Esaay: Resurrection City: The Dream…The Accomplishments, Jesse Jackson, 1968

EDITORS, THE BLACK AGENDA REVIEW

“The Poor People’s Campaign is the greatest single challenge ever unleashed upon our colonial system.”

Revisiting the Reverend Jesse L. Jackson’s essay “Resurrection City: The Dream… the Accomplishments” in the hours after his death is to encounter a morose nostalgia – and, quickly following, an acute rage. “Resurrection City” was published in Ebony magazine in October 1968. In the essay, Reverend Jackson recounts the vision of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., before his April 4, 1968 assassination, for a political program focussing on poverty, economic injustice, and the profound and violent class differences — the brutal divisions between rich and poor — cutting across racial lines in the United States. King’s vision resulted in the Poor People’s Campaign. 

Under the leadership of Reverend Ralph Abernathy and other leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), the Poor People’s Campaign joined with a cross-racial alliance of advocates for the poor and working class organizations to carry out Dr. King’s vision of an occupation of the US Capitol’s National Mall to make visible the plight of the poor to the US government. Groups organized caravans from all over the US to travel to Washington DC. They began arriving in Washington on May 5th. On May 13th at an opening ceremony, Dr. Abernathy dedicated the site as “Resurrection City, U.S.A.” and construction of the wood dwellings began. The encampment had about 3000 dwellings and more than 50,000 people lived on the site – in the heart of the US government.

Resurrection City is probably better remembered for its quick death than for its short life. It lasted but forty-two days. Media coverage focussed on its internal political difficulties, the apparent failure of its progressive vision for economic reform, and the near-Biblical storms that turned it into a city of mud and wood and frustrated dreams.

Yet in his Ebony essay, Reverend Jackson, dismisses the easy criticisms, along with the one-dimensional and slanted media coverage. He instead pointed to Resurrection City’s accomplishments: its gathering of disparate racial groups of poor people and its attempts to center economics and class as the unifying force of US politics over narrow sectional and racial interests.

It is striking to read the Reverend Jackson of 1968. His personality and politics have been flattened and caricatured in the intervening years: after his two candidacies of the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party (1984 and 1988), with the control of the party by the right-wing Democratic Leadership Council and the rise of Bill Clinton, and, especially as Obama engulfed Black politics. Yet, of course, Reverend Jackson was also both the product of a movement and a bellwether of the times. To read in Ebony magazine of all places his progressive demands for jobs and economic justice, his attacks on militarism, imperialism, and oligarchy, and his advocacy of inter-racial alliance suggests something of a long-lost era in US politics. Hence the nostalgia, but also the anger: what has happened to US politics, to Black politics, in the intervening decades has been nothing short of disastrous.

Jackson’s “Resurrection City” is a document of a lost politics — a politics that needs to rise from the dead. We reprint it below.

Resurrection City: The Dream…The Accomplishments

by JESSE JACKSON

From May to July the Poor People’s Campaign converged on Washington, D.C., to challenge the nation’s economic structure to address the problems of poverty in America. Much has been written and filmed about the campaign, but now I want to submit my reflections on this phase of the struggle for human rights.

From its inception in the mind of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to the forceful closing of Resurrection City, the Poor People’s Campaign had an awesome task: to help the nation determine its priorities. In Birmingham, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference challenged America’s priorities in relationship to its social structure. In Selma, that challenge was extended to the political structure. Finally, the time came to raise the economic issues to the conscience of the nation.

America had been alerted that 40 million people, a full one-fifth of the world’s richest nation, were living below the poverty level.

Buried midst the tons of information was the fact that 30,000 jobs were being lost to the labor market each week by technological advances. In order to meet the growing anxiety of the American people, the Poor People’s Campaign took up the burden of raising the issue of poverty to the surface of our national conscience and to expose its devastation in the lives of millions of poor people.

Someone had to cry out for justice in a land that has placed priority on profits rather than persons.

Someone had to ring out with clear moral authority that 10 million people went to bed each night suffering physical destruction from malnutrition to acute starvation.

