Archive for the ‘Socialism’ Category

Gingrich knocks Milley: ‘So incompetent’ he revealed extent of socialism in military – Fox News

Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley is owed a "debt of gratitude" from the American people for singlehandedly exposing the extent to which Obama-era socialism has infected the United States military, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Wednesday

Gingrich told "Fox News Primetime" the proverbial "disease" is not one of the brave rank-and-file servicemembers, but one spread by politicized and incompetent leadership from the top of the Pentagon, thanks in part to "nutty" people that Presidents Obama and Biden installed in the bureaucracy.

He responded to host Ben Domenech's comments that the military's top brass is more focused on their personal career and wealth, as they are often vying for positions on Defense contractor boards like that of Raytheon which Defense Secretary Gen. Lloyd Austin III, Ret., served on between his enlisted service and Biden administration role and that in doing so, they must adhere to "woke" or left-wing and corporatist orthodoxy.

"I think you first have to recognize that this is part of a larger problem the big government socialism which now dominates our elites corrupts everything it touches. It corrupts FBI and Justice Department [and] schools where students who cant pass any tests it corrupts our major corporations," he said.

"So, of course the same disease, the same kind of spreading across the land of these kind of corrupt ideas have hit the Pentagon," the former House Speaker noted.

"And people like the General Milley, you know, he did this. And he decided from Obama to Biden -- which is the same system, Obama began the corrupting of America and someday people will write about how much his appointees and his policies and his rhetoric undermined America and weakened America and increased, by the way, racial tension in America," Gingrich continued.

Obama's orchestrated shift of America toward the socialist left, Gingrich added, was compounded by "his vice president, [who] brought even nuttier people to be a part of the government."

"The depth of corruption, which is at the heart of big government socialism, is a topic that hasnt even begun to be discussed yet. Its a moral corruption. Its a corruption which breaks the law. It breaks the law at the border. When 400,000 people cross the border every month, thats a level of law breaking a level of corrupt behavior that astonishing, and you find it every aspect of the current system."

Regarding the military specifically, Gingrich said the top brass had, by 1990, transformed to a markedly better system than in the Vietnam era but that since then it has been back on the downswing:

"I have to say we all owe General Milley a debt of gratitude: He is so incompetent. He is so blatantly obvious, he lies so clearly in public, what he says is so clearly despicable, that anybody who has any sense at all knows this guy shouldnt be chairman of the joint chiefs and tells you how sick the system is that the system thinks its fine," he said.

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"There is something deeply sick about the idea that starting tomorrow this corrupt group of left-wing ideologues is going to monitor every soldier, sailor, marine, Coast Guard and airman. I find that so unamerican, so much like Chinese communism or the Soviet communism that it is Im surprised the American people aren't in rebellion."

All Department of Defense personnel will now have to go through "continuous vetting" and may soon be subject to surveillance of their social media posts in an attempt to spot extremists, Fox News previously reported.

"Whether it's an event-driven look at social media, whether it's a regular continuous look at some social media or whether it's a one-time when they're investigated look at social media, there's different ways you could use some of the social media, search capabilities that are out there," William Lietzau, who leads the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency, told Defense One. "We're still right now analyzing how much value we think there is."

Fox News' Michael Lee contributed to this report.

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Gingrich knocks Milley: 'So incompetent' he revealed extent of socialism in military - Fox News

Is socialism the key to fixing the world of improv? This L.A. group thinks so – Los Angeles Times

This is Rick, says comedian Jessica Zepeda, holding up a plastic tree.

Rick is a cheap Christmas decoration that has been repurposed as a sort of talking animatronic puppet that Zepeda liked to use in some of their pre-pandemic shows. In seconds theyre giving a dissertation on how puppets should behave.

I dont think they should cuss, says Zepeda. But I love cussing. But I like puppets to be pure.

Ten minutes later Zepeda has swapped Rick, a swear-free but self-deprecating tree, for a pair of books detailing the benefits of communal governance. Their ultimate goal? To build a better comedy scene.

More than a year and a half into the pandemic, weve come to expect the unexpected. Perhaps the socialist revolution can start in an improv community?

Enter the Comedy Co-op, a planned theater in the works by more than 30 local comedians.

Jessica JZ Zepeda.

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Its radical, says Zepeda, who once ran a diversity show at Upright Citizens Brigade and has become one of the new groups largest proponents of sociocracy, which utilizes a series of committees to diffuse a hierarchal set-up.

It is asking comedians to do something that we have never traditionally done, which is think beyond yourselves.

And its speaking to a charged political moment of social reckoning, when institutions large and small are being re-evaluated on their diversity, equity and workplace harassment policies.

Born out of the pandemic, when a number of prominent theaters were singled out for a lack of diversity and spiraled into financial insecurity, the Comedy Co-op is an acknowledgment that improv and stand-up constitute a low-margin world serving those with the flexibility to spend thousands of dollars on classes. Participants also say the co-op fills a long-overdue need in shifting a robust community away from brand-name theaters like Upright Citizens Brigade, the Second City, iO and Groundlings into one that is owned and governed by the community.

If comedy theaters arent a path to getting rich or famous, perhaps one can show the Los Angeles performance world that theres power in socialism? Its a model based less on propping up local celebs and more about supporting a theater because of its perceived morals and ethics.

James Mastraieni was the initial organizer of the Comedy Co-op. There are now more than 40 members.

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

During the pandemic, I had a lot of time to engage with my socialist sensibilities, says actor-comedian James Mastraieni, who kickstarted the Comedy Co-op, where everyone who works or performs is a part-owner.

I sent an email to about 150 comedians Ive known over the years, and explained what this is. I said, If this existed, could you see yourself supporting it? At the time I was in this headspace of wondering if I was the only one feeling really insecure about my place in a community Ive been in for so long. It was cathartic to get responses back, and that was my motivation to dig deeper.

Part of it.

In the wake of nationwide George Floyd protests against police brutality and systemic racism combined with pandemic fears, practically no industry, including comedy, was spared from having its shortcomings on matters of diversity aired in public. A number of local stages were downsized before the pandemic, including geek culture hub Meltdown and iO West.

In July of last year, more than a dozen local comics told The Times that Los Angeles stages were plagued with problems of institutionalized racism, driven by a white-led power structure that marginalized diverse voices. Grievances on social media and petitions were sent to theaters such as Groundlings, Upright Citizens Brigade and Chicagos now-shuttered iO.

Comedy Co-op is a new endeavor formed by a group of local improvisers in the wake of numerous L.A. clubs floundering or shutting down during the pandemic. From right: Paige Elson, Nicole Pasquale, Jessica JZ Zepeda, PJ McCormick, Leonard Smith Jr., James Mastraieni and Dave Theune.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Things got bleak.

Upright Citizens Brigade, which began in Chicago before expanding to New York and eventually becoming the nexus of the L.A. scene, is down to just one stage after shutting its East Coast spaces. Those once credited for creating modern improv were questioned over the kind of scene they created, or if it even existed anymore.

