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If Oscar Grant’s Killer Walks: Will They Innoculate & Suppress Oakland’s Youth?

Posted by Mike E on July 2, 2010

The first Oakland rebellion -- right after Oscar Grant's murder, January 2009

New York Times reports on police preparations:

“In recent weeks, the Oakland police organized mock-riot exercises involving more than 450 officers from 20 law enforcement agencies, including the California Highway Patrol and the Napa and Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Departments. Those agencies will be on standby after the verdict, Oakland officials say.”

From the Urban Peace Movement statement:

“We need to begin ‘innoculating’ our bases and the community at-large so that when the verdict comes down, people are prepared for it, and so that the ‘outside agitators’ who were active during the initial Oscar Grant protests are not able to incite the crowd so easily. To be clear, our main concern is the safety and well-being of Oakland’s young people.  We do not want to see them get taken to jail or hurt as a result of violent or destructive behavior brought on or encouraged by ‘extreme-fringe’ groups coming into Oakland from the outside.”

From Mike Ely:

“This view needs to be taken on. This is a view of cowardice and counterinsurgency. It is a view of non-struggle and defeat. It is the slavishness of the condescending social worker. In fact “our main concern” needs to be justice and liberation — and it is a road that will require self-sacrifice and suffering. There is in fact no “safety and well-being” to be achieved by refusing to struggle — by opposing confrontation with our oppressors when their deeds are clear and the people are ready to fight.

“And some forces have an answer for any situation: They denounce “small groups” who carry out violent acts — saying they are isolated from the community and scare the people. But then (with no sense of irony or shame) these same people then  fight hard to prevent the people themselves from joining in a mass and justified rebellion.

“This shows they just don’t want resistance. They don’t like it. They see no value in it. They see no future or justice in it.”

By Mike Ely

There are preparations on many sides as the trial of Johannes Mehserle comes to a close — with a verdict possible today. Different classes prepare in different ways.

What does justice for Oscar Grant looks like?

And if the system follows the murder of Oscar with a new outrage — if they don’t truly punish the murdering cop — how will the people give justice and respect to our murdered brother?

Mehserle, a BART police officer in Oakland, pulled his gun and shot Oscar Grant III, an unarmed Black man, to death, as Oscar lay face down on the platform of the Fruitvale station. It was cold-blooded, and it was filmed, and the video was seen by countless outraged people.

And (like the Rodney King case) a whole whipped up cotton candy foam was invented to “explain” the murder in court… including Mehserle’s own claim that he thought his loaded pistol was a taser and so the killing was therefore just a tragic accident.

Dual tactics of Counterinsurgency

Police are preparing to meet any rebellion with force. Oakland officials (including Mayor Dellums) are trying to portray themselves as part of a concerned citizenry.

And (in a particularly controversial set of moves) an Urban Peace Movement has emerged that is trying to politically “innoculate” angry youth (their word, “innoculate”!) to prevent a rebellion (if this killer walks free). They join the authorities in a red-baiting attack on “outside agitators” — in a blatant attempt to prevent any fusion of organized radical groups with the anger of the oppressed.

Naturally this is done in the name of protecting the youth (naturally, of course! protect the youth by diffusing the resistance!) — the police prepare to beat, arrest and kill those youth, and a coalition emerges to urge them go along peacefully.

They say “To be clear, our main concern is the safety and well-being of Oakland’s young people.”

And this view needs to be taken on.

This is a view of cowardice and counterinsurgency. It is a view of non-struggle and defeat. It is the slavishness of the condescending social worker. In fact “our main concern” needs to be justice and liberation — and it is a road that will require self-sacrifice and suffering. There is in fact no “safety and well-being” to be achieved by refusing to struggle — by opposing confrontation without oppressors when their deeds are clear and the people are ready to fight.

And some forces have an answer for any situation: They denounce “small groups” who carry out violent acts at demonstrations — saying they are isolated from the community and scare the people. But then (with no sense of irony or shame) these same people then  fight hard to prevent the people from joining in a mass and justified rebellion.

They just don’t want resistance. They don’t like it. They see no value in it. They see no future in it.

