Wednesday, September 10, 2025

“There's something happening here. What it is ain't exactly clear;” New International Realities

 Harry Targ

Confusion in the Moment

The combination of social media,  media “breaking news” stories, the politics of the spectacle, the frenetic criminal conduct of the Trump administration, and the agonizing killing, starvation, deaths, pain and suffering happening all around us have been immobilizing. Consequently, it is even more difficult for those working for change to make sense out of the world we are inhabiting. This is particularly so in international relations where “something is happening” but we don’t hear about it or get just pieces of misinformation. If we sift through the fog and confusion, we might discern the emergence of New International Realities.

Recent Developments in International Relations

                                        People's World
On July 6-7, the BRICS nations met in summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. BRICS is a Global South bloc launched in 2009 by Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, and now has many affiliating “partner” nations and 30 other nations requesting membership. BRICS has been meeting regularly to strengthen the voice politically and economically of the traditionally powerless nations of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Host President Lula spoke of the meeting’s purpose: “If international governance does not reflect the new multipolar reality of the 21st century, it is up to BRICS to help bring it up to date.”

According to Duncan McFarland,  (https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/heir-to-the-non-aligned-movement-brics-presents-alternative-to-u-s-hegemony/) the BRICS countries, members and associates, surpass the GDP of the G7 countries, the historic former colonial powers. Also BRICS members and associates are much larger in population than the G7.

BRICS countries are animated by the needs for economic development and a new international order based on the spirit of multilateralism and multipolarity. Concretely, they oppose tariff barriers, the currency and loan system created at Breton Woods in the 1940s, and Israel’s genocidal policies in Gaza.

Paralleling and expanding on the BRICS “movement,” the Shanghai Cooperation Organization met in Tianjin, China on September 1. They issued the Tianjin Declaration, which calls for “peaceful and equitable governance and increased South-South cooperation.” Formed in 1996 by China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, it became the SCO in 2001. SCO now has ten members including India, Pakistan, Iran and Belarus (with 26 countries and representatives of ten global organizations  participating in the recent meeting).

                                                International Peace Institute

SCO heard comments from Chinese President Xi. He proposed a Global Governance Initiative (GGI) emphasizing sovereign equality, a commitment to international law, multilateralism, a “people-centered” approach to global policy, and concrete actions to achieve these goals. He committed funds to a soon-to-be created SCO Development Bank. In addition, the Tianjin Declaration endorsed programs to combat drug trafficking, terrorism, and also pledged cooperation on the use of artificial intelligence and protection of the environment. (https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/09/02/xi-jinping-proposes-a-new-global-governance-framework-based-on-sovereignty-and-multilateralism-at-sco-summit/)

Finally, while the United Nations General Assembly opened its meeting in New York (the 80th year of its founding) there had been calls to move the session to Geneva, Switzerland to protest the US refusal to allow leaders of the Palestinian Authority to enter the country. The General Assembly over the years has passed resolutions criticizing Israeli policies and sanctions against Cuba. And at both the BRICS and SCO meetings it has been suggested that existing international institutions, such as the United Nations, be transformed to reflect global economic interests and the interests of the vast majority of humankind. The United Nations Security Council, with five “permanent members” each with veto power, reflects not the new international realities but the international system established during the era of big power dominance.

The United States Responds to the New International Realities

Although the responses of the Trump administration (and its predecessors) have reflected resistance to the challenge to US global hegemony, it is clear that US policy has been impacted. For over a decade United States policy has involved a “pivot to Asia,” that is challenging China’s rising power militarily and economically. Alfred McCoy has warned that while China’s economy is reaching the levels of the United States, the US response has been more investment in its military. Also, the Trump administration has sought to use tariff policies to stifle China’s increasing global economic presence and exports to the US.

However, recent developments suggest that US policy may be shifting back to the eras of the Monroe Doctrine and Roosevelt Corollary. Recognizing that the distribution of power on the world stage is changing (BRICS and SCO for example), the Trump administration may be returning to a fortress America approach (that is the Western Hemisphere), a kind of Monroe Doctrine 2.

                                        Code Pink
Indications of this would include solidifying and increasing economic sanctions against Cuba and Venezuela, seeking to undermine the Lula government of Brazil, and also trying to intimidate the independence of the Mexican government of Claudia Sheinbaum. Most recently the Trump Administration has renewed a “war on drugs.” As to the latter, the US military destroyed a Venezuelan boat on September 2 in the Caribbean murdering eleven unidentified inhabitants and alleging with no proof that they were members of a Venezuelan drug cartel. And the Secretary of Defense visited Puerto Rico on September 8 to investigate sites for new military installations to make war on hemisphere “drug cartels.”

Vijay Prashad,  has pointed out that there is no evidence of any connection between drug cartels and the government of Venezuela. But Prashad  warns that claiming a connection of drugs with Venezuela should remind us of the “weapons of mass destruction” that were claimed to have existed in Iraq to justify that brutal war in 2003.

https://venezuelanalysis.com/opinion/the-united-states-uses-a-fabricated-drug-charge-for-a-potential-strike-on-venezuela/

Also in addition a Reuters article on the US. Secretary of State's visits to Mexico and Ecuador suggests: "Rubio, the first Latino U.S. secretary of state, traveled to countries in Central America and the Caribbean during his first overseas trip after taking office as the administration sought to shift back focus to Latin America."

