General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Womens Conference runs into rough seas of their own making [View all]Ken Burch
(50,254 posts)It's not as though the choices are "economic justice" OR "intersectionality"-and if the 1977 leadership wasn't saying enough about race and sexual orientation, they should have said more. But it's not as though the only way to say more about that was to say less about economic issues.
I don't know what I've ever posted here that equates to the belief that economic justice would "solve" racism.
I believe that social justice-including the defeat of grassroots and institutional racism- can't be achieved WITHOUT economic justice-and that social justice can't be solved without a major program to fight poverty. That is a totally different thing than saying that economic justice would solve all problems in life.
What I admire the 1977 conference about was that they were challenging the power structure at a basic level. They were pushing for an egalitarian, democratic way of organizing life. I also admired their challenge to militarism-and believe, to this day, that war and military intervention are intrinsically reactionary, anti-transformation, anti-women, anti-POC, anti-LGBTQ and pro-oppression concepts.