Someone had to say that not only do we need jobs but that we also need a redefinition of work.

Someone had to plead for a quality in life that offered wages, but more importantly, fulfillment.

Someone had to demand that involuntary starvation should be a punishable crime in a land of surplus and waste.

But so often only the incidentals of the Campaign were communicated to the nation. Such incidents included the record downpour of rain and the resulting mud in Resurrection City. The care of the mule train, the mire and the inherent confusion in a massive task of building a city of many ethnic groups were amplified or printed out of proportion by the news media. Thus the general level of the nation’s insensitivity and unawareness was in part attributable to a press that deals often in sensationalism, personalities and in protecting big business. And the press preferred to print apparent feelings about the death of Dr. King and Senator Robert Kennedy rather than focus upon the issues damning the poor to hungering insignificance. Thus a nation largely uninformed was challenged to judge the personal behavior of poor people rather than the collective behavior of the Congress.

Given the press preferences for problems of process rather than the purpose of the Poor People’s Campaign, the adversaries of the poor exploded those problems out of proportion in order to avoid the issues of inequity in our economic structure. From mud to personality differences in Resurrection City occupied their time rather than the cries for food, jobs and opportunity that brought Resurrection City into being. But a new idea was moving from the excitement of conception to the fermentation and growth to the laboring pains of anguish when moments of history yield forth new life.

GATHERING THE POOR

What was the difficulty? The pain involved pulling together all of America’s poor: the Indians, the Puerto Ricans, the Mexican-Americans, the poor whites, the poor [B]lacks — each of whom had been taught that the others were enemies. Historical circumstances forced each group apart and structured in each disrespect for the other. We had been so obsessed with competing with one another for the few jobs and privileges at the bottom of the economy that we dared not threaten our status with too much public or political identification. We thought competition was our most effective tool, when cooperation is our real challenge. Many of us had analyzed our problem to be simply race, when, in reality, race is only a part of the problem. Class is another part of the problem. There is an inherent contempt that the economic system holds for the suppressed at the bottom of the economy. Yet the economy of the nation rests upon the shoulders of the oppressed.

The first meetings of these different ethnic groups were exciting but tense. The groups were full of fear and mistrust of one another. Each group felt that it had a monopoly on pain and suffering. So meetings were long as we bore with one another’s sermons on the effects of particular aches and pains. This was a period of anxiety when each group began learning to appreciate the other, to gather information about the other.

With our [B]lack-white analysis few of us realized that there are more poor whites in numbers than poor [B]lacks. But in percentages, more [B]lacks are poor than whites. Few of us really understood the insignificant role relegated to the poor white class by the rich white class. We realized that [B]lacks are a despised caste within the poor class. But at least we were a caste which the system calculated to make us suffer but allow us to live. While [B]lacks were slated to be ground up by the economic system based upon slavery, and eliminated as the technological development of the system rendered them unnecessary, the ultimate destiny of [B]lacks was genocide spread from generation to generation. Seldom do we realize that [B]lack capitulation to the tyranny of the slave system provided us the means to struggle for our survival midst our suffering and our destiny to die. White people concluded that “a good nigger was an obedient nigger,” and they taught us that obedience was better than sacrifice. Thus, we developed survival techniques that included acting docile and meek even though we always felt differently. Uncle Tomism because for us an involuntary state of existence developed for survival.

At the same time, America’s Indians were destined to instant genocide, tribe by tribe, day by day. The Indians, with their strong sense of identity and pride, were confronted by the forces of tyranny invading their lands and homes. They remained anti-colonialist and contended that their land had been taken, and for this they were driven from their homes to reservations in the desert regions to die rather than in ghettos or colonies to work. So anti-colonial were their actions that white people concluded that “the only good Indian is a dead Indian.”

