Young and Revolutionary: You Are The Future

Daily headlines and news feeds continue to pour out new details on the  
economic crisis, but they rarely discuss the roots of the crisis – the economic 
 revolution brought about through labor- replacing technology. This 
economic  revolution has led to a new class of workers who are no longer 
necessary 
for  production and are thus being thrown out of the system. 
 
Young people coming of age today are a large and growing part of that new  
class, and they have a large and increasingly important role to play. These  
workers coming of age have only known the crisis caused by the economic  
revolution and its many symptoms of social destruction: deteriorating  
infrastructure, nothing but temporary work or no work at all, the stingiest of  
social services, a deteriorating education system, the growth in prisons and  
policing, and military recruiters hawking bloody lies in high schools and  
colleges. 
 
All generations must join together and help build a new world in which the  
abundance made available by new technology is distributed to the many and 
not  just the few. 
 
What's different about recent generations 
 
Many within the new class of workers once had a connection to steady work,  
but have been thrown out by an economic system that does not need them any 
more.  But many younger workers who are just entering, or who have been 
struggling to  get a foot in the workforce were born thrown out of the system. 
Many under 35  have never been part of it, and have not known any prosperity 
under capitalism,  nor any job security, and in growing numbers, not even a 
stable home. 
 
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment among workers  
between the ages of 16-19 is approaching 30%, nearly triple the overall  
unemployment rate of 10%. 20% of workers between 16 and 24 are unemployed, and  
11% of those between 25-35 are unemployed. Over 50% of all black youth 
between  the ages of 16-24 are unemployed, and it is estimated that only 14 out 
of 
every  100 young black men have jobs. These are important years for younger 
workers to  gain experience and build their employment skills, but younger 
workers are being  displaced from even entry level jobs. There also has been 
a drop in the hiring  of college graduates, as even a college education 
serves less and less to fend  off a bleak future. 
 
What recent generations face 
 
What has the last 20 or so years meant to those growing up in this social  
and economic chaos? Low paying temp jobs or no jobs, the end of welfare, 
police  brutality, drugs, military recruiters, years of war, the border fence, 
free  trade, chronic unemployment, underemployment, and an educational 
system under  attack in the form of cuts to school budgets, larger class sizes, 
more testing,  tuition increases, less financial aid, to name a few. 
 
While there has been mobility for some, the conditions for the mass of  
working class blacks, Latinos and whites continued to worsen, especially for  
young adults. Two examples of this are the employment outlook for young 
people  and the impact of the growth in prisons and policing. 
 
As jobs have been automated or hustled around the world, the last few  
decades have seen a U.S. labor market being restructured from industrial to  
service sector jobs – and this trend continues to intensify. The November 2009  
Monthly Labor Review report predicts that job creation over the next ten 
years  will be in the employment areas that pay less, are typically non-union 
and less  secure, such as customer service reps, personal and home care 
aides, retail  sales people, security guards, and teacher assistants. But 
automation does not  stop with industry. In fact the leading robotics yearly 
publication World  Robotics has moved from several dozen pages on service 
robots 
to an entirely  separate volume. The technology exists today to fill even 
these jobs (or reduce  the number of workers necessary) with robots and 
automated machines. 
 
While there are fewer jobs, the prison population continues to grow. In  
1970 the prison population was 200,000. Today it is over 2.3 million with 7  
million in jail or prison or on probation or parole. Over half of those 
behind  bars are under 35 and incarceration rates for those between 20 and 35 
are 
much  higher than for other age groups. 
 
Author Christian Parenti argues in his book, Lockdown America: Police and  
Prisons in the Age of Crisis, that massive growth in the numbers 
incarcerated is  a ruling class solution to lessen the chances of “social 
dynamite,” 
first as a  response to the uprisings of the 1960s and early 70s and second, 
as a response  to the economic transformation that began in the early 1980s. 
Likewise, in her  book Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and 
Opposition in Globalizing  California scholar Ruth Wilson Gilmore argues that 
the 
growth of prisons is a  way of dealing with surplus populations rendered 
unnecessary by changes in  productivity. The growth of prisons, policing and 
surveillance are having  devastating affects on communities as potential young 
leaders are being shipped  out to spend years and decades in prison. 
 
Young revolutionaries 
 
Those of us born between 1975 and 1995 are called Generation X and  
Generation Y (or next), or the hip-hop generation and post-hip-hop generation.  
Workers in recent generations were born into a world of social and economic  
disruption and have grown up as dispossession was becoming normalized as part 
of  the very fabric of U.S. society. Many don’t trust or like capitalism, 
and might  be called disaffected, that is, alienated, discontented, or 
disloyal toward  authority, as many have never been allowed to enter the system 
in 
any meaningful  way in the first place. Youth are an important segment of 
today's emerging  revolutionaries. 
 
Some consider themselves part of the hip-hop generation, including urban  
minority youth, but also white urban youth, suburban youth, and rural youth.  
Others have found other subcultures to belong to, including the hard-core 
music  scene and various forms of gangs, among others. Though there is a 
diversity of  thought within the younger generations, more tolerance for 
differences and  suspicion of sectarianism, there is also some lack of 
historical 
knowledge of  struggle, as well as a lack of a class analysis. 
 
At the same time, these generations on the whole have a much better sense  
of politics and economics than given credit. A lingering depoliticized and  
distracted sensibility was shaken off as people, especially new generations, 
 began to ask deeper questions in the wake of 9/11. This had begun in the 
1990s  with gang truces, cop watching, and the anti-corporate and 
anti-sweatshop  movements built on the fights against NAFTA and the 
anti-globalization  
struggles. 
 
Many are especially eager to look to other struggles to see what is  
possible, such as the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela, the work of the  
Zapatistas, the anti-neoliberal movement in Bolivia, and the factory takeovers  
in 
Argentina, to name a few. 
 
Many in the younger generations generally mistrust corporations and  
government, but also have a tendency toward cynicism and irony, which can lead  
us 
to apathy or worse. Questioning authority comes almost instinctually, but  
with this there is a reticence to join organizations. 
 
There is a fire in the bellies of younger folk today and young  
revolutionaries are burning up with energy, but for many there is a feeling 
that  the 
only revolutionary leadership that can be looked to are those forms of the  
past period. (Such as the Black Panthers, the Brown Berets and SDS, among  
others). 
 
The League of Revolutionaries for a New America has many generations of  
revolutionary leadership, and decades of experience that can join with the new 
 and emerging leaders from younger generations. 
 
Future of revolutionary struggle and role youth can play 
 
The new generations, like those that have preceded it, contain  
revolutionaries who are responding to transformations in society, but like 
every  
generation they have a particular relationship to these transformations based 
on  
their own experience and changing conditions. It is clear that a 
significant  segment of the younger generations want to act, want to do things 
and 
need to be  directly involved. Those with long experience in the revolutionary 
movement must  join with the new generations through education, action and 
involvement and  learn of the ideas and experiences of younger generations. 
To those among the  newest generation of revolutionaries, deep knowledge lies 
with elders. 
 
All generations must unite and take seriously our responsibility and  
authority as the future of revolutionary struggle is in our hands. 
 
September.2010.Vol20.Ed5 This article originated in Rally, Comrades! P.O.  
Box 477113 Chicago, IL 60647 _rally@lrna.org_ (mailto:ra...@lrna.org)   Free 
to reproduce unless otherwise marked. Please include this message with any  
reproduction. 
 


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