Tom David Kahn (September 15, 1938 – March 27, 1992) was an American social democrat known for his leadership in several organizations. He was an activist and influential strategist in the Civil Rights Movement. He was a senior adviser and leader in the U.S. labor movement.[1]

Tom Kahn
Born
Thomas John Marcel

(1938-09-15)September 15, 1938
DiedMarch 27, 1992(1992-03-27) (aged 53)
Other namesT. Kahn
Thomas David Kahn
Tom Marcel
EducationBrooklyn College
Howard University (BA)
PartnerBayard Rustin (1960s)

Kahn was raised in New York City. At Brooklyn College, he joined the U.S. socialist movement, where he was influenced by Max Shachtman and Michael Harrington.[2] As an assistant to civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, Kahn helped to organize the 1963 March on Washington, during which Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech.[1][2] Kahn's analysis of the civil rights movement influenced Bayard Rustin (who was the nominal author of Kahn's "From Protest to Politics").[2][3] (This article, originally a 1964 pamphlet from the League for Industrial Democracy, was written by Kahn, according to Horowitz (2007, pp. 223–224). It remains widely reprinted, for example in Rustin's Down the Line of 1971 and Time on two crosses of 2003.)

A leader in the Socialist Party of America, Kahn supported its 1972 name change to Social Democrats, USA (SDUSA). Like other leaders of SDUSA, Kahn worked to support free labor-unions and democracy and to oppose Soviet communism; he also worked to strengthen U.S. labor unions. Kahn worked as a senior assistant to and speechwriter for Democratic Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, AFL–CIO Presidents George Meany and Lane Kirkland, and other leaders of the Democratic Party, labor unions, and civil-rights organizations.[1][2]

In 1980 Lane Kirkland appointed Kahn to organize the AFL–CIO's support for the Polish labor-union Solidarity;[4][5] this support was made despite protests by the USSR and the Carter administration. He acted as the Director of the AFL–CIO's Department of International Affairs in 1986[6] and was officially named Director in 1989.[2] Kahn died in 1992, at the age of 53.[1][2]

Biography

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Early life

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Kahn was born Thomas John Marcel[7] on September 15, 1938, and was immediately placed for adoption at the New York Foundling Hospital. He was adopted by the Jewish couple Adele and David Kahn, and renamed Thomas David Kahn. His father, a member of the Communist Party USA, became President of the Transport Workers Local 101 of the Brooklyn Union Gas Company.[2]

Tom Kahn was a civil libertarian who "ran for president of the Student Organization of Erasmus Hall High School in 1955 on a platform calling for the destruction of the student assembly, because it had no power", an election he lost.[2] In high school, he met Rachelle Horowitz,[2] who would become his lifelong friend and political ally.[2][8]

Democratic socialism

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At Brooklyn College (CUNY), the undergraduate students Kahn and Horowitz joined the U.S. movement for democratic socialism after hearing Max Shachtman denounce the 1956 Soviet invasion of Hungary:[9] Shachtman described

rolling Russian tanks ... defenceless Hungarian workers and students fighting back with stones ... a heroic people's crushed hopes, and ... our democratic socialist links to those hopes. Freedom, democracy—they were not abstractions; they were real and could therefore be destroyed. Communist totalitarianism was not merely a political force, an ideological aberration that could be smashed in debate; it was a monstrous physical force. Democracy was not merely the icing on the socialist cake. It was the cake—or there was no socialism worth fighting for. And if socialism was worth fighting for here, it was worth fighting for everywhere: socialism was nothing if it was not profoundly internationalist. I do not remember whether that was the night I signed up. But it was the night I became convinced.[10][11]

As young socialists, Kahn's and Horowitz's talents were recognized by Michael Harrington.[2] Harrington had joined Shachtman after working with Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker's house of hospitality in the Bowery of Lower Manhattan. Harrington was about to become famous in the United States for his book on poverty in the United States, The Other America. Kahn idolized Harrington, particularly for his erudition and rhetoric, both in writing and in debate.[12]

Civil rights

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Bayard Rustin, whom Tom Kahn assisted with organizing the 1963 March on Washington

As a leader of the American socialist movement, Michael Harrington sent Tom Kahn and Rachelle Horowitz to help Bayard Rustin, one of the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement, who became a mentor to Kahn.[13][14] Kahn and Horowitz were affectionately called the "Bayard Rustin Marching and Chowder Society" by Harrington.[15] Kahn helped Rustin organize the 1957 Prayer Pilgrimage to Washington and the 1958 and 1959 Youth March for Integrated Schools.[16]