They say in their talking points:

“There is no question about it violence & brutality are wrong - whether at the hands of community members or at the hands of the police. “

Is this true? No. Not at all. It is an outrageous claim.

The violence of the oppressed is not wrong, it is righteous — especially when the oppressed are rising in conscious resistance to an intolerable injustice.

The violence of the rapist, the slaveowner, the killer cop, the nuclear bombardier are wrong, horrific, degrading, unjust, intolerable and it is part of the means of preserving an unjust system.

The violence of the raped, the enslaved, the brutalized people when they rise in conscious resistance is righteous, inspiring, uplifting, just, worthy of respect, and more — it is a necessary part of the road to liberation.

And those who equate the violence of oppressed and oppressors, in this way, are (perhaps despite their own intentions) becoming defenders of injustice and servants of the status quo.

* * * * * * *

We are posting below (first) a sharply polemical piece denouncing the Urban Peace Movement attempt prevent a rebellion in Oakland after this verdict. The article is followed by the Urban Peace Movement’s public email. And finally we are posting the statement in which the Raider Nation Collective.  (The pieces originally appeared on Advance the Struggle.)

* * * * * * *

Nonprofits Defend the State – Need More Proof?!

On June 23rd, 2010, in the midst of Oscar Grant’s murder trial, one of the leaders of the nonprofit organization, Urban Peace Movement, wrote in an email (in full below):

“We need to begin ‘innoculating’ our bases and the community at-large so that when the verdict comes down, people are prepared for it, and so that the ‘outside agitators’ who were active during the initial Oscar Grant protests are not able to incite the crowd so easily.”

The paternalist and racist assumption made by non-profit sector activists portrays those who participated in property destruction as child-like noble savages easily corrupted by superior beings from afar (read: “outside agitators”). This should come as no surprise to anyone, seeing as how the non-profit organization is historically rooted in colonial assumptions that the oppressed are mindless brutes that require, for better or for worse, intellectual guidance (read: “inoculation”) from above.  The non-profiteers see their role as missionaries, saviors, and saints that carry the burden of pity for the downtrodden.

Who is really the outside agitator? And what does the state and the politically interventionist non-profit sector object to most, the outside part, or the agitator part?

During this past week’s phase of the trial, leading Bay Area journalist JR Valerie observered:

“. . . 4 out of 6 black males under the age of 40 were kicked out of the courtroom in the 2nd day of Meserhle testifying . . . .” (rough transcription from Hard Knock Radio archive, June 25th, 2010, min. 32:20-32:48, http://kpfa.org/archive/id/62141)

As Mehserle ran through a rehearsed emotional display, one black male courtroom observer from Oakland stood up and called out “save those tears.”  He was promptly jumped by Deputies, removed from the courtroom and now faces charges. Did any “outside agitators” incite this black male to speak out against the false cries of a murdering agent of the state? Would the Urban Peace Movement give this man credit for calling out the courtroom process, which is structured against the “biases” of the people’s sense of justice? Or for them, is the bourgeois white supremacist legal apparatus the legitimate carrier of justice?

To many, the courtroom setting and the whole legal apparatus of the state delivers the opposite of justice.  For centuries it has been coming in from the outside, committing genocide, and conquering to imposing itself as the center of economic, political, and social life. Who is on the outside and who is on the inside of this?  Unfortunately this isn’t the first time that folks claiming to represent the community have behaved as insiders to the system they claim to be against.

Last year, in our pamphlet Justice for Oscar Grant: Lost Opportunity? we wrote:

“Despite frequent references to the radical legacy of Oakland, CAPE behaved as an extension of the state, “organizing” people to be peaceful, go home and not take militant action in the streets.”

We were criticized (not in any significant written, public form) for taking this blatant stance in opposition to the conservative political role of the non-profit sector, which Coalition Against Police Executions (CAPE) was an expression of. We listened to some of these criticisms and accept that we over-generalized the forces within CAPE. In fact, there were divisions within CAPE that we did not recognize, voices of a more radical nature than the dominant Non-profit elements. We invite those differences to be made known by those within CAPE who had them.

