| If you have come to a point of discomfort in seeing Marxism discussed within the context of Black Lives Matter, then you are where you need to be. Sit with it. It is a radical movement, the larger goal of which, discussed in [1,2], is the complete dismantling of white supremacy. What would a United States look like in which all life was equally valued? We don’t know, none of us has experienced that world, and that is why (I would contend) there is an urgent need to consider all options. The movement is not just about anti-Black policing, it is about bringing about a United States (a world?) where Black life (or the life of any marginalized person) is as valued and as treasured and held as sacred as any other. You might also consider that Black radicalism has a long intellectual history [3,4,5]. In sum, I am saying to take a moment to understand the long historical context that birthed this movement. Sit with the discomfort that goes along with the process that will bring that world into being. [1] “When they call you a terrorist: a black lives matter memoir”, Patrice Khan-Cullors, Asha Bandele [2] “Stay woke: a People’s Guide to Making All Black Lives Matter”, Tehama Lopez Bunyasi, Candis Watts Smith [3] “The Black Jacobins”, C.L.R. James [4] “Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition”, Cedric Robinson [5] “Black Reconstruction in America: 1860-1880”, W.E.B. DuBois |