{"id":639,"date":"2010-06-20T17:50:34","date_gmt":"2010-06-20T17:50:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/rashidmod.com\/?p=639"},"modified":"2013-06-30T01:01:59","modified_gmt":"2013-06-30T01:01:59","slug":"interview-with-comrade-rashid-on-the-present-state-of-new-afrikanblack-crisis-in-america-revolutionary-art-the-united-panther-movement-and-communism-vs-anarchism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/?p=639","title":{"rendered":"Interview with Comrade Rashid: On the  Present State of New Afrikan\/Black Crisis in America; Revolutionary Art; the  United Panther Movement; and Communism vs. Anarchism"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>The following is from an interview  by correspondence with Comrade Kevin \u201cRashid\u201d Johnson, the Minister of Defense  of the New Afrikan Black Panther Party Prison Chapter (NABPP-PC) conducted by Comrade  Anthony Rayson of the South Chicago ABC Zine Distro. <\/em>((This interview was first  published in The Liberator #15, Summer 2010.))<em> During the time of this interview, Comrade Rashid was imprisoned at the Red  Onion State Prison in Pound, Virginia, a supermax facility.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Anthony Rayson<\/u><\/strong>: As you know Amerika does not want people to know what you know and  are busy articulating. We&#8217;re told the \u201ccivil rights struggle\u201d of the 1960&#8217;s  took care of racism and that Blacks are cool with capitalism (Snoop Doggism). Tell  us what the deal really is and the place the vast gulag system plays in society  today \u2013 particularly with Black people.<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Rashid<\/u><\/strong>: We both recognize that the last major wave of New Afrikan\/Black  struggle against this imperialist (monopoly capitalist) system, racism and  national oppression here in Amerika, occurred in the 1960&#8217;s and 1970&#8217;s. This  struggle took place on two fronts, reflecting the aspirations of two <em>opposite<\/em> class poles in Black Amerika. The  first was the pro-monopoly capitalist pole (these elements sought an  accommodation with and integration into the U.S. capitalist system). The second  was the revolutionary national liberation pole (these elements sought  independence and separation from the Amerikan capitalist system or fundamental  socialist reconstruction of Amerika&#8217;s political-economy as a condition to Black  integration).<\/p>\n<p>The first tendency was most strongly represented in  the Civil Rights Movement: The second tendency by the Black Power\/Liberation  Movement. Because the second tendency represented a direct challenge to the  U.S. imperialist system, it was feared the most by the Establishment.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. began as an  accommodationist and pro-integrationist. His major gripe with Amerika was that  white racism was a major obstacle to Black integration. That the U.S.  government in openly fostering racism was not living up to the rhetoric of all  people being equal as expressed in its founding creed \u2013 the Declaration of  Independence.<\/p>\n<p>As a middle class (petty bourgeois) Black, MLK  initially held the same class values as the U.S. capitalist ruling class (big  bourgeoisie), so he had no beef with capitalism itself, only with the  conditions of white racism which prevented Black integration into capitalist  Amerika. But MLK became more class conscious toward the end of his life, and  ultimately came to realize that the wealth-worshiping capitalist system was the  very cause of social inequalities and exploitation, including white racism. At  this point he became an advocate of socialism. But initially, he was an  advocate of capitalism. MLK&#8217;s major presence as a civil rights leader spanned  from the late 1950&#8217;s until his assassination in 1968.<\/p>\n<p>Now at the opposite Black Liberation Pole were  revolutionary thinkers like Malcolm X. Malcolm&#8217;s early political understanding  was stifled by what I call &#8216;reverse racism&#8217; \u2013 the subjective idea that Blacks  are by nature superior to whites and whites are the embodiment of &#8216;evil.&#8217; This  view was initially behind his support for Blacks to separate from Amerika. But  he wasn&#8217;t exactly anti-capitalist. In fact, as a leading member of the Nation  of Islam, he belonged to an organization that itself promoted Black capitalism.  Despite this, his voice was a beacon to New Afrikans who opposed integration  into Amerika and accommodation with its white ruling class.<\/p>\n<p>The power structure repeatedly maneuvered to block <em>both<\/em> trends of our movement, prompting New  Afrikans to fight back physically against both racial oppression and enforced  poverty, and a broad grassroots movement of poor Blacks spontaneously organized  to March on Washington, D.C. in 1963, with the intention of shutting the  Capital down \u2013 stopping all movement in D.C. Including shutting down government  operations, traffic, airports, commerce, etc.<\/p>\n<p>This is when President John F. Kennedy decided to open  up the Democratic Party to Blacks as a \u201csupporter\u201d of us getting basic civil  rights and \u201cequality\u201d within the capitalist system, Kennedy and his big money  backers financed King, (who was not broadly known then, but was a prominent  pacifist civil rights leader in the South), and used him to rein-in and control  Black militancy, and the spontaneously-planned 1963 march, which initially MLK  had nothing to do with. He became the face and the voice Kennedy and Co. used  in the mainstream media, the churches and elsewhere to speak to the riled-up  Black masses and contain their festering rage that was threatening to  militantly besiege the U.S. capital.<\/p>\n<p>The U.S. government was compelled to use King and the  Democratic Party to avert what would have been a major political and economic  crisis that would have shattered its world image. At that time, I believe that  MLK, confused by his pro-capitalist class interests, na\u00efve faith in the federal  government, and his avowed pacifism, was sincerely opposed to Black racial  oppression and felt he was doing the right thing.<\/p>\n<p>So King was used as a political pawn to convert what  was going to be an angry Black militant siege of D.C. into a  government-controlled, passive, one-day march where Blacks \u2013 manipulated into a  pacifist spirit with \u201cthings will get better someday\u201d speeches \u2013 marched, sang,  and cried out their frustrations, pain and misery, with a few white  sympathizers on the fringes. It was a general repeat of what we&#8217;d done for  centuries during and since slavery in the Black churches.<\/p>\n<p>Now Malcolm X witnessed this entire farce, saw it for  the trick it was, and bitterly criticized King and his allies. Malcolm pointed  out that Amerika had repeatedly stifled, subverted, tricked and infiltrated  every Black struggle for genuine freedom from oppressive conditions, government  brutality and neglect, endemic poverty and white racism; and that the 1963  march was just another example of this. He predicted that the Black masses  recognized this too, were fed up, and and as a result Amerika was in for a  \u201clong hot summer\u201d of Black revolt. And just as he predicted, beginning in 1964,  (just months after the 1963 march), and continuing through 1968, Black ghettos  across the U.S. exploded in continual revolt.<\/p>\n<p>Meantime, after being excommunicated from the NOI by  Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm began traveling across Afrika, studying their  liberation struggles, working to build Pan-Afrikan ties between the oppressed  New Afrikan masses in Amerika and the newly liberated Afrikan nations. From the  1950s through the 1960s, Afrikans were fighting for and winning political  independence from European colonialism, and establishing new formally  independent Afrikan-led nations. With the European colonizers being expelled  from Afrika, and Afrikans taking over the governments, Amerika sought to  establish ties with the new heads of the Afrikan countries, so it could secure  access to and control over Afrika&#8217;s abundant natural wealth. However, racism in  Amerika presented an image problem that could prevent the U.S. ruling class  from winning the \u201chearts and minds\u201d of Afrika&#8217;s new Black leaders, and their  diplomats who were visiting or living in Amerika. This was actually the motive  behind federal government efforts to outlaw segregation in the southern states,  beginning with the landmark ruling in <em>Brown  v. Board of Education<\/em> in the mid-1950s.<\/p>\n<p>Even during the most rabid periods of racial  oppression, Amerika always projected a patently false international image of  the U.S. being a racial and cultural \u201cmelting pot\u201d where all people lived and  were treated equally. Malcolm&#8217;s efforts threatened U.S. imperialist ambitions  in Afrika, as he was actually exposing the true racist face of Amerika to  Afrikans and showing them that their own sistas&#8217; and brothas&#8217; were brutally  oppressed in Amerika, as they had been under the European colonial systems they  had just struggled to break free of in Afrika.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike MLK, Malcolm X at this stage was a strong  advocate of our right to struggle for political independence and separation  from Euro-Amerikan rule, &#8211; as Afrikans were doing in Afrika \u2013 and to defend  ourselves against racist violence, \u201cby any means necessary,\u201d which included by  use of arms. Malcolm&#8217;s views became more and more revolutionary and less rooted  in reverse racism, as a result of his international travels. His pilgrimage to  Mecca exposed him to the reality that whites were not inherently \u201cevil,\u201d but  that the brutal racism that he witnessed in Amerika was the result of  conditions created by those who ran and \u201cowned\u201d society.<\/p>\n<p>His closer study of U.S. imperialism led him to reject  capitalism. The major government fear of Malcolm was that he was winning the  support of the nations of color in Afrika and Asia, who were coming to identify  Amerika as an imperialist power that was colonizing the Blacks within its own  borders, and Malcolm was seen by Afrikan and Asian leaders as the legitimate  leader and representative of the oppressed New Afrikans. This threatened to win  international support for our right to struggle for national independence from  Amerika, just as Afrikans and Asians were doing against European colonialism. Malcolm  was also maneuvering to formally present the grievances of New Afrikans against  Amerika, including charges of genocide, before the United Nations through a  petition he&#8217;d drafted. But before all the pieces could come together, the CIA  had him assassinated in 1965.<\/p>\n<p>Inspired by Malcolm&#8217;s revolutionary nationalist and  Pan-Afrikan internationalist visions, Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale founded  the Black Panther Party (BPP) the next year to lead this struggle. The BPP  openly adopted an anti-capitalist and pro-socialist platform, and implemented  socialist [Serve The People\/Survival] programs in the ghettos to organize and  serve the needs of the people free of dependence on the imperialist system. This  quickly earned the Panthers \u2013 and the Young Communist Movement they helped  inspire \u2013 the label of being <em>the <\/em>major  threat to the U.S. capitalist system.<\/p>\n<p>Meantime, King became more and more exposed to the  fundamental contradictions in capitalism and became disillusioned with it, and  blind faith in the U.S. government, and the idea of Black integration into the  U.S. Empire as it existed. He thus broke ranks with the middle class,  pro-capitalist, civil rights agenda and came out in support of the poor and  working class, and bitterly opposed the war in Vietnam as an adventure in  imperial conquest against Asian people struggling for liberation from  imperialism.<\/p>\n<p>King became a closet socialist, knowing he&#8217;d be killed  if he openly championed socialism. But as a devout pacifist he had no concrete  ideas on how to pursue a struggle to empower the oppressed poor and working  class people to transition Amerika into a socialist society.