That said, our main point – that CAPE in particular and the non-profit sector in general, act(ed) both as a buffer and as an extension of the oppressor’s violent state apparatus – stands as true as ever.

This leads us to the email in question: a communique to the non-profit sector and public agencies calling for measures to quell the forseeable rebellion in case of acquittal or any conviction less than 1st degree murder for killer cop Meserhle. It suggests that:

“. . . [Non-profits] and Public Agencies should be thinking of ways to create organized events or avenues for young people and community members to express their frustrations with the system in constructive and peaceful ways.”

While we formally agree that resistance and rebellion against the system should be constructive, we absolutely disagree on what is “constructive” and what isn’t.  Constructive resistance and revolt should project a vision of the type of revolutionary society we seek to build. A necessary component of that process is negating, attacking, destroying, theoppressive forces within the current society. The rebellions of Oakland in January 2009 did include minor incidents of random property damage, and it also included attacks on capitalist institutions such as Wells Fargo and other sites of commercial capital carried out by spontaneous coalitions of multiracial youth.

Now that the trial is wrapping up, Non-profit activists should stop seeking to micro-manage the movement by “innoculating” young people against “outside agitators”.  People truly committed to social justice should be dialoguing with young people about how to escalate the attacks towards our real enemies:  the state and capital. How can we move beyond smashing windows and begin shutting down and taking over the means of social reproduction? How can we stop school closures, layoffs, immigration raids, and police murders?  What are the roots of racism, sexism, imperialism and capitalism?  How should our understanding of history inform our fight against oppression?  These nonprofit managers not only avoid these questions – they answer them in favor of our oppressors, seeking to keep us blinded of the real enemy. Ironically, they regularly invoke a radical legacy that is in reality contraposed to their own program for achieving “justice.” As the centrist political non-profit sector conjur the image of Huey P. Newton, there is no doubt that Newton would be ashamed to be associated with a program that seeks to maintain the “order” constructed around racial oppression and the accumulation of capital.

In the year and half since Oscar Grant was murdered by the state, the legitimacy of that state has been vastly undermined. Obama’s election to the office of President of the United States was seen by many within the non-profit sector and liberal left generally, to be the negation of the Bush regime. Now it is clear that it is an uninterrupted continuation of it. Very little hope remains in the minds of the masses as to the capacity of the Obama regime to solve any of the crises our society now faces. Dreams of “constructive and peaceful ways” to deal with any of these crises – be they the longest war of US history, the deepest depression in 80 years, the severe policing of the border and immigrants, etc – have died faster than the BP-drenched wildlife of the Gulf coast.

What remains to be seen is what is born out of these crises. No, riots are not the ultimate expression of the society we would like to see. Yes, young working class people of color are capable of infinitely more constructive actions. But how do we learn what we are capable of and what our true potential is? By inoculation against ‘outside agitators’ who join the youth in the streets in the fundamental criticism of private property and the police state? Or by encouraging discussion between all the political perspectives and supporting the exploration of methods for building a resistance movement that has a real chance at constructing a new type of social order? We intellectually smash the first option, and strongly advocate the second one. That is the Marxist way.

What follows are the clearest examples of what the non-profit centrists (the Urban Peace Movement’s email in full), and the radical left (Raider Nation Collective’s recent statement) are saying about what should happen in the wake of the decision in the long-awaited trial of Johannes Mehserhle.

———-

“During this period the colonized intellectual behaves objectively like a vulgar opportunist . . . Swept along by the many facets of the struggle, he tends to concentrate on local tasks, undertaken zealously but almost always too pedantically.  He does not always see the overall picture.  He introduces the notion of disciplines, specializes areas and fields into that awesome mixer and grinder called a people’s revolution . . . he tends to lose sight of the unity of the movement and in the event of failure at the local level he succumbs to doubt, even despair.  The people, on the other hand, take a global stance from the very start.  ”Bread and land: how do we go about getting bread and land?”  And this stubborn, apparently limited, narrow-minded aspect of the people is finally the most rewarding and effective working model.”

- Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth

“[The peasant rebellion in Hunan] is fine.  It is not “terrible” at all.  It is anything but “terrible”.  ”It’s terrible!” is obviously a theory for combatting the rise of the peasants, and in the interests of the landlords; it is obviously a theory of the landlord class for preserving the old order of feudlaism and obstructing the establishment of the new order of democracy, it is obviously a counter-revolutionary theory.”

- Mao Tse-Tung, Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan

“Furthest from the minds of elitist intellectuals, of leaders in particular, is the self-development of the masses who themselves would master the principles of the dialectic. Yet all the new beginnings for theory, for philosophy as well as for revolutionary reconstruction of society on totally new human foundations, have in our age come from the spontaneous outbursts the world over. “Self-determination in which alone the Idea is is to hear itself speak” was heard by those fighting for self-determination. They were “experiencing” second negativity. Clearly the struggle was against not only exploiters, but also those who set themselves up as leaders.”

- Raya Dunayevskaya, Philosophy and Revolution

* * * * * * *

URBAN PEACE MOVEMENT EMAIL

From: ****
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 1:31 PM
To: ************
Subject: Bracing for Mehserle Verdict – Community Engagement Plan

Dear Friends and Allies -   (Please Forward Widely – Please Forgive Duplicates)

As many of you know, the trial of the officer who killed Oscar Grant is currently underway in LA.  The prosecution has rested their case, and the defense (Mehserle’s attorney) is currently making their case. The trial has moved much faster then many had anticipated, and folks speculate that a verdict may come down in the very near future (possibly as soon as next week).

If a “not guilty” verdict comes down (which is a significant possibility) it will inspire widespread outrage, and many, including myself, are concerned about the potential consequences of that outrage.

As someone who is BOTH committed to social justice and an end to police brutality AND a peaceful and thriving Oakland, I wanted to suggest some ways for us to proceed:

1) Organizations, CBO’s, and Public Agencies should be thinking of ways to create organized events or avenues for young people and community members to express their frustrations with the system in constructive and peaceful ways.  If people have no outlets then it may be easier for folks to be pulled toward more destructive impulses.

2) We need to begin ‘innoculating’ our bases and the community at-large so that when the verdict comes down, people are prepared for it, and so that the ‘outside agitators’ who were active during the initial Oscar Grant protests are not able to incite the crowd so easily.

To be clear, our main concern is the safety and well-being of Oakland’s young people.  We do not want to see them get taken to jail or hurt as a result of violent or destructive behavior brought on or encouraged by ‘extreme-fringe’ groups coming into Oakland from the outside.

Below are some suggested talking-points to begin engaging community members. (scroll down) Please forward the talking-points widely amongst the staff and leaders of your organizations so we can get the message out far and wide.

I have been in preliminary conversation with some of our partners an allies up to this point including the Ella Baker Center, Youth UpRising, Oakland Rising, BWOPA, The Mayor’s Office and the City of Oakland regarding these suggestions.  Let’s continue to be in dialog and hold each other close in the challenging days ahead.

In Peace and Solidarity,
************

Talking Points: (General Audience)

  • There is no question about it violence & brutality are wrong - whether at the hands of community membersor at the hands of the police.  While many of us are outraged, we must find a way to move forward in peace.
  • OAKLAND IS OUR HOME, and we want all Oaklanders to think carefully about how to respond, even in the face of our own anger and outrage.
  • There are peaceful and constructive ways for us to demonstrate our frustration with the system, butbeware of outside ‘agitators’ many of whom don’t live in Oakland, who will try to insight the crowd to violence.  They won’t be there for you if YOU  end up getting taken in by the police, and they don’t have to live in the aftermath, they can just go back to their neighborhoods, far away from Oakland.
  • This is a city with a rich history and a sense of pride from the East to the North to the West, and we don’t back down when times get tough.