Another technique used upon [B]lacks, but not upon other poor minorities, was social integration. We integrated from pain and brutality and humiliation, not toward joy and fulfillment. Blacks have never been covetous of the talents or souls of white folks. Only whites’ privileged status and social protection appealed to [B]lacks. Our total uprooting and separation from our tribes, languages, culture and land is the fundamental reason for our actions. As [B]lacks we were taken from our land and brought here. We experienced the whites as rapists of our dignity. On the other hand, the Indians’ sense of nationhood, or peoplehood, is responsible for their collective behavior for freedom or death. The Indians and the Mexican-Americans experienced the Europeans as rapists of their land.

In Resurrection City the poor whites began to see how they had been used as tools of the economic system to keep other minority groups in check. Perhaps the poor whites were the most tricked of all the poor in that they are in the same economy class as the others. Their problems are basically the same, in fact as ours: a need for food, jobs, medicine and schools. However, they were given police rights over “niggers,” a plan which satisfies their sick egos but does not deal with any of their basic problems.

It was in our wallowing together in the mud of Resurrection City that we were allowed to hear, to feel and to see each other for the first time in our American experience. This vast task of acculturation, of pulling the poor together as a way of amassing economic, political and labor power, was the great vision of Dr. King.

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Democracy & capitalism’s shadow

by FARID PANJWANI

IMAGE/Oxfam

“he top 10% own three-quarters of global wealth, while the bottom half holds only 2%.” So states the World Inequality Report 2026. Can democracy survive when capitalism concentrates wealth so drastically?

The belief that democracy and capitalism are natural allies is as widespread as it is inaccurate. To see this, one has only to observe capitalist accumulation under authoritarian political arrangements. The UAE is just one such example. Why then does this belief persist?

Democracy and capitalism often journey together — until they don’t. To a point, they do support each other. This is why it is not easy to find democracies without capitalism. Think of a society, poor and authoritarian, that then undergoes a revolutionary change that makes it both democratic and capitalist. For a while, the two wo­­uld go together. Democracy would bring freedom and political equality; capitalism would bring resources.

Even Marx acknowledged that capitalism creates ‘colossal productive forces’. The growing middle class would demand greater freedoms and consumption, thereby strengthening both democracy and capitalism. For some time, prosperity and empowerment would rise together.

But this harmonious co-existence would soon wear off. Democracy is about political equality. Capitalism, by design, needs economic inequality. The two would eventually collide. In time, the wealth generated by capitalism starts to pool in fewer and fewer pockets. Growth continues, distribution falters. Tensions begin to appear.

Democracy is about political equality. Capitalism, by design, needs economic inequality.

This concentration is not just financial. Being rich doesn’t just mean plush houses or private jets. It means connections and information, as the wealthy form exclusive social ties, venture together, share insights and tastes, thus increasing their collective purse. French sociologist Bourdieu has called this social capital, “aggregate of actual or potential resources” that bring tangible benefits. High-profile events such as the Ambani wedding illustrate how this transformation happens. But the process does not stop here.

Social capital soon becomes political capital, with the wealthy getting access to the political class, who make laws. The role of the corporate lobby and campaign funding is well documented. These are some of the ways in which wealth buys political influence. Elon Musk’s access to and authority in the White House was an example of the political power wealth can bring. Consequently, economic values of capitalism start to prevail over the political ideals of democracy, human rights and political equality, as the market dictates the state.

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Trump has built his own fascist paramilitary squad

by C. J. POLYCHRONIOU

Protest at the Whipple Federal building in response to the shooting of a woman by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer who killed the woman. U.S. border patrol commander Gregory Bovino with federal agents at the protest scene.
IMAGE/ Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

ICE tactics are designed to instill fear in people and create chaos in communities as part of an overarching strategy aimed to silence opposition to Trump’s overall domestic agenda and let citizens know that this is the dawn of a new era.

Exactly a year ago today, Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president of the United States. He took over a nation with strong imperialistic tendencies and a democratic polity but with widespread illiberal features throughout its history and, in less than a year, succeeded in establishing a 21st-century US variant of fascism while espousing a lawless world order.