<\/p>\n<p>Realizing that he&#8217;d been used by the U.S. imperialists  in 1963 to stifle the Black movement for fundamental change, MLK planned a new  march on Washington to occur in 1968 as a Poor People&#8217;s Encampment. This  campaign would lay siege to the capital as planned in 1963 until subverted, but  this time on behalf of all of Amerika&#8217;s poor and oppressed peoples. King&#8217;s  \u201cbetrayal\u201d of capitalism and radical change of politics could not be tolerated  by the imperialists, who&#8217;d made him a widely recognized leader whom they knew  multitudes of Black people across the nation respected and would follow. Therefore,  the U.S. government had him assassinated just months before the Poor People&#8217;s  Encampment was set to occur.<\/p>\n<p>Another factor in his assassination was that,  beginning in late 1967, MLK became increasingly vocal that he was losing faith  in passive resistance and growing tired of being repeatedly brutalized and  arrested by the government. The FBI admitted its aim to \u201cneutralize\u201d  (government-speak for murder) King for fear he would ultimately abandon his  views on passive resistance and openly embrace a genuinely revolutionary line  that included the right of the oppressed masses to defend themselves against  official violence and pursue fundamental change through methods that included  armed struggle.<\/p>\n<p>When, in latter 1967, he began expressing the need to  \u201cfashion new tactics which do not count on government good will, but instead  serve to <em>compel<\/em> unwilling  authorities to yield to the mandates of justice,\u201d I believe Dr. King was  beginning to struggle \u2013 even if only unconsciously \u2013 with the inherent  contradictions of pacifism as a political strategy. I think he was coming to  realize as well that he was not really a pacifist. Since, for example, he had  embraced the government&#8217;s use of violence as \u201clegitimate,\u201d while rejecting that  of the people acting in self-defense as \u201cillegitimate.\u201d Indeed, while he  counseled the people to practice pacifism in the face of racist and oppressive  violence, he&#8217;d long looked to the federal government to provide <em>armed protection<\/em> to him, his colleagues,  an their followers during southern marches and protests.<\/p>\n<p>He came to realize that it was Amerika&#8217;s \u201cvery own  government\u201d that was actually \u201cthe greatest purveyor of violence in the world,\u201d  which left him with the realization that no such power could be looked to by  the people to genuinely provide protection and that he was likely to meet a  violent end himself at the hands of the government \u2013 and he did. Hence his fear  to openly promote and lead a mass movement for socialism in Amerika.<\/p>\n<p>A thorough investigation into the role played by the  various U.S. government agencies in King&#8217;s murder in 1968, and the cover-ups  that followed, can be found in William Pepper&#8217;s <em>An Act of State: The Execution of Martin Luther King<\/em> (2003).<\/p>\n<p>After MLK&#8217;s death, the liberal wing of the U.S.  capitalist ruling class&#8217;s political vanguard (namely the Democratic Party),  used the 1963 pro-capitalist, integrationist version of MLK and  Black-capitalist civil rights leaders like Jesse Jackson, Sr., (in his final  years King was opposed to Jackson&#8217;s Black capitalism), to project the  Democratic Party as Black Amerika&#8217;s friend and champion, and the channel  through which we should pursue social justice. \u201cBlack capitalism\u201d was promoted  by the imperialists as the key to Black progress. In fact, a plan was promoted,  since 1967 by FBI assistant director William E. Sullivan, to destroy MLK and  other influential, independent, Black political leaders and activists, and then  handpick a \u201cnew national Negro leader\u201d to replace them. Sullivan wrote of his  plan to destroy such Black leaders:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p> \u201cWhen this is  done, and it can <em>and will be done<\/em>,  obviously much confusion will reign, particularly among the Negro people&#8230;.  The Negroes will be left without a national leader of sufficiently compelling  personality to steer them in the proper direction.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p> He promoted that Samuel R. Pierce, Jr., a Black,  capitalist, corporate lawyer, be groomed to replace the destroyed Black  leadership. However, a new leadership emerged from amongst the people to fill  the void, before the imperialist scheme could take root.<\/p>\n<p>This new leadership, namely the BPP, came under  all-out attack by the U.S. government at all levels. Its key members were  openly assassinated by police and\/or jailed on obvious frame-ups, the  government attempted to manipulate and even financed violence-prone street gangs  and street-level Black capitalist groups into \u201cgang-warfare\u201d against the  Panthers. Government agents and \u201cfriendlies\u201d inside the media were used to  publish articles and air reports slandering and demonizing the Panthers to the  Amerikan public. Agent provocateurs were infiltrated into the BPP to incite and  carry out acts of violence that would make government counter-violence appear  justified. BPP supporters were harassed, slandered, attacked and arrested,  Panther community service programs were disrupted, and so on, all carried out  as a counter-intelligence program (COINTELPRO) of the FBI.<\/p>\n<p>Because of a flawed internal organizational structure,  and because it came to be wrongly \u201ccommanded\u201d by Huey instead of correctly led  collectively by genuine democratic-centralism, the BPP rank and file were  unprepared to handle and to counter government instigations that caused the  Panthers to split into two factions; one wing adopted a  rightist-accommodationist, liberal-reformist line [like running Bobby Seale for  mayor of Oakland as the Democratic Party candidate], while the other wing  adopted an adventurist, ultra-leftist, militarist line. Under continued  government attack, while pursuing these flawed and incorrect political lines,  the Panthers were unable to combat the government&#8217;s campaign, and the Panthers  ultimately self-destructed, with no suitable leadership in the Black community  to replace them.<\/p>\n<p>Although several attempts have been made to regroup  and rebuild a revolutionary party to lead and organize the Black masses in our  struggles, each has failed or disintegrated because none have correctly summed  up the lessons of our previous failures and applied this knowledge. So in this  void, the Empire has been able to push Black capitalism on the people free of  opposition, challenge or alternative, as the <em>only<\/em> <em>viable solution<\/em> to our oppressed  condition \u2013 but capitalism is the very <em>cause<\/em> of our oppression and all of our problems. Indeed, it was the lust for profits  and the dollar that was behind the kidnapping and enslavement of our Afrikan  ancestors to begin with: Capitalism is the enemy!<\/p>\n<p>The cities, where new Afrikan and other oppressed  nationalities are concentrated in large numbers, were and are seen as an area  of continual threat by the Empire. Deep-seated mass insecurity and desperation  still lie just under the surface. Therefore, if ever organized and united in  struggle for fundamental change, the U.S. ghettos and barrios could easily  transform into revolutionary fronts and base areas here inside the \u201cBelly of  the Beast.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But this cannot happen spontaneously. It demands a  conscious and committed revolutionary leadership. The Establishment realizes  this, and this is why it has remained committed to undermining and destroying  every persyn or organization that threatens to take up the torch of the  original BPP and lead our people in this direction. To stifle urban  revolutionary potential, the system has implemented policies to foster and  perpetuate instability in the urban centers, flooding them with narcotics (first  heroin and then also crack cocaine, PCP and other addictive and deadly drugs)  and military-grade weapons (like AK-47&#8217;s and Uzis) which generated severe  social degeneration, fratricidal gang wars and genocidal implosion.<\/p>\n<p>Stripped of revolutionary leadership and organization,  the urban youth have only had their neighborhood gangs (which have been  manipulated and used by the oppressor). In place of political purpose and  cultural pride, and the self-respect the revolutionary leadership gave the  urban youth \u2013 which united them in struggle against oppression and for  liberation, &#8211; the Empire and its entertainment media have promoted a  self-destructive subculture of \u201cgangsterism,\u201d (Black and Brown; imitations of  earlier movie images of expensively-dressed, luxury car-driving, Italian  Mafioso and other white hoodlums devoid of social consciousness), vulgar  materialism, crass consumerism, moral depravity, rampant individualism,  self-gratification at the expense of the community, nihilism and an illegal,  ghetto version of Black capitalism in general.<\/p>\n<p>Under these government-created conditions, the youth  turned their poverty-driven frustration and potentially revolutionary rage  against themselves, with inner-community violence, street crime and  drug-peddling. The Establishment then used these conditions they had created  and facilitated to justify increasing their own violent repression of the urban  communities under their declared \u201cWar on Drugs,\u201d \u201cWar on Crime,\u201d and \u201cWar on  Gangs.\u201d The result has been enhancing of the militarization of the police  occupation of these communities and incarceration of the cream of our  potentially-revolutionary youth inside the massive, and ever-expanding  prison-industrial complex.<\/p>\n<p>In a 2006 report entitled <em>Cracks in the System: Twenty years of the Unjust Federal Crack Cocaine  Law<\/em>, even the ACLU admitted that the \u201cDrug War\u201d is targeted at  Blacks and has in effect turned U.S. prisons into mass disposal sites for Black  people. We can see this scheme was greatly enhanced with the added \u201cWar on  Gangs.\u201d And make no mistake about it, Black youth are the principle targets. The  CIA has acknowledged that the largely, youthful, urbanized ethnic populations  present a danger of \u201cregime-threatening unrest.\u201d A 1984 CIA report stated:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cThe youth of a  growing population may very well play a major role in pressing for change. They  are among those who are usually disproportionately disadvantaged: They have  less at stake in the existing structure of authority, more idealism, more  impatience, and in a society with a steady or rising rate of growth their  proportion to the total population increases. The density of the number of  youth relative to the total population may thus be a clue to strength of pressure  for change.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Malcolm X also observed that it was the youth who made  up the greater portion of the rank and file forces leading the struggles  against colonial oppression in Afrika and Asia. And it was the New Afrikan  youth who rose up in revolt against neo-colonial oppression in the urban centers  here in Amerika from 1964 to 1968. It is this dense, growing population of  urban ethnic youth that the strategy of mass incarceration is designed to  deplete. The U.S. prison-industrial complex is a fascist tool of social  containment, a weapon evolved to a level of sophistication that makes the  concentration camps of Nazi Germany appear crude and amateurish by comparison.<\/p>\n<p>The Establishment fears nothing else as much as it  fears these disadvantaged and oppressed youth developing a revolutionary  consciousness. California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger made this quite clear  when he refused to commute Stanley \u201cTookie\u201d Williams&#8217; death sentence in 2006,  not because \u201cTookie\u201d was a founding member of one of Amerika&#8217;s largest urban  youth gangs, but because he dedicated his book \u2013 <em>Life in Prison<\/em> \u2013 to New Afrikan revolutionary leaders of the  1960s and 70s, specifically George Jackson \u2013 the founder of the original BPP  prison chapter \u2013 who was assassinated at San Quentin by prison guards in 1971.<\/p>\n<p>The prisons were a major front in our liberation  struggle in the 60s and 70s. It was in an effort to crush this aspect of our  movement and the outside support for our movement after George Jackson&#8217;s murder  and the Attica Uprising that followed, that the system began the proliferation  of \u201ccontrol units\u201d and \u201csupermax\u201d prisons, beginning with the Marion control  unit established in 1972. The strategy was to weed-out and isolate potential  leaders while the remainder were pitted against each other with instigated  racial and gang violence.