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The left has to be "indivisible"?
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"No real left depends upon a coalition. if you cannot have a solid majority faction that share a substantial common interest, and are indivisible, you cannot have a left."
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???
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Let me just give you some examples of highly successful leftist movements--movements that have elected presidents and governments--that are comprised of many different social movements and interests, including Indigenous peoples, racial minorities, women's groups, gay rights groups, environmental groups, labor leaders, workers, street vendors, community activists in very poor neighborhoods, human rights activists, "liberation theology" priests and nuns, artists, students, academics, intellectuals, leftist economists, professionals and business people of various kinds, and even soldiers...
Venezuela Bolivia Ecuador Paraguay Uruguay Argentina Brazil Nicaragua
It takes time. It takes great attention to democratic institutions such as fair elections. It takes a lot of organizing. It takes, often, great courage. But all of the above types of groups and people have been knit together into overarching leftist movements that have altered the political landscape of Latin America in a very dramatic fashion over the last decade.
It has happened there. It can happen here. Your condemnation of the process of coalition building seems quite blind to me, as to how a strong leftist movement is really created. Sometimes these wildly "divisible" groups and people have come together over one issue--such as the privatization of water in Bolivia, or the "neo-liberal" crashing of the economy in Argentina. They do have common interests and goals. And unified action is, of course, very important in specific circumstances, and in regard to specific strategies. But to require lockstep, "indivisible" unity means that IT WILL NEVER HAPPEN. The left is naturally fractious because it represents almost everybody. You cannot expect a "solid majority faction" to be "indivisible"--most especially not in a country as diverse as the United States.
And how do you build this "solid majority faction" except from its parts? Perhaps I misunderstand you, but a majority is built out of people, starting at the grass roots level, who have many and diverse issues that prompt them to come to a political meeting, or to organize a protest, or to go out in the street and hand out leaflets or knock on doors, or--these days--to educate, inform and organize on the internet.
Granted, the U.S. is a particularly difficult place to organize, and has been especially targeted by multinational corporations and war profiteers with intense propaganda and fake democracy. But that doesn't mean that a "solid majority faction" can't be created. It just takes time, serious grass roots organizing, and fair and transparent vote counting, and I would add, thinking big--the main lessons of the Latin American leftist revolution.
I'm beginning to think that I HAVE misunderstood you. But when you make sweeping statements like "there cannot be a real left in america," I balk. I'm sure there were plenty of naysayers in Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador and these other countries ten years ago, or fifteen years ago, who said, 'Give it up! It'll never happen here!' For this reason. For that reason. Because there didn't seem to be a "solid majority faction," or whatever. (Look at Paraguay, for heavens' sakes--with the most fractious left in the world! THEY pulled together.) When you say that something is not possible, for some vague ideological or sociological reason--or for what seems to me to be an illogical reason, that you can't create "a solid majority faction" because you don't have a "solid majority faction"--then I say that you haven't thought this through. A strong leftist movement can ALWAYS happen. But if you put an ideological or a sociological point first, and people second, then maybe you don't have the sympathy necessary to see HOW it can happen here. You cannot impose an ideological or sociological precept on PEOPLE. And you also can't always extrapolate from one country or region to another, or one culture to another.
I realize this, in regard to the successful Latin American leftist movements. There are differences among L/A countries, and differences between those countries, and that region, and the U.S.A. Still, there is enough commonality among these various L/A leftist movements--which in fact comprise a general regional movement toward regional integration, independence and social justice--and there are sufficient common institutional features and common aspirations between L/A. democracies and our own, that I think that looking at how Latin Americans have done it is quite useful and applicable here, at least in some respects. (Certainly transparent vote counting is one of them--and that is an issue that could mobilize substantial numbers of north Americans, and could be the spark--like water was, in Bolivia--for a general uprising against corporate rule.)
You are not thinking creatively enough, it seems to me. You're just condemning something (I'm not sure what) like naysayers everywhere, prior to a revolution. You are saying that there can be no revolution because there is not yet a revolution. Well, yeah. Things are bit hopeless looking in the U.S. So what? Did that ever stop a revolution before, once the people found a way--in whatever conditions they found themselves in--to make one?
One other thing I want to ask you about--besides asking you to re-explain your point about "a solid majority faction"--is this comment: "And the fact that white-hatred is a substantial plank in the democratic party and in klein's base, dooms leftism in america. Again, it is the poison pill injected into the 'false left' by the rich, a poison pill that has killed leftism in america."
What are you talking about? It is so vague that I really don't get it. "White hatred is a substantial plank...in klein's base?" And who do you mean by "klein's base"? Her readers? That could be anybody. People who admire her writing? People who quote it? Who are the people in this "base" and how do you conclude that they exhibit "white hatred"? I presume you mean whites hating those with dark skin. Do you mean that? You got anything to back that up--that whoever you mean by "klein's base" are white racists? It seems off-the-wall and needs substantiation.
It just occurred to me that you might mean the Democratic Party leadership's targeting of the most progressive members of the Black Caucus in Congress? Is that what you are referring to? If so, what has that to do with "klein's base" (whatever that is), or the Democratic Party "base," for that matter? I truly do not understand this remark. Please explain.
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