Talking Points: (Youth Audience)

  • There’s no question – Police Brutality is wrong.
  • We are all angry, but the question is what do we do with our anger?  Do we use it constructively to make changes like the Martin and Malcolm did, or do we use it to destroy each other and our community?
  • There are constructive ways to have your voice heard – join a speak-out or make music to express yourself.
  • Beware of ‘outside agitators’ who are not from Oakland and who will try to incite violence.  Oakland is OUR HOME, but it’s not theirs, and so they don’t care if we mess our city up.  And, they won’t be there for you if YOU get caught-up by the police.
  • Let’s not let these agitators make a bad situation worse.
  • Instead, let’s hold our heads high and throw up our fists in solidarity like Huey did!!

www.urbanpeacemovement.org

——-

RAIDER NATION STATEMENT

RAIDER NATION:  MANSLAUGHTER IS NOT ENOUGH! IT’S MURDER OR NOTHING!

The most likely outcome of the trial of Johannes Mehserle, the BART cop who murdered Oscar Grant on the morning of January 1st 2009, is a manslaughter conviction. Why is this likely? Because convicting Mehserle of manslaughter is the best way for the state to protect itself by sacrificing one of its own. To the police, manslaughter simply means: be careful when you kill.

To the people, manslaughter means: you got a conviction, what more do you want? Or in other words: don’t riot, don’t rebel, no public outcry necessary.

On the other hand, a murder conviction would not be tolerated by the police and their unions, and even the most opportunistic of political leaders see a murder conviction as tying their hands in the future: they need the police, and police need to be able to kill.

Not that it matters what the state or its leaders think about murder: white supremacy and cop culture will ensure that Mehserle won’t get what’s coming to him. We have already seen both in the disgusting jury selection process, which yielded a jury which includes three relatives of police officers but not one single Black person. And Michael Rains feeds on this, deploying an ingenious out-of-court strategy of defaming Oscar Grant and manipulating public opinion by leaking selective information to the press—a press which eats it up like an organic delicacy.

And if Mehserle is convicted of manslaughter, the arguments being put forward in his defense suggest that this will not even be “voluntary” manslaughter. Rather, it will be “involuntary,” allegedly the result of a tragic mistake of judgment, where a 9-pound Sig is mistaken for a 3-pound Taser.

Involuntary manslaughter in California carries a determinate sentence ranging from 2 to four years. Mehserle’s race, his former profession, the teary-eyed stories of his youth, and his lack of a criminal record, will all be presented to guarantee the lowest possible sentence (and we wouldn’t want to guarantee that will even be as much as 2 years).

- 2 short years for cold-blooded murder of Oscar Grant.

- 2 short years for permanently traumatizing Grant’s friends who witnessed the murder.

- 2 short years of taking one for the team and ensuring that the genocidal system of policing and imprisonment in California can go unchecked, unrestricted,  unquestioned.

For Mehserle’s 2 short years we have 2 short words: FUCK THAT.

We fully expect and hope that Oakland will respond to a manslaughter conviction as it would respond to an acquittal: with an expression of creative rage that transforms our political landscape beyond all possible recognition.

With love and rage, we’ll see you in the streets,

RAIDER NATION COLLECTIVE, Oakland and Los Angeles

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/02/us/02bctrial.html

July 1, 2010

With Verdict in Officer’s Trial Near, Oakland Braces for Violence

By SHOSHANA WALTER and JACK DUANE

Evan Shamar, a San Francisco wedding photographer, organized the protests last year after Johannes Mehserle, a BART police officer, fatally shot Oscar Grant III, an unarmed black man, on the platform of the Fruitvale station on New Year’s Day 2009. Thousands took to the streets, and Mr. Shamar said he went home that day, shattered, when the protests turned violent.

As Mr. Mehserle’s trial drew to a close this week, Mr. Shamar, 26, was again knocking on doors and distributing fliers, calling for people to gather at 14th Street and Broadway when the verdict is announced.

Mr. Shamar said he was terrified about the prospect of more violence, but was unwilling to back down. Oakland officials have repeatedly tried to contact him about his plans, he said, but he has not returned their calls.

“It’s not sincere,” he said. “They plan on pacifying us.”

Mr. Shamar, a member of the umbrella organization the Coalition for Justice for Oscar Grant, is at the center of the city’s feverish preparations for the conclusion of one of the most explosive criminal cases in Oakland’s history.

