Class Consciousness Project – Telegram
Class Consciousness Project
790 subscribers
998 photos
248 videos
1 file
1.82K links
The Telegram channel for the Class Consciousness Project

Find us at https://classconsciousnessproject.blog
Download Telegram
Forwarded from Joti Brar
Just to reiterate, it is now a century since Britain had its first Labour government – a government which Lenin advocated workers should elect SO THAT THEY WOULD LEARN FROM THEIR OWN EXPERIENCE that it was a servant of imperialism and not a friend of the workers. So they would realise it was not and never could be a vehicle for socialism.

That very first Labour government in 1924 shocked workers by using police, army, spies and emergency powers to break strikes and sabotage the labour movement, which had begun the year on a wave of militancy. It left the civil service and state structures entirely intact and its ministers allowed themselves meekly to be directed in their new roles as frontpeople for a system of government over which they should expect to have no meaningful say.

Their eagerness to please their ruling-class masters and their rampant chauvinism in regard to the rightness of the criminal enterprise known as the British empire may surprise readers today, brought up as they have been to believe in the socialist foundations of this anti-worker organisation.

A few choice quotes from members of that first government can give an idea of where their loyalties lay then, and where they still lie today. (Spolier: it's not with the workers at home or the oppressed abroad.)

That same government appointed a Fabian, Sydney Olivier, to run the India office who stated:

The programme of constitutional democracy ... was not native to India ... It was impossible for the Indian people or Indian politicians to leap at once into the saddle and administer an ideal constitution ... The right of British statesmen, public servants, merchants and industrialists to be in India today was the fact that they had made the India of today, and that no home rule or national movement could have been possible in India had it not been for their work.

The same Sydney Olivier had formerly been governor of Jamaica, and remarked:

I have said that the West Indian negro is not fit for complete democratic citizenship in a constitution of modern parliamentary form, and I should certainly hold the same opinion with respect to any African native community.

Former railwaymen's union leader JH Thomas was appointed to the colonial office, and expressed the pious wish that

... it would be realised, when the time came for them to give up the seals of office, that they had not only been mindful of their responsibility, but had done nothing to weaken the position and prestige of this great empire.


Three months later this great traitor to the working class reiterated that the Labour government

... intended above all else to hand to their successors one thing when they gave up the seals of office and that was the general recognition of the fact that they were proud and jealous of, and were prepared to maintain, the empire.


This first Labour administration, which was so keen to make it clear that the British empire was "safe in our hands" imprisoned communists in India and arrested nationalist leaders without trial, bombed Iraqi villages, supported counter-revolutionary attempts to overthrow the government of Dr Sun Yat-sen in China.

As leading Labour politician JR Clynes put it:

In the same period of years, no Conservative or Liberal government has done more than we did to knit together the great Commonwealth of Nations which Britain calls her empire ... Far from wanting to lose our colonies, we are trying to keep them.
👌2👍1
Forwarded from Joti Brar
All this only came as a surprise to those who had not been paying attention to the words and actions of the Labour party's founders.

As far back as 1901, the man who would go on to become Britain's first Labour prime minister, Ramsay MacDonald, told an audience in London:

So far as the underlying spirit of imperialism is a frank acceptance of national duty exercised beyond the nation's political frontiers ... it cannot be condemned ... the compulsion to expand and to assume world responsibility is worthy at its origin.


The Fabian Society was the home of the chief theoreticians of the Labour party. Leading Fabians Beatrice and Sidney Webb were the authors of the Labour manifesto's clause iv, which was supposed to gull the general populace into believing the party had socialist intent.

Of course, clause iv was never acted on by the party in office, it remained a piece of paper until such time as the Labour party of Tony Blair in 1996 decided that such a genuflexion before the socialist-leaning sentiments of the masses was no longer necessary.

The Webbs wrote the following in an article in the New Statesman (which they founded) in 1913 discussing the falling birthrate amongst the upper stratum of workers and intelligentsia, which they plainly considered a disaster:

Into the scarcity thus created in particular districts, in particular sections of the labour market, or in particular social strata, there rush the offspring of the less thrifty, the less intellectual, the less foreseeing of races and classes – the unskilled casual labourers of our great cities, the races of eastern or southern Europe, the negroes, the Chinese possibly resulting, as already in parts of the USA, in such a heterogeneous and mongrel population that democratic self-government, or even the effective application of the policy of a national minimum of civilised life, will become increasingly unattainable.

If anything like this happens, it is difficult to avoid the melancholy conclusion that, in some cataclysm that is impossible for us to foresee, that civilisation characteristic of the western European races may go the way of half a dozen other civilisations that have within historic times preceded it; to be succeeded by a new social order developed by one or other of the coloured races, the negro, the kaffir or the Chinese.
👌2👍1
Join me at 2pm today where I'll be discussing the recent riots in Britain.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qH4BuKxtNYE
Forwarded from War Monitor
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
⚡️The far right have broken into a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham, England
These hotels are not only used to house "asylum seekers" but vulnerable people who are getting over drug addiction, long stays in hospital, homelessness and/or prison release.
Forwarded from Joti Brar
Islamophobia has been systematically stirred up for more than 20 years as part of the imperialist propaganda campaign to justify its aggressive wars in the middle east.

Having made this the ‘acceptable’ face of racism also serves to keep the working class divided and impotent as our rulers wage a relentless attack on workers at home and ramp up their vicious war drive abroad.

https://thecommunists.org/2024/08/03/news/how-achieve-unity-working-class-against-fascism/
Any restrictions on democratic rights are always targetted at the working class. The government will usually not say this, they will hide behind the boogeyman of the minute to justify their clampdown, but it always the case that it is workers who get hit hardest by these things. All trade unions should oppose any attempts by Starmer to restrict freedom of speech or the right to protest.
👍8