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Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Being a Marxist-Leninist of any kind, here in the US, is not an easy task for a high profile political activist
.....Such as Angela Davis
By Steven Otto
Just recently I had a run in with
some so called "friends" on my Facebook page that reminded me how
much opposition goes along with the United States of America's
corporate and imperialist propaganda mindset that many of our citizens have to
deal with, in this country. Those of us who are Communists know this well.
For example, one woman, who I refuse to identify here, compared my views on Joseph
Stalin and Mao Zedong to Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. She said:
"What
makes you think I'm "buying into" pro-capitalist pundits? I'm a
critical theorist with a great respect for Marx's works, and I abhor
authoritarianism in any shape. Even if what you believe was true, Mao oversaw
political attacks on his opposition, imprisoning and murdering them. He was a
mass murderer. I'm going to believe those who survived his dictatorship, not
those who seem to welcome it. I'm also going to believe survivors of Castro's
regime, so many of whom are not pro-Batista. And survivors of Lenin's and
Stalin's regimes. Dictatorships aren't to be celebrated.
They may have
liked the theory, but they never lived by it. They fomented anger, ordered mass
executions, committed ethnic cleansing and genocide, and they deserve no more
love than Hitler, Mussolini, and Franco. Theory is hardly ever reality."
I had another gentleman who
insisted, as did she, that both Mao and Staling were mass murderers. This is
not uncommon. I get that from the right-wingers all the time, who like to
rattle off the summation that Mao was intentionally more murderous than Hitler
or Stalin. That off course, has been a common pronouncement by revisionist
historians of the US
right-wing. But they are not alone in this. This view is also held by many
Democrats. When it comes to opposing imperialism, the Marxists left is often
attacked by liberals as well as people on the right. Until the addition of
Ilhan
Omar to the House of Representatives, US
foreign policy has never been questioned by either party, since the Ronald Reagan years.
In addition to all the accusations
of human rights abuses in Cuba
and Venezuela much of US
imperialism tries to justification of the subjection and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan, which is a policy
supported by both Republicans and MOST of the Democratic Party as well.
Both Republicans and Democrats
refuse to normalize relations with Venezuela
and the US recognizes a
right-wing stooge,opposition
leader Juan
Guaido, who has never been elected and yet this
country only recognizes that person as the president of Venezuela. Omar has been just about
the only congress person to question that position.
I do try to hold discussions and
debate with any of my so called friends who make an honest attempt to discuss
my positions on Maoism or Chinese history. But when a friend tells me that
they respect the Cuban gusanos (worms is what they are called by the
Cuban who have stayed behind) who have left
Cuba to try and help overthrow that system, and when that person equates, not
just Stalin and Mao, but VI Lenin and other leftist leaders with Hitler,
Mussolini and Francisco Franco of Spain, then
there is no common ground left and I unfriended that person.
At times it is really difficult to
be a Maoist, because the history of China's communist movement did make
its share of mistakes. At times, certain actions have lead to people's deaths and at
times there have been some excessive actions taken against those who have been
critical to the communist government. Not all of the excesses are justifiable.
But that does not mean that the revolution in China has no redeeming values, or that
the population was "terrified by Mao." Some of these people are on
the left, but they have accepted what they have read about China and they
have believed those who left that part of the world in favor of a capitalist
lifestyle. One of the tricks for me is to determine whether a person is
seriously trying to debate a position or is so anti-communist that there is
absolutely no common ground to work with. When there is no common ground, there
is no point in keeping a relationship going with that person.
My beliefs on Maoism are based on
the writings, the philosophy—the "school of thought" that I have
learned from this leader. That is where my influenced has come from and not
necessarily on the leadership of Mao or his party. There are some Maoist who
believe that this philosophy can't be dealt with, without support of a superior
leader and that often includes not only Mao, but also Chairman Gonzalo and
sometimes others. One Maoist confronted me on my idea that the leaders are not
as important. He said that developing leaders, as Mao and Gonzalo, where a
major part of the "Maoist world outlook." While I agree with most of
these people that Maoism
"is a world outlook" for me, it is the philosophy that has drawn
me into this kind of politics and not so much the leadership. I don't have
strong feelings against these other Maoists, I just disagree with them
That said, it is difficult to be
any kind of Marxist-Leninist in the US. Today I worked at the local
Wichita School System today. While I was there, I was looking at the black
heroes this teacher had put up on the wall, probably to celebrate black history
month, which was last month, February. There was quite a contrast of various
different people and leaders, and a plethora of different political ideas, from
Barack Obama, to Frederick Douglass, Malcolm
X, Martin Luther King Jr., Judge Ruth Ginsburg and last but not least was a
picture of Angela Davis along with a quote of hers: "In a racist society
it is not enough to be non-racist. We must be anti-racist."
The amazing thing about Angela
Davis is that she is a Marxist-Leninist and her picture and quote is on the
school wall. To become a famous civil rights leader as a Marxist-Leninist is no
easy feat. There was a lot of prejudice against her. She had been fired from
her job at UCLA
(University of California, Los Angeles) over her
political views:
"Because Davis
was a member of the Communist Party, the UC Board of Regents, at the urging of
then-Gov. Ronald Reagan, tried to fire her before she even taught her first
class. But enraged UCLA faculty, staff and students protested in support of Davis, citing academic
freedom. A lawsuit also was later filed in Davis’ defense."
"On
August 7th, 1970, seventeen year old Jonathan Jackson kidnapped Superior Court
Judge Harold Haley from the MarinCountyCivicCenter in San Rafael, California.
The kidnapping was meant as a tool to negotiate the freedom of the Soledad
Brothers, a trio of African-American inmates (George Jackson, Fleeta Drumgo,
and John Clutchette) who were charged with the murder of a prison guard at
Soledad Prison in California.