With police and city officials bracing for the worst, activists, community leaders and civic organizations have mobilized — some in an effort to prevent violence, some apparently to stoke it and some simply to protest what they perceive as an unjust killing, regardless of the trial’s outcome.

Youth groups have recruited hundreds of young people to walk the streets encouraging a nonviolent response. Popular Bay Area rappers, like Mistah F.A.B. and Keak Da Sneak, have recorded public service announcements urging people to protest peacefully. Meanwhile, people who describe themselves as anarchists and communists have been meeting in basements and East Bay bookstores, vowing that the trial’s true verdict will take place in the streets.

Amri Daniels, a member of the Uhuru Solidarity Movement, an activist group that says it is dedicated to the liberation of African people throughout the world, said at a meeting on Tuesday night that he had been talking with some of the city’s young people, and that “it’s not going well.”

“These kids have weapons, and they’re fired up,” Mr. Daniels said. “They’re not interested in all this talk.”

Jury deliberations are expected to begin Friday in the trial of Mr. Mehserle, who is accused of murdering Mr. Grant, shooting him in the back as he lay facedown on the platform shortly after midnight. Mr. Mehserle testified that he had accidentally reached for his Sig Sauer P226 pistol instead of his Taser. The trial was moved to Los Angeles.

After amateur videos of the shooting became public last year, protesters spilled into downtown Oakland. Their rage spiraled into violence, resulting in damaged businesses, burned and overturned police vehicles and more than 100 arrests.

In recent weeks, the Oakland police organized mock-riot exercises involving more than 450 officers from 20 law enforcement agencies, including the California Highway Patrol and the Napa and Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Departments. Those agencies will be on standby after the verdict, Oakland officials say.

Businesses in downtown Oakland are also preparing. Hoping to ward off looters, some small-business owners have hung posters of Mr. Grant in their storefront windows.

“I figured this would be a way to let people know I’m a sympathizer — we need justice,” said Malik Cooper, owner of People’s Choice Printing on Webster Street, who provided many businesses with the posters and plastered his own windows with Mr. Grant’s likeness.

As the trial moved into its final phase, faster than many had anticipated, Oakland officials sent out e-mail marked “urgent” inviting community leaders to a meeting at City Hall on June 21 to help plan a response to the verdict. Some who attended the meeting said they believed that the city was unprepared, and that they needed to organize their own response.

“I’m not operating under the belief that this could become a violent situation,” Mayor Ron Dellums said. “I believe that people love this city and ultimately people’s desire is to manifest themselves in a peaceful way.”

Several groups have organized events at recreation centers where young residents can seek counseling.

Youth UpRising and Urban Peace Movement, organizations dedicated to promoting youth leadership development, each plan to send roughly 100 teenagers and adults into the community to talk to young people who feel upset about the case. Olis Simmons, executive director of Youth UpRising, said she hoped these “foot soldiers” would inspire informed and nonviolent community action around the issues raised by Mr. Grant’s death.

“When officers aren’t held to the same standard as citizens,” Ms. Simmons said, “people are legitimately concerned about that. And then people don’t feel safe. It’s about educating young people, and it’s about pointing out to them the power they have for positive change.”

Kevin Grant, no relation to Oscar Grant, who leads a city violence-prevention program called Measure Y, said education before the verdict was crucial because most young people were vulnerable to being swept up in the emotional response. It is important for people not only to vent their anger peacefully, Mr. Grant said, but also to avoid confrontation with the police.

“When the mob mentality is on and the police is on, it don’t matter if you a peaceful protester or not,” Mr. Grant said. “If you caught up in the machine, then you get rounded up in the machine.”

Mr. Grant and members of his team, many of whom are former gang members, regularly walk through Oakland hot spots and talk to residents during late hours. They have distributed fliers urging young people to stay home the day of the verdict.

Mr. Grant and others said they believe that the threat of violence is just as likely to come from “outside agitators” as from Oakland. In the Lake Merritt neighborhood this week, city workers scrubbed red spray-painted messages — including “Mehserle Must Die!” and “Cops Bleed Too!” — off the sidewalks.

Mr. Shamar, the organizer of last year’s protests and the co-founder of the now-defunct Coalition Against Police Executions, blamed anarchists for inciting the violence.