While UCB has pledged to work closely with the community as it re-imagines itself as a leaner nonprofit, iO co-founder and comedy matriarch Charna Halpern said the same before confessing that the Chicago institution was money-less and she would be forced to find a buyer.

For the record:

An earlier version of this story referred to Ruha Taslimi as an actress. The performer is non-binary and uses the pronouns they/them.

Did I just invest over a decade in a place thats not coming back? says performer and co-op member Ruha Taslimi of the sensation of watching theaters contract and close during the pandemic. But out of a sense of abandonment came a realization: Ones identity isnt tied to a business. Or, as Taslimi says, No. That investment was in myself.

Veteran writer-performer Alex Fernie says those involved in the co-op feel a recommitment to the comedy scene.

This is not just people showing up for the fun part. This is people working to ensure that theres a long-term viability for this, he says.

And if they can fight the power of capitalistic structures along the way, great.

It feels very in line with the political uproar thats happened, actress and comedian Paige Elson says. Theres socialists now. Anti-hierarchy, capitalism. Thats kind of cool. I was like, Yeah, that sounds good to me.

Paige Elson

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

These days, an interview with Mastraieni is just as likely to discuss comedy theory as it is political postulation.

As hes been doing the interview rounds, hes met those who dont believe a membership-based, socialist-inspired method is possible. I had expressed that I was a socialist, says Mastraieni of a recent interview, and they were like, Will you have a committee for censorship and canceling comedians? What? No. Theres a misinformed idea that when people hear socialist or worker cooperative they think censorship.

But the Comedy Co-op even has a plan for that.

Whats important to me is to be solution-orientated, Zepeda says. If someone [screws] up on stage, were not going to kick them out. Theres going to be accountability. We tell people to act better, and give them no tools. We need to have sensitivity training.

The Comedy Co-op wants the community to know that if it wont always have the answers, its working its way through the questions. Membership tiers are being drawn by a 30-plus steering committee currently broken up into intimate groups of four to seven to focus on branches of running a cooperative business. Multiple people are in multiple committees, creating communal links to ensure hopefully no decision is made in a vacuum.

Leonard Smith Jr.

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Two benefit shows one stand-up and one improv at nonprofit Glendale performance space Junior High have been set for Oct. 3. The improv gig, which will be live-streamed, has already sold out.

A crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo will launch soon afterward, with the long-term goal of establishing a new L.A.-area theater. In the meantime, the do-it-yourself ethos of the Comedy Co-op has thrust a lot of improvisers into unsuspecting roles.

I was at one of the early meetings, and James asked what 2% of $2,000 was and I threw the number out, says actor and comedian Artoun Nazareth. Oh, its $40. Hes like, God, youre good with numbers. You should be on the money committee.

So I ended up there. Ive done a ton of research into tax law, and learned what the difference is between an LLC and a cooperative corporation, Nazareth continues. I didnt know any of that was coming my way.

But if the group is hopeful, its not delusional.

Were hoping to make enough to pay the performers and keep the lights on, and thats it, says Nazareth, adding all forms of alternate income will be looked at, from grants to finding a venue that could double as a filming location or allow alcohol sales.

And then, of course, theres just the nature of any community with egos equally big and fragile.

So many problems at so many places Ive been involved with have stemmed from people not knowing whats going on, Fernie says. Its always going to be personal if a show doesnt work or if a show gets ended because we put ourselves into them. But its worse when theres mystery.

On the money side, we want to be open. Heres whats coming in. You can see if were in trouble this month. I believe that transparency crosses off a lot of problems, Fernie says.

That mind-set, says Zepeda, is among the groups core mission statements.

Anyone can complain, says Zepeda. Not everyone can problem-solve. Thats what sets us apart. I understand hesitancy. I hear it. But what other option is there? All the systems around us we have watched crumble and fall to the ground. We should be excited by what if?

Everyone involved in the Comedy Co-op stressed that they want to see the likes of UCB return as better-run organizations.

Its like your family, Elson says. You love them. And sometimes you hate them. But it brought us together.

If anything, the pandemic heightened generational discussions and concerns that were already bubbling under the surface.

At some point Second City was the rebellion, says actor and comedian David Theune. And then maybe iO becomes the rebellion to Second City. At some point, the rebellion becomes the king and theyve got to get taken down in some ways. Thats the way it goes.

David Theune

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Grievances with the established system arent hard to come by. Just prior to the pandemic, PJ McCormick landed a spot on one of UCBs coveted Harold teams. McCormick, who once dreamed of being a pro wrestler, says the predominantly white L.A. comedy scene didnt make his journey easy.

You dont want to be judged purely based on your stereotype of, you know, of your culture or your ethnicity, says McCormick, who is half-Filipino and half-British. So what tends to happen, as a diverse performer, you look up [at an audition panel], you see all the white faces, and you feel like, Well, Im not comfortable bringing my experience as a Filipino person to this stage, because they may not understand the references. And then you are not being authentic to yourself, and youre probably going to ruin your audition.

PJ McCormick

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Such issues, Elson says, are a microcosm of the entire entertainment industry, but co-op members say theyre optimistic because diversity is ingrained into its mission statement. Zepeda, for instance, expresses pride when discussing the diversity showcase that they produced at UCB, but acknowledges there was awkwardness about it being segregated.

It was always conflicting in our head, but then when we got to the green room with only Black, Indigenous and people of color performers, it was like, Holy s, weve never been in this space, Zepeda says. So there is that wrestling, that tokenization, but also the necessity to fight to create a space where you can be yourself. We acknowledged it wasnt perfect, and my mentality is that reforms are not possible in systems built on capitalism and white supremacy.

Another concern: ensuring comedians get paid for their work. The Comedy Co-op hopes to allow performers to set their own ticket prices and take a percentage of the door. While no one has the misconceptions that such monies will cover rent or even a burger members want to erase the idea that appearing on a stage is payment enough.

The Comedy Co-op, however, will forgo a key money-making initiative of other theaters: no training academy. Part of that is simply an acknowledgment that theres a number of quality improv classes offered throughout L.A. by theaters and individual performers.

But part of that is existential.

What you find funny is what you find funny and you cannot be wrong, Fernie says. We want to be a place for you to pursue what you find funny. We dont want to teach you what is funny. We want to go out of our way to reach out to schools and communities where people dont feel welcome to check out shows.

From left: Nicole Pasquale, Dave Theune, Paige Elson, Leonard Smith Jr., James Mastraieni, Jessica JZ Zepeda and PJ McCormick.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Building a better comedy scene isnt easy, regardless of the performers idealism.

What Ive known is that every single improv venue that Ive ever been a part of, Ive seen the same problems, says Theune, citing money struggles and fights for stage time. But when James had this idea, it was different. Weve tried it these ways and some have been unbelievably successful but lets try it a different way.

And sure, at the end of the day its just comedy, but its worth stressing that the power to laugh with others is important, no matter how weird the show.

Nicole Pasquale, for instance, dreams of an early-morning performance of improvised synchronized dancing. Its just a fun hour, Pasquale says. Thats all I want to do. I want a room for silliness.