<\/p>\n<p>They <em>want<\/em> us to be divided by racial hatred and to kill each other off with  \u201cgang-bangin&#8217;,\u201d to shoot-up and peddle dope in our neighborhoods to weaken and  harm ourselves and our communities \u2013 just as they used alcohol to destabilize  the Native American tribes and imported opium to undermine the Chinese in the  1800s. They <em>want<\/em> us engaged in  and degraded by a pimp-ho subculture, objectifying our sistas as commodities  and selling their bodies on the block like we were sold into slavery, and catching  and spreading deadly sexually-transmitted diseases, like the HIV\/AIDS and  hepatitis, furthering the strategy of genocidal disposal of our youth. That&#8217;s  how much they <em>fear<\/em> us becoming  revolutionaries and uniting and struggling for liberation and to pull down this  predatory capitalist system that is the <em>cause<\/em> of our poverty, insecurity and misery.<\/p>\n<p>Another component of urban population control is  \u201cspatial deconcentration,\u201d a policy implemented since the &#8217;60s revolts of  breaking up large concentrations of poor Blacks, which includes \u201curban  gentrification\u201d of neighborhoods, closing down housing projects, and pushing  poor people into the suburbs, smaller cities and towns. It also includes  integrating other ethnic poor into formerly all-Black neighborhoods.<\/p>\n<p>Our conditions of poverty, lack of job availability,  security and accessible basic services that are essential to survival for urban  people, are worse today than they were back in the &#8217;60s. So we exist as a  perpetually threatening (to the Empire) dependent population with little value  to the wealthy elite. Therefore, we face a very real and ever more intense  official policy of genocide calculated to spread us thin and pick us off by  increasing our death rate, decreasing our birth rate and lowering our life  expectancy.<\/p>\n<p>There is a deeply-rooted capitalist logic behind this  policy. If we look back to capitalism&#8217;s early development out of European  feudalism, we find capitalist economic theorists like Thomas Malthus and David  Ricardo openly advocating the need to mass exterminate populations who couldn&#8217;t  be put to profitable use by the rising capitalists. In his 1798 treatise <em>An Essay on the Principle of Population<\/em>,  Malthus suggested that if surplus population groups couldn&#8217;t \u201cgo somewhere  else,\u201d they should be killed off through artificially-created famines, wars and  plagues.<\/p>\n<p>Under the feudal system that preceded capitalism,  government policies recognized the need for supporting and providing of the  poor with basic necessities in order to maintain stability and avoid  rebellions. Yet the monarchs still found it necessary to seal themselves away  from the masses whom they plundered from inside walled and fortified palaces. Under  capitalism, however, Malthus and others held that providing for the poor would  cause an unacceptable loss of profits for the rich, therefore the poor should  be removed to \u201csomewhere else\u201d or exterminated. These \u201cMalthusian\u201d concepts  were and remain a basic tenet of capitalist logic in a system that put profits  over people.<\/p>\n<p>It could be no other way in a system that turns on  taking and hoarding the wealth produced by the labor of workers, with the  result of rendering them dependent and poor, making mass revolt inevitable. So  those in power must contain or deplete this potentially rebellious population  to prevent their coming together to pull down the system that exploits them and  put things under their own control. This is the hidden logic behind the schemes  of displacement and depopulation that threaten Black people and poor and oppressed  people everywhere and are most apparent in the 3rd World. From  imperialist-instigated tribal, ethnic and gang wars through which we are  induced to kill each other; to economically-induced famines, such as the one  devastating the Sub-Saharan region; to the unchecked spread of the HIV\/AIDS  virus that is destroying millions of Black lives on every continent; to  flooding our communities with narcotics; to mass incarceration of our young men  and wimyn in prisons where they cannot reproduce, we are under genocidal  attack!<\/p>\n<p>The latter condition basically replicates the same  system of using armed lower-class whites to guard and dominate masses of  enslaved Blacks that we were subjected to under chattel slavery before the  Civil War. The \u201cNew Slavery\u201d of the prison-industrial complex shows that  \u201chistory repeats itself,\u201d but as it was then motivated by a shortage of  necessary labor to work the land, it is today motivated by a surplus of labor  that cannot be profitably exploited by the capitalists. Because we have no  value today \u2013 as we did on the old plantations \u2013 we find ourselves facing  genocidal policies much like those historically aimed at the Native Americans.<\/p>\n<p>Also, our conditions become more desperate by the day:  with growing mass urban concentrations, and a continuing \u201cGreat Migration\u201d of  industrial and manufacturing jobs away from the cities, the working class is  shrinking fast and Black workers everywhere are being marginalized, even as the  urban proletariat keeps growing. They can&#8217;t find full-time jobs at decent  wages, and here in the U.S. there is a cap on welfare. The ghettos have become  dead ends leading only to early graves or prisons.<\/p>\n<p>So the power structure has had to feed us false hopes  in the form of a \u201cBlack\u201d President \u2013 a hand-picked Black capitalist-serving  President \u2013 to mislead us in the face of a genuine leadership vacuum. They now  have us chasing dreams of Black capitalism, while we are caught in a crisis of  deadly competition with each other and other poor folks for five minutes of fame  and a temporary shopping spree, through channels that have destroyed our  culture, destroyed our history and collective memory, destroyed our  communities, and is ultimately destroying us.<\/p>\n<p>And it is no grand conspiracy. It is the simple logic  of the globalized capitalist system which operates only to enrich a tiny,  super-rich elite class at the expense of everybody else. Just like the dopeman  on the block who doesn&#8217;t care whose lives he destroys or who he uses to turn a  profit and gratify his wants. <em>This<\/em> is the logic we&#8217;ve learned from the capitalists.<\/p>\n<p>The first to get the axe are those the capitalists  value least \u2013 those considered most expendable \u2013 and those least able to defend  themselves. In other words; <em>US<\/em>. That  is our situation today.<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Anthony Rayson<\/u><\/strong>: I am astounded by the complexity and subtlety of your artwork. Seeing  one of your originals, one cannot but be amazed \u2013 especially as you are  accorded such rudimentary materials. Can you explain to us how you developed as  such an accomplished artist (and what your driving motivation is)?<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Rashid<\/u><\/strong>: In your introduction to this interview you mentioned that my  drawing tools consist of pen and pencil. Actually, the only tools I use are  five inch long ballpoint pen and standard typing paper.<\/p>\n<p>While I appreciate the compliments I often receive on  my art, (which acknowledges that it reaches people on more than a superficial  level), I think we all have particular skills and talents \u2013 or can develop them  \u2013 and if driven by a certain level of determination, we can evolve them to  exceptional levels.<\/p>\n<p>My art is driven by my determination to contribute  what I can towards educating and inspiring the common people to collectively  build the struggle to crush imperialist oppression, which is the cause of all  other forms of social oppression. A major front in this struggle, as I&#8217;ve  already pointed out, is the cultural front. This front, &#8211; which relates  directly to raising the consciousness and resolve of the masses, &#8211; must  directly challenge and counter the dominant bourgeois culture, which reflects  and promotes the corrupt values of capitalism and conceals and stifles mass  culture. Art (imagery and sound) is a major form of cultural expression. With  my art, I aspire to produce images whose quality is both aesthetically pleasing  (to capture and hold the eye and emotions) while educating (even if only  initially on a subconscious level).<\/p>\n<p>The vast majority of people are affective decision  makers rather than cognitive decision makers. Meaning, they base decisions more  on emotion than calculated reason. This is especially the case in a society  like this where the reasoning faculties of the masses are kept in suspended  animation. This is a reality that seems to be lost to most academic \u201cMarxists\u201d  and Anarchists alike, and it is why they fail to reach and inspire the masses. (They  spend most of their time talking to themselves and going over the common  people&#8217;s heads).<\/p>\n<p>The ruling class realizes this and in fact promotes  forms of \u201ceducation\u201d that basically train the people to function on the  spontaneous emotional level rather than cognitively. The masses of Amerikans  function without thinking much at all. This is why the capitalists are so  successful at manipulating public opinion through media that is targeted almost  exclusively at the basest and most primitive emotional levels. They don&#8217;t call  their communications media an <em>entertainment<\/em> industry for nothing. So a big part of our struggle is, as George Jackson  recognized, to teach people <em>how<\/em> to think instead of <em>what<\/em> to think.  This is a struggle carried out in the ideological and educational fields, and  is targeted at <em>awakening<\/em> the  conscious mind.<\/p>\n<p>Whereas artistic imagery both captures and informs the  emotions, many may be unwilling or unable as yet to grasp the ideas in print or  spoken word form. Artistic imagery reaches another, deeper, level of the psyche  \u2013 often involuntarily and unconsciously. Therefore I try to educate using both  words and imagery and reach both the rational and emotional levels of the mind.  This allows a dialectical balance in consciousness raising, reaching large  numbers of people despite the limitations of my physical surroundings and  availability of materials. In fact my art has been copied, circulated and seen  by people on a vastly larger scale than my writings. Art makes knowledge  accessible across class, race, gender, educational and state boundaries.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m also a particularly determined persyn. When I  commit to something, I invest my all into it, often to the point of exhaustion  or injury. We all have that capacity, it&#8217;s just where our interests lie and  where we are motivated to invest our energies. I&#8217;m no different from anyone  else. I&#8217;m really not exceptional. Most people&#8217;s limitations are self-imposed:  The result of self-doubt or lack of interest. The same factors I believe are  behind New Afrikans and other oppressed peoples having remained oppressed for  so long. We&#8217;ve been conditioned to doubt ourselves and our ability to overthrow  our oppressors, or we&#8217;re distracted to the point of lack of interest in  pursuing liberation.<\/p>\n<p>I don&#8217;t doubt myself, although I often question myself  and self-criticize (and by extension I don&#8217;t doubt the masses), because I know  that we\/I have the same capacity to do what anyone else can. It just requires  correctly analyzing problems and devising correct solutions. This awareness is  what often allows me to devise ways to counter or overcome adversity and  maneuver around external restraints.