This time, he said, he hopes for a different outcome. For several weeks, Mr. Shamar has handed out fliers in neighborhoods across Oakland and traveled to colleges and local radio stations to promote a peaceful gathering after the verdict is announced. Protesters are expected to gather near City Hall at 6 p.m. on the day of the verdict.

“We are not planning on rioting or being unlawful,” Mr. Shamar said. “We don’t want violence. Oscar Grant was enough. We don’t want anyone else to get hurt.”

He said he was hoping for justice in the trial, but like many others, he said he expected Mr. Mehserle to be acquitted.

If that happens, Mr. Shamar said he would understand if the protest became violent. But he believes that the police, not the protesters, would be the instigators.

“We will fight back if necessary,” he said. “We’re not going to back down.”

swalter@baycitizen.org
jduane@baycitizen.org

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6 Responses to “If Oscar Grant’s Killer Walks: Will They Innoculate & Suppress Oakland’s Youth?”

  1. I just posted this heads-up from Oaktown this morning:

  2. I just barfed.

    La rebelión se justifica!

    the red fox.

  3. Nat W. said

    Mike writes:

    “This is a view of cowardice and counterinsurgency. It is a view of non-struggle and defeat. It is the slavishness of the condescending social worker.”

    The UPM view is horrible and needs to be struggled against, and even can turn into a line of reaction and counter-revolution, in fact it probably already is.

    I don’t think you are saying that all social workers are condescending, though that was my first reaction when reading. It seems to me that it is necessary to win significant numbers of more radical minded, non slavish social workers, teachers, non-profit,etc. to struggle against the UPM line or else we end up isolated and alone and the oppressed suffer. Perhaps it is necesary to be clear that this view is a reactionary view, but does not represent the outlook of all who work in these fields.

    I’m sure many of these types of people are extremely frustrated with the hopelessness of the change they wish to effect and can be won to the side of the oppressed when the oppressed stand up.

  4. gregw89 said

    I am anxious to see what will happen when the verdict is read. Is this Rodney King 2? I hope the judicial system does the right thing and convicts the officer, as he was caught in public.

  5. Tell No Lies said

    There are certainly radical social workers, teachers, and people in non-profit jobs who are just as disgusted by the line being promoted by UPM. We should be careful not to attack or even appear to be attacking people who don’t deserve to be attacked. At the same time we should understand that the line being promoted by UPM has a base in and is likely to resonate among precisely that intermediate strata that, individual intentions notwithstanding, often acts objectively as a buffer between the poor and oppressed and the rich and powerful. This video is aimed as much at that strata as at poor people in Oakland. It is an explicit appeal to them to distance themselves from and denounce any and all outbreaks of revolt that exceed certain quite narrow limits. This is what Gramsci means when he talks about a “war of position” — a fight for the allegiance of intermediate strata to determine whether or not a new historic bloc can be constituted.

    What is the story behind the UPM? Who are they and who are their funders? (For surely they have funders.) What is their relationship to the Bay Areas unusually large non-profit sector and its ostensibly progressive wing? Their fiscal sponsor is the Movement Strategy Center. Can anyone here elaborate on their role?

    While it is important to expose the generally counter-insurgent role that the non-profit sector plays in channeling popular anger, and this video and e-mail are particularly rich in this respect, we should distinguish between exposing the politics and treating the whole strata they are coming out of as enemies. We need to be clear that the biggest problem with the non-profit sector is not that it is predominantly staffed by college-educated people tied in various ways to the middle class, but rather that so many people genuinely committed to social justice and in possession of such valuable skills have been chanelled away from building the revolutionary movement that is needed. While the grant chasing is undoubtedly corrupting of many, these are people we want on the side of the revolution. We need to struggle not just with them but with ourselves to answer as concretely as possible the question that is their most potent response to this whole line of criticism: what alternative do you have to offer?

  6. sks said

    In spanish:

    http://laislaimposible.wordpress.com/2010/07/03/%C2%BFes-igual-la-violencia-de-los-opresores-y-la-violencia-de-los-oprimidos/

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