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/mexico-emphasizes-sovereignty-good-ties-during-rubio-visit-2025-09-03/

While there is reason to believe that the United States recognizes the shift in global power from the North to the South and is acting accordingly by retargeting the Western Hemisphere, it is important to note that the “new” policy still involves US continuing support for its key allies and their wars, such as Ukraine and Israel. In addition, the US remains the number one world arms merchant, even if its specific focus might be shifting to the Western Hemisphere.

The Meanings of the New International Realities for Peace and Justice Movements

First, we activists need to have a clear, rigorous understanding of the world in which we act. Recognition of The New International Realities is increasingly important as we think about our political work (A multiplicity of scholars and activists have begun to address the NIR and many of us have been inspired by Howard Zinn’s injunction that history involves not just a retelling of the behavior of elites but also the reaction of those who had and are now resisting. The dominant paradigms of the past, among international relations scholars, have concentrated on “the big powers,” ignoring the acts of those who resist and most importantly the masses of workers and peasants who say “no” to repression and exploitation).

Second, recognition of the NIR obliges activists in the core countries to act in solidarity with movements and nations in the Global South. Examples of this include solidarity movements with Palestine and Cuba and campaigns led by the Global South such as BDS.

Third, activists need to continue their work opposing US imperialism and militarism. It is clear that the military/industrial/university complex is squeezing more and more of societal resources in the direction of profits from wars and interventions.

Fourth, peace and justice movements in core countries like the United States must continue to link pain and injustice at home with pain and injustice in other countries. In other words, the NIR, we should claim,will benefit us in the United States as well as peoples in the Global South.

Fifth, there do exist international institutions such as the UN system, that provide activists everywhere with the skeletal form of a New World Order. Activists need to inform themselves about the myriad of UN agencies that do work for people and some, such as the Security Council, which reinforce the old order of militarism and exploitation.

Finally, peace and justice movements must further articulate a consciousness that national borders are artificial, that “enemies” are the creation of ruling elites, and all the world’s citizens would be the beneficiaries of a New World Order.



(This essay was inspired by discussions with friends and comrades in the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS) sub-committee on The New International Realities)

Sunday, September 7, 2025

PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENTS IN THE UNITED STATES: Reflections on History as a Guide to the Future

 "I'VE BEEN ON THE LEFT FOR 60 YEARS. I know the full range of socialist and communist groups. Since the demise of the Weather Underground 40 years ago, I don't know a single group that's into violence or terrorism of any sort, even against Charlie Kirk and others like him," Carl Davidson, from Facebook)     

                                            
Harry Targ

from Chapter 5, Challenging Late Capitalism, Neoliberal Globalization and Militarism: Building a Progressive Majority, Lulu.com, 2006

What are Progressive Movements?

Marx believed that all history was the history of class struggle. Class struggle was basic to history because all societies were class societies. Those classes that owned or controlled production, such as the factories or fields, gained disproportionately while those who worked as slaves, servants, or wage workers gained less.

Therefore, basic to the production and reproduction of life in class societies is inequality in wealth, power, and control which generates conflicts of interest. As history unfolds, these conflicts of interest spill over into mobilizations to demand change. The demands may be modest or fundamental. Sometimes mobilizations to create change, such as for a fair wage, escalate to demands for qualitative change, such as to destroy the economic and/or political system of inequality. Revolutionary movements are motivated by the belief that the basic institutions of society cause exploitation and oppression and therefore must be replaced by new institutions. Reformist movements wish to change some institutions and/or policies to alleviate human problems.

The Marxian assumption is that inequality in wealth, and therefore power,  is basic to capitalist societies. As a consequence the economic organization of society fundamentally shapes all its institutions and relationships, including politics and culture. However, some inequalities, while parallel to and significant for the system of wealth and power, are derived from institutions, interests, and ideologies integral to but not necessarily derived from the economic system. Racism and sexism are vital to capitalist exploitation but have their roots in institutions and cultures preceding it. Racism is a system of control based on social constructions of race; that is institutional definitions of  superior and inferior “races.” Patriarchy is a system of power and control tied to gender. In addition to the economic structures of society, systems of racial oppression, and patriarchy, institutionalized forms of domination and subordination  have existed based on religious beliefs or other characteristics of difference.  In other words, the basic inequalities in wealth and power generated by class have been reinforced and replicated throughout societies in different economic, social, political, and cultural realms. 

Given systems of inequality in wealth and power and the negative consequences of these inequalities, demands for change of varying kinds are essential features of societies. As suggested above, individuals and groups organize from time to time to create change: workers, people of color, women, or peoples of faith, for example. Progressive movements are coalitions of groups who come together to bring about changes in policies and/or institutions to improve the lives of people and to reduce inequalities in wealth, power, and/or status.  They may come together to address issues of class, race, gender,  religious toleration, or specific problems such as abuse of the environment. More radical coalitions have a vision of changing several realms of economic, political, social, and cultural reality at once. Progressive movements are coalitions of groups who agree to work together because of some common purpose even if they do not share a particular understanding of history, economic and political structures, or a particular view of human possibilities. They realize that with numbers there is power and that a mass movement is needed to bring about some of the changes they desire.

Kinds of Social Movements                                      

Political activism varies from country to country based on history and context. Some countries experience more mass mobilizations, street protests, frequent ouster of leaders, and violence than others. Also some countries have longer histories of leftwing political parties and Socialist movements than others. Despite the significant variation in political histories, it is important to remember that social movements are basic to history and historical change.