<\/p>\n<p>We&#8217;ve been so conditioned to self-doubt and therefore  have become so consumed with idolizing others that we forget we can each become  or do the same things. For example, since 2006, and as part of a campaign of  repression, I&#8217;ve been indicted on some sixteen criminal charges \u2013 3 times for  attempted capital murder of a prison guard. In each case I represented myself  and got the charges either withdrawn or dismissed. That&#8217;s pretty much unheard  of, but I didn&#8217;t approach these cases with self-doubt. I know I have just as  much sense as any lawyer, and with the right tools and time can do just as well  defending myself. Plus, I planned ahead. Before all this came down, I&#8217;d already  spent years collecting pertinent legal materials and learning law. This is how  I approach most problems.<\/p>\n<p>I study, critically analyze material conditions and  evaluate what others have done, and what I&#8217;ve done. I investigate mistakes and  successes, looking at things from both sides, pro and con, and I search for  play in the joints. I use what tools I have at hand and I improvise. I&#8217;ve done  this for so long that it&#8217;s become natural. In this regard, I was a Marxist \u2013 a  practiced dialectical-materialist \u2013 long before I ever heard of Marx, Engels,  Lenin or Mao. Studying them just gave me more clarity and a philosophical and  ideological explanation of my practice. And my practice, like <em>genuine<\/em> Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, is  anything but dogmatic and mechanical.<\/p>\n<p>As you recognize, I get results. It all boils down to  applying practical judgment, determination, flexibility and also audacity (the  will to act) to change material conditions. It&#8217;s the scientific approach to  solving problems and is why Mao called Dialectical Materialism a \u201cliving  science.\u201d This is why \u201cintellectuals\u201d and \u201cacademics\u201d who&#8217;ve become conditioned  to trying to solve problems inside their heads instead of in the real world  don&#8217;t comprehend Marxist theory and can only perceive it mechanically as a  dogma.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m just determined. This struggle means a great deal  to me, so I will find ways to contribute my best to it. Period. Until I stop  breathing, that&#8217;s what I&#8217;ll do.<\/p>\n<p>I suppose I&#8217;ve always had an inclination towards art,  but never much pursued it. As a child, I used to draw, although infrequently. While  I was never consistent with it, I could just do it at will, unlike a lot of \u201cnatural\u201d  artists I&#8217;ve known who have to be in a certain mood. Between 1990, when I began  my present term of imprisonment, and 2001, I probably drew no more than about  15 pictures total. It wasn&#8217;t until I began studying the struggle that I really  set into drawing regularly, creating images that expressed and depicted themes  of struggle and oppression and those who organized against oppression, which  continues to develop, as does \u2013 I feel \u2013 the quality of my art.<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Anthony Rayson<\/u><\/strong>: You&#8217;ve poured a lot of your energies lately into building up your  Panther Prison Chapter. Can you tell us what the main tenets are, who the  principle activists are, what you hope to achieve, and how it relates to other  Panther formations and other anti-imperialists?<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Rashid<\/u><\/strong>: Yeah, the New Afrikan Black Panther Party Prison Chapter  (NABPP-PC) has been my main energy focus since Comrade Shaka Sankofa Zulu and I  co-founded it in 2005.<\/p>\n<p>The major tenet is \u201cPantherism\u201d as elaborated by the  original Black Panther Party (BPP) during its most revolutionary stages. Specifically,  Pantherism is revolutionary New Afrikan\/Black nationalism, pan-Afrikanism and  proletarian internationalism illuminated by the \u201cScience of Revolution\u201d  (Historical and Dialectical Materialism). We identify with the BPP because in  our analysis it <em>was<\/em>, when at its  best, the most revolutionary and successful organization on Amerika&#8217;s Left, and  made the greatest all-round gains for New Afrikans in our struggle against  national oppression and white supremacy.<\/p>\n<p>Before the BPP was split into two factions by  government attacks that left each pursuing opposite erroneous lines, (one of  ultra-leftist militant reaction and the other of rightist-reformism), the BPP  was breaking new ground in building the struggle for revolution in Amerika. Through  applying HDM, we aspire to rebuild the BPP, learning from and applying the  lessons of its advances and mistakes and learning from the lessons of the  struggles of today. Especially we are focused on studying and correcting its  errors, because we are determined that this time we shall win.<\/p>\n<p>Our work is at this time focused on transforming the  \u201cRazor wire Plantations\u201d into \u201cSchools of Liberation,\u201d to educate, uplift and  organize those within the prisons and convert these humyn warehouses into revolutionary  universities which will produce Panther cadres and activists of all  nationalities and races. 85% of all those incarcerated in the U.S. will  eventually return to society. Our goal is to see many of them empowered to  return to their oppressed and poor communities and play a role in transforming  them into revolutionary base areas. The next step is to replicate this process  on an international level.<\/p>\n<p>At this point in time we have Party collectives in  many U.S. prisons. But unlike other formations people can&#8217;t just join our  Party, but are instead recruited based upon <em>proven<\/em> commitment to the struggle, and they must adopt and adhere to our Rules and  Discipline and 10 Point Program. This is required because we fully understand  that talk is cheap, and many folks who claim aspiration and dedication to push  the struggle forward don&#8217;t have a full understanding of or the resolve to  sustain the difficulties of the work, the hardships and self-sacrifice that is  required. Some who approach us will be working for the enemy.<\/p>\n<p>So we are setting it up so that commitment and  sincerity must be proven through service in a mass organization like the New  Afrikan Service Organization (NASO) before a candidate is recruited into the  Party. NASO operates under the leadership of our Party and has as its basis of  unity support for the 10-Point Program, but it is building its own leadership  structure under a National Steering Committee. Folks <em>can<\/em> join or start new chapters very easily. NASO operates on  democratic principles (as opposed to democratic centralism, and we seek to  include a wide spectrum of ideological and political orientations within this  organization.<\/p>\n<p>Contrary to bourgeois propaganda and bourgeois  \u201cleadership style,\u201d a genuine vanguard party, such as we aspire to become,  doesn&#8217;t lead the people by compulsion or \u201ccommandism.\u201d Its leadership must be  voluntarily accepted by the masses based on its proven commitment to serving  their genuine welfare and interests, and demonstrated ability to organize and  lead the people in solving their own problems. As Mao pointed out:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cEvery  comrade&#8230; should help the masses to organize themselves step by step and on a voluntary  basis to unfold gradually struggles that are necessary and permissible under  the external and internal conditions obtaining at a particular time and place. Whatever  we do, authoritarianism is always erroneous because, as a result of our  impetuosity, it makes us go beyond the degree of the masses awakening and  violates the principle of voluntary action on the part of the masses.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In its practical application, this style of leadership  is based exclusively on the principle \u201cfrom the masses to the masses,\u201d which  means we take the ideas of the masses (raw, unorganized and scattered ideas)  and concentrate them (through study and transform them into organized  systematic ideas) and return them to the masses in the form of slogans and  programs. And we rely upon collective leadership.<\/p>\n<p>As an illustration, take for example a mass of people  confined to a barren land. The overall group doesn&#8217;t know how to work the land  so it will become productive and produce food or sustain livestock and are  therefore on the verge of starvation. There can be no doubt that the masses <em>want<\/em> to produce sufficient food to eat and  survive. Problem is <em>they don&#8217;t know how<\/em>.  Now there are a couple of their members who have managed to study the  ecological factors of their given environment and learned techniques to  transform the barren land into a virtual paradise of production. So they go  about showing the people by example how to do it and organize their collective  power to produce this result.<\/p>\n<p>Now they don&#8217;t force their leadership on the people,  the people embrace them voluntarily because of their proven example and ability  to help them help themselves, and because they are themselves <em>of the people<\/em>. Instead of standing <em>above<\/em> the people giving orders and  punishing their errors, the comrades work alongside the people and share their  knowledge freely, encouraging collective leadership, so that ultimately the  leaders and the people become one in understanding and practice. In essence,  this is how a mass-based vanguard leadership works \u2013 though my example may be a  bit oversimplified. And this is what the Chinese Communist Party under Mao&#8217;s  leadership strove for during China&#8217;s revolutionary years, contrary to bourgeois  lies and propaganda \u2013 that are often uncritically parroted by many \u201cLeftists.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Under this leadership style, the masses&#8217; disorganized  and unsystematic ideas are organized and systematized, returned to them as  programs, explained and popularized until they embrace and implement them. Then  they are tested and refined through summing up practice. This process is  repeated over and over in an ongoing spiral of practice-summation-practice. The  ideas thereby become more and more correct and useful \u2013 connected to life and  productive.<\/p>\n<p>This is the scientific method which reflects the  Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Theory of Knowledge. Through <em>proof<\/em> of its correctness in theory by practice in serving  the people, the Party continuously <em>earns<\/em> the support and confidence of the masses. It makes no claim to leadership  except by the consent of the masses it serves.<\/p>\n<p>It takes an organization of people who share a certain  level of consciousness, commitment and discipline to provide this sort of  leadership, and an organizational structure that facilitates the maximum degree  of inner-party discussion with the maximum degree of unity in action. It  requires constant struggle to check corrupting influences and tendencies. In  this context, the New Afrikan masses and the Party must be able to expect a  high degree of commitment and dedication to the cause of revolution and social  justice \u2013 even unto death.<\/p>\n<p>We Panthers must put the highest interests of humynity  above self-interest and endure hardships and self-sacrifices when they are  called for. The oppressed masses have a right to expect us to be consistent and  not vacillate or sell them out \u2013 no matter what \u2013 to build strength and not  weakness, to be honest and humble and never dishonor ourselves or the Party. Our  duties as revolutionaries are many, among which I think are:<\/p>\n<p>  1. To embrace  Historical Materialism (HM) and Dialectical Materialism (DM) and not sentimentalism,  romanticism or any kind of idealism.<\/p>\n<p>  2. To  proletarianize ourselves and be loyal to the class of the future (the  proletariat) and not the petty-bourgeoisie and their petty (and less than  revolutionary) concerns over bourgeois rights and privileges.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a03. To be  all-the-way revolutionary thinkers and leaders in the fight against all  oppression, all forms and manifestations of racism, sexism, ageism and any  other divisive prejudices harmful to uniting all who can be united to overthrow  capitalist-imperialism and build socialism.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a04. To reject  sectarianism while at the same time standing firm for proletarian ideology and struggling  for a correct ideological and political line to lead our movement forward.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a05. To combine  unity with struggle and be principled and aboveboard.