Nicole Pasquale

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Leonard Smith Jr. cant help but to launch into a bit of his stand-up during a phone call, even trying out some new jokes he wrote during the pandemic. And while hes very much into the ideals of the Comedy Co-op he admits he made some remarks in his ultimately rejected application for a diversity scholarship at UCB his work is far from politically minded (I talk about butts and sex, he says).

For Smith, the co-op has been eye-opening in breaking down barriers. You find your circle. You find your clique and you navigate that area, but here theres a lot of faces I had seen but never talked to, Smith says.

The co-op has been a lifeline for actor and co-op member Taslimi, who is immunocompromised and is not yet able to return to performing.

Its cheesy to say this, says Taslimi. Ive done a lot of therapy, but some of my best therapy happens in this work. Being fearless, and trusting your voice, and supporting other people makes you a better person. It gives you a new relationship to your brain.

These are among the ideals leading the co-ops members to believe that a worker-run space is the way forward. Will it be perfect? Nope. But will it work?

I dont see this failing, Zepeda says. Im full of self-doubt, but not with this. I see that people are working really hard, and I see everyone having to look at themselves in a different way. Thats what the past two years have been sitting and looking at yourself. Unfortunately, it took us being robbed of our stages to value them and understand that there can be a better stage.

Zepeda stops, takes a breath and sighs. Its going to work.

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Is socialism the key to fixing the world of improv? This L.A. group thinks so - Los Angeles Times

What Lies at the Heart of National Division? – City Journal

We didnt need a new poll from The University of Virginia Center for Politics and Project Home Fire to tell us that many Democrats see fascists when they look at Republicans and many Republicans see Communists when they look at Democrats. Forty-one percent of Biden voters and 52 percent of Trump voters at least somewhat agree that the time has come to split the country into red and blue states. There is a widespread feeling on both sides that we are not friends but enemies. All this, we could have guessed.

That our divisions have their origins largely on the left has nothing to do with the number of righteous people on either side. Its simply a question of cultural power. The Left dominates the news industry, Hollywood, the academy, social media, big tech, and the minds of corporate leaders. Leftism commands all the heights that shape our culture, except the besieged and dwindling redoubt of reality.

Because socialism is the Lefts ultimate goal and because socialism is immoral and cant be rightly argued for, the leftist shapers of culture peddle hatred and division instead.

Socialism is immoral because it rests on a benign fantasy that masks a malignant truth. The fantasy is that a nations production, distribution, and wealth can be entrusted to a benevolent state dedicated to the common good. There is no such state. There are only people with power. Long centuries of constitutional restraints have schooled these naked apes in the habits of decency. But as the restraints weaken, the habits fall away. Not sometimesalways. Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Socialism, which centralizes power, leads to oppression and human misery. Like the t-shirt says, you can vote your way in, but you have to shoot your way out.

The results of socialisms immorality have been lived out again and againin the murderous Soviet slave state, in the homicidal tyrannies of Communist China, in Cuba, and in various other South American, African, and Asian debacles. Even in the far milder social democracies of Europe and Scandinavia, many of the destructive outcomes of top-down economies have been papered over by the fact that Americas capitalist wealth has provided the nations there with much of their defense, not to mention their technical, energy, and medical innovation. Even so, parts of both Europe and Scandinavia have dialed back their social largesse with positive results.

Because of socialisms repeated failures, the supporters of this bad idea are left without arguments. Instead, they have retreated into critical theory, insult, and violence. Critical theory, generally speaking, is the dishonest strategy of relentlessly criticizing the flaws and history of freedom and capitalism in the hope that listeners will conclude that solutions must come from a more powerful central government. Insult silences reasoned arguments with name-calling. If you disagree, youre racist, sexist, phobic, or otherwise hateful and must be shunned and canceled. Violence comes in the form of riots (mostly peaceful demonstrations, in corporate media-speak), Maoist street thuggery (anti-fascism), and the hobbling of the police, which ensures spiraling crime (racial justice).

A culture dominatedmonopolized, reallyby such leftist malfeasance inspires, elevates, and amplifies the angriest and most obnoxious voices on the right, who then seem to justify the lefts criticisms, insults, and violence. And on we go, the worst of us at each others throats, the best of us silenced and sidelined. Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.

Toward the political center, where I suspect most American hearts reside, conservatives and liberals have valid points to make. Conservatives know the Burkean truths that liberty rests on tradition and morality and is of such great value that it is worth allowing individuals to do and say some evil rather than attempting to transform them into mere machines and instruments of political benevolence. Liberals understand that traditions and traditional morality can sometimes amberize historical injustices, and that wholly unfettered capitalism can lead to extremes of inequality, cronyism, and corruption.

For these conflicting truths to yield a golden mean of political action, they must be opposed in goodwill debate. But we can barely even speak to one another if we dont first concede a common ground that gives us shared purpose. We have been bequeathed that common ground in our founding philosophy: We are each of equal value and each endowed by our Creator with inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happinessand the purpose of government is to secure those rights, legitimized by the will of the people.

This founding premise rules out centralized power and therefore socialism. Instead, it validates our Constitution, and the history that produced it and which it produced. And it leaves us with much room for discussion among friends.

Andrew Klavan is a novelist and City Journal contributing editor. His podcast is featured every Friday at the DailyWire.com.

Photo by David McNew/Getty Images

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What Lies at the Heart of National Division? - City Journal

Socialists Organized in the 1950s Civil Rights Movement – Jacobin magazine

The Montgomery bus boycott of 195556 opened a new phase in the centuries-long struggle for black freedom and inspired a rebirth of activism and militancy in the United States. Pioneering mass direct action against segregated public accommodations, Montgomery was the forerunner of movement struggles of the early 1960s.

The bus boycott was won by the largest black mobilization since the March on Washington of 1941. Montgomerys entire black community was organized through the churches, which were packed by protest meetings of thousands every night, and through the construction of alternative transportation a highly effective carpool system that shuttled over 20,000 black workers to and from their jobs every day for a year. It was a brilliant portrait of the latent genius, determination, and self-organizing capacity unleashed when the working class goes into motion.

The bus boycott created new systems of struggle, strategies, tactics, organizations, leaders, and cadres. The bravery and audacity of ordinary working people was symbolized by Rosa Parks, a seamstress who touched off the boycott by fighting for her rights with unyielding dignity and courage. The mass character and militancy of the black liberation movement made it the model, the dynamic motor force, that influenced all the subsequent movements of the 1960s.

Montgomery was a renaissance, the rebirth of hope overcoming years of desperate quiet, struggle replacing acceptance, and the sense of power that we could change miserable, abusive conditions. Its occurrence at the time of the Hungarian Revolution; the failed imperialist invasion of Egypt by Britain, France, and Israel; and national independence for Ghana located Montgomery for the Left as part of the world-revolutionary drive for liberation. We were still in the reactionary 1950s, but the road was being charted for a new beginning, a new radicalism.

For revolutionary socialists at the time like me, our political assumptions and horizons changed overnight. We threw ourselves into civil rights activity nonstop, remaining immersed for years in every stage of the movement until its ultimate fading. Despite our small size, we were a significant participant.