Social movements differ as to vision and purpose and strategy and tactics. Movements have been created to solve specific problems in institutions or policies. These are single issue movements. Groups organize living wage campaigns, work to end particular wars, demand environmental protections, seek to protect women’s right to choose and work on a whole host of other important issues.  In societies like the United States there are literally thousands of groups seeking changes that would improve humankind in some way and single-issue groups constitute the vast majority of this organized political activity.

Other movements are multi-issue, that is, they believe that issues of class, race, gender, the environment, and peace are interconnected and require a common approach to problem solving. Political parties committed to significant change, such as the Greens, serve this kind of purpose. Most mainstream parties, while they address a multiplicity of issues, do not have a vision or commitment to significant change.

Many movements are reformist,  that is they promote modest but significant changes. Usually they work toward some policy change or institutional adjustment in the polity.  Others organize with the goal of radically transforming economic and political institutions. Their vision is considerably more comprehensive drawing upon a systemic analysis of the underlying flaws in the economic and political order. Of course, Socialist movements foresee the overthrow of the capitalist system and its replacement by a humane Socialist society. These movements are revolutionary. 

Life is considerably more complicated than simple categorization schemes and social movements often consist of persons seeking change on individual issues as well as broader structural change. Also activists in particular social movements may be motivated by a desire to reform while others may share more revolutionary visions of change. But, it is still useful to look at the two categories raised: single vs. multi-issue movements and reformist vs. revolutionary to help to distinguish kinds of movements in U.S. history and their strengths and weaknesses.

Single-Issue Reform Movements

Throughout U.S. history, groups have formed to address specific changes in institutions and policies. Some, such as the environmental movement, have mobilized around single issues that have had long-term political and economic consequences for the nation. Most such groups have addressed individual policies of more limited impact such as supporting a clean water act or an endangered species act. Single-issue reform movements are often seen as part of the “pluralist” character of American politics, the standard social science rendition of how the political process works. Every citizen can participate in the policy process by joining a group. These groups organize around specific issues. For mainstream political scientists, single-issue reform groups are the heart and soul of US democracy.

                                            People's World

Single-Issue Revolutionary Movements

Less common in U.S. history are single-issue movements that have a revolutionary agenda. Sometimes people mobilize around single issues without realizing the long-term consequences for economics and politics of their actions. Perhaps the Abolition Movement of the 19th century and the Gay Rights Movement of the 1970s are examples. What begins as specific demands for institutional or policy change leads to a growing mobilization that transforms society in significant ways.

Multi-Issue Reform Movements

These movements, less frequent, but very significant for U.S. history, involve a coming together around a variety of issues with a shared vision and purpose. For these reform movements, such as the Populists of the late 19th century, which sometimes include the mainstream political parties, institutional and policy changes are promoted with an eye towards rectifying social problems without radically changing the distributions of wealth and power. As the momentum for change escalates, significant economic and political changes might occur. Even though they are not revolutionary, the totality of the reforms add up to substantial economic and political changes. The New Deal reforms of the 1930s, discussed below, are an example.

Multi-Issue Revolutionary Movements

 While having less of a presence in the United States than Europe, a Socialist left animated by a vision of radical transformation of the economy and the polity are relevant here. These movements have an analysis of the fundamental connection between capitalism and class, race, and gender that leads them to advocate a fundamental transformation of society. That is, the systems of capitalism, white supremacy, and patriarchy must be overturned and replaced with a new society based on humane visions of Socialism. . At various times Socialist and Communist parties have had significant impact on U.S. politics. Paradoxically, their impacts have been to stimulate the creation of successful single- and multi-issue reform programs that have led to modest but valuable changes in institutions and policies. 

Generalizations About Single and Multiple Issue Reform and Revolutionary Movements

First, the practices of all social movements are shaped by their interaction with the forces that resist them. Oftentimes groups mobilize around an issue, encounter resistance, reexamine the systemic source of the resistance, then articulate demands for more fundamental change, and develop new strategies and tactics to achieve the new goals. 

Second, resistance often leads to the development of a new understanding of the problem at hand.  Single-issue campaigns, about environmental policy for example, might lead activists to the conclusion that opponents of reform represent corporate capitalists who oppose any restraint on their pursuit of profit. 

Third, U.S. history is replete with examples of individuals and groups becoming “radicalized” by resistance to modest demands on single issues. As activists meet resistance, they begin to see that other groups with other agendas have experienced the same problems. Usually, confrontation with state power leads reform minded activists to develop a consciousness of “layers of causation” in reference to resistance to change. What begins as a campaign against recalcitrant politicians sometimes leads to a more systemic analysis of the economic underpinnings of support for the status quo.

Fourth, the character of the state reaction in the context in which the activism occurs  significantly affects the kind of activism that is advanced. Under certain circumstances, single-issue reform constitutes the most that can realistically be expected. At other times, a multiplicity of issues can be addressed in a comprehensive way and on rare occasions, analyses, vision, and tactics can take on a more revolutionary character.

 Finally, “left” political activism should be based upon the historical possibilities that exist at any given time in history. Left participation in political activities of all sorts is important. The “left” contribution to building any progressive political movement should be to suggest an outlook based on a systematic theoretical understanding of society; for example, that human problems have a root cause or root causes; the variety of human problems are connected; and in the long run the solution to human problems require radical or revolutionary solutions.

