Hawkins: Democracy is not possible under capitalism

Hawkins: Democracy is not possible under capitalism

In 2016, Greens unanimously declared the party an ecosocialist party, and Howie Hawkins is discussing this promise and how democracy cannot truly play out under capitalism (click play on the audio feed at the end of this post).

The Green Party platform on economic justice reads:


The Green Party seeks to build an alternative economic system based on ecology and decentralization of power, an alternative that rejects both the capitalist system that maintains private ownership over almost all production as well as the state-socialist system that assumes control over industries without democratic, local decision making. We believe the old models of capitalism (private ownership of production) and state socialism (state ownership of production) are not ecologically sound, socially just, or democratic and that both contain built-in structures that advance injustices.


Instead we will build an economy based on large-scale green public works, municipalization, and workplace and community democracy. Some call this decentralized system ‘ecological socialism,’ ‘communalism,’ or the ‘cooperative commonwealth,’ but whatever the terminology, we believe it will help end labor exploitation, environmental exploitation, and racial, gender, and wealth inequality and bring about economic and social justice due to the positive effects of democratic decision making.


Production is best for people and planet when democratically owned and operated by those who do the work and those most affected by production decisions. This model of worker and community empowerment will ensure that decisions that greatly affect our lives are made in the interests of our communities, not at the whim of centralized power structures of state administrators or of capitalist CEOs and distant boards of directors. Small, democratically run enterprises, when embedded in and accountable to our communities, will make more ecologically sound decisions in materials sourcing, waste disposal, recycling, reuse, and more. Democratic, diverse ownership of production would decentralize power in the workplace, which would in turn decentralize economic power more broadly.

See http://www.gp.org/economic_justice_and_sustainability_2016

Texas GP members call for strong anti-racist stance from party leaders

Texas GP members call for strong anti-racist stance from party leaders

By now, many people are familiar with the situation in San Antonio over the weekend preceding July 4th, in which a local activist threw a drink into the face of a young person that was joking out loud about lynching Black people, while in a public establishment.  It was initially assumed that the local activist was a member of the Green Party, which later fact-checking showed was inaccurate.  Since then, there has been a short statement issued by the Green Party of Texas, which some Texas Greens find to be lacking. The sequence of events, plus a way to get involved, are posted here.

The original statement issued by GPTX was:

Our official reply concerning Kino Jimemez: Kino Jiménez has no association with the Green Party of Texas other than an entry in our contact file which was bogus and therefore has been deleted. His actions are 180º opposite of what we stand for.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/txgreens/posts/1990108787675483

Some GPTX members feel that the short statement centers white supremacy by concerning itself only with the actions of the San Antonio activist and also offers one take on the concept of non-violence.  Therefore, a group of Texas Greens decided to write an updated statement, here and offer commentary on the situation.  Here is that first draft:

On July 4th, Kino Ahuitzotl Jiménez removed a MAGA hat from a teen sitting in a Whataburger and then splashed him with an open drink. On July 5th, a Heavy article was published which claimed Jiménez was a Green Party member and quoted the secretary of Harris County Green Party as having expelled him due to his actions. On July 6th, the GPTX steering committee posted a summary of these events, concluding that Jiménez’s behavior was “180º opposite of what we stand for.” Subsequently, Jiménez has not only been verbally assaulted around the nation due to both liberal and conservative media coverage, but was arrested, and lost employment at a bar in San Antonio.

 

After a period of democratic deliberation amongst the rank-and-file of the GPTX, many of us have concluded that the official response was inadequate, and worse, contributes to the very institutionalization of white supremacy against which this party is opposed. On behalf of the GPTX, we apologize for fundamentally mishandling this incident. On the one hand we attempted to resolve the situation by shifting blame to bureaucratic problems, and on the other we actively condemned the anti-racist actions of Jiménez out of a liberal interpretation of ‘non-violence.’


Although the secretary of Harris County Green Party had no authority under our bylaws to speak to the media on behalf of the party as a whole, nor to expel Jiménez, we collectively hold responsibility for inadequately training our officers in their powers and responsibilities. Additionally, we should generally be more prepared to handle and correct such incidences, should they occur.