Movement histories often ignore socialist involvement, a legacy from the 1950s that typically airbrushes away, minimizes, or derides socialist influence as some embarrassing or subversive secret. During McCarthyism, our role was of necessity frequently forced into the shadows. Truth, historical accuracy, political lessons, stronger bonds in the future, and trust would be better served if the contributions revolutionary socialists made to the struggle for black liberation were not ignored.

Greater than the contributions we made to the movement was the impact the movement had on us. The International Socialists (IS), the group I was a member of at the time, were as much a product of the black liberation movement as we were of Trotskyism. Through Trotskyism, we saw our ideas and practices as a continuity of the Russian Revolution and the revolutionary communist tradition. But it was black liberation that defined for us what it meant to be an American revolutionary.

The impact of black self-emancipation changed us personally and politically to be modern-day abolitionists, a link in the chain of the oldest, most heroic, most noble American struggle against oppression against slavery, white supremacy, Jim Crow, segregation, and the still-intact systemic, institutional racism of US capitalism. Combating this oppression made us unwilling to tolerate discrimination of any kind and toughened us as fighters against all oppressions.

We were shaped anew as participants in the movements demonstrations, sit-ins, Freedom Rides, arrests, jail time, debates, militancy, creative radicalism, and self-organization, and by the inspiring guts of its black and white freedom fighters. We were not there just for the big moments, the stirring high points we were day-to-day combatants, doing the nitty-gritty work to make events happen. Our commitment to black liberation was central to how we thought of ourselves, to our reason for being; our interests were never separate from the movements emancipatory goals. Because of this passion, our tendency enjoyed an acceptance by movement activists that most other socialist groups could never achieve.

Montgomery challenged us to make essential changes. In the grim years of McCarthyite reaction and Cold War liberalism, our influence and numbers were drastically reduced. We became isolated from the working class, ideologically marginalized, at best barely hanging on. We had to rise to this moment, to embrace the movement making history, and to prove, when appropriate, the relevance of socialist politics to the experiences the new movement was going through in real time.

It required a complete makeover, from discussion group to combat organization, from isolation to engagement, from theory to practice, from propaganda to agitation: It was a leap into the future. It involved massive reeducation, learning from and with the movement through its practices, experiences, narratives, internal life, changing moods, and ideas.

We navigated this transition more easily because of our conviction that Montgomery was the start of an even greater upheaval. The audacity, improvisation, unity, and staying power of the 381-day bus boycott convinced us that it was the opening of a potentially explosive dynamic that could mobilize the black working class and tenant farmers across the South to crack the Jim Crow segregation system, break the hold of the white supremacist Dixiecrats on US politics, and take up the task to complete the unfinished revolution of Reconstruction.

It was a perspective that would increasingly be shared by many movement activists. Victory in Montgomery gave millions the hope and belief that change was possible, even if it would take time to flourish.

Aside from the Communist Partys (CP) Labor Youth League, which dissolved in 1956, the Young Socialist League (YSL, the youth section of the Independent Socialist League) was the only socialist youth group at a national level, but with a membership of at most 125 people. Yet the YSL had roots and strengths as a serious cadre organization, with an intense internal political life and a profound appreciation for theoretical training. For years, it had been suffocating, isolated from any living movement it was dying for fresh air. YSL members were sophisticated, dedicated, tenacious; this small group produced an extraordinarily large talent pool of leading figures across the entire 1960s left spectrum.

YSL members had some experience from participating in those few struggles for civil rights that existed during McCarthyism mostly sporadic picketing, confined to the North, by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) of restaurants and public places that refused to serve black people. The YSL was active in the important left wing of the Chicago National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), fighting to break the control of the William Dawson machine, the black subset of the Richard J. Daley machine, the Democratic Partys vehicle for keeping Chicago segregation intact. YSL publications (Challenge and Anvil) showed an appreciation of black culture literature, jazz, history, and the visual arts notoriously absent outside the black community in that reactionary period.

The YSLs mission statement, What is the Young Socialist League?, highlighted the primacy the organization accorded to the fight for black equality:

The rising tide of militant struggle by the Negro people to realize their emancipation . . . is the most important development in our political and social life. This is a battle against all that is rotten and backward in the South and the nation as a whole; it is a struggle for democracy. . . . We will do all in our power to support the struggle. . . . It is the duty of the government to enforce the ruling against segregation in the schools and to make all acts of segregation and discrimination illegal.

This was our guide.

In addition to activity, we brought to the movement theoretical views that were the distillation of the ideas of American socialism. Many originated in the Communist Party of the 1920s, which attempted to overcome the racial backwardness and mixed record of the US left epitomized by the preWorld War I Socialist Party (SP). The SP had many outstanding anti-racist fighters, from Eugene Debs, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Big Bill Haywood on down, but at its worst it tolerated segregated branches in parts of the South. Even anti-racist SPers were frequently limited by American theoretical primitiveness. They often understood black oppression as a solely economic question, another facet of capitalist exploitation, which would be solved almost automatically by socialism. Meanwhile, in the here and now, they underestimated the importance of immediate or separate struggles against racism.

Some SPers spurned anti-racist struggles as reformist, others because it could create barriers with prejudiced white workers. Working-class unity would be achieved, they thought, by appealing to the lowest common denominator economic demands that both white and black workers could agree on while avoiding demands against racism, which might be a threat to unity. Pre-WWI socialism, with important exceptions, preferred to ignore the problem in effect, not challenging the racist status quo, white prejudice, and the hold that bourgeois ideology, with its inherent racism, had on white workers and radicals. This political and theoretical crudeness and backwardness was often dressed up as color blindness or class unity, ignoring rather than defining and fighting American racism.

In contrast, the revolutionary tradition, under the influence of the world communist movement of the 1920s, stressed that racial oppression was central to American capitalism. The fight for socialism was inseparable from black liberation, a part of the struggle against capitalism and imperialism. The fight to overcome racism was the task of the entire working class, white as well as black workers. Revolutionaries had to win the working class to fight against all instances of oppression and exploitation. Only through the heightened class consciousness that overcame racist ideology would the working class become capable of making a socialist revolution and fit to rule society.

The CP laid the foundation for our theory that black oppression had a dual character, with blacks being a super-exploited section of the working class, as well as possessing dimensions of a national minority in some ways similar to groups afflicted by national and colonial oppression. Black liberation was a part of the struggle for national liberation; independent organizations and struggles against oppression had to be supported as a democratic demand, a matter of democracy and justice part of the fight for socialist democracy and as the only real way to forge working-class unity. Revolutionaries had to sympathetically understand the distinction between the nationalism of the oppressed, as a vehicle to fight against their subjugation, and the nationalism of oppressors, as a vehicle to continue coerced domination and inequality. We were not defined by standard concepts of nationalism, separatism, or integration; our goal was black equality and liberation, whatever was required to advance and achieve it or as Malcolm X later famously said, by any means necessary.