                                            Portside

Cultural Fronts, the 1930s, and Progressive Movements

Michael Denning (1996) has made an important theoretical contribution to the study of social movements in the United States. He introduced the notion of a “cultural front” to discussions about the 1930s and 1940s. He argued that in those epochs, when masses of people were organized around and sympathetic to fundamental social change, networks of influences relating class struggle to politics and to culture seemed to be prevalent.

 The primary political forces in the 1930s, the labor and Communist movements, indirectly influenced popular discourse and culture and how the vast majority of people viewed their times. Hundreds of thousands of workers were marching, striking, and sitting in factories to demand the right to form unions and thousands of them were affiliated and motivated by the Communist movements of the day. In daily newspapers, the saga of the CIO unfolded regularly. In many towns and cities workers not directly involved in organizing struggles were sympathetic to those workers who were. The newly emerging industrial unions, under the banner of the CIO, published newspapers, broadcast radio programs nationwide, and, in the case of Chicago, owned a radio station.   

Communists, who had played a leading role in the early days of the CIO, had for years been involved in campaigns to demand relief for workers hit hard by the Depression, such as forming Unemployment Councils to demand welfare payments for the unemployed, supporting hunger marches, and agitating for an alternative to the kind of capitalism that brought the Great Depression. The Communists also played a leading role in challenging racism in the South: organizing against the charges of rape leveled against the young men of Scottsboro, demanding federal legislation against lynching, and organizing boycotts of businesses in cities like New York and Chicago which refused to hire African American workers.

Communists, Socialists, and peace activists organized opposition to European war in the 1930s. After the Soviet Union was attacked by Nazi Germany, the Communist Party joined with many Americans to support the war against fascism in Europe and later in Asia. Also Communists played a leading role in organizing the Abraham Lincoln Brigade,  young American volunteers to fight against General Franco’s fascist forces that attacked the beleaguered democratic regime in Spain. 

 In short, in the 1930s, class struggle was manifested in the nationwide drive to organize industrial workers in trade unions supported and encouraged by a Communist movement that had worked for years to organize industrial workers, a sector of the work force that had traditionally been excluded from unions. Also the Communist left put the struggle against racism on the agenda. As masses  mobilized, the unemployed, factory workers, and farmers, class struggle became a visible feature of public life. And, workers, Communists and Socialists, and pacifists, worked to oppose war and fascism in Europe. Most of these currents were visible to  Americans through the mass media. Denning suggests that the union organizing was the driving force behind the visible presence of a progressive movement in the United States. 

 Arts and culture were inspired by the mass movements during the decade. Through the working class balladry of Woody Guthrie, the anti-colonial and anti-racist artistic politics of Paul Robeson, the proletarian novels of Jack Conroy and James T. Farrell, the artistic imagery of war and fascism in Picasso’s Guernica, the worlds of work, politics, and struggle became the subjects of culture. Performers, as varied as Billie Holliday, Duke Ellington, Charlie Chaplin, and Marian Anderson, made artistic statements reflecting the progressive spirit, even though they were not affiliated with the CIO or the Communist Party. This is the point for Denning. The “cultural front” constituted a moment in history where organized movements, shaped by class struggle and Left parties, helped create a left/center political coalition and inspired the creation of a broader progressive politics and culture.

The immediate political byproduct of the cultural front was the New Deal. Legislation was passed to give workers the right to form unions, to establish a minimum wage, to require some standards of health and safety at the work place, and to provide social security for specific categories of retirees. Unemployed people were put to work to build bridges, highways, and sidewalks and to clean public parks. Others were paid to write and perform plays, to prepare histories of states, to photograph rural and urban life, and to document in writing the pain and suffering of workers experienced during the Depression. While it is clear in retrospect that many African Americans did not receive adequate benefits from the New Deal, the seeds of the idea of “positive government” were planted. The epoch-shaping era of the 1930s began with groups promoting single issue reforms and evolved into campaigns for multiple issue reforms. In the background, but not insignificant to the epoch, were those Left organizations who worked for a revolutionary transformation of American, while working with mass organizations to achieve multi-issue reforms.  The Left/center coalition that developed over the decade constituted a progressive movement that significantly changed the economic, political, and cultural life of the country.

The Cultural Front, the 1960s, and Progressive Movements

The cultural front of the 1930s, including the changes in public policy brought by the epochal struggles of that time, still existed in weakened form in the 1960s. But it was a shell of its former self for a variety of reasons. Labor militancy was defused by CIO collaboration with capital during  World War II. Labor/management agreements after the war defused radical labor demands for control of the workplace in exchange for  wage increases and benefits. Anti-communism, the tool of repression, spread through the labor movement,  schools and universities, government, and movies, radio, and television.

 In sum, the shared values, beliefs, and politics of the 1930s became defined as subversive and un-American. And specifically, the Communist Party was hounded into isolation, as were any political and cultural performers and activists who had been sympathetic with it in years past. The network of connections between class struggle, politics, and culture were steadily dismantled and replaced by a “repressive cultural front” that defined progressive politics as an enemy force. 

Manifestations of the cultural front of the 1930s, however, lingered on in the politics of the 1950s. Radical trade unionists continued the struggle for the right to organize and some, albeit a small fraction, of the labor movement continued to incorporate an anti-racist agenda in their work. In the South and across the nation, Tobacco Workers, Longshoremen, Packinghouse Workers, Mine, Mill, and Smelters continued the old CIO/Communist campaign; “Black, White, Unite, and Fight.” However, the mainstream of the labor movement, which became the AFL-CIO after a 1955 merger, significantly reduced its commitment to racial justice in the labor movement and the society at large.

