News and Letters Lead Article May 1998
A radical youth movement rises to confront global retrogressive times
by Kevin Michaels
Young people have been noticeably active in both the streets and the
campuses across the United States in recent months, voicing their strident
opposition to the retrogressive direction in which this country is headed.
The most dramatic evidence of this trend was the sizable contingent of
youth who threw a wrench into the works of the Clinton administration's
plan to stage a globally televised war-preparedness rally in Columbus, Ohio
in February. But across the country there have been numerous,
less-publicized, manifestations of a spirit counterpoised to the prevailing
ideology which states that capitalism is utterly triumphant, racism is an
inerradicable phenomenon and there is no alternative to existing society.
Thirty years ago an international movement of youth which was radically
opposed to the racism and imperialism of the status quo reached such
proportions that it shook the ruling classes the world over and was the
driving force behind a near-revolution in France. Despite the tumult of
that year though, its potential was not born out in the achievement of a
new society.
The world we live in today and the contemporary movements we are witnessing
are vastly different from those of 1968. We should, however, examine what
we are experiencing for its exciting potential to become a radical youth
movement which will not be bound by contradictions of the past but instead
will develop into an integral part of a challenge to capitalist society's
barbarism.
Opposition to war has always been a hallmark of youth who are, of course,
among those most directly affected by the decision to pursue politics by
other means. When the Clinton administration decided to rattle its saber
over the issue of access for United Nations weapons inspection teams in
Iraq, youth across the country played an enormous role in organizing
hundreds of demonstrations which for the most part went unreported by the
mainstream press.
Much effort went into attempts to play down the impact of the demonstration
at the Columbus war rally by attributing it to the sectarian left. But the
reality is that an organization of students and recent graduates from
across the Midwest had come together in a very short span of time to create
the Columbus Coalition for a Democratic Foreign Policy. These students,
from Ohio State University, Antioch College, Earlham College and other
schools, communicated by telephone and electronic mail to bring together
voices in opposition to a "racist war," as they declared in their chant at
Ohio State University's St. John Arena.
Other organized forms of opposition to the possibility of war took place
elsewhere. At the University of Minnesota, a boisterous student
demonstration prevented United Nations ambassador Bill Richards from
delivering the Clinton administration's line on the issue. And at Northern
Illinois University in DeKalb, a Marxist-Humanist student group was forced
to challenge the school's policy against posting "position statements" on
university kiosks in order to exercise their right to free speech in the
form of a flyer denouncing U.S. war moves. San Francisco, New York City and
Memphis, Tenn., were the sites of other demonstrations. Many activists
continue to maintain contact, anticipating the possibility that the United
States could again use the inspection issue as a pretext for hostilities.
Students have also been engaged in a wide variety of issues across the
country in organizations such as the Free Burma Coalition, the East Timor
Action Network, the Student Environmental Action Coalition and the Student
Labor Action Coalition. Much of this activity, such as the efforts to get
universities to divest from companies with ties to the repressive regimes
in Burma and Indonesia, represents a continuity with campus anti-apartheid
divestment campaigns of the 1980s. But the increasing affinity with the
organized labor movement that has been in evidence represents a new and
exciting dimension. Student solidarity with striking clerical and
maintenance workers at Yale and Barnard College in 1996 is just one
example.
Another new and important phenomenon is the large anti-sweatshop labor
movement, proof of the size of which was evident in the large turnouts for
the April 18 national mobilization to target Nike stores. Student activists
have directed embarrassing questions at university administrators about the
justifiability of signing million-dollar athletic endorsement contracts
with a company that allows Asian contractors to operate factories in which
workers, predominantly young women, are subjected to abuse and hazardous
conditions in exchange for wages insufficient even for mere subsistence.
Their work is paying off. The University of California-Irvine has agreed to
drop its endorsement contracts, and Duke University introduced an
anti-sweatshop pledge.
Campuses are not the only places where youth are meeting with success. The
young residents of the Edenwald Gun Hill Houses, a Bronx public housing
project, have been involved in a campaign mobilize the youth of other
public housing projects to give back their Nike footwear as a protest
against the corporation's intense use of the image of Black athletes to
sell apparel to youth while limiting all production to Asian countries. The
publicity garnered by their visits to Manhattan's Fifth Avenue Niketown
convinced the company to dispatch a public relations person to the housing
project last year to try to dissuade the young activists.