We rejected interracial unity that ignored or subordinated black demands to white prejudice or politics. Only by rising to anti-racism could class consciousness based on class unity become a living reality; without it, no significant US revolutionary movement could be forged. Revolutionaries had to act as a vanguard, fighting all instances of prejudice, initiating struggles against racism, educating and winning the broader labor and radical movements to interracial support for these fights even when these were highly unpopular minority views.

The 1920s CP was composed almost entirely of immigrant workers, of whom only 10 percent were in English-speaking branches. Yet these immigrant proletarian revolutionaries, under the guidance of the pre-Stalinist Communist International, developed a sophisticated theoretical approach to black liberation that armed them to fight for black equality; to break the color bar and open the trade unions to black workers; and to champion armed self-defense against the murderous pogroms against blacks in East St. Louis, Chicago, Tulsa and other cities. They were the inspiration for us who followed their revolutionary innovations.

The theoretical approach pioneered by the CP of the 1920s prior to its Stalinization was transmitted to the Trotskyist movement of the 1930s. We were instructed, in Leon Trotskys words, to view the world through the eyes of the oppressed. During the upsurge of industrial unions in the 1930s and 1940s, the labor movement, under communist and socialist influence in its finest moments, fought racism on and off the job convincing many black workers that the labor movement was an essential vehicle to achieve equality.

The Trotskyist movement of the 1930s and 1940s had two outstanding black leaders: C.L.R. James, the West Indian revolutionary, and Ernest Rice McKinney, labor secretary and later national secretary of the Workers Party (WP). In the 1940 split of the Trotskyist movement over World War II, James and McKinney were among the founding leaders of the new Workers Party. C. L. R. James, author of The Black Jacobins, the history of the slave rebellion that was the Haitian Revolution, is world-famous as a major Marxist theoretician, an important influence on revolutionaries internationally including on Martin Luther King Jr, who on his first trip to Europe set up a meeting with James.

James was the leader of the WP minority, the Johnson-Forest-Stone (party names for James, Raya Dunayevskaya, and Grace Lee Boggs) tendency. This minority tendency agreed with the major programmatic views of the WP on WWII and domestic and international politics, but their analysis was that the Soviet Union was state-capitalist rather than a new form of class society.Additional differences later developed.

Ernest Rice McKinney needs greater introduction: He is one of many black revolutionary figures left out of history. McKinney was born in 1886, not long after Emancipation, to a family of ex-slaves. As a youngster, he was educated in union politics by his grandfather, an ex-slave, who became a leader in the bloody mine workers class warfare in turn-of-the-century West Virginia. McKinney was a cofounder of the Niagara Movement, an early twentieth-century civil rights organization; joined the CP at its launch; was on the organizing committee of the great 1919 steel strike; and was again on the Steel Workers Organizing Committee in the 1930s Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) drive.

In the 1920s, he was labor editor of the Pittsburgh Courier and secretary of the Pittsburgh NAACP. He drifted out of the CP in the late 20s and became associated with A. J. Mustes Conference for Progressive Labor Action, which during the Depression organized the Unemployed Leagues with McKinney as editor of its newspaper. The Muste organization led the Toledo general strike of 1934 and then merged with the Trotskyists, with McKinney a few years later becoming organizer of the New York City branch of the Socialist Workers Party. McKinney was the architect of the WPs historic rank-and-file caucus strategy against the no-strike pledge during WWII, which provided leadership and program in the wartime strikes and labor actions opposed by the pro-war union officials, social democrats, and Communists.

In the South, McKinney, disguised as a preacher on a mule, successfully organized sharecroppers strikes and WP sharecropper branches. McKinney also organized underground black workers groups in industry to break Jim Crow job classifications, particularly in the new CIO unions. He moved rightward in the 1950s but came out of retirement to give classes for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the 1960s.

Inside the Workers Party, the emphasis was placed on activity within black working-class communities and on building a multiracial revolutionary organization. A years-long discussion and debate took place internally and in the pages of Labor Action and the New Internationalon the question of black liberation: James, particularly after the 1943 Harlem rebellion, stressed the revolutionary potential of the black community and the importance of independent black struggles and organization, summed up later in his famous document The Revolutionary Answer to the Negro Problem in the United States.

McKinney, meanwhile, stressed that black liberation could only be successful through the working-class and union movement. The arguments of these two positions bred a lively theoretical and political culture, with a deep appreciation for black history. These were the foundations out of which our outlook developed. We were originally trained in McKinneys position, but under the impact of 1960s black liberation, the IS reassessment of this question brought us into greater agreement with James views.

In the civil rights movement, we were movement loyalists. We shared its goals. We believed that socialists should join, defend, strengthen, assist, and champion this movement. We also were dedicated to building its militant left wing as a necessity for victory, as well as for renewing socialist organization. While involved in countless struggles to desegregate public accommodations, we emphasized that it was essential to fight for voting rights and jobs, to attack the underpinnings of racist institutions. These ideas became vital in the 1960s, in Southern voting struggles; in the March on Washington, whose main slogan was For Jobs and Freedom; and in the Bay Area movement, which under left influence made its major goal the fight to open racist job markets.

We believed all liberation struggles of the oppressed were indispensable parts of the class struggle against capitalism. We were not dismayed by the fact that in the early stages of the movement, the fighters were often Christians who were nonviolent, who had illusions in liberalism and in the government, and who did not start with an anti-capitalist consciousness. Some radical groups were dismissive of this stage of the movement, awaiting a higher stage before taking part in the struggle; to their shame and embarrassment, they missed the civil rights movement. We recognized that existing consciousness would change through struggle, as events taught people essential lessons about the real power relations of capitalist society the role of politicians, the police, the mass media, established institutions and authorities and radicalized them as they became more self-confident, convinced of their own agency, power, and ability to transform society, particularly if socialists were present to give voice to these radical political lessons. Our guide was Karl Marxs famous formulation in the Communist Manifesto: We have no interests apart from the masses of workers and the oppressed, and in the movement of the present we fight for the movements future.

We were often subject to red-baiting from political opponents liberals as well as conservatives who appealed to the still lingering McCarthyite sensibilities of American common sense that reds are an alien element with sinister purposes to impose some nefarious outside agenda. We overcame red-baiting attacks by taking them head-on politically, including in our forthright defense of the relationship of socialism to oppression.

We opposed without qualification all oppression and exploitation its elimination was what we considered socialism to be. The movements to achieve the end of oppression and exploitation are the process and vehicles for the liberation of humanity. These views, and our practice, became understood by movement activists and gained us respect, comradely feelings, and acceptance. It became impossible to witch-hunt us out of the movement.

Before Montgomery, the NAACP was the only organization with a mass black membership. The NAACP focused on court litigation, legislative lobbying, and pressuring political and corporate elites. There were some militant, local-chapter exceptions to this reform-from-above strategy. But the national leadership opposed mass action from below, breaking the law except for court case challenges, and mass arrests as counterproductive and a threat to respectable pressure politics. Roy Wilkins, NAACP chief, dismissed protests as blowing off steam. Victory in Montgomery opened alternatives to the dominant NAACP strategy.