In contrast,  militant workers, committed religious leaders, and members of traditional civil rights organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and most importantly rank and file African Americans launched a new civil rights movement that would shape the politics of the 1960s and 1970s. A new “cultural front” was initiated inadvertently by the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955. The working women and men who marched for miles to work instead of sitting in the back of city buses set off a nationwide explosion of forces: people of color, and youth, anti-war, students’ rights, women’s, and environmental activists.

As in the 1930s, the explosion of the spirit of activism spread throughout the culture. The politics of protest became a daily feature of electronic and print news, the subject of debate in cafes, barber shops, and legislative bodies. Folk and rock music became infused with messages of racial and social justice and peace. Movies and television, so constrained by the lingering anti-Communism of the 1950s, reluctantly and cautiously followed the music industry.    

Finally, a politics of single issues shifted to a multi-issue consciousness and some activists shifted from reformism to revolution in their thinking about social change. By the late 1960s, discourse involved whether change could be brought about “inside the system” or required going “outside the system.” Words like, the “establishment,” usually ill-defined, implied an analysis of society that entailed economic and political institutions. 

Importantly, the “old left,” those activists who experienced the cultural front of the 1930s and concretely who had been schooled in Marxist theory and Communist or Socialist politics, were seen by younger activists as  less relevant to the activism of the 60s than the 1930s. The very label of the new movement, a label coined by maverick sociologist C. Wright Mills, reflected the disjuncture between the prior movements and the emerging one. It was Mills who called for the creation of a “new left.” For him, this “new left” would rise up out of the passions of youth for social justice, particularly youth in the universities. This conception of the new movement implied that the working class was not central to change. Rather, they were defenders of the status quo.

Despite the fatal flaw in the idea of  a “new left,” that is its anti-worker character, the civil rights struggle and the inspiration it provided for students and anti-war activists created a political and cultural atmosphere in the 1960s that resembled that of the 1930s. Dr. King, Malcolm X, the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and the Black Panther Party inspired a struggle first for basic social and economic justice and later for revolutionary change to create a system ending exploitation, racism, and war.  

The civil rights and Black Power movements and the 1960s cultural front had significant policy consequences. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 and affirmative action programs could not have been embraced by the Johnson Administration and the Congress if mass movements had not demanded social and economic change. The panoply of programs known as the Great Society, including day care, pre-school education, legal aid, and the modest Medicare and Medicaid programs, were reformist byproducts of the ferment. Ironically, several governmental programs were having measurable impacts but lost resources and support because of the escalating quagmire in Vietnam.

The Poor People’s Campaign of 1968 symbolized the hope and the defeat of the 1960s cultural front. Dr. Martin Luther King had come to the view by the late 1960s that poverty, exploitation, racism, and militarism were interconnected. His conclusions about the interconnectedness of these issues and the need to fundamentally transform society to overcome them required the mobilization of poor people, Black and white, and progressives to demand fundamental change. His PPC was to culminate in a massive mobilization of progressive forces in Washington D. C. in May, 1968. 

The development of his consciousness was reflected in his 1967 speech at Riverside Church in New York, in which he linked the war in Vietnam to racism and poverty at home. In addition, his support for striking garbage workers in Memphis, Tennessee reflected his efforts to link the issues of class and race. After Memphis, he was to lead the nationwide PPC walk to Washington to construct Resurrection City. He was never to make the trip and the Resurrection City that was constructed on the mall in Washington was torn down in short order after it was erected. His assassination may have been connected in some way to the threat that Black/white unity around class and race issues represented to the dominant order.

The mass movements continued but the concrete (and theoretical) anchor that the PPC would have provided was destroyed. Various left formations emerged, the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) splintered, and state repression escalated. The Black Panther Party, which was providing hot breakfasts and free health care to people in poorer communities became the target of counterintelligence programs (COINTEL). Panthers were killed, arrested, jailed on trumped up charges, and their influence in the Black communities declined.    Students were killed by National Guard or police authorities at Jackson State and Kent State universities. Meanwhile, products of popular culture shifted from social justice themes to interpersonal liberation. Rebellion was channeled more and more into consumerism. The United States presence in Vietnam came to an end in 1975 and so did the 60s cultural front.

Progressive Politics After the Cultural Fronts

The “sixties” connoted something special as did the “thirties” before it. As has been suggested here, mobilizations around class and race stimulated the reassertion of people’s campaigns of all sorts. Politics in turn impacted on culture and culture on politics. In terms of a mass psychology a sense of hope flowered and grew. In the 1940s and 1950s and again in the 1970s and beyond, the cultural fronts disintegrated and despair, isolation, and individualism replaced community, solidarity, and activism. 

Several forces facilitated the demise of “the 60s.” First, state repression escalated. Assassinations, police violence, arrests, and incarceration of many Black and white activists reduced the ranks of the leadership of existing organizations. Second, the global economy experienced stagnation and crisis spurred by two oil shocks. In the United States unemployment and inflation together rose precipitously. Capital flight escalated such that literally millions of high paying industrial jobs were lost as thousands of plants closed. The percentage of the work force in unions began its significant decline. In the terms of the day the “economy of abundance” was replaced by an “economy of scarcity.” When Ronald Reagan came in office an active campaign to destroy the labor movement was put in place, as symbolized by the successful effort to destroy the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO).

