Class unity growing

Latest

May Day march in Chicago.  PHOTO/BRETT JELINEK
May Day march in Chicago.
PHOTO/BRETT JELINEK

Editor’s note: This article appeared in our bilingual sister publication. Visit them at tribunodelpueblo.org.
Across decades-old racial divides, our class—the working class—is beginning to unite.
We are at a turning point. Something very serious, very significant, very beneficial for our class—the working class—is under way.
For a good many years, the Tribuno del Pueblo and the People’s Tribune have argued that if the working class in the United States wants to survive it must unite across the racial divides that the oligarchy has carefully cultivated over the decades.
Now just such unity appears to be developing, and it is developing in places where joining hands across racial lines has been most difficult to achieve and where it is most threatening to the powers that be — in the South and the prisons.
In the Moral Monday demonstrations in the North Carolina state capitol, thousands of Anglos have joined thousands of African-Americans under the banner of the Black civil-rights organization, the NAACP.
For whites to march behind Black leadership is historic in the South, where the oligarchy has for centuries bought the loyalty of whites with just enough privilege to keep them a step above Blacks.
In the Dream Defenders’ long sit-in at the Florida governor’s office, the united struggle of
Black and Latino youth is equally historic.
In the California state prisons, the hunger strike of 30,000 inmates—united by a peace agreement among warring Black, Latino, and Anglo gangs—threatens the very foundation of the state’s prison system.
Courageous leaders for years have attempted to create this unity and failed. Why now?
Our class is uniting across old divides because conditions have changed—and changed fundamentally.
For many people, it is becoming clear that the economic system—capitalism—is collapsing, that it can no longer provide the things people need, and that there is no shortage of those things, just of the money to buy them.
And it is becoming clear that the oligarchy’s response is to come down on us hard, take what remains of our money, deprive us of our democratic rights, and leave us bleeding in the gutter.
In this critical moment, class unity is the new idea that germinates, takes root, and flourishes to feed an increasingly conscious need to rise up—as a class—and take charge of our future.
Let us all now grasp that new idea.

+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

ICE Violence Escalates at Newark’s GEO-Run Jail, Delaney Hall

Protests have been going on outside the Newark, NJ, ICE jail known as Delaney Hall, where hundreds of detained immigrants have been on a hunger and labor strike for a week demanding their immediate release.

Trump Demands End to Birthright Citizenship Ahead of Supreme Court Decision

The Supreme Court is expected to hand down a ruling on Trump's challenge to birthright citizenship by July. Trump publicly pressured the court recently to rule in his favor.

Voters Rights Coup Shakes Foundation of Our Fragile Democracy

The dismantling of voting rights directed at the African American community can only be described as re-traumatizing and opening old painful wounds in this long-suffering community. Yet this community is rising and resisting. But if the resistance takes the form of African Americans fighting alone, can the assault be overcome?

Protestors Gather Outside Michigan ICE Facility, Immigrant Detainees Launch Hunger Strike

Citing dangerous conditions, lack of adequate food and medical care, and cruel legal obstacles that keep many in captivity for months, protesters gather outside as several hundred detainees go on hunger strike at the ICE North Lake Processing Center in Baldwin, MI.

We’re ‘Still Trying to Wage Peace,’ Says Veterans for Peace Member

Stephen Bare of Veterans for Peace Chapter 11 in Santa Cruz, CA, describes how the chapter is regrouping and renewing its efforts to "wage peace."

More from the People's Tribune