Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

The Class Collaboration of “Justice” 
Erica Caines
29 Apr 2021
The Class Collaboration of “Justice” 
The Class Collaboration of “Justice” 

After the guilty verdict, the clarity that was collectively growing became squandered with the words “it’s not justice, it’s accountability.”

“The Black petty-bourgeoisie have established enclaves around themselves using one another’s platforms to avoid directly addressing the Black masses they have claimed to represent.”

The rejection of class analysis has binded many of our liberation efforts into an identity reductionist analysis of race solely. For this reason, the masses are more susceptible to being swayed against their better interests because the packaged messaging of hope and change is delivered by people, the Black petty-bourgeoisie, who look like us. However, one must begin to question if that were true, then why do the material realities of the Black working class differ so starkly from the popular narrative of progression and justice.

Who controls the narrative?

Dr. Jared Ball’s longtime work on media as a propaganda tool to obstruct liberation efforts (I Mix What I Like: A Mixtape Manifesto, The Myth and Propaganda of Black Buying Power) gives insight to the ways mainstream media has assisted the state in adapting. Not only has mainstream media (in collaboration with the federal government) pushed the fallacy of Black capitalism as a solution to all of our problems, but it did so with the assistance of Black media. Through many decades of representation via mainstream Black media, our inability to comprehend what counterinsurgency is and looks like has been further solidified. This is where we find ourselves today. 

During the post-uprising, pre-election day period, a Black pundit class emerged to deliver a different message than what was being shouted in the streets. The calls for “defunding the police” and “abolishing the police” were swiftly drowned out across media platforms where Black pundits, [questionable] Black activists, Black celebrities, and Black social media personalities were pushing voting for the most carceral warmongering administration AS the solution.

“Through many decades of representation via mainstream Black media, our inability to comprehend what counterinsurgency is and looks like has been further solidified.”

This class of Black people, the majority being Black women, who controlled the narrative of these platforms and spaces from positions of ‘power,’ aligning with the Black misleadership class, have attacked and silenced all Black people to their political left. Conveniently depicting criticisms as anti-Black, anti-Black women (misogynoir), and from whites only, this class– the Black petty-bourgeoisie— have established enclaves around themselves using one another’s platforms to avoid directly addressing the Black masses they have claimed to represent. 

This misdirection can be observed played out through the recent guilty verdicts of the murderous pig who took the life of George Floyd. A wave of political confusion has ensued that mirrors Election 2020. The same platforms that these same bad actors control are being used to carry out specific messaging that exists to drown out the radicalization of the masses. 

For instance, emotions that encircled the trial notwithstanding, there was a growing clarity among the masses that pigs testifying against pigs was not a symbol of progression but a concession from the state. The masses understood it to be a “sacrifice”. After the guilty verdict for all three charges, the clarity that was collectively growing became squandered in an instant with the words “it’s not justice, it’s accountability.”.

There’s no intent on clarifying that this is a concession won by the mobilizing of millions of working people around the country who marched, fought in the streets and burned down precincts. Instead, the Black petty-bourgeoisie media is attempting to convince the masses of working-class Black people that this is a sign that the system can work for us. 

This particular political confusion coming directly from the Black petty-bourgeoisie is rooted in their alignment with the state apparatus as an avenue for justice (and profit). This particular phrasing didn’t just appear out of thin air. It is a more-than-obvious prepared rejection of left criticism that has long held the notion that this system does not and WILL NOT provide justice. Yet somehow it has provided us accountability? 

“The Black petty-bourgeoisie media is attempting to convince the masses of working-class Black people that the system can work for us.”

The intent in this framing is to validate the state as a means to garner any type of justice (and stay employed). The message of “accountability” is being brought to us by a class of Black people who most benefit from aligning with the state. The misnomer that prisons are places of accountability is an obvious class collaboration of the Black petty-bourgeoisie currently controlling the narrative and the avenues in which they are being circulated uncritically. 

The Black working-class must understand this delusion as nothing more than a validation of a system that depicts Blackness as innately criminal which gives cover for MORE policing. The Black working-class must begin to understand the people bringing this particular messaging as class enemies.  What makes this insidious and counterrevolutionary are the ways abolition has begun to mean nothing more than a title one can take up. “I am an abolitionist” is popular enough to say and easy enough to dismiss when it does not align with self-interests. For these reasons, we are witnessing the continued justification of systems that have been designed to oppress Black people in the US.

The verdict brought a collective sigh of relief throughout Black communities because there are intentional efforts to steer our people away from political education and acute comprehension of their circumstances so they may organize towards the end of all oppressive systems. These efforts to depoliticize the Black working-class are encouraged across Black mainstream media and social media platforms by Black people controlling the narrative who have never stopped benefiting from the State-sanctioned deaths of Black people.