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a06. To oppose  liberalism (see Mao&#8217;s Sept. 7 1937 essay <em>Combat  Liberalism<\/em>) and  rectify incorrect styles of thinking, work and conduct.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a07. To be open  to criticism by comrades and the masses and to practice self-criticism.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a08. To struggle  for objectivity, seek truth from facts and learn from the masses and the  struggle.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a09. To be  fair-minded, to listen to the people&#8217;s concerns and suggestions and apply HDM  to deepen their understanding and raise their level of consciousness and  ability to solve problems.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a010. To be loyal  to the Party and regard its life as your own, to defend it, build its strength  and influence and strive to perfect it as the vanguard of the people&#8217;s  struggle.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a011. To respect,  uphold, build and defend the democratic centralism of the Party, the subordination  of lower bodies to higher bodies, the minority to the majority and the whole  Party to the Central Committee or a sitting Party Congress.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a012. To be  united in spirit and action and to speak with one voice and act as one body.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a013. To be  self-disciplined, to live by the Party&#8217;s Rules of Discipline, uphold  proletarian morality and represent the bright future in the struggles of today,  striving always to be the people&#8217;s pride and a credit to the Party.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a014. To have  courage and dare to struggle and dare to win all power to the people, to die  for the people if necessary and endure any oppression as a true red-hearted  revolutionary.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a015. To practice  and promote revolution and not reformism, Pantherism and not cultural nationalism,  and revolutionary optimism and not cynical defeatism.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a016. To uphold  and defend and work to extend revolutionary intercommunalism and unite all the people  in all the oppressed communities on the planet through the United Panther  Movement.<\/p>\n<p>I think these sixteen points should be kept in mind at  all times and serve as a basis for further discussion throughout the Party and  our movement.<\/p>\n<p>Now, there are a <em>lot<\/em> of misconceptions and distortions about democratic centralism, some of which I  addressed in <em>On the Roles and  Characteristics of the Panther Vanguard Party and Mass Organizations<\/em>.  These misconceptions are largely the result of bourgeois-propagated  disinformation about the role and character of communist parties, but also they  reflect historical misapplications of the concept by groups on the Left where <em>commandism<\/em> was substituted for the <em>mass line<\/em> while claiming to be practicing  democratic centralism either out of ignorance or revisionism. Also many critics  have seized one-sidedly on errors made by various organizations on the Left and  presented those errors (while ignoring their correct aspects) as the essence of  these organizational forms and practices.<\/p>\n<p>As Dialectical Materialists, we recognize and  understand that nothing proceeds in a straight line, that every positive has a  negative side (and vice versa), and that humyn error is inherent in life. We  simply aspire to honestly evaluate things from both sides, to identify and  correct errors instead of throwing out the baby with the bath water. If we fail  to act for fear of making mistakes then we give victory to our oppressors by  default.<\/p>\n<p>The NABPP-PC includes the White Panther Organization  (WPO) and the Brown Panther Organizing Committee (BPOC), which are arms of our  Party being set up to represent our Party among and give ideological and  political leadership to oppressed white and brown people in the prisons and  oppressed communities. Our Party unites with all anti-imperialist forces,  including other Panther formations \u2013 such as the Black Riders Liberation Party,  the National Alliance of Black Panthers, the New Panther Vanguard Movement, the  Anarchist Panthers, etc. &#8211; even if we have disagreements with their line and  practice.<\/p>\n<p>There have been some inquiries and assumptions made  regarding ties or similarities we might have with the New Black Panther Party  (NBPP) which came out of the Nation of Islam (NOI) in the 1980s. We began as an  autonomous chapter of NBPP aspiring to change the orientation of the outside  NBPP into that of a genuine vanguard party in the New Afrikan communities,  however, we soon realized it was better to separate ourselves from NBPP&#8217;s  narrow nationalism and reverse racism. We also changed our name to the New  Afrikan BPP \u2013 Prison Chapter to further distinguish ourselves and reflect our  orientation towards revolutionary New Afrikan nationalism.<\/p>\n<p>Folks interested in learning more about or linking up  with NABPP-PC can do so by writing us care of:<\/p>\n<p>Rising Sun Publications<br \/>\n  PO Box 4362<br \/>\n  Allentown, PA 18105<\/p>\n<p>Information and some of our publications can also be  obtained through the Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) network.<\/p>\n<p>Lastly, we feel the U.S. prisons are an important  front in the struggle against imperialism. Prisoners are among the most  oppressed sectors of the U.S. population, and because many have a good deal of  time and opportunity to read and study, we stand to be potentially one of the  most advanced sections of the people. This is why prisons are sometimes call  the \u201cpoor man&#8217;s universities.\u201d Comrade George Jackson once stated that only two  types of people ever leave these concentration camps \u2013 the rebels and the  broken. But there&#8217;s one other type he overlooked, namely the revolutionaries. The  oppression inherent in these expanding humyn warehouses by nature breeds  rebels, but infused with proletarian revolutionary theory, prisoners can make  the qualitative leap from rebels to revolutionaries.<\/p>\n<p>Comrade Lenin said, \u201cWithout revolutionary theory  there can be no revolutionary movement.\u201d And it is these revolutionary  prisoners who, upon their release, can hit the streets like paratroopers,  joining and building the outside movement to educate, organize and lead the  less advanced masses in determined struggle to deal this dying  capitalist-imperialist system the <em>coup de  grace<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>We don&#8217;t plan to build our Panther movement just in  the U.S. but wherever poor and oppressed Black people (and all oppressed  people) are concentrated throughout the world. We plan to build WPO wherever  there are concentrations of poor whites and BPOC wherever poor and oppressed  brown people are concentrated. And I am sure we will eventually have a section  of the Party dedicated to organizing Asian people as well. Half the world&#8217;s  people now live in urban settings, jammed together in urban slums or  shantytowns, and we aspire to transform these into revolutionary Panther base  areas throughout the global capitalist empire.<\/p>\n<p>We aim to create and build people&#8217;s power from the  grassroots up, and to organize Serve the People (STP) survival programs,  People&#8217;s security forces and liberation schools. And we aim to link these urban  revolutionary base areas into an inter-communal network through the Party and  our own media and United Panther Movement. Between our work in the prisons and  the oppressed communities, we aim to raise up a revolutionary generation  schooled in the Science of Revolution, trained and tested in class struggle  through the Party and the mass organizations, so that we will not be dependent  upon petty-bourgeois intellectuals to lead our revolutionary movement. There  will of course be a role for these types who are willing to commit \u201cclass  suicide\u201d and dedicate themselves to becoming all-the-way revolutionaries and  remold themselves to adopt the class stand of the revolutionary proletariat.<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Anthony Rayson<\/u><\/strong>: As you know, I am a serious Anarchist, as you are a dedicated  Communist. At this point, we are on the same side of the barricades. The  fundamental difference of course, is the Communists want to take state power,  as the \u201cleader\u201d of the oppressed, and the Anarchists have as their goal the  elimination of oppressive state power altogether. As international capitalism,  led by the voraciously murderous U.S., gets more and more desperate to retain  its empire, the world&#8217;s people will suffer through more hellacious wars,  occupations, enslavements, lack of life&#8217;s basics such as food, water, health,  safety, etc. People will become more and more politically polarized. Some will  be suckered-in as fascist dupes (or outright agents and killers of the criminal  state). Others will look for truth, protection, and involvement in  revolutionary opposition \u2013 Communist, anarchist, New Afrikan, or otherwise.<\/p>\n<p>Anarchists believe that state power is the epitome of  evil \u2013 the ultimate corrupter. Now let&#8217;s assume that through a worldwide effort  we are able once-and-for-all to destroy the centuries&#8217; old nightmare of  capitalism. Let&#8217;s also assume we were also able to stop them from dragging all  life on earth down with them.<\/p>\n<p>So, there&#8217;s a chance at \u201cSocialism.\u201d Anarchists  believe in the equitable distribution along anti-authoritarian principles. Communists  want to assume state power and orchestrate it all from a \u201cCentral Committee.\u201d Every  other time Communists have attained power, they&#8217;ve repressed Anarchists, other  revolutionaries, etc. What would be different this time?<\/p>\n<p><strong><u>Rashid<\/u><\/strong>: I think this question offers the opportunity for an important  discussion in the ongoing debate between Anarchism and Communism. Also, it  exposes a common tendency I&#8217;ve observed of critics of Communism, namely that  their critiques are often pretty inaccurate and just repeat charges based on  superficial stereotypes. In fact, when one pushes Anarchists to the wall, and  compels them to give concrete answers to concrete problems, instead of abstract  criticisms, they begin to sound a lot like genuine Communists. Otherwise, they  don&#8217;t go deeply and thoroughly into solving the real problems that arise in  struggling to defeat an oppressive class system such as capitalism. But many of  their criticisms are valid and worthy of consideration.<\/p>\n<p>You begin with placing emphasis on the fact that  Anarchists want an equitable distribution of social wealth and to abolish the  state, but, by implication, you suggest Communists do not. Even the  \u201cmainstream\u201d recognizes these implications to be untrue. Take for example this  definition of \u201cCommunism\u201d given by the <em>Merriam  Webster Collegiate Encyclopedia<\/em> (2000):<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0<u>\u201cCommunism<\/u>:  Political theory advocating community ownership of all property, the benefits  of which are to be shared by all according to the needs of each. The theory was  principally the work of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels. Their <em>Communist Manifesto<\/em> (1848) further  specified a &#8216;dictatorship of the proletariat,&#8217; a transitional stage Marx called  socialism; communism was the final stage of which not only class division but  even the organized state \u2013 seen by Marx as inevitably an instrument of  oppression \u2013 would be transcended. That distinction was lost and &#8216;communism&#8217;  began to apply to a specific party rather than a final goal&#8230;\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>This summary of the nature and goals of Communism  sounds pretty similar to what you state are the goals of Anarchism: equitable  distribution of property and abolition of the state. Indeed, both Communists  and Anarchists agree that the state is an \u201cinstrument of oppression.\u201d But it  seems, just as the mainstream reference book points out, you&#8217;ve embraced the  erroneous view that Communism is a \u201cspecific party\u201d rather than a \u201cfinal goal.\u201d  Can it be that the imperialists have a more accurate and fair understanding of  what Communism is than the modern Anarchists?