The successful transition of the United States from an imperial republic to what could be best described as imperial proto-fascism was achieved due to the ease with which the Trump administration weakened the country’s institutions meant to restrain power and the massive support that it received, and continues to receive, from the nation’s oligarchy. There are thus eerie similarities between Trump’s United States and the rise of Italian fascism and German Nazism, and none more so than those between Trump’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency and Mussolini’s Squadristi and Hitler’s Sturmabteilung (SA), respectively.

Fascism, the most reactionary regime of oligopolistic and decaying capitalism, has always relied on violent paramilitary groups to intimidate political opponents and spread fear across society. In Italy, in 1919, Benito Mussolini formed a paramilitary squad of war veterans called Blackshirts (or squadristi) whose primary goal was to terrorize fascism’s political opponents, mainly the socialists and the communists. By the early 1920s, the squadristi had wiped out the Italian left and destroyed Italian democracy. In Germany, in 1921, Adolf Hitler established the SA, known as the Brownshirts due to their brown uniforms. They were street thugs who used violent intimidation against opponents of National Socialism and assaulted non-Aryan citizens, particularly Jewish citizens. Blackshirts and Brownshirts acted with impunity as the regular uniformed police in both Italy and Germany turned a blind eye to their thuggish tactics.

Violent paramilitary groups were seen by fascists as essential tools in the struggle to uproot the previous sociopolitical and cultural order and pave the way for the success of fascism’s ultimate goals and objectives, which are to promote extreme nationalism and do away with democratic liberties and implement policies without legal or political restraints while dehumanizing those labeled as “the enemy.” Under fascism, propaganda and violence work in unity in order to secure conformity and subdue the opposition.

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New currency of power: How the Global South is dismantling dollar supremacy

by SULEYMAN KARAN

A coordinated rebellion is quietly reshaping global finance – one that aims not just to escape dollar tyranny, but to bury it.

“American hegemony helped provide public goods: open sea lanes, a stable financial system, collective security, and support for frameworks for resolving disputes … We participated in the rituals and largely avoided calling out the gaps between rhetoric and reality … This bargain no longer works. Let me be direct: we are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition.” – Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, special address at the World Economic Forum (WEF), Davos 2026

The era of the dollar’s unchallenged global supremacy is fraying at the edges. What was once a cornerstone of global finance and trade is now a contested domain, as a growing number of states search for alternatives to the currency long used to enforce western diktats. The US dollar’s centrality to cross-border transactions and its role as the world’s reserve currency are no longer guaranteed – and this shift is no longer theoretical.

For decades, the dollar served as a universal medium of exchange, store of value, and unit of account. But these benefits came with steep costs. The system’s dependence on a single state’s policies and its reliance on intermediary conversions generated layers of risk and friction. Today, those risks have become obstacles to the expansion of global trade. And as emerging economies gain confidence and weight, Washington is being forced to cede its monetary throne.

The dollar still reigns, but its grip is loosening

The dollar continues to dominate cross-border transactions, whether in current accounts or financial markets. It remains a trusted store of value for both institutional investors and individuals. But the tide is turning. Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, central banks and private capital have steadily reduced their dollar holdings, redirecting value into gold and other tangible assets.

While the dollar is still used for standardizing global accounting, the utility of artificial intelligence (AI) and technological innovation now allows for currency baskets – like those composed of the BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) – to easily substitute many of the dollar’s functions. In short, the era when no credible alternative existed is over.

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Iran and the price of sovereignty: What it takes not to be a client state

by BEHROOZ GHAMARI TABRIZI

Trump and his national security team meet in the Situation Room of the White House, during the US airstrikes on Iran Saturday, June 21, 2025. IMAGE/Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok.

On June 12, 2025, for the first time after more than twenty years, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) board of governors passed a resolution declaring that Tehran was breaching its non-proliferation obligations. The day after, on June 13, Israeli warplanes began a campaign of bombing Tehran and other major Iranian cities. With the help of their proxies inside the country, they assassinated top military commanders, killed leading nuclear scientists at their residence along with their families, bombed the cabinet meeting in Tehran, wounding the President, indiscriminately shelled urban residential areas, and even targeted Evin prison where most political prisoners are incarcerated.  The U.S. offered intelligence, refueled their jetfighters in mid-air, and finally entered the war directly by bombing the Iranian nuclear enrichment sites with bunker buster weapons.

