

"White Reconstruction" - Dylan Rodriguez On Domestic War, The Logics of Genocide, and Abolition
12 snips Jan 7, 2021
Dylan Rodriguez, a Professor at UC Riverside and founding member of Critical Resistance, dives into his new book, discussing the complex history of white reconstruction and its implications for today. He challenges the concept of multicultural white supremacy and critiques DEI initiatives in law enforcement. Rodriguez also explores the 13th Amendment's ties to anti-Blackness and analyzes Barry Goldwater's controversial legacy regarding race. His insights shed light on the vital connections between abolition, communal accountability, and radical self-defense in today's activism.
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White Supremacy as Aspirational Violence
- White supremacy is both an aspirational global violence and a concrete social organization logic.
- It normalizes anti-Blackness and racial colonial power beyond extremist groups or individuals.
Abolition as Collective Praxis
- Abolitionist identity is a collective, accountable praxis rooted in Black radical tradition.
- Recent abolitionist visibility arises from decades of struggle, not spontaneous emergence.
The 13th Amendment's Perpetual Violence
- The 13th Amendment extends slavery's logic by permitting involuntary servitude for the convicted.
- Its purpose is sustaining anti-Black criminalization, not just labor exploitation in prisons.