Juneteenth 2016 and the possibility of class unity

Latest

CARTOON/ANDY WILLIS
CARTOON/ANDY WILLIS

Born out of the Civil War struggles against slavery, “Juneteenth” (June 19th), has always been a time to celebrate what’s been won and to soberly assess what’s ahead for all workers.
The United States is vastly different today than it was at the end of the Civil War. After the defeat of the confederacy, the ruling class needed a way to keep most Blacks on the plantations working for virtually nothing. From this came the vicious system of Jim Crow, which subjected all African Americans, regardless of education or wealth, to the same oppression, segregation and discrimination. This created a distinct people with common interests.
Today, we live in a country where President Barack Obama, speaking recently at the commencement of Howard University’s Class of 2016, could say of African Americans: “We’re no longer entertainers, we’re producers, studio executives. No longer small-business owners, we’re CEOs. We’re mayors, representatives, presidents of the United States.”
While President Obama’s comments accurately portrayed the integration of the African American elite into the top of society, the reality is starkly different for the vast majority of African Americans, who are workers.
In the past, the brutal, legal discrimination against all African Americans reinforced the isolation of the Black masses and created a common bond between the Black impoverished and the African American elite. At the same time, racial ideology, backed up by social privileges granted to white workers over Black workers, kept Black and white workers apart. Unequally oppressed and exploited, they could not unite. Those circumstances made the unity of the working class across color lines impossible.
Today, a new impoverished class of workers, of all colors, has been created by labor-replacing electronics. African Americans are at the heart of it. This new class consists of employed and unemployed sectors. Today, more than one third of the work force consists of part-time workers, contingent workers, and those working either at the minimum wage or for less than it. Today, a unity of the new class created by electronics is possible. The class is fighting for a new society that will meet its needs.
This Juneteenth, the urgent task of revolutionaries is to spread a message far and wide, to propagandize the new class about the importance of uniting around a common, class program: to create the new society electronics makes possible—a cooperative society without poverty and racism!

+ Articles by this author

Chris Mahin is a writer, speaker and teacher on contemporary U.S. politics and history, particularly on the significance of the American Revolutionary War and Civil war eras for today.  He is the Electoral Desk on the People’s Tribune Editorial Board.

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 Raids Mean the Return of Brutal Family Separations

The separation of immigrant families at the border was barred by the 2023 settlement of a lawsuit, but the Trump administration has found a way to brutally reimpose family separations, by moving the practice away from the border and doing it through the ongoing ICE raids.

A Turning Point Worth Celebrating — The Night Voters Said Enough

The November, 2025 election was a win for the workers, renters, the forgotten, and dreamers. It wasn't just about beating the far-right. It was also about rejecting the stale Democratic politics that too often bends to corporate donors and Wall Street.

Couple Seeks Accountability After Mom In Active Labor Discharged

A Black couple from Illinois was discharged from an Indiana hospital while the mother was in active labor, forcing a roadside birth.

Poverty and Deportees on the Streets in Tijuana

In U.S. media, even progressive media, we pay little attention to what happens to people when they're deported. Many are dumped through the border gate, have no home to go to and live on the streets in cities like Tijuana.

No Tows Without Homes

At the same time that advocates for San Francisco’s vehicle-dwelling residents charged the City to protect RV and large vehicle residents from displacement by a parking enforcement program, City workers were removing trailers about five miles away.

More from the People's Tribune