The NAACPs crowning achievement was the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, the landmark court ruling against segregated schools and the doctrine of separate but equal. The Dwight D. Eisenhower administration, however, refused to enforce the decision, and there was no existing movement to make enforcement happen. But Brown set off a strong segregationist backlash the campaign of Massive Resistance, spearheaded by Southern Democratic congressmen, with the quiet acquiescence of other Democratic officials. This racist counterattack reinforced McCarthyism, with the NAACP outlawed as subversive in some Southern states, and its members fired from public employment.

Southern business, professionals, and the middle class sponsored the formation of the respectable white supremacist Citizens Councils. The Citizens Councils and police departments across the South provided cover for the reinvigorated Ku Klux Klan to terrorize rural black people. This white racist reaction effectively held back the fledgling movement during three long years between Montgomery and the eruption of the sit-in movement in Greensboro, North Carolina. But it was the ferment of those years, the demonstrations and the fight back, that kept the Montgomery spirit aliveand was laying the basis for the mass upsurge of the 1960s.

Montgomerys aftermath clarified that traditional national black organizations would not engage in militant, mass actions; new organizations were needed for the fight. Bayard Rustin was pivotal to this development. Rustin conceived the idea for the first new organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). He was the agent for creating the relationship between A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King Jr that became the force behind national mass actions.

Randolph and Wilkins were, prior to King, the most prominent black leaders nationally. Randolph was the most successful black trade unionist in American history. He organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), the only independent black trade union, and later headed the 1930s mass National Negro Congress. Randolphs greatest success was in forming the all-black March on Washington Movement (MOWM) in 1941, which demanded racial equality in defense plants and the integration of the armed forces. It threatened demonstrations that could disrupt defense preparations on the eve of World War II. Roosevelt, allied to the Dixiecrats, fought the MOWM and its demands but was forced to capitulate, and issued an executive order that created the Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC).

Until the FEPC, racist employers kept most black workers confined to farm, service, menial, and household servant work. The FEPC set off a vast migration, as black workers went from poverty wages in the South to union wages and conditions in Northern war factories.

Randolphs prestige came from his efforts that changed black social conditions to a greater degree than any of his contemporaries, until King, were able to achieve. Bayard Rustin became a national figure in the civil rights movement through his position as the coordinator of the Randolph-King forces. These forces began without strong national organization, and Rustin relied heavily upon the YSL and our allies as his troops for mobilizations. Our alliance with Rustin is what gave us a role disproportionate to our size.

Rustin was probably the most talented mass organizer that the US left has produced. His planning genius was connected to his visionary political ideas and tactics. A socialist and radical pacifist, Rustin was an openly gay man, which made him a target for harassment in the homophobic 1950s. Rustin paid the price: arrests, slanders, demotions, firings, being banned for years from civil rights prominence. He repeatedly overcame these setbacks and was restored to leadership because of his unique talents.

Movement histories often overlooked, minimized, or depreciated Rustins role until gay consciousness restored acknowledgement of his importance. Neither A. J. Muste nor King would defend Rustin from attacks about his sexuality. The YSL, with liberated sexual views unusual in the conservative 1950s, defended his sexuality and sexual rights; it was another bond in our alliance.

Rustins experience of mass organization stretched back to his Young Communist League membership, when he helped organize a successful bus boycott against job discrimination in New York City. He left the CP in opposition to its support for US entry into World War II and became an assistant to Randolph in the MOWM. From the mid-1950s on, he was Randolphs closest political collaborator.

Prior to Montgomery, Rustin was the executive secretary of the War Resisters League, and the primary organizer of the radical pacifist current led by Muste, which dominated a number of interlocking organizations including the WRL, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, CORE, and Liberation magazine. The Muste group shared some defining politics with us, to which they gave a pacifist content. Liberations inaugural issue in April 1956 raised as its own the slogan, Neither Washington nor Moscow, but for the Third Camp, and editorially defined Russian Stalinism as bureaucratic collectivism. That same issue of Liberation included Our Struggle, Kings first article on Montgomery, written in the midst of the conflict, explaining its central lessons as the rise of

The New Negro . . . a revolutionary change in the Negros evaluation of himself and his destiny . . . the church is becoming militant . . . economics is part of our struggle . . . and we have discovered a new and powerful weapon, non-violent resistance.

The WP, renamed the Independent Socialist League (ISL) in 1949, had fraternal ties with the radical pacifist, anti-capitalist, and anti-Stalinist Muste current. Muste was the keynote speaker at the founding conference of the YSL. The ISL and the Muste tendency formed a joint organization, the Third Camp Committee, to oppose imperialism and the Cold War. Its activities during the Cold War included demonstrations against the Francisco Franco dictatorship, the US invasion of Guatemala, and other imperialist crimes. Common activity, based on common principles, with the Muste group furthered our acceptance within the civil rights and peace movements, and was our original link to Rustin.

Rustin was dispatched to Montgomery by Randolph and Muste in February 1956, when it seemed the bus boycott might weaken. Coretta Scott King was a longtime admirer of Rustins work, easing his introduction to Martin Luther King Jr. Rustin had long, deep, imaginative, even transformative discussions with King that began their decade-long creative alliance. Rustin was Kings original guide in nonviolent resistance, as well as a political adviser and tactician to King, who was just beginning his political career.

King had tremendous respect and admiration for both Randolph and Muste, and Rustin was his first link to them and their world. This relationship would allow Rustin to construct the Randolph-King alliance as the mass action alternative to the existing civil rights strategy.

Rustins Montgomery experience led him to formulate some key ideas. The first was that, at this historic juncture, the black church was the only independent institution capable of mass black mobilization. Rustin insisted that whatever its conservative limitations, the black church could be neither ignored nor circumvented; no successful effort to advance the struggle was possible without it.

As the Young Socialist Challenge reported, Rustin said in a May 6, 1957, speech at a YSL meeting:

In Montgomery . . . throughout the South and in the North, the Negro churches have been the rallying point of a gigantic mass movement . . . The church is the one representative institution which is universal to the Negro community.

Rustin drew the conclusion, and convinced King, to form the SCLC, comprising those black churches and ministers committed to direct action and mass mobilization. Rustin was Kings nominee to be executive director of the SCLC, until vetoed by other ministers because of Rustins homosexuality and radicalism.

YSL members were convinced of Rustins view that the black church was essential to organizing the civil rights movement at this opening stage. It was the key lever to set in motion the mass struggle from below, which would later take other, more militant organizational forms in SNCC, CORE, the Deacons for Defense and Justice, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, and black power organizations.

Another strategic Rustin contribution that influenced the early movement was his theory of social dislocation. Social dislocation argues that mass civil disobedience could impose upon the racist white power structure a situation of social chaos, forcing it to respond. The disruption of US life could dislocate the racist functioning of normal American society by shifting the burden and consequences of racism onto the upholders of the status quo.

