tl;dr I am racist for saying slavery still exists—that when ICE deports undocumented workers to their deaths for not having their papers in order, that is a form of slavery.

Long post coming up. Only read if you’re interested, obviously.

So I have this friend. He’s a very unique guy. He’s a boomer, but I often forget that he’s a boomer. He’s a politician who’s won a bunch of local elections, but I’ve known him for about three years, now, and he’s never complained about my Marxist politics. Still, he seems to believe in bringing all kinds of people together to accomplish political goals, and he doesn’t really care what their politics are. If he can get conservatives to work with him on an environmental issue, for instance, he’ll go for it. But I’ve never seen him punch left, ever. He’s a Democrat, but he’s critical of the Democrats, to the point of talking about leaving the party.

Anyway, he invited me to a zoom meeting of some local activists yesterday. (If anyone remembers, I’m the guy who was bragging a month or two about starting a small local leftist group—we’re still around and still talking, but we haven’t done any cool shit.) I strongly suspected that the meeting was going to be lib shit, and I told him so, but he still told me to come, so I did. There were six other people there, including my friend. Two of them were millennial women in the coast guard. They were in uniform at the meeting. One of them was black, the other was white. Three others were white boomer women. There were a bunch of red flags, here, but I told myself I had only come to listen and not cause trouble. I also told myself that there are historical instances of the military radicalizing.

They started talking about their plans to subject the local police to racial bias training. They were planning to spend $11,000 to bring people in from halfway across the country to basically tell the cops to stop murdering black people. (My words, here, not theirs.) The cops would not be forced to attend, of course. The two women in the coast guard described themselves as federal law enforcement officers. I was ready to just leave, at this point, but then my friend asked me to tell everyone my thoughts on the matter.

And so I told them. I was elected just over a year ago to a small government committee that has some budgetary oversight over the sheriff, which means that I shudder sometimes have to meet with that guy. He told me, a year ago, that he had turned over two inmates at the county jail to ICE because they couldn’t make bail and didn’t have their papers in order. What had then happened to them he couldn’t say. This horrifying event has governed my opinion on the matter ever since. (I became an ACAB guy before George Floyd thanks to this as well as the subreddit.) (I am also the only person on that committee who always votes down the sheriff’s budget proposals.)

I didn’t say “abolish the police,” even though that’s what I believe. I told this group that the problem is that different countries exist, that some people don’t have their papers in order and are in danger of being deported to countries that have been destroyed by the CIA, that workers today are enslaved, but that they experience a different form of slavery.

I was nervous telling them this because I honestly didn’t want to get told off by a black woman. But she didn’t complain at all! She even seemed on the verge of tears when I told them the story about the sheriff. It was one of the boomer white women who told me that I couldn’t talk that way, that it was hurtful to refer to describe modern working conditions as slavery. And I was like—okay, it’s not exactly the same as the antebellum south, but it’s still pretty fucking bad. People have no control over their lives. Millions of Americans are getting thrown out of their homes. And these two people were deported by the local cops. How is that not slavery?

I also somehow brought in colonialism, European serfs being driven off their communal land to become workers, as well as the witch hunts, the Age of Discovery, and the enslavement of Africa, all of which began at around the same time, five hundred years ago.

I’m a white dude, so at some point this boomer woman somehow implied that I can’t talk about slavery because I’m not black. I was like, I’m half-Jewish and part Irish, so there’s plenty of slavery in my background. (Older Jews always talk about how “we built the pyramids,” even though there’s no record of Jews being involved in their construction or even existing at the time at all, but race is a social construct and all humans are genetically very closely related, so there must be some slaves of some kind in my background somewhere.)

If she had pushed me on the matter, I would have said that Britain had enslaved Ireland, particularly with reference to the famines of the 19th century which took place there, and that I think a lot of Irish people would back me up on this matter—but she didn’t push it. Irish indentured servants were also only one step above black slaves in America and only began to be considered “white” when some of them started becoming cops, at least according to David Roediger.

But I didn’t get to that. At this point, what do they do? They just moved on like I hadn’t said a word. They began talking about the senate runoff in Georgia. Neither of the coast guard women seemed angry at me at all. They asked my opinion on the matter. I told them I didn’t know much about it (because I can barely bring myself to care about electoral politics anymore), but that I had heard that Warnock was a socialist or a Marxist or liked Castro or something, which I thought was cool. I told them that Ossoff was a corporate stooge who (I believe) is not campaigning on a Green New Deal or Medicare for All and is likewise being funded by the worst people on Earth.

After that, I was interrupted by something and had to switch off my mic / camera. When I came back, the meeting seemed to be over.

So comrades. Am I the asshole? Is it hurtful to refer to modern working conditions, particularly for undocumented workers in the USA, as slavery? (In a Marxist sense, no, it is not exactly the same, but like I said—it still sucks.) Or was this bourgeois weaponizing identity politics to stop me from discussing radical politics?

Edit: thanks for all the awesome comments. Next time I’ll bring up the 13th amendment and focus on solidarity rather than the possibility that my ancestors were enslaved.

  • Gay_Wrath [fae/faer]
    ·
    4 years ago

    No. Literally the current, LEGAL text of the 13th amendment

    Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    The documentary 13th was directed by a black woman and it seemed like most of the contributions were from black people, and it literally makes the argument slavery never ended, just that it transformed. (as does Michelle Alexander's book the New Jim Crow)

    13th is on netflix, and it's incredible and engaging. deffo worth a watch. The New Jim Crow is also incredible if you are a reader, but the film overlaps a lot so you won't be missing that much if you don't read it.