Third, a long simmering right wing backlash to the 30s and the 60s gained significant force aided by an attractive leader, Ronald Reagan. During his first term, Reagan launched a program that is still active and successful in 2005 to destroy the vestiges of positive government. Also he used the war against Communism, the “evil empire,” to rekindle national chauvinism and massive increases in military spending. New campaigns were started to repress Central American activists and groups defending civil rights. His followers created campaigns against a women’s right to choose an abortion, against gun control, for school prayer, and for the teaching of creationism to mobilize conservatives and some religious fundamentalists. The use of  so-called “social issues” was designed to build a mass base of support for an economic and political ruling class that was committed to shifting the distribution of wealth and income even more to themselves by destroying positive government programs.    

The quantum shift to the right nationally could not have occurred without apocryphal changes in progressive politics. Single issue politics continued, in some cases with admirable successes. Women’s and gay rights movements flourished. Anti-nuclear and Central American solidarity movements successfully mobilized millions of people in opposition to Reagan’s foreign policy. But the “old left” was in disarray; that is those multi-issue groups committed to a Socialist political vision. As the former Soviet Union and the Eastern European Socialist states experienced crises of political legitimacy and economic stagnation, the image of revolutionary Socialism became more tarnished. Most Socialist states disintegrated between 1989 and 1991, leaving only a handful committed in name, if not in principle, to Socialism. New post-Marxist theoretical currents among the academic left “deconstructed” the historical “narratives” such that the history of any revolutionary ideal became suspect. Class and class struggle as empirically grounded theoretical concepts were dismissed.  Class was replaced by identities-racial, gender, sexual preference, and ethnic-as the focus of political attention. The Marxian idea of linking exploitation, oppression, domination and subordination to the economic character of the society was rejected as an intellectual tool.  

The end result of the transformation and deconstruction of progressive movements was  a politics of atomization: issues, identities, discourses, discrete contexts replaced a theoretical and practical understanding of history and attempts to understand the continuities between the past and the present were rejected. The dismissal of the Socialist project in general became fashionable on the intellectual left. At the level of electoral politics, the leadership of the Democratic Party shifted from being a party of opposition to being a party of centrist collaboration. The argument of those who rose to influence in the 1980s and 1990s, in the camp of President Clinton, was that electoral victory required embracing a variant of the Reagan revolution in politics to appeal to the “center.”

 The end result of these two developments was that the intellectual left rejected the historical and conceptual tools that would give vision and purpose to the possibility of constructing a “new new left.” In the electoral arena, the Democratic Party, the sometimes agent of reform, embraced a new role, rejecting contestation and adopting collaboration as a political strategy. Meanwhile wealth shifted more to the top 1 percent of the population, real incomes declined for most workers, and the economic, political, and cultural manifestations of racism and sexism resembled  the period before the Great Society of the 1960s. 

Political Crisis in the 21st Century

George Bush won two disputed elections in 2000 and 2004. He is a creature of the neo-conservative, religious fundamentalist, rightwing faction of the capitalist class. During his reign wealth has continued to shift to the rich, workers and the poor have become as vulnerable at any time since the Great Depression, and the United States is attempting to reconstruct a worldwide capitalist empire that has been the dream of imperialists since the 1890s. This has meant unending wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and threats of war against Syria, Iran and North Korea. Despite extraordinary demonstrations against war and racism and the rise of grassroots organizing, the movements are disjointed, single-issue, bereaved of systemic analysis and vision. Of particular relevance is the weakness, to the point of near extinction, of the labor movement   The old anti-racist movement, whose heart was in civil rights and Black Power, does not evidence the solidarity of the past, nor the solidarity with other sectors of the progressive movement.

 Clearly there is a need for a new mass movement which is multi-issue and reform/revolutionary. This new mass movement needs a class base. It must prioritize an anti-racist, anti-sexist agenda. It must be anti-imperialist. And the new progressive majority needs to ground itself in the public discourse and the culture of the majority of the people. The new progressive majority cannot replicate the prior periods of the cultural front but activists can learn from the strengths and weaknesses of the prior periods.

The times are right for a new progressive beginning. The vast majority of humankind lives in horrific material conditions. Massive mobilizations are spreading around the world concerning issues critical to people’s lives. Numbers of passionately committed left intellectuals and cultural artists are growing. And, there is a history, even in the U.S., of  Socialist vision and practice. 

 

                                            National Archives

Bibliography

Denning, Michael. The Cultural Front, Verso, 1996




Saturday, September 6, 2025

TRUMP MAKES “WAR’' ON EVERYONE

 Harry Targ

A Washington Post editorial correctly asserted that the old name, The Department of War, more accurately describes what the agency of the US government does than the cold war euphemism, the Department of Defense, a renaming in 1947. The editorial points out that our use of words becomes embedded in our collective consciousness such that we begin to incorporate ideology in our thinking.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/09/05/war-department-defense-trump-rebrand/

However, President Trump’s dicta to rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War has a deeper meaning as well. The same week he unilaterally renamed the instrumentality of US imperialism to clearly call it “war,” he ordered an attack on a Venezuelan "ship", killing those on board, claiming with no evidence that the vessel was shipping drugs to the United States. This attack was supported by the “Defense Department’s” placing of other ships in the Caribbean and implicit military threats against the government of Venezuela. And, of course, the United States has been arming and funding “war” in the Middle East. And we know that in the name of “defense” the United States has placed some 900 bases around the world and has authorized almost a trillion dollars for more “defense,” or more accurately “war,” in the future.