The Montgomery bus boycott was victorious when the carpool system bankrupted the bus company, strategically changing the balance of power by placing the costs of segregation onto the municipal authorities. The pain and humiliation of segregation and racism could be shifted so that not just black people suffered, which the United States tolerated, but racists were forced by inconvenience or loss to share the burdens and costs of institutionalized racism or make changes.

Rustin was a profound source in making the boycott a national story. He had an intense impact on us as the boycott was happening. Shortly after he returned from Montgomery, in April 1956 there was an all-day Philadelphia Third Camp Conference, sponsored by the ISL, the YSL, and the WRL. The speakers were Rustin, Muste, and Michael Harrington, national chairman of the YSL.

In his speech, The Meaning of Montgomery, Rustin interpreted the bus boycott as a triad of significance: a watershed event in black history, a labor upsurge in the South, and a part of the revolt against colonial domination. The United States, Rustin held, had brought its colonial subjects from Africa home, and this revolt was similar to the ongoing international struggles for national liberation. The concept that black people represented an internal colony inside the United States had previously been advanced by the CP and was popularized a decade later by the Black Panther Party.

Rustin ended his remarks by saying that third-camp socialists had a duty to take part in this movement for racial equality and anti-colonialism. He continued this message with a speaking tour of college campuses that included YSL forums.

It was in building Northern solidarity for Montgomery that our active collaboration with Rustin was cemented. Rustin cofounded a new, small organization, In Friendship, with civil rights veterans Ella Baker, later godmother of SNCC, and Stanley Levison, later Kings fundraising and political adviser. In Friendships purpose was to provide economic assistance to those suffering economic reprisals in the efforts to secure civil rights. In Friendships first major event was a Madison Square Garden 20,000-strong rally, the largest such event since the March on Washington Movement. It was held a month after the Philadelphia conference, and for the first time, considerable on-the-ground organizing was provided by YSL and ISL members, who showed their competency, professionalism, and nonsectarianism.

It was a role that might have been precluded in previous years by the Communist Partys hegemony on the Left. A second fundraiser was held in December 1956, featuring Duke Ellington, Harry Belafonte, and Coretta Scott King. These events were the start of the ongoing working relationship between Rustin and the YSL, two of whose members Tom Kahn and Rachelle Horowitz became his main assistants.

The partnership with Rustin was our entry into collaboration with Randolph and King. The only downside of this relationship developed years later, when Rustin became the main spokesman in the civil rights movement for the rightward-moving Max Shachtman group.

Three mass demonstrations took place in Washington, DC, in the years between Montgomery and the 1960 sit-in movement. They were the first large-scale protests at the nations capital since the 1940s. Each demonstration showed the determination to sustain the fight for civil rights in the face of the Southern racist backlash and federal government stonewalling. During the years when there was no ongoing national mass movement, these marches were stepping-stones to the 1960s and dress rehearsals for the March on Washington of 1963. The organizing center for the marches was on 125th Street in Harlem, at the BSCP or other union offices.

Randolph and King were the cochairmen who coopted other luminaries as cosponsors. Rustin was organizer, Kahn and Horowitz his chief assistants. The YSL and its allies were the cadres responsible for the Jimmie Higgins work of building the marches, publicizing them, getting the endorsements, confirming speakers, and mobilizing people through carpools and buses.

The first march, the Prayer Pilgrimage, was named after a one-day demonstration in Montgomery in which, to show their resolve, people walked to work as opposed to using the carpools. The following two events were the Youth Marches for Integrated Schools. The political backdrop to all three marches was that, despite the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954, the federal government had done nothing to implement school desegregation in the South.

In the Brown v. Board of Education case, the board of education was that of Topeka, Kansas. Schools were segregated in a number of Northern and Border states, including Delaware, Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky, as well as southern areas of Illinois, Indiana, and Kansas. Schools in those regions were integrated between 1954 and the early 1960s, but in the Deep South, 99 percent of schools remained segregated in 1963. The courts and the federal government were not enforcing the law; for Brown to become reality, movement pressure was necessary.

Action to force the government to implement the supposedly established law of the land was the core function of the marches. The Prayer Pilgrimage was held on the third anniversary of the Brown decision, in May 1957. Labor Action reported on a YSL meeting where Rustin insisted that the Pilgrimage was

not going to pray and wait for the heavens to open up. . . . It will confront a congress which is do-nothing in the area of civil rights. . . . The issue is not confined to civil rights. . . . Every political question in America today . . . schools, health, labor is becoming inextricably tied up with the issue of emancipation posed by the developments in the South.

The Prayer Pilgrimage, which more than 25,000 attended, was the first mass protest in years, the largest civil rights demonstration until that time. Its overwhelming religious character was fortunately interspersed with overtones of militancy. It was the first demonstration sponsored by the SCLC and gave the organization a sense of the broad support it could build nationally.

At the pilgrimage, King gave his first major speech in the North, placing him on the national stage; in the black media, for the first time, King was heralded as the nations most important black leader. Kings theme was an electrifying call to give us the ballot, a demand for the federal government to protect black voter registration; if blacks could vote in the South, King maintained, desegregation, including of the schools, would follow.

Kings speech foreshadowed the Southern voter registration drives of the 1960s. Kings speech castigated both political parties for betraying justice:

The Democrats have betrayed it by capitulating to the prejudices and undemocratic practices of the Southern Dixiecrats. The Republicans have betrayed it by capitulating to the blatant hypocrisy of right-wing, reactionary northerners. These men so often have a high blood pressure of words and an anemia of deeds.

Labor Action celebrated the spirit of resistance the pilgrimage represented, but slammed the absence of leading union officials and liberals:

Many moods and many tendencies came together in Washington. . . . But if one element stands out above all others it is this: the Negro movement expresses its determination to press forward for democracy against the old parties, if need be; in the face of the labor officialdom, if need be; without the public support of hypocritical liberals, if need be.

Kings speech at the Prayer Pilgrimage signaled the new movements defiant refusal to allow the white liberal establishment to set the pace of change. Against calls to revert to passivity, King argued that Southern Negroes . . . will not and cannot retreat.

The first Youth March for Integrated Schools occurred the next year, in October 1958, focused on trying to force the federal government to intervene in Little Rock, Arkansas, against governor Orval Faubus, who violently obstructed school integration, eventually closing the high schools for a year. Some 12,000 students demonstrated for integration, in what was seen as the start of the student civil rights movement.

Rustin toured college campuses in New York City with Jackie Robinson to build the march, and King spoke at NYC churches. As historian Daniel Levine writes, The whole thing was a shoestring operation. . . . Most of the support came from labor unions, primarily those unions in which black workers were an important part of the membership.

The march was organized along lines that Michael Harrington outlined in his instructions to Young Peoples Socialist League (YPSL) branches, into which the YSL had just merged. Rustin would speak only on campuses with YPSL branches, who were the force organizing for the march. Two meetings would occur. First, a large public meeting would mobilize for the demonstration, for which the YPSL was to seek broad sponsorships from the NAACP Youth Council, the student government, and campus progressive groups. The second meeting would be a YPSL internal membership meeting, in which Rustin would speak on the role of socialists in the civil rights movement, and on the strategy and tactics socialists should employ in building the movements next steps. King was the featured speaker at the Youth March, but after he was stabbed and hospitalized, Coretta Scott King filled in as primary speaker.