A further new dimension to youth activity is the truly sizable increase in
anti-police brutality and prison solidarity work. Two successive national
mobilizations on October 22 as well as March's Jericho '98 rallies in
Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Oakland, Cal., brought out large numbers
of high school and community youth to protest the everyday savagery by
police forces which do not reflect the racial and ethnic makeup of the
neighborhoods they lord over. Youth are also increasingly active in
community organizations, often led by Black mothers whose children have
been victims of police frame-ups or other abuse, who are rallying against
brutal cops and the racist courts which are warehousing an entire
generation in an explosively burgeoning prison system.
This diverse range of youth activity is taking place against a backdrop of
dire retrogression. The severity of the recently announced statistical
results of the success of California's Proposition 209 ballot initiative to
scrap affirmative action programs in college admissions took many by
surprise. The University of California system's flagship school, Berkeley,
announced that only 255 Black students have been accepted for the fall
semester, down from 598 last year. Latino students admitted will total 852,
down from 1,411.
Similarly, a federal court ruling in Texas which declared affirmative
action in admissions illegal has had a drastic effect on minority
admissions to the cream of the state school system. The chilling message
sent by the ruling has even affected applications to the University of
Texas's law school in Austin, which dropped to only 111 Black students this
year, down from last year's 225. Of the number who were admitted last year,
only four chose to actually enroll in such a polarized and hostile
environment.
Although proponents of Proposition 209 such as Ward Connerly argue that its
results are simply a "correction" of preference shown to minorities, in
reality it serves as an outright racially exclusionary measure.
A new reactionary ballot initiative aimed at the elimination of bilingual
education programs, Proposition 227, was challenged by a huge youth march
in Concord, Cal., on April 22. High school youth traveled from the Bay Area
to not only protest Prop. 227, but also the subordination of educational
needs to the criminalization of youth. Concord has a new jail, while Bay
Area public schools are deteriorating.
California and Texas have been the vanguard in the campaign against
affirmative action, but powerful racist forces in other states are biding
their time. Residents of Washington State will weigh in on a ballot
initiative to kill affirmative action this November.
This retrogressive trend to slam the doors of higher education in the faces
of even the highest-achieving Black youth coincides with a disheartening
statistical trend. The CHICAGO REPORTER published a story in February of
1996 that stated that while Black males between 20 and 34 years of age take
their own lives at a rate less than white males of the same age group, the
rate of suicide for young Black men has risen in the last 15 years. In
Chicago, Black male youth commit suicides at a rate of 16.7 per 10,000, a
higher rate than either whites at 12.9 or Latinos at 9.4. While it is
difficult to draw solid conclusions from these figures, it can be said that
they reflect a population under an enormous amount of social stress.
The criminalization of an entire generation of poor, Black and Latino youth
is perhaps the most salient and repugnant feature of this retrogressive
period. State legislatures across the country have debated lowering ages at
which children can be tried as adults. The United States senate will debate
a piece of legislation sometime this spring which can truly be called
draconian. Titled the Violent and Repeat Offender Act of 1997, the bill,
which has been passed by the House of Representatives, mandates the jailing
of youth in adult facilities. The Children's' Defense Fund is lobbying
against the bill.
The diverse range of youth activity, with its elements of labor,
international and anti-racist solidarity, has enormous potential to develop
into a movement which can challenge existing society. The youth movement of
30 years ago, which fired the imaginations of many because of its sheer
scale and momentum, did not mature to carry through such a challenge
because of its internal contradictions-sexism and hostility to the
development of theory among them.
It is of the utmost importance to begin asking tough questions of today's
movement at this very moment-when we are not even sure if such a movement
exists-to ensure that the lessons of the '60, '70 and '80s to become
internal to its activist-theoreticians.
We must ask if anti-sweatshop activity can develop into a challenge to a
system in which the human activity of labor can be commodified. We must ask
if the activity of those opposing the repressive regimes in Indonesia and
Burma can take the ground of a revolutionary solidarity which will not be
satisfied with merely bringing those countries into the circle of liberal
democracies. And we must ask if anti-police brutality and prison solidarity
work in the United States can develop into the deep and profound integrated
anti-racist movement which is surely the prerequisite for revolutionary
change in North America. In short, we must challenge the movement we may be
seeing the beginning of to undertake the task of developing a philosophy of
revolution.
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