But along with peace movement reminders of the escalating US war-making capacity, and naming it as such, attention must also be addressed to war-making at home. Agents of the US government, along with the FBI, such as ICE and the National Guard, have begun to make war on the American people. ICE agents and soldiers have occupied and attacked communities within the United States such as in Los Angeles, and as we reflect, threaten to send military troops to Chicago, Baltimore, New Orleans and elsewhere. Most of the war-makers are being sent to locations in which majorities of voters are Democrats, and the mayor of these cities are African American.

In short, the United States government is making war on targets outside the continental United States and against people within the United States.

If ever in US history there is a need for the forces of peace and justice to unite it is now. The renaming of the Department of Defense, as the Post admits, is a frank admission of what the project and vision of the Trump administration is, to make war on people everywhere.

And we in peace and justice movements to the contrary should remember Che Guevara’s humanistic alternative perspective:

 

May be a black-and-white image of 1 person and text that says '"Always be able to feel deeply "Alwaysbeabletofeldeeplyar any injustice committed against anyone anywhere in the world. It is the most beautiful quality of a revolutionary.' " Ernesto Che Guevar in in a goodbye letter to his children @cubamistad'

 

Sunday, August 31, 2025

THE INDIANA ECONOMY HURTS WORKERS, WOMEN, MINORITIES:Still

 (Originally posted  October 27, 2023)

Harry Targ

Under Republican rule in Indiana for over a decade the economic circumstances (and education, good paying jobs etc.) have worsened for Hoosier workers and their families.. The Republican "business model" is a disaster for workers.

"From 2017 through 2022, the Indiana economy grew more slowly than the nation as a whole. In inflation-adjusted terms, the Hoosier economy expanded by 10.8%, While the nation as a whole grew by 11.3%.

...the dismal growth of 2017 through 2020 accounts for all the lagging performance of the Hoosier economy. The expansion from 2009 to 2019 was the worst relative performance of our economy in state history. By 2019, the Indiana economy was slipping into recession due primarily to the tariffs put in place by the Trump administration. "What the new GDP data tells us about the Hoosier economy", Michael Hicks Muncie Star Press, reprinted in the Journal and Courier, January 8, 2024)

And I mused in December 23, 2023: 

"I am beginning to see tax abatements, huge job promising government funded projects, military contracts, the privatization of education from K through college, real estate speculation, and more as a substantial cause of the movement of wealth from the 99 percent to the top one percent. And we see in Indiana that 39 percent of households live below a livable wage, healthcare is scarcer and more expensive, there are pockets of food deserts, and across the state growing environmental degradation.it is time to say enough is enough."

And today Hoosier politicians and corporate/university elites suggest that the Indiana economy is booming and will only improve with less taxes, more support for industrial projects like LEAP, and a general reliance on the "free market." 

Recent United Way ALICE reports suggest to the contrary that economic circumstances of large percentages of Hoosiers have worsened over the last decade. For example, a recent United Way Alice Report suggests that the number of households in Indiana living below a livable income (about 37 percent) have increased since the last decade.

https://iuw.org/alice-2025/


Saturday, August 30, 2025

LABOR CELEBRATES ITS HISTORY: MILITANT TRADE UNIONISM STILL NEEDED

  Harry Targ



LABOR DAY PARADE, 1882. The first Labor Day Parade, held in Union Square, New York City, by the Knights of Labor on 5 September 1882. Wood engraving from a contemporary American newspaper.

https://www.granger.com/results.asp?image=0041831

On the morning of September 5, 1882, 30,000 men and women bricklayers, freight handlers, printers, blacksmiths, railroad workers, cigar makers, furriers, seamstresses and other workers lined up to begin the first Labor Day march in New York City. Many of the marchers carried signs with such messages as "Labor Will Be United," "Eight Hours for Work-Eight Hours for Rest-Eight Hours for What We Will" and "Strike With the Ballot."

The New York Central Labor Union spread the word about Labor Day and two years later a national labor organization, the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions, resolved at its convention that the first Monday in September be set aside as labor's national holiday. It was to be celebrated by all workers, Black and white, women and men, young and old, skilled and unskilled, industrial and craft. After years of labor-initiated celebrations, the Haymarket Affair of 1886, and the rise of a worldwide anarchist and socialist workers’ movements, and growing support for a Labor Day in cities and states around the nation, Congress finally adopted Labor Day as a national holiday in 1894.

The original Labor Day was designed to symbolize the demand for the 8-hour day, a healthy work environment, adequate rest, and basic health and other benefits. It also was designed to express the pride that workers felt about their role in the production of all the goods and services in the society. Finally, Labor Day was a time to mobilize workers for the ongoing struggle to achieve a fair and living wage, safe and productive worksites, basic economic security, and worker participation in economic and political decision making.

And the conditions that necessitated the building of a strong labor movement still exist.

First, since the 1970s, there has been increasing class polarization. Gaps in distributions of wealth and income have grown. Real wages of workers have stagnated since the 1970s. In addition, workplace benefits have declined, including pensions. Permanent jobs have been replaced by contingent labor. The percentage of unionization of the work force has declined by two-thirds. A recent study estimates that only one-fourth of jobs today are “good jobs”, paying at least $16 an hour. And, on the other hand, the share of income and wealth accumulated by the top one percent or ten percent or twenty percent, the entire privileged class, has risen. The rich have gotten richer while the poor poorer. 

