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George Jackson

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About Me

George Jackson: Black Revolutionary
By Walter Rodney, November 1971
To most readers in this continent, starved of authentic information by the imperialist news agencies, the name of George Jackson is either unfamiliar or just a name. The powers that be in the United States put forward the official version that George Jackson was a dangerous criminal kept in maximum security in Americas toughest jails and still capable of killing a guard at Soledad Prison. They say that he himself was killed attempting escape this year in August. Official versions given by the United States of everything from the Bay of Pigs in Cuba to the Bay of Tonkin in Vietnam have the common characteristic of standing truth on its head. George Jackson was jailed ostensibly for stealing 70 dollars. He was given a sentence of one year to life because he was black, and he was kept incarcerated for years under the most dehumanizing conditions because he discovered that blackness need not be a badge of servility but rather could be a banner for uncompromising revolutionary struggle. He was murdered because he was doing too much to pass this attitude on to fellow prisoners. George Jackson was political prisoner and a black freedom fighter. He died at the hands of the enemy.
Once it is made known that George Jackson was a black revolutionary in the white mans jails, at least one point is established, since we are familiar with the fact that a significant proportion of African nationalist leaders graduated from colonialist prisons, and right now the jails of South Africa hold captive some of the best of our brothers in that part of the continent. Furthermore, there is some considerable awareness that ever since the days of slavery the U.S.A. is nothing but a vast prison as far as African descendants are concerned. Within this prison, black life is cheap, so it should be no surprise that George Jackson was murdered by the San Quentin prison authorities who are responsible to Americas chief prison warder, Richard Nixon. What remains is to go beyond the generalities and to understand the most significant elements attaching to George Jacksons life and death.
When he was killed in August this year, George Jackson was twenty nine years of age and had spent the last fifteen [correction: 11 years] behind bars—seven of these in special isolation. As he himself put it, he was from the lumpen. He was not part of the regular producer force of workers and peasants. Being cut off from the system of production, lumpen elements in the past rarely understood the society which victimized them and were not to be counted upon to take organized revolutionary steps within capitalist society. Indeed, the very term lumpen proletariat was originally intended to convey the inferiority of this sector as compared with the authentic working class.
Yet George Jackson, like Malcolm X before him, educated himself painfully behind prison bars to the point where his clear vision of historical and contemporary reality and his ability to communicate his perspective frightened the U.S. power structure into physically liquidating him. Jacksons survival for so many years in vicious jails, his self-education, and his publication of Soledad Brother were tremendous personal achievements, and in addition they offer on interesting insight into the revolutionary potential of the black mass in the U.S.A., so many of whom have been reduced to the status of lumpen...About Me continued at George Jackson blogHome | Browse | Search | Invite | Film | Mail | Blog | Favorites | Forum | Groups | Events | Videos | Music | Comedy | Classifieds

My Interests

Liberation

I'd like to meet:

Settle your quarrels, come together, understand the reality of our situation, understand that fascism is already here, that People are dying who could be saved, that generations more will die or live poor butchered half-lives if you fail to act. Do what must be done, discover your humanity and your love in Revolution. Pass on the torch. Join us, give up your life for the People.

Music:

Bob Marley, Public Enemy, Tupac Shakur, Dead Prez, John Coltrane, Scarface, Steele Pulse, The Roots, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Burning Spear, Miles Davis, Outlaws

Books:

Soledad Brother, Blood In My Eye, IF They Come In The Morning, Art of War

Heroes:

Jonathan Jackson, Georgia Bea, Malcolm X, Angela Davis, Huey P. Newton, W.L. Nolen, James Carr, George Lewis, Bill Christmas, Torry Gibson, Bobby Seale, Bobby Hutton, Fleeta Drumgo, John Clutchette, Kwame Ture, Assata Shakur, Mumia-Abu Jamal, Bunchy Carter, Ericka Huggins, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Fidel Castro, Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Friedrich Engels, Mao Tse Tung, Imam Jamil Al-Amin AKA H. Rap Brown..

My Blog

Huey P. Newton: A Functional Definition of Politics

A Functional Definition of Politics: January 17, 1969..Politics is war without bloodshed. War is politics with bloodshed. When the peaceful means of politics are exhausted and the people do not get wh...
Posted by George Jackson on Sat, 02 Dec 2006 03:37:00 PST

To the Man-Child Jonathan Jackson

Tall, evil, graceful, brighteyed, black man-child--Jonathan Peter Jackson--who died on August 7, 1970, courage in one hand, assault rifle in the other; my brother, comrade, friend--the true revolution...
Posted by George Jackson on Mon, 09 Oct 2006 09:12:00 PST

George Jackson: Revolutionary

George Jackson: Black RevolutionaryBy Walter Rodney, November 1971continued...Under capitalism, the worker is exploited through the alienation of part of the product of his labour. For the African pea...
Posted by George Jackson on Mon, 09 Oct 2006 08:58:00 PST