty, racism and corporate domination.

See more about this story here.