Second, since the 1980s, workers and their families have experienced downward mobility, that is their social and economic position has declined. This has occurred because stable, well-paying jobs have disappeared due to outsourcing, capital flight, and deindustrialization. By any number of measures, the “American Dream” of helping one’s children to move up the status ladder has been reversed. 

Third, the increasing accumulation of wealth and power through tax cuts, deregulation of financialization, and declining government support for public services have encouraged the privileged to embark on class secession. Increasingly, the privileged class withdraws its support for public institutions as it funds its own private schools, libraries, recreational facilities, and additional social services. The rich build gated communities, electrify their fences, hire private guards to protect themselves and create private institutions to replace public ones. Robert Reich once referred to the “secession of the successful” which refers to the elites combining “traditional forms of physical and social separation and increasing numbers of privately provided services with the ideology of neoliberalism, an idea system of free market fundamentalism that encourages and legitimates hostility to public institutions.” Sociologists Earl Wysong and Robert Perrucci concluded that “class secession today involves both a separatist social identity and a conscious secessionist mentality.”

In sum long-term trends in the United States since the 1970s have led to growing wealth and power at one pole and increasing immiseration at the other pole. The idea of a broad middle class is further away from reality than ever. 

For the vast majority of Americans economic security is declining. And, most importantly, the privileged class, which has built its wealth and power on the growing immiseration of the new working class, including service and part time workers, is physically, financially, and ideologically seceding from the system that historically claimed to provide at least some institutional support for enrichment of the citizenry at large. Data also shows how the brutality of the new class society particularly impacts on people of color, women, immigrants, and other traditionally marginalized people. 

The specific issues of the 21st century are different than the 1880s but the general concerns of workers remain the same

            -Workers must stop plant closings and the millions of good jobs that have been lost because of capital flight.

          -Workers must stop the shift in the economy from well-paying jobs to part-time and minimum wage jobs. Workers must reverse the 30-year decline in real wages that Americans have experienced.

          -Workers must challenge the decline in health and safety in the workplace.

         -Workers must struggle to reverse the rise in the numbers of homeless people and the declining ability of people to pay for health care.

        -Workers must join with their brothers and sisters from Mexico, Canada, Asia, and Africa to oppose the pitting of underpaid and overworked men and women in one country against men and women in other countries using the excuse of "free trade."

        -And finally, it is clearer now than ever that worker solidarity worldwide is needed to stop militarism, wasteful military spending, and war.

To achieve these goals, workers have to combat the economic and political assault on trade unions which reached massive proportions in the 1980s and 1990s. Without trade unions, there would have been no Labor Day proclaimed in 1882 and there would be no Labor Day in 2025.

https://heartlandradical.blogspot.com/search?q=the+new+class+society



Wednesday, August 27, 2025

COMEDIANS: The New Revolutionaries

  Harry Targ

r/50501 - Photos from today’s We’re With Colbert protest in NYC!

Reddit

"Workers of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains!". Karl Marx

“Comedians of the world unite. You have nothing to lose but your jokes.” Harry Targ

 

(Richard Pryor on racism and capitalism:

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/TCFfmecFYpw)

The twenty-first century is strange. Most of the modest social benefits provided by many governments are being reversed. Contrary to expectations in a “post-Cold War” world, violence has increased and competition between Cold War adversaries continues. And to quote from Vijay Prashad, we are living in an “age of cruelty.” We are helpless observers as a holocaust is being perpetrated on the people in Gaza. And while a police state is rounding up “illegals,” convicted felons are being pardoned, (and some elected or appointed to office), masses of people are hitting the streets to protest virtually all these egregious immoralities perpetrated by ruling classes and political elites. And it has gotten to the point with these horrific developments that we must look to comedians to save us.

And before we look askance at a defense of comedians, we should recognize that they historically have stimulated us to think about the human condition. Paradoxically profit and criticism have over the years conflicted. In the post World War Two period a panoply of comedians have surfaced who generated popularity and profit, and at the same time challenged the evils of capitalism, war-making, class antagonisms, racism, and patriarchy.

For those of us growing up in the fifties Tom Lehrer was cheerfully accessible while communicating ideas about atomic war, hate, and militarism. And while Lenny Bruce was too acerbic for some he spawned subsequent generations of very radical comedic talents including George Carlin, Richard Pryor, and Lily Tomlin. And then radical/political humor became mainstreamed on television including Saturday Night Live, the Daily Show and the John Oliver program. Television series such as MASH critiqued war, Other programs, some funny and some serious, analyzed commercialism, greed, ruling classes, and racism.

So now in a period where democratic discourse is more threatened than ever, even more than the McCarthy era of the 1950s, fascist sectors of the ruling class, after attacking the universities, the media, protesters, and “foreigners,” are targeting the comedians, the last refuge of deep criticism of the US political economy. 

As we rise to defend academic freedom in the universities, vibrant curricula in K- twelve educational institutions, the right to protest (and vote) and independent media, we cannot forget the comedians. Historically, they have communicated radical ideas to larger sections of the population than many others who have resisted monopoly capitalism and war.

 Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason. - Mark Twain

 

 

The Bookshelf

CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

Challenging Late Capitalism