The following was prepared by me for a potential discussion on what white people can do about whiteness. The discussion has been indefinitely postponed, but my frustration with the inadequacy of white discussions about whiteness has not abated. I am frustrated with white examinations of the topic, the way they (we) “refuse to see how white culture is rooted firmly in capitalism and imperialism; refusing to reject it beyond superficial cultural appropriations” (Lorenzo Kom’boa Ervin, 1996). “The only way to fully work through this hang up is to gain even a small percent of the courage of a black adolescent and overcome their white guilt with a fist, a stone, and a Molotov cocktail” (We Still Outside Collective, 2020). This piece is my suggestion for how we might break out of our paralysis and finally do so.
WHAT IS WHITENESS
Whiteness is the set of hegemonic identifiers and cultural norms associated with the capitalistic expression of colonialism and imperialism. Hegemony defines not just the dominant traits expressed in a culture but the ways in which norms are created and manipulated. It is the lens through which a culture is expressed and made real, or reified. Cultural hegemony occurs when socially dominating structures have control over educational mechanisms in a society. Domination is possible without hegemony, but hegemony is not possible without domination. Hegemony secures domination. Hegemonic identifiers shift to keep the ruling systems in place and incorporate or eject groups and behaviors as necessary. The dominant system in the United States is capitalist colonialism, where colonialism is understood to be the primary expression of domination, and capitalism its latest expression.
Colonialism and imperialism are systems which create divisions between the core and the periphery. Traditionally, these relationships look like nation-state and colony or settlement and frontier. The capitalist version of these systems places Capital at the core and land and people at the periphery. In economics, capital, labor and land are understood to be the three factors of production. Capital is generally understood to be the product of land and labor. Under capitalism, however, Capital alone has agency; land and people do not. Globalization has expanded the influence of systems which place Capital in the core position. Since corporations span the globe, the frontiers of imperialism are no longer defined by nation-states but by the movement of Capital and its activity, which is the capitalization of land and people(s). Membership in whiteness is generally earned by support for and enforcement of capitalization, including capitalization of one’s own identity, value, and existence. Irish people, for example, earned their admission to full whiteness in the US by becoming policemen, defending Capital and beating other racialized groups. Whiteness is an identity which is entirely capitalized and which seeks to enforce capitalization against others. In everyday language we often associate whiteness and acting white with acting on behalf of Capital (demanding to see a manager, for instance), the commodification of cultures and identities, or engaging in capital-intensive activity (like an artists’ retreat or destination wedding). It was produced by capitalist colonialism, and reproduces those systems in turn.
Whiteness is a fundamentally political category characterized by a shared relationship to the imperial core rather than a shared cultural heritage. The Proud Boys have taken this to its logical conclusion, defining their White supremacist gang as western chauvinist, a clever substitution for whiteness which has all the same signifiers and an expanded appeal. This characterization of whiteness comes from the Haitian revolutionary Dessalines in 1804. Given that the Haitian revolution loomed like a spectre over the early United States, it is important to study these definitions for the influence they may have had on the formation of whiteness and blackness in the US. The 1804 constitution defined all Haitians as black, regardless of skin color, where blackness was defined by resistance to imperialism. Whiteness was thus de facto defined by support for imperialism. These definitions collapsed dozens of racial classifications which were in use in French-controlled Saint Domingue, and continue to inform our political conceptions of racialization.
WHAT IS CAPITALIZATION
Capitalization is the activity of Capital. In order for capitalism to be properly understood, Capital has to be conceived of as having agency under capitalism. Under capitalism, Capital is transformed from the product of labor and land into a valorized subject with its own subjectivity (the distinction Capital and capital). People and land are objects which Capital acts upon, and act as subjects only to the extent that they are identified with Capital. Capital has drives and activity; in the main, it seeks to turn everything else (land and people, and the social products thereof) into itself. This transformation is capitalization–the changing of land and people into resources and slaves or raw materials and workers. Think of Capital like a ravening machine which devours land and people and spits out copies of itself–capitalized versions of the people and land it consumes. In this way the core constantly consumes the periphery and creates new peripheries to consume in turn. This drive creates a contradiction, since Capital can never be finished consuming land and people, and must constantly create new frontiers–not everyone can be inside the core, but the core must constantly consume, and boundaries–which also bound whiteness–are therefore always shifting. This activity is violent and involves the theft of land and people and the creation of systems which threaten people with starvation, jail, and physical violence. Support for and enforcement of capitalization–which is the material basis for membership in whiteness–is violent both currently and historically, both actually and potentially.