In terms of the actual actions of Jiménez, both the secretary of Harris County Green Party and the SEC offered a single interpretation of our Ten Key Values, one which not only failed to fit the fact patterns, but also provided tacit cover for white supremacy. Jiménez was responding not only to the MAGA hat, which is itself a white supremacist symbol, but also to the horrifying and racist dialogue of the two teens. In this sense, Jiménez was acting to simultaneously disrupt the ‘safe space’ that enabled the racist banter and to put ice on the teens’ expectations that such ideas are acceptable in our society. In contrast, by denying Jiménez the agency to engage in such low-level disruptions as splashing a drink on racists or grabbing a hate symbol, our leadership has functionally taken the stance that people of color can only protest within boundaries of ‘civility,’ which of course are pre-determined by white society.


While our leadership may have cited the Ten Key Values, they surely stopped at the title of “Non-Violence,” for under the description of that value, our party has previously affirmed that “We recognize the need for self-defense and the defense of others who are in danger.” Further, another key value, Social Justice and Equal Opportunity states that, “We must consciously confront in ourselves, our organizations, and society at large, any discrimination…”


What better way to protect people of color as a whole and to confront discrimination than to verbally and physically disrupt racism as it happens? To look at it differently, does Jiménez deserve to be jailed and unemployed because he took away a racist symbol and splashed a drink at teens laughing about lynchings? Based on our reading of social justice theory and our own platform, of course not; to conclude otherwise is tacit white supremacy, plain and simple.


Thus, we believe that the Green Party of Texas as a whole owes an apology to Jiménez and all people of color, both within and without the party. Although we had believed ourselves to be an ally in the fight against white supremacy, our actions in this incident have clearly revealed otherwise. We are deeply sorry for having failed here as anti-racist allies.


Nonetheless, an apology is not enough. We will also continue to engage in democratic dialogue with the goal of producing changes in internal policy and officer education, which should hopefully prevent such failures from occurring in the future.

Co-signers:

Aaron Renaud (Dallas County, TX)
Alex Telecky (Collin County, TX)
Cory Bowers (Dallas County, TX)
Remington Alessi (Galveston County, TX)
Adrian Boutoureira (Travis County, TX)
Natalia Schuurman (Travis County, TX)
Travis Christal (Tarrant County, TX)

The draft co-signers explain:

On Sunday (7/15), the GPTX SEC discussed a proposal by several TX Young Greens for the party to publicly apologize for its mishandling of the recent incident concerning Mr. Jiménez. The proposed apology is included below. The TX GP leadership decided to form an ad hoc committee to write up an apology by the night of the 17th, which may or may not reflect the original proposal. This committee was comprised of Shawn Gay, Jeff Justice, Alán Alán Apurim, Kevin McCormick, Alexandra Telecky, and Aaron Renaud, but also received commentary from GPTX co-chairs Joy Davis and Wesson Gaige.

 

The editing process was a struggle, as the liberals on the committee wished to defang and weaken the language of the apology draft, such as by eliminating the voice and rhythm from the writing, down-playing the failures of GPTX leadership by eliminating such language, and reducing space given to the leftist counter-interpretation of the ten key values. For example, both Shawn and Jeff originally wished to eliminate everything after the opening paragraph in order to replace it with the following: “After further discussion with our party membership, we would like to formally retract stating that Jimenez’s actions are 180 degrees opposite of what we stand for. We believe that he should not have been arrested or fired from his job. The reason why is that Jimenez was, in his own way, standing up against what he viewed as racist behavior, which some in society believe is acceptable. We find such behavior completely unacceptable. The MAGA hat has regretfully become a provocative symbol of racist ideals and policies. The Green Party of Texas stands for non-violence and promoting social justice and equal opportunity. It vows to continue and redouble our advocacy for all who have suffered and still suffer the effects of institutionalized white supremacy.” Similarly, Kevin McCormick stated that this apology, “…is shaping up to be worse than the original blunders of the HCGP Secretary and subsequent blunder of the SEC co-chair,” that “‘we’ are not collectively guilty of these actions,” and the letter “looks like emotive babble.”

 

On July 19th, two days past the stated deadline, the ad hoc committee submitted a heavily edited apology to the SEC, with a vote scheduled for July 23nd, or six days past the stated deadline. As of the 23rd, co-chair Wes Gaige claimed that the ad hoc committee was submitting the final copy to the SEC later that day, with revisions occurring on Slack, outside of the original committee deliberation in email which ended on the 19th. In truth, some committee members were engaged in a parallel editing conversation outside of the ad-hoc committee’s email thread, with Jeff Justice making calls for “completely redoing this document.” As a result, non-committee members have essentially rewritten the entire apology from the ground up, with Wesson Gaige pushing to submit that copy to the SEC for a vote, instead of the copy deliberated on in the email thread.