<\/p>\n<p>However, prominent Anarchists of the past have  conceded that the goals of Anarchism and Communism are much the same. Indeed,  Alexander Berkman in his <em>ABC of Anarchism<\/em> (1929) saw the goals of Communism and Anarchism as synonymous. In fact, he used  the term \u201cAnarchism\u201d to describe Communism:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cThe greatest  teachers of socialism \u2013 Karl Marx and Frederick Engels \u2013 had taught that anarchism  would come from socialism. They said that we must first have socialism [the dictatorship  of the proletariat], but that after socialism there will be anarchism, and that  it would be a freer and more beautiful condition of society to live in than  socialism.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>So the \u201cfundamental difference\u201d between Anarchism and  Communism is <em>not<\/em> in their views  on equal distribution of wealth and abolishing the state. The fundamental  difference is on <em>how<\/em> to go about  achieving these ends and their class basis. Anarchism promotes an <em>idealistic<\/em> approach rooted in a petty-bourgeois  class perspective, while Marxist Communism promotes a materialist and  dialectical approach rooted in a working class perspective.<\/p>\n<p>Now Communists and most Anarchists agree that armed  struggle will be required to compel and wrest control of property relations  from the bourgeoisie (or capitalist ruling class) and to overthrow and smash  the state it rules through \u2013 because the essence of state power is a  specialized armed force of men (and now also wimyn). The capitalists aren&#8217;t  going to relinquish their power and wealth without a fight \u2013 never have, never  will!<\/p>\n<p>So essentially, it is a question of what to do after  the bourgeois class is overthrown, and when do we lay down our arms? Because  that is what <em>state power<\/em> is all  about. So by resorting to arms in the first place, the Anarchists <em>are<\/em> taking part in <em>the exercise of dictatorial power<\/em> and the  use of <em>authoritarian<\/em> means to  repress the bourgeois class. Here&#8217;s how Frederick Engels made the point:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cThe  anti-authoritarians demand that the political state be abolished at one stroke,  even before the social relations that gave birth to it have been destroyed. They  demand that the first act of the social revolution shall be the abolition of  authority.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cHave these  gentlemen ever seen a revolution? A revolution is certainly the most  authoritarian thing there is; it is an act whereby one part of the population  imposes its will upon the other part by means of rifles, bayonets and cannon,  all of which are highly authoritarian means. And the victorious party must  maintain its rule by means of the terror which its arms inspire in the reactionaries.  Would the Paris Commune have lasted more than a day if it had not used the authority  of the armed people against the bourgeoisie? Cannot we, on the contrary, blame  it for having made too little use of that authority? Therefore one of two  things; either the anti- authoritarians don&#8217;t know what they are talking about,  in which case they are creating nothing but confusion, or they do know, and in  that case they are betraying the cause of the proletariat. In either case, they  serve only reaction.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>So we see an inherent contradiction in Anarchism that  renders it fundamentally either pro- or counter-revolutionary, namely, whether  it supports or opposes the armed struggle of the proletariat and consolidation  of people&#8217;s power. In either event, overthrowing the state power of the  bourgeoisie won&#8217;t in one stroke abolish the bourgeois class and its aspirations  to regain state power. The Communists&#8217; goal is to smash the state power of the  capitalists <em>right away<\/em>; to do  away with their army, their police, their courts and their prisons. <em>But<\/em>, we cannot get rid of the bourgeois  class so easily, nor the petty-bourgeoisie, nor the bourgeoisified workers and  lumpen-proletarians.<\/p>\n<p>If we were to put down our guns at this point, &#8211; if we  did not maintain our own army, police, courts and prisons \u2013 these elements  would turn right around and rig up a new bourgeois state. They would rig up a  bourgeois state and use it to repress us \u2013 everyone connected with the  revolution and the masses. This is exactly what happened in the Mexican  Revolution when Emiliano Zapata listened to his Amerikan Anarchist advisors and  gave up state power after victory and went home. The new reconstituted  bourgeois state quickly hunted him down and murdered him like a dog \u2013 and  Mexico has been under a bourgeois dictatorship and U.S. imperialist domination  ever since.<\/p>\n<p>This is also what happened in the <em>very<\/em> short-lived Spanish Revolution, the  revolution the Anarchists claim to have been successful at. The bourgeoisie  overthrew it overnight and immediately reasserted their rule. This occurred  because the Anarchists opposed establishing a workers&#8217; state and the Communists  who were trying to create one. The Fascists reaped the victory and ruled Spain  with an iron fist for decades after.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>Homage to  Catalonia<\/em>, George Orwell&#8217;s memoir of the Spanish Revolution, he gave  an account of how instantly and completely bourgeois rule reasserted itself in  Barcelona only months after it had been overthrown by the working class. In the  beginning of his memoir, Orwell gives a glorious account of Barcelona when the  popular revolution was still underway in latter 1936. He then contrasts how  only months later the revolutionary successes had vanished without a trace. Here  is his description of conditions in April 1937:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cEveryone who  has made two visits, at intervals of months, to Barcelona during the war has remarked  upon the extraordinary changes that took place in it. And curiously enough,  whether they went there first in August and again in January, or, like myself,  first in December and again in April, the thing they said was always the same:  that the revolutionary atmosphere had vanished. No doubt to anyone who had been  there in August, when the blood was scarcely dry in the streets and the militia  was quartered in the small hotels, Barcelona in December would have seemed  bourgeois, to me, fresh from England, it was liker to a worker&#8217;s city than  anything I had conceived possible. Now the tide had rolled back. Once again it  was an ordinary city, a little pinched and chipped by war, but with no outward  sign of working-class predominance&#8230;. The officers of the new Popular Army, a  type that had scarcely existed when I left Barcelona, swarmed in surprising  numbers&#8230; [wearing] an elegant khaki uniform with a tight waist, like a British  officer&#8217;s uniform, only a little more so. I do not suppose that more than one  in twenty of them had yet been to the front, but all of them had an automatic  pistol strapped to their belts, we, at the front, could not get pistols for  love or money&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cA deep change  had come over the town. There were two facts that were the keynote of all else.  One was that the people \u2013 the civil population \u2013 had lost much of their  interest in the war; the other was that the normal division of society into  rich and poor, upper class and lower class, was reasserting itself.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Communists simply recognize the state for what it is \u2013  namely an instrument by which one class asserts its power over another. Unless  the proletariat overthrows the bourgeois capitalist state and replaces it with  a proletarian socialist state, the bourgeoisie will maintain its dominance. Only  under working class state rule can massive Cultural Revolutions take place to  purge bourgeois thinking and practices, which, once this process succeeds, will  bring about the egalitarian stateless social order. So our object is to create  a proletarian state with our own special bodies of armed wimyn and men, our own  courts and our own prisons for those who commit crimes against the people. Under  this system the armed workers will defend the revolution and use their power to  transform all of society to eliminate classes and lay the basis for advancing  to the kind of society both the Anarchists and Communists want.<\/p>\n<p>It is at this point, <em>and  not a moment sooner<\/em>, that we will lay down our guns and move forward  to advance the stateless society, because only then will it be <em>possible<\/em> to do so. Any other approach is  just pipe-dreaming idealism. We believe in the principle of from each according  to their ability and to each according to their needs \u2013 that is, doing away  with the whole concept of commodity exchange. In short: abolishing money. But  there has to be a whole lot of cultural revolution and transforming of society  to make that possible. There has to be basic changes in how production and  distribution of goods are organized. People have to be willing to participate  in socialized production without being forced to by economic necessity, and we  have to produce enough of everything for everybody to be able to get what they  need to survive and be happy.<\/p>\n<p>Another factor is that you&#8217;ve got to do it in such a  way as to preserve and protect the natural environment so future generations  will be able to get what they need and be able to keep society running. This  calls for revolution in the cultural, social and political realms and also in  science, production and ecology. This all has to be planned, organized and done  on a global scale as well as regionally and locally. A stateless society must  by definition be a global society without borders. And we can&#8217;t have one  section of humanity hogging all the world&#8217;s resources, like we do now, which is  just what would happen if we didn&#8217;t start with a worldwide dictatorship of the  proletariat.<\/p>\n<p>As to who will get repressed along the way, well,  that&#8217;s up to the proletariat. Isn&#8217;t it? We advocate a step by step, planned  transformation of society rather than anarchy. We believe the masses can be won  to understand the logic of this and support it. In this way, repression can be  kept to a minimum and democratic methods of persuasion will be the primary  focus and means of the struggle. But counter-revolutionaries will be repressed  at every stage, and the proletariat will decide how and when and who \u2013 no  matter what the counter-revolutionaries call themselves \u2013 through the organs of  people&#8217;s power and the people&#8217;s courts.<\/p>\n<p>One thing we&#8217;ve learned from past revolutions is that  the greatest threat of capitalist restoration will come from within the upper  ranks of the Party and state from those who betray the class stand of the  proletariat and assume that of the bourgeoisie. As socialism is a stage of  transition from capitalism to communism, it is relatively easy for those at the  top to rig up a state capitalist system under the cover of building socialism  and take the country back down the capitalist road. This is what happened in  the Soviet Union after Stalin, when Khrushchev came to power, and in People&#8217;s  China after Mao died in 1976.<\/p>\n<p>The lesson here is for the proletariat to keep a firm  grip on its Party and to exercise all round dictatorship over the bourgeoisie \u2013  and especially on those in leadership positions in the Party and the workers&#8217;  state. Cultural Revolution is the weapon to prevent capitalist restoration and  to keep moving society down the path of socialist revolution.<\/p>\n<p>The working class must arm itself with a thorough  understanding of the <em>Science of Revolution<\/em> and increasingly take power into its own hands directly to revolutionize every  aspect of society. When we say \u201cAll Power to the People!,\u201d we mean that  literally in an ever deepening and all-round way. So long as classes exist, it  is the proletariat who will be exploited and oppressed, and it is the  proletariat who must play the leading role in waging class struggle to overcome  it. The class struggle leads inevitably to the elimination of classes and  communist society. But at every step it will be a struggle \u2013 against idealism  and those who would sidetrack and derail the class struggle to preserve and  enhance their own privileged positions and keep on exploiting the masses of  people.