https://peoplesworld.org/article/black-lives-matter-and-the-working-class-struggle-against-genocide/

Black Lives Matter and the working-class struggle against genocide
By Tim LibrettiJuly 28, 2020

Black Lives Matter march in Staten Island, New York after the killing of Eric 
Garner by the police. It was only a matter of time when disregard fo Black 
lives becomes disregard for all working-class lives as is evident now in 
Trump's criminal neglect of the needs of all Americans in the coronavirus 
crisis. | John Minchillo/AP
As many have pointed out, making Black lives matter is a precursor to making 
all lives matter. To make all lives matter, we have to address the ways certain 
lives, particularly those of people of color and working-class people in the 
United States, have been devalued.  Put another way, we can’t create a culture 
and society that values all lives unless we identify and root out the 
mechanisms and value systems that have been enabling the devaluation, the 
differential valuing, of particular groups’ lives.

One of those key mechanisms, of course, is racism.  And a behavior chiefly 
associated with the ideology of racism, it must be recognized, is genocide. It 
must also be recognized that the development of the United States is grounded 
in the genocide of Native Americans, the foundational act of racist violence, 
murder, in this nation’s history–and more particularly of the historical 
development of U.S. capitalism.

While Donald Trump certainly stands in a long line of presidents who have 
participated in this ongoing genocidal practice characteristic of U.S. history, 
the flagrant way he disregards human life, takes shameless pride in his 
genocidal discourse and practice, may just finally push Americans to the point 
of addressing U.S. racism in this broader historical and cultural frame.

As I wrote about in People’s World last October when Trump facilitated the 
genocidal slaughter of Kurdish people in Northern Syria by Turkey’s President 
Tayyip Erdogan, described by many as an “ethnic cleansing,” Trump’s behavior 
needs to be understood as nothing less than genocidal, worthy of being brought 
before the United Nations for adjudication. At the time, he was also engaging 
in the caging of Latin American people at the border, also arguably an act on 
the genocidal spectrum as I wrote at the time, highlighting the continuity 
between his domestic and foreign policy, his genocides at home and abroad.

Trump’s response to the police murder of George Floyd, sparking mass protests 
generating broad multiracial support for the Black Lives Matters movement, 
constitutes one more piece in the puzzle of America’s genocidal history and 
culture which Trump celebrates and practices so proudly.  Trump had little to 
say in sympathy for Floyd or in recognition of the larger epidemic of racism 
and police violence. He did exploit Floyd when he reported better than expected 
unemployment numbers on June 6, stating that Floyd must be looking down and 
smiling, that it was a good day for him.

Since then, Trump has largely pounded home, again and again, his “law and 
order” message, effectively endorsing the police’s participation in America’s 
ongoing genocide, particularly as he lambastes and threatens the protesters who 
continue to challenge racism.

His handling of the coronavirus pandemic reveals again this pattern of 
genocidal behavior.  Native American tribes, for example, recently had to sue 
the Trump administrationto release the COVID-19 relief funding designated for 
them. Earlier this month a federal judge ordered Treasury Secretary Steven 
Mnuchin to release $679 million slated for Native Americans, who have been 
particularly hard hit by the pandemic and also particularly neglected, their 
lives devalued along with those of other people of color in the United States.  
The judge scolded the agency for the “irreparable harm” caused by the 
months-long delay, writing in her decision, “Continued delay in the face of an 
exceptional public health crisis is no longer acceptable.”

While we can see this neglect and delay in funding as part and parcel of 
Trump’s genocidal agenda—and the nation’s ongoing genocidal project—Americans 
also need to recognize how addressing this genocidal practice is key to making 
all lives matter and to improving the lives of all Americans, particularly 
working-class Americans,  by creating a more just and humane society and 
culture in America.

The genocidal attitude which especially targets—and has historically 
targeted–people of color in the United States, enables the more general 
devaluation and indifference toward American lives. Trump’s refusal to address 
the coronavirus pandemic in a serious and coordinated way, with a national 
policy and support for states, should make clear to all Americans the way his 
racist disregard for the lives of people of color actually extends to all 
Americans.  His insistence on meat-processing workers returning to factories 
with no assurance of safety exemplifies this devaluation of human life. The 
U.S. class system, and the way it organizes production, devalues the lives of 
workers of all colors.

White Americans, all Americans, need to understand the way racism and genocide, 
in enabling the devaluation or differential valuation of lives, threatens their 
own survival.  They need to see that they should not consider themselves simply 
allies in the anti-racist struggle but that they should consider the struggle 
as crucial to their own survival and well-being.   It is part and parcel of 
class struggle. White America, America generally, must take its political lead 
from Native and African America.

Living in a genocidal culture, while racism has put people of color at the 
front of the line, it needs to be recognized that everybody is standing in line 
awaiting their own destruction.

Consider as illustrative of this point the Standing Rock Sioux’s legal victory 
last March when a federal judge struck down a permit that would have allowed 
the Dakota Access Pipeline to be directed under the Missouri River upstream 
from the Standing Rock reservation, endangering their lives, and way of life, 
should an oil spill occur.

Many will remember the massive protests in 2016 at Standing Rock. Well, the 
Sioux persisted beyond the publicity and finally won this verdict.

What is important to realize, however, is that this victory protects not just 
drinking water for the Standing Rock Sioux, but for everybody.  They are just 
experiencing this threat most immediately and visibly.

Undermining ecosystems is one part of a genocidal project, as we see with 
Standing Rock, but as I wrote about earlier for People’s World, Trump has been 
assaulting the environment and enabling the pollution of water supplies since 
he took office, demonstrating again that the dehumanization of particular 
groups of people and the disregard for their lives that culturally underpin 
genocide finally extend beyond the limits of those groups; they infuse the 
dominant culture at large.

As more Americans reflect on the recent protests and the Black Lives Matter 
movement, it will become increasingly important that they frame this moment in 
the context of the U.S. genocidal history to most lucidly grasp the cultural 
and historical dynamics endangering our lives and to understand how to create a 
culture and a society that truly value life.

[Tim Libretti teaches in the English Department at a public university in 
Chicago where he lives with his two sons.]
Sent from my iPhone

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