George Jackson also happened to be the real brother of Jonathan Jackson.
Jackson, heavily armed, took over the courtroom in MarinCounty,
arming the defendants and taking Judge Haley, the prosecutor, and three female
jurors hostage. In a firefight that broke out as they attempted to leave the
scene, Judge Haley, the defendants, and Jonathan Jackson were killed. In the
ensuing investigation, it was discovered that the shotgun used to kill Judge
Haley had been purchased byAngela Davisa few days prior to the event.
Furthermore, it was discovered that Davis
was in collusion with one of the Soledad Brothers."
At one point she was on the FBI's
10 most wanted list as a dangerous criminal. All of this over the fact that
she had become a member of the Communist Party USA. That party used to be the
pro-Soviet party—a party which many of us on the left, considered to be
revisionist. But I don't think that matters today. She had to go against the
same prejudices that any Marxist ends up going through, just by being here in
the US.
Just as I had to confront those who believe that Mao was a mass murderer, at
times Davis had to go through the same kinds of
accusations, mostly because she supported the Soviet Union
and its so called "satellites."
An example of the kinds of smears
she was subjected to include these comments recorded by Wikipedia:
"Davis
was an honorary co-chair of the January 21, 2017, Women's March on Washington,which occurred the day after President Donald Trump's inauguration. The organizers' decision to make her a
featured speaker was criticized from the right by Humberto Fontovaand National Review.Libertarian
journalist Cathy Youngwrote that Davis's "long record of support for political
violence in the United
States and the worst of human rights abusers
abroad" undermined the march."
So, as with myself, she had to defend a position of support
for a country, along with other countries, that even US liberals had attacked. In fact
some leftist Marxists and Maoists also attacked those governments.
Some of her past positions have been condemned by the
established politicians, yet there are supporters for what she believes in
today. For example:
"......"Davis supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctionscampaign against Israel." And that is a position that has gained a lot of ground as more and more political
activist are taking up.
At the same time as all this was going on, Davis was an intellectual
and a scholar"
"Education
Growing up, Angela attended black-only schools. She and her
family were forced to ride in the back of buses, and were only able to enter
the back door of different establishments in the community. This made her angry
early on. Angela entered high school just as the civil rights movement was
beginning. She left Birmingham at the age of 15
and traveled to New York City.
There, she attended high school and began to learn about the Communist Party.
After high school, Angela attended Brandeis University on a
full scholarship, where she was one of only three African American first-year
students. As a college student, Davis
continued to pursue her interest in communist activities and to learn about
different cultures. She came to realize that there were many barriers that
needed to be overcome with regard to language and diversity.
During her junior year, Davis
studied French literature at the Sorbonne in Paris. Upon returning to the states she was
able to fulfill her interest in philosophy, studying with the German
philosopher Herbert Marcuse. She later received a scholarship to study
philosophy in Frankfurt, Germany, where she delved into the
philosophies of Karl Marx, Georg Hegel and Immanuel Kant.
An Outspoken Activist
During college, Angela became interested in the Black Panther
Party. She learned that this party had been formed in order to protect the
African American community from experiencing brutality from the police. Angela
was very interested in this movement and wanted to participate. Her work with
the Black Panther party brought her further discrimination from males involved
in the movement. They considered the work Angela was doing to be 'men's work'. Davis would encounter
this type of discrimination in many of her future roles as well.
In 1969, Davis was hired as an
assistant professor at the University
of California Los Angeles.
By this time, she had become a member of the Communist Party and participated
in activities with them, including a trip to Cuba. Davis worked with the Cuban people and
realized that there was very little discrimination there under the Socialist
system. For her participation in this trip, she received much criticism and
hate mail when returning to the United
States and was also not rehired as a
professor the next year."
She was vary smart. However, she was forced to confront
both racism and prejudice of her communist beliefs. Being a communist in the US has always
had its dangers. Consider the Hollywood 10 and
their treatment during the 1950s, during the Joseph McCarthy (Known as McCarthyism) years:
"Hollywood Ten, in U.S. history, 10 motion-picture producers,
directors, and screenwriters who appeared before theHouse Un-American Activities Committee in October 1947, refused to answer questions regarding
theirpossiblecommunist affiliations, and, after spending time in
prison for contempt of Congress, were mostly blacklisted by the
Hollywood studios. The 10 were Alvah Bessie, Herbert Biberman,Lester Cole, Edward Dmytryk, Ring Lardner, Jr., John Howard Lawson, Albert Maltz, Samuel Ornitz, Adrian Scott, andDalton Trumbo."
So I'm not
surprised to see a lot of prejudice beliefs against those of us who have chosen
any type of Marxist-Leninism. At times those governments were not always fair
or democratic. But they have been an alternative to the horrible governments of
the US and Europe
that have allowed a hand full of rich people to become wealthy beyond their
wildest dreams and at the expense of the rest of us.
As I have
told people here in the US,
I have been to Cuba.
It is a country that lacks the constant advertising and attempts to make money
off of us, as here in the US.
It was pleasant to get away from that. I met some prostitutes and other people,
while I walked around the streets of Cuba, by myself. Yes in this
foreign country I walked through working class neighborhoods, I walked into
working class bars, I walked all over the various neighborhoods of Cuba and I
would love to go back.
Cuba was a wonderful place and nothing like the horror show that
I have read about here in the US.
Anyone who thinks they can learn more from a gusano than by a person like me,
who took the time to walk around and actually meet Cubans, does not need me for
a friend. If fact, I would never trust anyone like that.
So I will
continue on and try and produce an important blog that brings people real and
believable news of the world around us. I get nearly 800 to 1000 hits a month
on that blog. I'd say we are doing something right.
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