<\/p>\n<p>There is no way to avoid this protracted struggle, and  certainly not by disarming the proletariat as soon as the old bourgeois order  is overthrown. It certainly can&#8217;t be done by substituting anarchy for a  rational strategy. Only the petty-bourgeoisie \u2013 anxious to replace the old  bourgeoisie \u2013 would intentionally propose such a short-sighted \u201csolution.\u201d The  true solution is for the petty-bourgeoisie \u2013 <em>including  those who become upwardly mobile through the revolution<\/em> \u2013 to be won  to a position of <em>committing class suicide<\/em> and aligning themselves with the oppressed and exploited masses struggling to  end all oppression and exploitation by revolutionizing every aspect of society  \u2013 in a planned, organized and disciplined way through the application of the <em>mass line<\/em> and the illumination of the <em>Science of Revolution<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Do we see the contradiction between ourselves and the  Anarchists as inherently antagonistic? No, we do not. We believe that it can be  resolved non-antagonistically so long as it remains a contradiction within the  people. We do not want to repeat the Stalinist errors of treating  contradictions within the people the same as contradictions with the enemy.<\/p>\n<p>For many people, as it was with me, Anarchism is a  starting place, because it is fundamentally an <em>emotional<\/em> response to the evils of capitalist-imperialism. This was the case with Mao  Tse-tung, who self-identified as an Anarchist before becoming a Communist. Throughout  his political career he was accused of still being an anarchist by both  dogmatists and revisionists alike. Three times he was kicked off the Central  Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), but he maintained that it was a  Marxist-Leninist principle to go against the tide and stand firm for  revolution. At the Lushan Conference, he threatened to quit his post as Chairman  and go back to the mountains and start a new CCP and People&#8217;s Liberation Army  if it was necessary.<\/p>\n<p>As Chairman of the CCP Mao was not the Head of State  and was constantly at odds with the state bureaucracy. During the Great  Proletarian Cultural Revolution, he suspended the democratic centralism of the  Party so that lower bodies were no longer subordinated to higher bodies and he  issued the call to the youth, workers and peasants to \u201cbombard the  Headquarters!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Does this mean he was not really a Communist? No, it  does not! It means that as a Communist his first and foremost loyalty was to  proletarian socialist revolution and the class struggle. \u201cA revolution is not a  dinner party,\u201d he said, \u201cit is the violent overthrow of one class by another.\u201d \u201cBy  any means necessary!\u201d was the way Malcolm X put it.<\/p>\n<p>Many of the criticisms of the Communist movement made  by Anarchists or others are right on. But they are also usually non-dialectical  and one-sided. Often they obscure the criticisms of the proletariat who look at  the same problems differently. Mao was a firm believer that Communists should  openly reveal, criticize and struggle against their \u201cdark side.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>We can&#8217;t do without a proletarian state any more than  we can do without smashing the bourgeois state. Does this mean we love violence  or love authority? No! It means we are serious enough about ending wage  slavery, and all of the evils of capitalist-imperialism, that we are willing to  be scientific about revolution and go beyond an emotional response. <\/p>\n<p>As a New Afrikan and a condemned slave of the state, I  can&#8217;t afford not to be serious and scientific about the liberation of my people  \u2013 and all oppressed people everywhere \u2013 through socialist revolution. Our fates  are intertwined. Only by carrying the class struggle all the way to Communism  will there be a bright future for our posterity. For us, there is only slavery  or liberation, so we can have no hesitation when it comes to applying Brother  Malcolm&#8217;s dictum to our struggle. Step by step, stage by stage, we shall  advance the revolution through all the twists and turns, setbacks and victories  until full liberation is won.<\/p>\n<p>As I said, we can&#8217;t do without a proletarian state,  but there is a tendency for it to turn into its opposite \u2013 and we are wise to  it. Power does corrupt, and the inevitable continuation of old class relations  \u2013 particularly in the lower stages of socialism \u2013 and the deeply-rooted  ideology of the past will nurture the tendency for capitalist restoration. Commodity  relations \u2013 even under socialist state control \u2013 do regenerate capitalism and  bourgeois ideas. Non-proletarian class forces \u2013 who are necessary to keep the  economy and social services going \u2013 are going to demand concessions, such as  higher wages, personal power and retention of bourgeois rights.<\/p>\n<p>Technicians and professionals in all spheres will  defend their privileged position in society and resist the encroachment of the  common people in their <em>business<\/em>. And  only when the proletariat can do without them can we move from the lower to the  higher stage of socialism. The struggle between \u201cReds\u201d and \u201cExperts\u201d was a  major aspect of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in China. We all know  that after Mao&#8217;s death, the \u201cReds\u201d were defeated and that the \u201cExperts\u201d now live  \u201chigh on the hog\u201d in China and the so-called \u201cCommunist Party\u201d has become a  fascist party of \u201cExperts\u201d and capitalists.<\/p>\n<p>Mao predicted that this outcome was \u201cvery possible,\u201d  but he also predicted that their rule would be short-lived and that they \u201cwould  know no peace,\u201d and we see that today there is a resurgence of Maoism in China  and internationally, and we see that China&#8217;s masses are waging sharp class  struggle against their exploitation and oppression.<\/p>\n<p>We also see a resurgence of Anarchism today, and  particularly among the youth of the imperialist countries. I <em>should<\/em> say among the <em>white petty-bourgeois<\/em> youth and students,  because there is a class and race basis to this resurgence. Anarchy extols the  supremacy of the individual and individual freedom, which is also a way to  separate oneself from identifying with one&#8217;s <em>skin<\/em> and <em>class privileges<\/em>. One can  say, \u201cI am not responsible for racist and class oppression or for global  imperialism. I reject all that. I am an Anarchist.\u201d But that neither threatens  the ruling class nor helps the oppressed class. It&#8217;s merely a lifestyle choice,  a fashion. You can dress up for it, dye your hair black and get a \u201cbad\u201d  haircut, eat vegan food, ride a bicycle, pierce your nose, nipples or tongue,  dumpster dive and make the scene.<\/p>\n<p>Then there are the Anarchist careerists, which brings  to mind admissions made and the example set by Greg Wells, an Anarchist  journalist out of Richmond, Virginia, with whom I was corresponding a few years  back. At a time when I was facing a high-point of repression from prison  officials, I proposed a few ideas to him about consolidating discrete activists  into a practical support network for prisoner activists and other oppressed  individuals. He replied that my proposals definitely needed doing, and that \u201cas  much as\u201d he&#8217;d \u201clove to\u201d help he was \u201csimply too comfortable to do any such  thing.\u201d He added, \u201cI&#8217;ll tell you something that other Anarchists won&#8217;t admit,  but it&#8217;s true. You know that most Anarchists are comfortable white middle-class  and aren&#8217;t going to do much more than a little protesting and critical  writing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Greg is a prolific writer who has made a career out of  railing at capitalism, racial and gender oppression, U.S. imperialist wars,  etc., yet he concedes his unwillingness to jeopardize his status and comfort  level by allying himself in practice with the oppressed. As he confessed, this  is typical of most of the milieu of petty bourgeois Anarchists. Indeed, I would  say it is typical of most radical intellectuals on the Amerikan Left. As I  stated in a previous unpublished article:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201c99% of the  radicals are divorced from the masses. They attend rallies and protests but  lock their doors when driving through oppressed neighborhoods. They don&#8217;t know  how to do mass work, how to agitate and organize. They think it&#8217;s their  opinions that matter, that they fulfill their political duty by expressing  them. Whereas, they need to create a presence on the street, amongst the  oppressed workers and nationalities, and time is of the essence.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Of course, there are some Anarchists like ABC, whom we  consider to be comrades, who actually do play a role in assisting the struggle  in the prisons and are groping with the question of making revolution. We are,  as you say, \u201con the same side of the barricades.\u201d The question is can we build  a <em>higher<\/em> level of unity and what  would that take? Well, we&#8217;ve created the White Panther Organization (WPO) as an  arm of the New Afrikan Black Panther Party \u2013 Prison Chapter (NABPP-PC), so  white comrades can fully unite with us and represent our Party among the  oppressed white people. They do have to accept the democratic-centralism of the  Party and its rules of discipline, the same as the Black Panthers. They have to  study and apply the Science of Revolution and commit to being all-the-way  revolutionaries.<\/p>\n<p>NABPP-PC is not a Communist Party per se. We are  revolutionary nationalists and internationalists. Our ideological and political  line, \u201cPantherism,\u201d is illuminated by Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, and we are  committed to fighting for proletarian socialist revolution. We see the key  alliance in the United Front Against Capitalist-Imperialism to be between the  oppressed nations and nationalities and the multi-ethnic, multi-national  working class.<\/p>\n<p>For New Afrikans, the solution to our national  oppression is socialist revolution. As long as Black people are oppressed <em>because <\/em>we are Black, there needs to be a  Black Panther Party to lead the Black Liberation Struggle. We need to stand  together as a Nation under the leadership of our proletarian vanguard. To fight  most effectively against white racism, we need white comrades to stand with us  \u2013 as fellow Panthers or as supporters. We also need to stand in solidarity with  all other oppressed peoples and have them stand with us. This is the basis of  the United Panther Movement. We believe that the Nation of New Afrikans in  Amerika must play a vanguard role in this revolution because of our historical  oppression and because we are in a position to do so.<\/p>\n<p>We live in the \u201cBelly of the Beast.\u201d We are  concentrated in the urban centers of the sole imperialist superpower, and we  are infiltrated throughout the oppressor&#8217;s military and political-economic  infrastructure. We are everywhere, even if only pushing a broom or a mop.<\/p>\n<p>We are also part of the Third World, and we are  kindred to all other sons and daughters of Afrikan descent. Everywhere we are  oppressed because of our black skin under white world domination. As Mao said:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cThe evil  system of colonialism and imperialism arose and throve with the enslavement of Negroes  and the trade in Negroes, and it will surely come to its end with the complete emancipation  of the Black people.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>He said, \u201cThe Afro-American struggle is not only a  struggle waged by the exploited and oppressed Black people for freedom and  emancipation\u201d but that it is a \u201cclarion call\u201d to all the oppressed peoples. This  history and this positioning gives us the opportunity to play a vanguard role  in the world revolution, not exclusive of others but in dialectical  relationship to all people of color and all who suffer oppression. This does  not negate the leading role that must be played by the international  proletariat as the class of the future, for it is the ideology and worldview of  this class that guides our struggle for liberation.