A second Youth March followed six months later, in April 1959, attended by 25,000 people and accompanied by petitions signed by hundreds of thousands of students demanding federal support for school integration. More than three hundred buses, half of them from outside New York, historian Maurice Isserman writes, arrived in DC. King, Harry Belafonte, Jackie Robinson, and Tom Mboya, chairman of the All-African Peoples Conference, all spoke.

The structure of the demonstration was similar to the first. Randolph and King called the march and received cosponsorship from the NAACP, while Rustin organized it, with the YPSL the major organizing force on the ground across the country. As Isserman writes, New recruits helped out at the Youth March headquarters in Harlem and elsewhere around the country; these recruits included Bob Moses, then a New York City high school teacher, and Eleanor Holmes . . . then a student at Antioch College.

In Chicago, the YPSL was able to use its influence within the NAACP, the United Auto Workers, and the United Packinghouse Workers of America to mobilize buses for the April 18 march. King linked the campaign to a broader effort to advance democracy in the South.

The three marches demonstrated the potential national scope of the movement, but the demand for federal intervention in the South was ignored by President Eisenhower, met with silence by the liberal establishment, and not covered by most of the white press. As an editorial in Labor Action succinctly declared, White liberals talk, Southern reaction acts.

But a new generation of young black people felt that they could not wait for court rulings or for the federal government to confront the apartheid system. Labor Action captured the mood of frustration and anger simmering among segregations opponents at the inaction of the establishment:

The responsibility for the fact that there has been no break in the defiance of the Supreme Courts integration order in the Deep South rests to no small degree on the shoulders on the national leadership of both political parties. Their shameless capitulation to the Southern racists has actually encouraged the latters defiance of the court order.

Brown v. Board of Education appeared to mean little more than the paper it was written on.

The years between 1956 and 1960 were a period of racist backlash and also of ideological ferment preparing the next great wave of struggle. Revolutionary socialists experience in building solidarity with Montgomery, organizing the three Washington marches, and forging close alliances with key movement leaders solidified us as a part of the activist core preparing movement revival. Some activists of the 60s began their political life as organizers for the marches among them, Bob Moses of SNCC and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, and Ezell Blair, one of the four students who began the Greensboro lunch counter sit-in.

In these years of ferment, a civil rights subculture was created, developing a new generation of fighters who emerged, to the surprise of the world, seemingly overnight in the 1960 sit-ins and solidarity picketing. The YSL/YPSL was a visible part of this subculture that fused activism with education, in a renewal of the tradition of abolitionism a new abolitionism, as Howard Zinn called it.

Our contribution was not only as movement fighters, but also in political education in the movement subculture. YPSL held classes and reading groups on Reconstruction, the populist movement, Scottsboro, the CIO upsurge. We read Du Bois, C.L.R. James, C. Vann Woodward, Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, and James Baldwin, a one-time YPSL member who would occasionally speak for us. These classes and discussions were part of the intellectual culture in which activists for the 1960s civil rights movement were being formed. To be taken seriously in movement discussions, people needed to know the Harlem Renaissance, Scottsboro, Reconstruction, populism.

A dynamic political culture, of which we were an essential part, developed in the late 1950s, as the gathering momentum for social justice broke conformity and prefigured the 1960s. We established a strong position in the formative years of the movement; the test would be how we used these positions in the mass upsurge of the 1960s.

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Socialists Organized in the 1950s Civil Rights Movement - Jacobin magazine

County councilmember sends out flyers depicting her opponent as a socialist puppet – Mercer Island Reporter

A political flyer sent out by King County Councilmember Kathy Lamberts campaign depicting her opponent as a puppet controlled by prominent Democrats of color is being criticized as fear-mongering and divisive imagery and rhetoric.

The flyer contains an image of Lamberts Democratic opponent, Sarah Perry, as a puppet being controlled by Senator Bernie Sanders, Vice President Kamala Harris, Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, and Lamberts King County Council colleague Girmay Zahilay. The flyer accuses Perry of being a socialist puppet controlled by these politicians of color.

Lambert did not respond to requests for comment despite multiple calls and emails to her campaign office.

Perry said she was deeply disappointed by the imagery and language used on the flyer and was surprised that Lambert would sink that low. She said the depiction of her as a puppet was not only offensive to her as a strong, professional woman, but to other women like her as well.

She accused the flyer of being racist and antisemetic, replicating imagery that has been used by nationalist propagandists for centuries to depict certain politicians and public figures as being puppeteered and controlled by Jews, and tropes that play into xenophobic fears and attitudes through history.

King County Councilmember Girmay Zahilay, who was depicted as puppeteering the strings on Perrys back, also found issue with the flyer, accusing Lamberts campaign of fear-mongering. Zahilay endorsed Perry for Lamberts District 3 seat.

Some might say its because I endorsed her Democratic opponent. Actually 6 of [Councilmember] Lamberts colleagues endorsed her opponent, Zahilay tweeted on Oct. 6. And yet, of those 6, its only my face in a big red bowtie and my name in red boogie man letters that she chose to distribute to thousands of voters.

Zahilay said that painting a Black elected official with a foreign sounding name as an enemy to suburban and rural values is nothing new.

Perry said while she was endorsed by Zahilay, she has only met him twice before. She also said she has never met nor has any connection to Kamala Harris, Bernie Sanders or Kshama Sawant.

She said rhetoric used in the flyer labeling her as a socialist or aligning her with the defund the police movement mischaracterize her ideology and remove nuance from her political beliefs.

I do not know why she chose to use that term, Perry said, as she doesnt identify as a socialist and doesnt seek to defund police resources. In fact, she said she supports giving law enforcement and first responders additional resources, and her focus on police reform will be to increase transparency, accountability and standards, she said.

Her feeling is that the imagery and rhetoric used in the flyer was intended to elicit a gut-level response to the fear, doubts and uncertainty felt by more conservative constituents in the district. The flyer uses buzzwords such as socialism and defund the police, which have been used and misused, not just recently, by conservatives to mobilize voters against Democratic candidates.

Perry said that kind of rhetoric is not healthy for the community and only ends up creating more divisiveness. She said in the end, elected officials and communities move forward by working together and collaborating, not burning bridges.

Perry pointed out The Seattle Times endorsement of the incumbent Lambert, in which Kathys effectiveness at working across party and geographic lines is touted by her former colleague Larry Gossett as a reason for her success in the non-partisan county council seat.

Perry said this flyer shows her true partisan nature during what could be a closely contested election this November. The District 3 primary election left Lambert leading Perry by only around 2,000 votes.

With a list of endorsements including from Gov. Jay Inslee, Perry feels that Lamberts campaign rhetoric may have come out of fear of losing the election. Perry accused Lambert of having to try to attack her credibility simply because Lambert does not have enough accomplishments to stand on during her incumbency.

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County councilmember sends out flyers depicting her opponent as a socialist puppet - Mercer Island Reporter