HOW WHITE WORKERS HAVE HISTORICALLY EXPRESSED WHITENESS
The history of white participation in the struggle against capitalism is one of betrayals–of women by men, of white immigrant workers by White workers, and especially of black and indigenous (BIPOC) workers by white workers. The historical process by which modern whiteness was constructed goes like this: proletarianized white workers identify with Capital and enforce capitalization against land and people in exchange for admission into whiteness. As new groups gain admission, whiteness gradually changes form without ever losing its primary characteristics of being hegemonic and completely capitalized. This obviously paints with a broad brush, but it is important to understand that the legacy left to us by our collective ancestors is one of violence against land and people in the name of Capital. Examples include the witch hunts in early capitalist societies (both in Europe and the so-called New World), Black Codes in 1650, the Homestead act and pioneering in general, the exclusion of Irish, Italian and other immigrant labor from the budding labor movement, the exclusion of Black and Latinx labor from the labor movement in the 1800s by those self-same immigrants, the disenfranchisement of free black people with the support of working class whites, the Draft Riots and antipathy to ablation displayed by the Irish in the middle 19th century, the class collaboration exhibited by white workers after the New Deal and into the present day, and so on. There are also profound instances of solidarity, as in the Battle of Blair Mountain, but the overwhelming pattern of white working class organization is the prioritization of winning racial privileges over engaging in class struggle. Thus, the greatest contribution white workers can make to revolutionary struggle, indeed the one contribution they must make, is the destruction of whiteness from the inside.
DEVELOPING A METHODOLOGY FOR DESTROYING WHITENESS
As white people, or as people who think we’re white to borrow Baldwin’s phrase, we are uniquely positioned to attack whiteness from the inside. This is a material project, not an ideological one. The goal here is to use our positionality inside whiteness to destroy it. The first step to this is immanent critique, which will allow us to identify the weaknesses in whiteness, its vulnerabilities, and the second part is to use those insights to turn our privilege against itself and in the process pull whiteness in on itself like Samson collapsing the temple. This is a project of self-destruction and self-reclamation, since in destroying our capitalized identity we help create the material conditions for our own self-realization. We are not attempting to remove ourselves from whiteness. As long as the system that produces whiteness continues to exist, we cannot meaningfully escape whiteness. In order to escape whiteness we first have to tear down the system that produces it. This is not a project of freeing our minds from the bonds of whiteness and settler-colonialism. This is a project which requires radical, antagonistic action. Our analysis should compel us to act, and if it does not then something has gone seriously wrong. This is also different than using your privilege to aid others. Using privilege to protect, amplify, or otherwise help others can be good and useful, but it still preserves privilege itself. When a white woman in Portland does nude yoga to deescalate a police response, she is using the power of white womanhood to protect others but without challenging the logic of that power and the systems that produce it. We are trying to build and use a battering ram, not an umbrella.
IMMANENT CRITIQUE & DECONSTRUCTION
Immanent critique is a category of critique which derives the standards it employs from the object criticized rather than approaching it with independently (externally) justified standards. In the main, this means looking into the conditions of possibility of argument being made or the object being criticized. Deconstruction, according to Derrida, tells us that the logic of a text contains within itself the antithesis of that logic. Combining the two methods, we can see that understanding and critiquing whiteness will reveal logics we can use to dismantle it. We will first use immanent critique to reveal the systems that produce whiteness and dissect its logic, then use deconstruction to discover a new logic we can use to take action and destroy whiteness.
We want to do immanent critique on our own experiences. Our experiences of whiteness are produced by a system which we must critique in order to dismantle. Our experiences of whiteness represent our interactions with that system, and by examining them we can discover the logic by which the system operates and reproduces itself. Those insights are the jumping off point for the critiques we need to make in order to identify the structural weak points of whiteness. Immanent critique and deconstruction are tools that allow us to dissect our experiences with an eye to discovering whiteness’s systemic roots. By critically examining our own experiences, we can discover and dismantle the systems that produce them.
This dissection is what whiteness workshops and white carcasses fail to do. These spaces have plenty of room for individual expression, confession, flagellation and even pathologization (always individualized, of course), but little room for methodical examination and destruction. Acknowledging and examining whiteness in our own lives is only the beginning. If we stop there we fail to make whiteness our problem, and we cannot begin to understand what liberation means.