This unprovoked Israeli attack happened in the midst of seemingly constructive negotiations between Iran and the U.S. in Rome and Muscat. The Friday the 13th attack happened just before the two countries were to meet on Sunday the 15th to finalize a framework for further agreements on the Iranian enrichment program. In all close to 1000 people were killed in the Israeli attacks, thousands injured, and hundreds of families lost their homes.

There is no solid evidence whether the IAEA board coordinated the release of their report with the Israelis. But the suspicious choreography of the timing of the report’s release with the Israeli attacks affords credibility to the Islamic Republic’s claims that some of the IAEA inspectors spied for Israel. In its report, the IAEA excavated questions from twenty years earlier about highly enriched particles found in three Iranian sites. The case for the Iranian noncompliance is primarily based on the Agency’s conclusion “that these undeclared locations were part of an undeclared, structured programme carried out by Iran until the early 2000s, and that some of these activities used undeclared nuclear material” (my emphasis). Obfuscated in the report was the fact that the IAES has found no evidence of any weaponization program or military component in the Iranian nuclear activities. It was only a few days after the attacks that the IAEA’s Director General, Rafael Grossi, reiterated that “Iran has not been actively pursuing a nuclear weapon since 2003.”

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Could voting break the plastics treaty deadlock?

by EMMA BRYCE

Plastic bottles on Dhigurah Island in the Maldives, one of many nations struggling with plastic waste IMAGE/ C.MALE / Alamy

Emma Bryce suggests the majority must be able to move forward when total agreement is elusive

Three years ago, the international effort to create a binding treaty to end plastic pollution started with an explosion of hope. Last year it collapsed. This has stalled the birth of an agreement that could begin to rein in production of a fossil-fuel-based material that is harming ecosystems on every part of Earth.

The treaty seemed to be the latest victim of a struggling multilateral system. Shifting geopolitics, changing national positions and the global influence of fossil fuels are frustrating the broader work of curbing climate change – humanity’s common interest.

I reported on the plastics negotiations over this period, watching as 184 countries seemed increasingly unable to find common ground. With so much at stake, one absence in particular seemed to weaken the process: the ability, when countries could not reach full consensus, to make a decision anyway based on a two-thirds majority vote.

Arcane as it sounds, this omission lurked behind some of the most dramatic negotation scenes, and still haunts other environmental processes today, including the UN’s climate negotiations.

This is the story of how voting is an ever-present obstacle to the global plastics treaty, what it reveals about political will, and why, despite the process fizzling out, I believe there is still a desire in many quarters to reach an ambitious deal. 

Resistance mounts against a vote

Paris, France, May 2023:

When countries gathered to begin textual negotiations on the plastics treaty, a small group soon began to question the rules of procedure. Though hard to detect behind the practised calm of negotiators, a mighty conflict was brewing.

Saudi Arabia, backed by Iran, India, Brazil and China, took the floor. They challenged a standard rule in UN negotiations that allows a decision to be passed by a two-thirds majority when consensus cannot been reached. After hours of plenary statements and rebuttals, Saudi Arabia delivered the clincher. It would “not be moving forward [with negotiations] until the rule is bracketed”.

Words are bracketed in international negotiations to indicate disagreement over their inclusion in the final text. Requesting brackets at this stage was an attempt to kick voting into the long grass.

Negotiators ultimately spent two of their five days wrangling over this point, until – anxiously watching the clock – they effectively agreed to bracket the voting rule. The decision was accompanied by a statement noting the issue still hadn’t been resolved, in case it came up in a future discussion. But that discussion never came, and the voting rule was never applied.

To the treaty novice I was at the time, it wasn’t immediately clear why this mattered. But treaty die-hards saw eerie echoes of what had happened at the start of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process to negotiate curbs on greenhouse gas emissions.

