The Glasgow & Edinburgh Branches Blog.
Towards a better understanding of the world, in order to change it.
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Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Racism is a product of capitalist society
“Competition
is the completest expression of the battle...which rules in modern
civil society. This battle, a battle for life, for existence, for
everything, in case of need a battle of life and death, is fought not
between the different classes of society only, but also between the
individual members of those classes. Each is in the way of the other,
and each seeks to crowd out all who are in his way, and to put
himself in their place.” Engels,
Condition
of the Working Class in England
The
Socialist Party has long pointed out that the fight against racism is
an indispensable element in, and part of, the struggle for
working-class emancipation. The capitalist class can be effectively
challenged only by the economic and political strength of a united
working class. If white workers are to free themselves from
capitalist exploitation, they must contribute to the building of a
labor movement that embraces the struggles of minority workers
against racism.
That
the vast majority of blacks and whites are workers is the key to
understanding racism as a social problem. Job competition and class
divisiveness, rather than class consciousness and unity, are an old
story. The real conflict today is not between blacks and whites, but
between the social classes, between the capitalist class and the
working class. There
is, in the conditions laid down by capitalism, a constant competition
between all workers, individually and collectively, for access to the
jobs they need to secure a livelihood. The demarcation of black and
white is a false and deliberately nurtured breach in the ranks of the
working class. It is used to distract workers from the ultimate
source of their employment problems under capitalism. White
workers who heretofore have been quiet on the subject of race, but
who are increasingly threatened with layoffs and other ramifications
of capitalism's present economic crisis, are becoming resentful not
of the economic condition, along with the economic system that
generates the condition of insecurity, but of black workers who, like
themselves, merely want the opportunity to live healthful and decent
lives.
Blacks
are not alone in trying without success to secure economic security
for themselves and their families. Lack of it is not a condition
peculiar to the black worker. It is a condition common to the entire
working class. Millions are unemployed, and millions more will follow
them as the economy of capitalism is faced with worsening crises. If
workers, black and white alike, are to achieve the economic and
social well-being all working people desire, they will have to come
to recognize that not a race, not a color, stands between them and
their realizable dreams. What stands between them and what we all
want is a social class, the capitalist class, that controls the means
of wealth production and utilizes labor like any other commodity. All
workers, some with more success than others at given times, must sell
their abilities to the owners of industry and the social services. No
race, as such, controls the tools and jobs. It is a class, the
capitalist class.
Capitalism
will promote racism and discrimination everywhere. The solution to
inequality is not to share it or spread it around, but to root out
its capitalist cause. Capitalism cannot deal with these problems.
Indeed, capitalism is the source of many of them and can no more
eliminate these social byproducts of its existence than a leopard can
change its spots. Few problems demonstrate more graphically the
vicious and antisocial characteristics that the present social system
engenders and prolongs than racism. Moreover, that problem has, time
and again, exposed the hypocrisy and opportunism of politicians and
various reformers. Decades of lip-service and legislative action have
had only limited impact on some of the more overt effects of racism.
The record of failure that marks decades-long efforts to eliminate
racism attests to the impossibility of overcoming that evil by a
narrow and contrived approach to any or all of its manifestations. It
illustrates the need to treat those manifestations, not in isolated
frameworks, but in their full social context. Bluntly stated, the
negative results to date are due to the fact that the basic cause of
racism hasn’t been admitted, let alone addressed. One thing is
certain. So long as the destructive competitive spirit generated by
capitalism continues to permeate every aspect of society, racism will
not only prevail, in many respects it will grow worse. For it is
primarily a product of the conflicts generated among workers of all
races as a result of the competition for jobs, housing and social
services, all of which are steadily falling further below the need
and the demand.
Capitalism
is providing the social context for an upsurge in naked racism. All
workers are hurt by—and thus have an interest in actively
resisting—racism. The capitalist class that controls and profits
from the wealth produced by working people clearly benefits from
racism because it enables employers to impose lower wages on minority
workers and thus increases capitalist profits. Further, racist
ideology among the working class divides it, weakening its ability to
resist the austerity now being imposed by the ruling class. In fact,
racism has in the past, and will continue in the future, to pit
worker against worker and to prevent them from taking collective
action against capitalism. In this way, U.S. racism acts as a
powerful force militating against working-class solidarity and is as
such one of the main pillars of capitalism. In implementing the
austerity aimed at boosting profits at the expense of workers
generally, the ruling class has not hesitated to fan the flames of
racism. Capitalism is generating a social atmosphere in which racist
ideology and racist violence can grow.
All
workers have a stake in fighting racism. The lower wages paid
minorities and high minority unemployment rates increase job
competition and thus exert a downward pressure on all workers’
wages. As a result, capitalists reap every higher profits from the
working class as a whole. The fight against racism must challenge the
capitalist status quo that reinforces it. For example, under
capitalism, there are a limited number of jobs. Accordingly, white
workers tend to see gains for minorities as coming at white workers’
expense. At the same time, the disproportionate share of unemployment
borne by minorities and the failure of the labour unions to fight on
their behalf has left millions of jobless minority workers without
access to the economic power they might otherwise have to defend
themselves.
A
movement to defeat racism once and for all must seek to replace the
racist social institutions, artificial economic scarcity and profit
motive of capitalism with a collectively owned and democratically
administered economy that produces on the basis of satisfying human
need. In the face of the upsurge in racism, workers must link the
demand for an end to the more intense exploitation and oppression
suffered by minorities to the class struggle for socialism. For the
struggle against racism cannot be successful unless and until it is
transformed into a force for building the working-class unity needed
to end exploitation generally. If workers want to end the misery
engendered by the capitalist system, it is necessary that they
recognize that racial antagonisms are a tactical measure of
capitalism to prevent working-class unity. A working class, conscious
of its potential and the means to achieve a livable world for all,
can put an end to economic insecurity and the interracial distrust it
breeds by putting an end to capitalism.
"Capitalism
has ever striven to keep the workers divided. Without division in
their ranks capitalism could not and cannot preserve its rule of
human ruination. Nothing was more effective to that end than the
fomenting of racial animosities and racial conceit. These means
capitalism employed and still employs. The successful use thereof has
kept labor a dislocated giant." Daniel
De Leon
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