 

The new apology reads: “The Green Party of Texas supports Non-Violence as one of its Ten Key Values. Self defense is the right of all human beings subject to attack. Given the option, walking away from a potentially violent situation is the better response. The incident shown in the mass media, the throwing of a drink and walking away with a hat, may have been the result of aggressive provocation by the people taping Kino Jimenez. We don’t know what was happening prior to his being videotaped. Green Party value of non-violence would promote intervening verbally or by providing a comfortable space to argue without touching another person or throwing objects when confronted with bullying and verbal or physical aggression. We abhor violence. We also abhor racism and discrimination. We also recognize that resistance to injustice may require measures of civil disobedience and verbal and physical manifestation of disapproval. The matter is wisely employing those measures, including what, when, and how. Please note that the Green Party of Texas hasn’t banned Kino Jimenez from anything. He was never a member of the Green Party to begin with. We stand opposed to the trend towards fascism led by the current President and his racist supporters. We stand in support of people oppressed by white supremacy.

 

Thus the liberals of the party advocated a distortion of our party process by subverting the ad-hoc committee entirely. For example, Shawn Gay claimed on the 22nd that “the SEC will vote later today before posting on FB,” but without clarifying at all that the entire apology had been completely rewritten. When these failures to abide by process were brought up to the GPTX leadership, their only response was “Such was not communicated to the rest of us. We were looking for the draft and nothing happened. In the meantime, Alfred submitted his draft.” Although both co-chairs were cc’d on the email thread and had access to the Google doc containing the official draft, they would rather overlook an apology that runs counter to their liberal ideology and ignore the process entirely.

 

As a result, the following co-signers have created this petition urging the GPTX SEC to adopt the apology as it was originally written (first quote above) and without further bureaucratic delay.

Take Action

The petition below sends an email to the GPTX leadership to appeal for them to make a courageous statement about both the human right to self-defense and the responsibility of all Greens to opposed openly white supremacist and racist speech and actions.

Petition: Ideological Struggle in Texas over anti-racist action

  

Dear Green leaders:

**your signature**

16 signatures

Share this with your friends:

   


Latest Signatures
16 Mx. Jeff R. Gulfport, FL 33707, FL Aug 04, 2018
15 Miss Ariel H. Alvin, TX Jul 28, 2018
14 Miss Abigail P. Toledo, Ohio Jul 27, 2018
13 Mx. Tommie J. Charlotte , North Carolina Jul 26, 2018
12 Ms Stephanie T. San Antonio , TX Jul 25, 2018
11 Mr Ryan G. Little Rock, AR Jul 24, 2018
10 Ms Christiane D. Spokane, WA Jul 24, 2018
9 Ms matthew l. galveston, tx Jul 24, 2018
8 Mr Ahmed E. Union, NJ Jul 24, 2018
7 Ms Natalia S. Austin, TX Jul 24, 2018
6 Ms Olinka G. Dallas, Texas Jul 24, 2018
5 Ms Megan B. Clovis, CA Jul 24, 2018
4 Mr Tron C. Jul 24, 2018
3 Mx. Jason J. Denver , Colorado Jul 24, 2018
2 Mr Jacob F. Colorado Springs, Colorado Jul 24, 2018
1 Mx. Remington A. Galveston, TX Jul 23, 2018

Dr. Margaret Flowers: Unity and principled disagreement in the Green Party

Dr. Margaret Flowers: Unity and principled disagreement in the Green Party

An ongoing issue within the Green Party is the attempt to characterize differences of opinion as “factionalism.”  This phenomenon is a posture some “old guard Greens” take when confronting change.

You may not realize that one of our core organizers, Dr. Margaret Flowers, is running for a seat on the Green Party of the United States’ national steering committee.  In her campaign, she has had to face opposition that accuses her of “factionalism,” and in response, she wrote the following commentary to the GP National Committee.  We’ve posted it here with her permission.

Dear Delegates,

Margaret Flowers protesting the Dominion Energy Cove Point Terminal in Maryland.