Back in 1991, a group of petrochemical-rich countries wrestled the voting rules for UNFCCC negotiations into brackets, where they have now been gathering dust for 35 years. Many people told me this move has been responsible for slow action on climate change today.

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Peace boards and technocrats won’t stem out Palestinian resistance

by REFAAT IBHRAHIM

US Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff speaks next to US Vice President JD Vance and Jared Kushner, following a military briefing at the Civilian Military Coordination Center in southern Israel on October 21, 2025 IMAGE/Nathan Howard/Pool via Reuters

Last week, just as Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip intensified, United States presidential envoy Steven Witkoff announced on social media that the “ceasefire” is entering its second stage. In the following days, the administration of US President Donald Trump unveiled the makeup of a foreign executive committee and a peace board that will oversee the provisional administration of Gaza composed of Palestinian technocrats.

This setup reflects the wishes of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that neither Hamas nor the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority (PA) would be involved in Gaza’s future. Although the latter is mentioned in Trump’s “peace plan”, it supposedly first has to carry out a set of unnamed reforms to have any role in Gaza.

What this means in reality is that Fatah, too, can easily be blocked from returning to govern the Gaza Strip with the excuse that these vague reforms have not been carried out.

The problem with the present setup and Israel’s insistence on “no Hamas, no Fatah” is that they reflect a profound ignorance of the fabric of Palestinian society, its politics and history. The idea that a Palestinian political entity can be created by outside forces and fully integrated into the occupation to manage Palestinian affairs is unrealistic.

Over the past 77 years, various Palestinian national movements and revolutions have emerged, united by a single common denominator: the rejection of Israeli colonial presence. No Palestinian collective, regardless of its form, has ever publicly agreed to integration into the Israeli colonial project.

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Does the unthinkable happen?

by BOAVENTURA DE SOUSA SANTOS

IMAGE/ by Codex Kingsborough/Wikimediacommons, in public domain

Modern history is replete with events so extraordinary, aberrant, revolting, and surprising that one feels like exclaiming: how is this possible!? Normally, this exclamation, as a generalized phenomenon, does not arise at the moment such events take place, but years or centuries later: how was this possible!? The astonishment is such that, often, what has happened exceeds not only the limits of what is possible, but also the limits of what is thinkable: how does the unthinkable happen or how has it happened?

When the great art historian E. H. Gomrich set out to write (in six weeks) the book A Little History of the World for Young Readers (Eine Kurze Weltgeschichte für junge Leser), published in Vienna in 1935, his aim was to teach history to young people. The book was a huge success and was subsequently updated several times. One of the leitmotifs of the narrative is precisely to show young people how things that seem beyond the realm of the possible, or even beyond the realm of the thinkable, often happen in history. And the strangest thing is that such events are only known many years later.

For example, during World War II, neither Gomrich (who had emigrated to England in 1936 and worked for the BBC) nor the vast majority of Germans or Europeans knew or could imagine the horror of the crimes being committed against the Jews (the Holocaust). There are many other examples. How could anyone imagine that devout Christians (whether Portuguese, Spanish, or Mayflower pilgrims) could have engaged in the horrific extermination of the indigenous peoples of the Americas between the 16th and 19th centuries? And who would have known what was happening at the time it was happening? Of course, there were very eloquent contemporary testimonies, such as that of Bartolomé de las Casas, but his voice was an exception and little heard. Who could have imagined, and how many Belgians knew, that the highly civilized King Leopold II organized the extermination of 50 to 75% of the population of the Congo in just over two decades (1885-1908)?

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Material interests

by DYLAN RILEY

The new Marxist culture that emerged in the United States from about 2010 has many merits. It is particularly concerned with empirical reality and focused on tactical and strategic questions. It displays thereby a healthy scepticism toward theory, especially toward anything that smacks of Hegel, Sartre, Lukács or the Frankfurt School. Its maîtres à penser (to the extent that it acknowledges them) are Wright, Przeworski and to a slightly lesser degree Burawoy. Kautsky lurks in the background as well. The basic outlook of this group is a kind of simplified rational choice or ‘analytic’ Marxism. In this worldview there are classes whose members have material interests deriving from their position in a system of property relations. The success or failure of left parties depends on the degree to which they appeal to working-class interests so defined. One syndrome that preoccupies the new Marxism is the tendency of centre-left parties to pursue something called identity politics instead.

