Capitalism Can’t End Racist Exploitation
Wednesday, August 14, 2013 at 8:25PM
Contributor

On August 28, 1963, 300,000 demonstrators converged in multiracial unity for the March on Washington For Jobs and Freedom. Fifty years later, with racist inequalities growing wider all the time, we can see the limits of reform under capitalism — and the urgent need for communist revolution.
The 1960s were a brighter time for the U.S. working class. Despite reversals of workers’ power in the Soviet Union and China, the revolutions in those countries still inspired class struggle. Two mass movements — for civil rights and against the war in Vietnam — galvanized millions of workers and youth. Rebellions broke out in oppressed and brutalized poor black neighborhoods, from Harlem and Newark to Watts and Detroit.
The March on Washington was designed to channel this anger into a set of legalistic demands. Not everyone went with the program. Malcolm X denounced the march as a “circus” and a “farce.” The author James Baldwin was banned from speaking by mainstream civil rights leaders who were currying favor with President John F. Kennedy. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee’s (SNCC) John Lewis did speak, but only after the organizers censored his critique of the president’s pending civil rights bill. Among the lines they struck: “Mr. Kennedy is trying to take the revolution out of the streets and put it into the courts.”
 

Legal Reforms Can’t Protect Workers
 The approved demands were read aloud to the throng by pacifist Bayard Rustin. Among them were the passage of “effective” civil rights legislation, the immediate end to segregation “in every school district” in the U.S., the “defeat” of unemployment, an increase in the national minimum wage, and a call for “black men and men of every minority group” to get “all of the rights…given to any citizen.”
The capitalist ruling class, shaken by the urban uprisings of the sixties and the threat they posed to the profit system, gave its bought-and-paid-for politicians a new set of marching orders. The Civil Rights Act was passed by Congress in 1964, the Voting Rights Act in 1965, the Fair Housing Act in 1968. The number of elected black officials grew from 1,469 in 1970 to more than ten thousand today.
But none of these laws or politicians can alter the fundamental fact that U.S. capitalism is in crisis. The bosses’ rate of profit is falling.  Imperialist rivals are rising. (China has overtaken the U.S. as the world’s leading manufacturer, and is building a modern deep ocean navy.) With no mass movement to be pacified, and no other nation standing as a communist beacon, U.S. capitalists have been free to intensify their attacks on workers’ standard of living. While median household income has been flat since 1973, and conditions for the poorest are in free fall, the 400 richest U.S. billionaires are now worth $1.7 trillion. According to Forbes magazine, their assets — essentially the profits they’ve stolen from the working class — grew by $200 billion in 2012 alone.
The civil rights movement represented millions of honest working people — black, Latino, Asian and white. Many sacrificed careers and even their lives in this anti-racist struggle. But the movement had no chance to realize its goals because its leadership focused on legal reform within the status quo. Under capitalism, laws can always be changed or reversed or ignored to suit the rulers’ needs of the moment. (This was true long before the Voting Rights Act was gutted last month in a transparently racist decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.) Laws are the smoke and mirrors the bosses use to conceal what really runs their system, the rule of maximum profit.

New Presidents, Same Old Racism

We’ve had nine presidents after Kennedy: Republicans and Democrats, conservatives and liberals, white men and Barack Obama. Nine administrations later, the movement’s “dream” is fast receding amid the nightmare of capitalism. Officially sanctioned racism is on the rise, from police murders of black teenagers to Obama’s wholesale deportation of nearly two million immigrants. Racism will never be reformed away; it’s an essential component of the profit system. The capitalists need it to exploit workers (including white workers), and also to keep them from seeing their common interests — or their common enemy.
Today, material conditions for the working class in general and black workers in particular are deteriorating. Despite countless waves of reforms, we are in many respects worse off than we were thirty or forty years ago. Jobs and freedom, among other things, are harder to come by than they were in 1963. Consider:

Smash Racism with Communism!
It’s a good start to march for jobs and human rights, but we cannot stop there. To put an end to the inequalities and all the racist horrors of capitalism, we need to smash a system built on profit and replace it from the ground up, with a society based on workers’ needs. We need a communist revolution led by a revolutionary party — the Progressive
Labor Party. Join us!

 

Article originally appeared on The Revolutionary Communist Progressive Labor Party (http://www.plparchive.org/).
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