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View Full Version : The Black Panther Party structure- part of the reason for their downfall?



Let's Get Free
21st November 2012, 02:45
I was reading something written by Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, who is an ex Panther, where he said this:


In the 1960s I was part of a number of Black revolutionary movements, including the Black Panther Party, which I feel partially failed because of the authoritarian leadership style of Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale and others on the Central Committee. This is not a recrimination against those individuals, but many errors were made because the national leadership was too divorced from the chapters in cities all over the country, and therefore engaged in "commandism" or forced work dictated by leaders. But many contradictions were also set up because of the structure of the organisation as a Marxist-Leninist group. There was not a lot of inner-party democracy, and when contradictions came up, it was the leaders who decided on their resolution, not the members. Purges became commonplace, and many good people were expelled from the group simply because they disagreed with the leadership.

Because of the over-importance of central leadership, the national organization was ultimately liquidated entirely, packed up and shipped back to Oakland, California. Of course, many errors were made because the BPP was a young organisation and was under intense attack by the state. I do not want to imply that the internal errors were the primary contradictions that destroyed the BPP. The police attacks on it did that, but, if it were better and more democratically organized, it may have weathered the storm. So this is no mindless criticism or backstabbing attack. I loved the party. And, anyway, not myself or anyone else who critique the party with hindsight, will ever take away from the tremendous role that the BPP played in the Black Liberation movement of the 1960s. But we must look at a full picture of out organizations from that period, so that we do not repeat the same errors.

I think my brief period in the Panthers was very important because it taught me about the limits of - and even the bankruptcy of - leadership in a revolutionary movement. It was not a question of a personality defect on behalf of particular leader, but rather a realization that many times leaders have one agenda, followers have another.

Yet_Another_Boring_Marxist
21st November 2012, 02:48
I am unfamiliar with the black panther party so I can not agree or disagree, but I will say that centralization should only be to the point of theoretical unity and that the struggle for political line should be allowed and encouraged as it paves the way for class struggle under socialism

Yuppie Grinder
26th November 2012, 04:32
Party membership should have been based on class, not race. When asked what white workers could do for the revolution, Huey Newton said "Form a White Panther Party.". And they did. I'm not surprised a Maoist party was plagued by bureaucratic power struggles and unaccountability (is that a word?) to its membership.

RedSonRising
26th November 2012, 05:19
Party membership should have been based on class, not race. When asked what white workers could do for the revolution, Huey Newton said "Form a White Panther Party.". And they did. I'm not surprised a Maoist party was plagued by bureaucratic power struggles and unaccountability (is that a word?) to its membership.

Well, party membership was not exclusively based on racial lines, and black nationalism as a priority was eschewed in favor of revolutionary socialist philosophy.

The model was definitely a problem and a lesson we should learn from, but COINTELPRO and the problem of drug influx into their communities did not help at all. I've never a group or movement so extensively crippled and destroyed by espionage and sabotage from government intelligence agencies.

hetz
26th November 2012, 05:21
When asked what white workers could do for the revolution, Huey Newton said "Form a White Panther Party.". And they did.That wasn't a "party", that was a joke and an embarassement. Their "programme" includes stuff such as fucking in the streets and the like...

Total assault on the culture by any means necessary, including rock and roll, dope, and fucking in the streets.

Yuppie Grinder
26th November 2012, 05:26
I'm unsympathetic to the White Panther party but quoting MC5 lyrics and saying that was their party programme just cuz they were members is silly.

hetz
26th November 2012, 05:34
The White Panther Statement

In November 1968, Fifth Estate [/URL] published the "White Panther State/meant". This manifesto, emulating the Black Panthers, ended with a ten-point program:


Full endorsement and support of the Black Panther Party's 10-point program and platform.
Total assault on the culture by any means necessary, including rock and roll, dope, and fucking in the streets.
Free exchange of energy and materials—we demand the end of money!
Free food, clothes, housing, dope, music, bodies, medical care—everything free for every body!
Free access to information media—free the technology from the greed creeps!
Free time & space for all humans—dissolve all unnatural boundaries!
Free all schools and all structures from corporate rule—turn the buildings over to the people at once!
Free all prisoners everywhere—they are our comrades!
Free all soldiers at once—no more conscripted armies!
Free the people from their phony "leaders"—everyone must be a leader—freedom means free every one! All Power to the People![URL="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Panther_Party#cite_note-2"] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Estate_%28periodical%29)

khad
26th November 2012, 11:42
I was reading something written by Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, who is an ex Panther, where he said this:
Not entirely sure how opening up more debate and so-called "internal democracy" would have benefited the panthers, seeing how that organization was infiltrated by the feds top to bottom. In fact, logic would dictate that the opposite would have been the case.

Jimmie Higgins
26th November 2012, 13:20
It was partially their ideology and partially due to their rapid growth. Despite being top-down, different local groups and different prominent figures from different areas had pretty different ideas about the way forward or even conception of what they were fighting for. So taking a Maoist apprach and also the sense that revolution was fairly eminent (which a lot of the radical new-left believed) in an organization that grew big in a really short period of time probably led to a lot of this.