A key question, however, is rarely asked: what does ‘material interest’ mean? On closer inspection the term takes on a peculiarly metaphysical and timeless quality. Interests are said to ‘derive’ from property relations, without any further specification. But this is an essentially unreal way of understanding them.

Marxism must not forget that ‘members’ of classes are people, and people live toward their future as they understand and imagine it. It is thus a fundamental error to base one’s politics on an appeal to a given status – a present state of social being – and the interests supposed to flow from that. For an anthropologically well-grounded politics entails the attempt to mobilize groups and classes around a project to realize a future that is possible for them under a given set of determinant historical circumstances. Interests are ‘material’ to the extent that they emerge from those objective circumstances; they are ‘interests’ to the degree that they are oriented toward a horizon. Marxism thus cannot be, in Labriola’s wonderful phrase, ‘una filosofia del ventre’ (a philosophy of the stomach).

This raises the question of how horizons are constructed. One crucial way is through a process the new Marxist materialist metaphysics says relatively little about: class struggle. Grasped materially and dialectically, classes do not have a priori interests about which they subsequently struggle. Rather, class struggle is fundamentally about which futures are, and are not, realizable in present conditions, and it is only in that prospective context that material interests acquire substantive meaning. It makes little sense to say that a serf in thirteenth-century England had an interest in socialism. However, it might have made sense to say that a steel mill worker in nineteenth-century Germany had an interest in socialism, because it was among the possible futures embedded in historical reality.

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China’s top military academy courts Egyptian, Arab elites

by NADIA HELMY

IMAGE/Wikipedia

The People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLA NDU) plays a pivotal role in “military education diplomacy” to attract Egyptian and Arab military elites.

The People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLA NDU) plays a pivotal role in “military education diplomacy” to attract Egyptian and Arab military elites. This role has gained increasing momentum since the Gaza War (October 2023), as China seeks to present itself as a strategic security partner, either as an alternative or complement to Western powers. Cooperation between Egyptian military academies (including the Nasser Military Academy) and the “PLA NDU” has also grown through the exchange of delegations and expertise in the fields of strategy and national security. Faculty members and students are hosted in Beijing to exchange views on managing regional crises, particularly the Gaza War and the Palestinian issue. The “PLA NDU” offers several advanced programs specifically designed for foreign officers and their Egyptian counterparts of the rank of colonel and above, enabling it to build a strong network of relationships with the “future elite” in the Arab and Egyptian armies. Through these courses with Egypt and other countries, Chinese military academies seek to instill Chinese military soft power in Egypt and developing countries of the Global South in particular and to disseminate and promote Chinese military doctrine and Beijing’s vision of global security. This is evident in the “Chinese Position Paper,” which calls for comprehensive political solutions to conflicts such as the Gaza war, in line with Arab orientations.

  Here, the People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLAU) played a pivotal role in deepening strategic and academic military relations with Egypt and Arab countries, particularly in the post-Gaza War era. This was achieved through several avenues, most notably attracting Egyptian and Arab military elites (academic cooperation). One of the most recent forms of professional military and professional training between them is the PLAU’s organization of high-level seminars for commanders. For example, the university organized a seminar for senior military officers from China, Egypt, and other Arab countries (June-July 2024), entitled “Sino-Arab Security Cooperation: A Future-Oriented Approach,” aimed at deepening defense cooperation and promoting the building of a community with a shared future for mankind. Furthermore, the “PLAU” has been keen on organizing numerous international camps for military students and researchers from Egypt and other Arab countries. For instance, the university hosted military students from Egypt and other countries at an international camp in November 2025, which included training activities and academic and cultural exchanges.

Modern Diplomacy for more