First, I want to thank all of you who are supporting my run for steering committee. I appreciate your positive comments on and off this list. I hope that I am elected and have the opportunity to serve in this time of great potential for transformative change.

I am writing to acknowledge the struggles that are going on within our party, and that have existed throughout the party’s history. Yes, while we are united as Greens in our support for our platform, there are differences in opinion about how we achieve our goals. This is to be expected in any organization and it ought to be welcomed as an opportunity for deliberation and debate and to grow stronger in our positions and resolve.

We are all Greens. We who support the Green Party platform are all Greens. Nobody, even if you were a Green from the beginning of the party, gets to claim that only they are Greens and that people who disagree with them are “the other.” That type of thinking will stifle and probably is stifling the party.

While some would degenerate into accusations of factionalism and calling some Greens “the opposition,” these differences in opinion are normal. We can disagree with each other, even publicly. However, what is not healthy is name calling, finger pointing and other immature behaviors. I hope we can strive for principled and constructive discussions rather than tearing each other down. Let’s model the world we are striving to create.

Margaret relaxes with family and friends. Her medical practice was as a pediatrician.

One of my areas of expertise is social movements (others are pediatrics, single payer health care and gardening). Like biological organisms, social movements (and parties) thrive when they are diverse.

The Green Party will also thrive if it is diverse, but only if we are ready to accept that diversity. We have work to do if we want to be a strong and diverse party because there are issues within the party of racism, white supremacy and patriarchy. Our societal structure is racist, white supremacist and patriarchal, so it is no surprise that it exists in the party. The good news is that our values are anti-racist, anti-white supremacist and anti-patriarchal. With some work, we can learn to recognize how these play out in society and in the party and change our behaviors, and if we do that, we will grow because we will stop losing people who come to the party and leave because they were offended.

As there have been questions on various Green Party lists about my positions and motivations, I would like to clarify them here on the national list where all can read and discuss them. I encourage other steering committee candidates to do the same.

Independence – I believe that in order to effect transformational change we need to be a party that challenges the duopoly parties. I work with people from the duopoly parties on specific issues, but a third party that effects change must challenge those parties because they work to maintain the status quo.

Broad social movement – I believe that we need to be a party that lives its full platform and connects to a broad range of social movements, rather than seeing ourselves as being restricted to being environmentalists. These issues are all deeply interconnected and we can’t actually solve any of them without solving all of them. Our base is the people who are directly impacted by injustice and oppression and we need to make stronger alliances with impacted communities, build trust with people, welcome new people and nurture new leaders.

Economic Democracy – As far as economic systems go, a capitalist economy is incompatible with the GP platform. But I’m not a purist. One of my mentors is Gar Alperovitz and he says that the new economy is still emerging. It will likely have features of both capitalism and socialism. I prefer the term Economic Democracy. We cover this in more depth on our project, It’s Our Economy. Read our core issues here. Kevin Zeese and I wrote a number of articles about this in 2013 for TruthOut.

I sincerely believe that the next decade is full of potential for real transformative changes as outlined in the GP platform and that achieving those transformative changes will require a movement of movements that understands how power works and how to be effective and a political party that represents the values and principles of that movement of movements.

To that end, we created Popular Resistance – to raise awareness of the social movements in the US and around the world, to provide tools, to run issue campaigns that connect movements and to educate people about strategy and social movement theory. That’s why we just completed our first online free school on “How Social Transformation Occurs.”

And I am involved in the Green Party because I believe we can be the major party of the rising social movements. I was a strong supporter during Jill Stein’s past two campaigns. I was asked to be her vice president both times, but I declined because I did not think I was the right person for the ticket. I helped to create the Green Shadow Cabinet in 2013. I am active in my local and state parties and we are having a lot of success in growing, running strong candidates and challenging the duopoly parties. I want to share what we are doing and what we have learned with others.

So, my basic points are:

  • Differences in position will always exist in the party.
  • We are all Greens.
  • Disagreements and debate are healthy when they are done in a principled way.
  • Let’s try to stop the infighting and work together.
  • We have a lot of work to do.

I hope we can focus on the work ahead and that I have the opportunity to share my experience, talents and wisdom on the GPUS steering committee.

Margaret Flowers
She/her
MD delegate
Candidate GPUS steering committee