<\/p>\n<p>The New Afrikan Nation is primarily a proletarian  nation \u2013 on the whole, we own nothing and are forced to sell our labor power to  survive or otherwise to survive by any means necessary. Even most of our  lumpen-proletariat has an on again off again relationship with wage slavery. Our  Party must work ceaselessly to ground our cadre and comrades in a  thorough-going proletarian class stand and struggle resolutely against lumpen  and petty-bourgeois influences and tendencies.<\/p>\n<p>For several decades now the ruling class has been  pursuing a strategy of criminalization of the poor and our mass incarceration \u2013  particularly of our Black youth \u2013 and we must counter this with  proletarianizing and revolutionizing our young wimyn and men by teaching  \u201cPantherism\u201d and raising up a generation of revolutionary warriors.<\/p>\n<p>But let me return to your question and your point  about Anarchists wanting nothing to do with state power and their accepting  nothing short of its instant abolition. Well, <em>the<\/em> foremost modern Anarchist intellectual, Noam Chomsky \u2013 affectionately known in  Anarchist circles as \u201cUncle Noam\u201d &#8211; is both a proponent of using state power  (and <em>bourgeois state power<\/em> at  that) to address social ills, and he conceded that Anarchism is not an  instantly attainable social order. Were it not for his speaking in support of <em>bourgeois<\/em> state power, instead of  promoting <em>proletarian<\/em> state  power, one would think Chomsky was a Communist espousing the need for the  rational use of state power to transform society. \u201cUncle Noam\u201d put it like  this:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cWell it&#8217;s true  that the Anarchist vision in just about all its varieties has looked forward to  dismantling state power \u2013 and I personally share that vision. But right now it  runs directly counter to my goals: My immediate goals have been, and now very  much are, to defend and even strengthen certain elements of state authority  that are now under severe attack. And I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s any contradiction  there \u2013 none at all, really.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cFor example, take  the so-called &#8216;welfare state.&#8217; What&#8217;s called the &#8216;welfare state&#8217; is essentially  a recognition that every child has a right to have food, and to have health  care and so on \u2013 and as I&#8217;ve been saying, those programs were set up in the  nation-state system after a century of very hard struggle, by the labor  movement, and the socialist movement, and so on. Well, according to the new  spirit of the age, in the case of a fourteen-year-old girl who got raped and  had a child, her child has to learn &#8216;personal responsibility&#8217; by not accepting  state welfare handouts, meaning by not having enough to eat. Alright, I don&#8217;t  agree with that at any level. In fact I think it is grotesque at any level. I  think those children should be saved. And in today&#8217;s world, <em>that&#8217;s going to involve working through the state  system<\/em>, it&#8217;s not the only case.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cSo despite the  anarchist &#8216;vision,&#8217; I think aspects of the state system, like the one that  makes sure children eat, have to be defended \u2013 in fact, defended very vigorously.  And given the accelerated effort that&#8217;s being made these days to roll back the  victories for justice and human rights which have been won through long and  often extremely bitter struggles in the West, in my opinion the immediate goal  of even committed anarchists should be to defend some state institutions, while  helping to pry them open to more meaningful public participation, and  ultimately to dismantle them in a much more free society.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cThere are  practical problems of tomorrow on which people&#8217;s lives very much depend, and while  defending these kinds of programs is by no means the ultimate end we should be pursuing,  in my view we still have to face the problems that are right on the horizon,  and which seriously affect human lives. I don&#8217;t think those things can simply  be forgotten because they might not fit with some radical slogan that reflects  a <em>deeper vision of a future society<\/em>.  The deeper vision should be maintained, they&#8217;re important \u2013 but <em>dismantling the state system is a goal that is a lot  further away<\/em>, and you want to deal first with what&#8217;s at hand and  nearby, I think&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cSo I think  it&#8217;s completely realistic and rational to work within structures to which you  are opposed, because by doing so can help to move to a situation where then you  can challenge these structures.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Chomsky&#8217;s proposing that radicals work within  bourgeois state institutions to address social needs actually conforms to a  strategy of absorbing and controlling dissidents and activists within  government structures, which was proposed by the U.S. National Security Council  in the late 1970s. This reflects how the confused class stand of the  petty-bourgeoisie leads to erroneous approaches to opposing imperialist  oppression. But, <em>that<\/em> Chomsky  recognized the need to use state power along the road to ultimately abolishing  the state shows that Communist and Anarchist theory is not so irreconcilable. Anarchists  must simply recognize the role of the proletariat as preeminent in the struggle  against capitalist-imperialism and the advance to a classless society.<\/p>\n<p>I want to add that we reject the nihilism that is so  often associated with both Anarchism and gangsterism. We base ourselves on <em>Panther Love.<\/em> As both Ch\u00e9 Guevara and Mao  pointed out, love is the motivation of a true revolutionary. Our love for the  people, for liberty and justice, and for the unborn generations for whom we  stand ready to sacrifice our lives, is manifested in everything we do and say.<\/p>\n<p>On the question of who should legitimately coordinate  the application of state power and lead society in general, again \u201cUncle Noam\u201d  promotes the need and role for a leading structure very similar to our concept  of a genuine vanguard party operating with committee structures and democratic  centralism. He opposed the ultra-democratic approach to running even a basic  community as impossible. Indeed there has never existed a society without some  form of leadership. Here again is Chomsky:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cNo, I don&#8217;t  think [a large mass of people could actively participate in all the decisions  that need to be made in a complex modern society]. I think you&#8217;ve got to  delegate some of those responsibilities. But the question is, where does  authority ultimately lie? I mean, since the very beginnings of the modern  democratic revolutions in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, it&#8217;s always  been recognized that people have to be represented \u2013 the question is, are we represented  by, as they put it, &#8216;countrymen like ourselves,&#8217; or are we represented by &#8216;our  betters&#8217;?<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cFor example,  suppose this was our community, and we wanted to enter into some kind of agreement  with the community down the road \u2013 if we were fairly big, we&#8217;d have to delegate  the right to negotiate things to representatives. But then the question is, who  has the power to ultimately authorize those decisions? Well, if it&#8217;s a  democracy, that power ought to lie not just <em>formally<\/em> in the population, but <em>actually<\/em> in the population \u2013 meaning the representatives can be recalled, they&#8217;re  answerable back to their community, they can be replaced. In fact, there should  be as much as possible in the way of constant replacement, so that political  participation just becomes a part of everybody&#8217;s life.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cBut I agree, I  don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s possible to have large masses of people get together to decide  every topic \u2013 it would be unfeasible and pointless. You&#8217;d want to pick  committees to look into things and report back, and so on and so forth. But the  real question is, where does authority lie.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Now compare Chomsky&#8217;s emphasis on the legitimacy of  representative committee structures lying in the election and recall by votes  of leading members and such organizations being accountable to the masses by  full exposure of their activities, with this 1905 Bolshevik summary of democratic  centralism:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u00a0\u201cRecognizing as  indisputable the principle of democratic centralism, the Conference considers the  broad implementation of the elective principle necessary, and while granting  elected centers full powers in matters of ideological and political leadership,  they are at the same time subject to recall, their actions are given broad  publicity, and they are strictly accountable for these activities.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Also, consistent with Chomsky&#8217;s point that political  power should be vested in the common people and not with \u201cour betters,\u201d the  struggle which Mao initiated during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution  between the \u201cReds\u201d and the \u201cExperts\u201d was to displace political power from those  who by virtue of their technical expertise considered themselves the \u201cbetters\u201d  of the common laboring people, and to have that power spread broadly amongst  the working people.<\/p>\n<p>This is one of the reasons why the petty-bourgeoisie  cannot lead all-the-way revolution \u2013 or even the struggle to defend the human  and democratic civil rights of the oppressed \u2013 as their class conditioning has  them seeing themselves as the intellectual \u201cbetters\u201d of the masses towards whom  they have a \u201csuperior\u201d attitude. George Jackson demonstrated that you don&#8217;t  have to be middle class or attend a university to become a <em>revolutionary intellectual<\/em> \u2013 a \u201cRed\u201d who  is also armed with intellectual expertise. Some would say that I demonstrate  this myself.<\/p>\n<p>Those of us who have nothing to lose but our chains,  who have no reason to hesitate or vacillate and every reason to be serious,  dedicated, all-the-way revolutionaries have a responsibility to be in the  vanguard and to struggle relentlessly against every form of oppression to build  the mass-based revolutionary vanguard party to untie and lead the masses of  oppressed people to rise up and end <br \/>\n  oppression at its source through proletarian socialist  revolution and proletarian cultural revolution.<\/p>\n<p>Dare to Struggle, Dare to Win!<br \/>\n  All Power to the People!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The following is from an interview by correspondence with Comrade Kevin \u201cRashid\u201d Johnson, the Minister of Defense of the New Afrikan Black Panther Party Prison Chapter (NABPP-PC) conducted by Comrade Anthony Rayson of the South Chicago ABC Zine Distro. ((This interview was first published in The Liberator #15, Summer 2010.)) &#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[6],"class_list":["post-639","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles","tag-party-articles"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=639"}],"version-history":[{"count":5,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":795,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639\/revisions\/795"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=639"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=639"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rashidmod.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=639"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}