Erica Caines is a poet, writer and organizer in Baltimore and the DMV. She is an organizing committee member of the anti war coalition, the Black Alliance For Peace as well as an outreach member of the Black centered Ujima People’s Progress Party. Caines founded Liberation Through Reading in 2017 as a way to provide Black children with books that represent them and created the extension, a book club entitled Liberation Through Reading BC, to strengthen political education online and in our communities.

COMMENTS?

Please join the conversation on Black Agenda Report's Facebook page at http://facebook.com/blackagendareport

Or, you can comment by emailing us at [email protected]

Black Misleadership Class

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

The Black Misleadership Class Attempts to Obfuscate their Carceral State Correlation with the Bogeyman of “white wokeness"
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
The Black Misleadership Class Attempts to Obfuscate their Carceral State Correlation with the Bogeyman of “white wokeness"
14 December 2021
At a time that we need more justice and access to democracy, the Black Misleadership Class is fighting for more prisons and tawdry police refor
The US “Left” Has Repositioned Itself on the “Right” – Aligned with Capital, War and Repression
Riva Enteen
The US “Left” Has Repositioned Itself on the “Right” – Aligned with Capital, War and Repression
08 July 2021
The most dangerous component of ‘MSM’ fake news is arguably propaganda by omission.
Black Liberal, Your Time is Up
Yannick Giovanni Marshall
Black Liberal, Your Time is Up
01 July 2021
You are here to show your black skin so that you can claim the mantle of authority on anti-Blackness that white liberals have bestowed upon you.
The Great “Awokening” and Ruling Class Uses for Racial Grievance Discourse 
Pascal Robert
The Great “Awokening” and Ruling Class Uses for Racial Grievance Discourse 
09 June 2021
The Black political class is wedded to the centrist Democrats for its “fatback and biscuits” patronage.
Freedom Rider: Andrew Cuomo and the Black Political Class
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Freedom Rider: Andrew Cuomo and the Black Political Class
31 March 2021
Black politicians shamelessly rallied to Cuomo, ridiculously comparing him to Emmett Till and the Central Park Five, in hopes that he will dispense
Freedom Rider: Let the Black Caucus Be Black
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Freedom Rider: Let the Black Caucus Be Black
06 January 2021
Black people suffer because they have no real representation in Congress.
You Can’t Shame the Shameless Black Misleadership Class
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
You Can’t Shame the Shameless Black Misleadership Class
17 December 2020
The Black misleaders have been busy selling out Black people for half a century, but are still only barely tolerated by the rich man’s Democratic P
Freedom Rider: Master Biden Speaks
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Freedom Rider: Master Biden Speaks
16 December 2020
The civil rights groups’ rather basic requests for voting rights protections and the need for federal intervention to address police brutality were
Freedom Rider: Black Demands for the Biden Administration
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Freedom Rider: Black Demands for the Biden Administration
10 December 2020
The Black Misleaders give the impression of exercising black empowerment when they are in fact only promoting themselves.
Freedom Rider: Rebellion, Confusion, Scoundrels and Kente Cloth
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Freedom Rider: Rebellion, Confusion, Scoundrels and Kente Cloth
10 June 2020
Black rebellion brings insecurity to those in power, as editors, mayors and even long dead criminals are being called to account.

More Stories


  • BAR Book Forum: Lorenzo Kom’boa Ervin’s “Anarchism and the Black Revolution”
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Lorenzo Kom’boa Ervin’s “Anarchism and the Black Revolution”
    13 Oct 2021
    In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book.
  • Propaganda War against China Aims to Expand U.S. Hegemony and Eradicate Socialism
    Danny Haiphong, BAR Contributing Editor
    Propaganda War against China Aims to Expand U.S. Hegemony and Eradicate Socialism
    13 Oct 2021
    Anti-China propaganda is intended to indoctrinate Americans with fear and hatred and gain support for war against that country and against socialism itself.
  • Grand Jury Refuse to Charge Police in the Murder of Kwamena Ocran
    Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, BAR editor and columnist
    Grand Jury Refuse to Charge Police in the Murder of Kwamena Ocran
    13 Oct 2021
    Police killings in Maryland go unpunished as they do in the rest of the country. Kwamena Ocran was just one of of many Black victims in his community.
  • Houria Bouteldja and Youssef Boussoumah, co-founders of the Parti des Indigènes de la République in France, detail the party's history, the French anti-racist and anti-imperialist movement, and their own experiences engaging in anti-racist politics over the last fifteen years.
    Houria Bouteldja, Youssef Boussoumah
    The Parti des Indigènes de la République - A Political Success and the Conspiracy Against It (2005 to 2020)
    13 Oct 2021
    Houria Bouteldja and Youssef Boussoumah, co-founders of the Parti des Indigènes de la République in France, detail the party's history, the French anti-racist and anti-imperialist movement, and
  • Thousands of Police Killings Are Unreported
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Thousands of Police Killings Are Unreported
    06 Oct 2021
    Police killings of Black people are a feature of American law enforcement and they are deliberately under counted.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us