Marxist IQ: Black History Month

Communist Party USA

  February is Black History Month. This month is of great importance, as the forces of racism and reaction, led by the Republican Party, are attempting to make Black history once more invisible in the history of the United States. Today we see in Republican-controlled states legislation banning the teaching of critical race theory in schools along with campaigns to remove books dealing with racism from school and community libraries. There are even policies to give parents the “right” to determine what their children will learn. In writing about the revolutions of 1848, Karl Marx said, “The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living.” The tradition of racism continues to weigh like a nightmare on the brains of too many people, a nightmare that the enemies of socialism and democracy seek to make real and permanent. This Marxist IQ is dedicated to the defense of African American history as an essential part of American history. 1. While Americans were long taught very little about slavery except that the abolitionist movement consisted of idealistic white people, historians have in recent decades shown that free Blacks and escaped slaves played a large role in organized abolitionist societies and in armed groups who fought against the fugitive slave law and worked to encourage slave uprisings. They now believe the percentages of free Blacks and escaped slaves in these groups were a. 10% in organized societies, 15% in fighting groups. b. 25% in organized societies, 30% in fighting groups. c. 35% in organized societies, 45% in fighting groups. d. 50% in organized societies, 75% in fighting groups.   2. Apologists for slavery in the North often argued that slaves were better off than white laborers and that abolitionists were privileged hypocrites. These arguments are similar to the contentions made to this day by opponents of the civil rights movement of the 1960s that all subsequent civil rights legislation benefited Black people at the expense of whites. In response to such arguments before the Civil War, escaped slave and abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass gave which of the following responses? a. Abolitionists should moderate their views. b. Abolitionists should vote for the Whig party, who were a “lesser evil” than the open pro-slavery Democrats. c. He never heard anyone who argued that slaves were better off than poor white people volunteer to become a slave. d. Abolitionists should launch a guerrilla war against the slaveholding South.   3. The Socialist Party had little interest and even less success in organizing Black workers and fighting racism because it believed that a. Black people were a conservative force because of their religious beliefs. b. Black people were farmers and not part of the working class. c. Black people were workers indistinguishable from all other workers, and their problems would be solved in the future only under socialism. d. white workers could be organized only if their racist prejudices were tolerated.   4. The Communist Party, USA, from its first years was both committed to and had significant success in organizing African American and other minority workers since the 1920s because it a. saw Black workers as a revolutionary vanguard to overthrow capitalism. b. advocated “Black capitalism” to advance Black workers in the system. c. saw African American people as both an integral part of the working class and an oppressed people with special needs and demands, which made the struggle against racism inseparable from the struggle for socialism. d. advocated establishing an African American homeland in Africa.   5. The Communist Party, USA, was the first party in U.S. history…

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Marxist IQ: Black History Month