Homosexuality and Bayard Rustin

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As a young man, Tom Kahn "was gay but wanted to be straight ... It was a different world then", according to Rachelle Horowitz.[17][18] He had a short relationship with a member of the Young People's Socialist League (YPSL):

Although everyone active in the movement was aware of it, [before 1956] he was never explicitly out of the closet. He took his sexual orientation as an affliction, a source of pain and embarrassment. In part, perhaps, because he was so unreconciled to his longings, he limited himself for a long time to brief encounters. But then he became involved with one of the YPSL's and was compelled to seek the counsel of a psychiatrist to explain his unfamiliar feelings. The diagnosis, he told me, was "you're in love."[19]

Tom Kahn was "very good looking, a very attractive guy" according to longtime socialist David McReynolds,[17] who was also an openly gay New Yorker.[20] Kahn accepted his homosexuality in 1956, the year that Kahn and Horowitz volunteered to help Bayard Rustin with his work in the civil-rights movement. "Once he met Bayard [Rustin], then Kahn knew that he was gay and had this long-term relationship with Bayard, which went through many stages",[17] according to Horowitz, who quoted Kahn's remembrance of Rustin:

When I met him for the first time he was a few years younger than I am now, and I was barely on the edge of manhood. He drew me into a vortex of his endless campaigns and projects ... He introduced me to Bach and Brahms, and to the importance of maintaining a balance in life between the pursuit of our individual pleasures and engagements in, and responsibility for, the social condition. He believed that no class, caste or genre of people were exempt from this obligation.[2]

However, cohabiting in Rustin's apartment proved unsuccessful, and their romantic relationship ended when Kahn enrolled in the historically black Howard University. Kahn and Rustin remained lifelong friends and political comrades.[21]

Howard University

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Kahn, a white student,[22][23] enrolled for his junior and senior years at Howard University,[24] where he became a leader in student politics. Kahn worked closely with Stokely Carmichael, who later became a national leader of young civil-rights activists and then one of the leaders of the Black Power movement. Kahn and Carmichael helped to fund a five-day run of Three Penny Opera, by the Marxist playwright Berthold Brecht and the socialist composer Kurt Weill: "Tom Kahn—very shrewdly—had captured the position of Treasurer of the Liberal Arts Student Council and the infinitely charismatic and popular Carmichael as floor whip was good at lining up the votes. Before they knew what hit them the Student Council had become a patron of the arts, having voted to buy out the remaining performances."[22] Kahn and Carmichael worked with Howard University's chapter of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Kahn introduced Carmichael and his fellow SNCC activists to Bayard Rustin, who became an influential adviser to SNCC.[23] Kahn and Rustin's emphasis on economic inequality influenced Carmichael.[25] Kahn graduated from Howard in 1961.[24][26]

Leadership

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Kahn (along with Horowitz and Norman Hill) helped Rustin and A. Philip Randolph to plan the 1963 March on Washington, at which Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech.[1][2][27][28] For this march, Kahn also ghost wrote the speech of A. Philip Randolph, the senior leader of the civil-rights movement and the African-American labor movement. Kahn's analysis of the civil-rights movement influenced Bayard Rustin (who was the nominal author of Kahn's 1964–1965 essay "From protest to politics"),[2][3] Stokely Carmichael, and William Julius Wilson.[2]

League for Industrial Democracy

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Kahn was Director of the League for Industrial Democracy after 1964. Beginning in 1960, he wrote several LID pamphlets, many of which were published in political journals like Dissent and Commentary, and some of which appeared in anthologies.[29] Kahn's The Economics of Equality LID pamphlet gave an "incisive radical analysis of what it would take to end racial oppression".[30][31]

Student League for Industrial Democracy: Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)

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Before Kahn became LID director in 1964, he was involved with the Student League for Industrial Democracy, which became Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Along with other LID members Rachelle Horowitz, Michael Harrington, and Don Slaiman, Kahn attended the LID-sponsored meeting that discussed the Port Huron Statement.[32] Kahn was listed as a student representative from Howard University[33] and was elected to the National Executive Committee.[34] The LID representatives criticized the Port Huron Statement for promoting students as leaders of social change, for criticizing the U.S. labor movement and its unions, and for its criticisms of liberal and socialist opposition to Soviet communism ("anti-communism").[35][36] Kahn believed that the SDS students were "elitist", being overly critical of labor unions and liberals, and attributed upper-class origins and Ivy-league schooling to them, according to Port-Huron activist Todd Gitlin, who observes that Kahn was the son of a "manual laborer".[34]

LID and SDS split in 1965, when SDS voted to remove from its constitution the "exclusion clause" that prohibited membership by communists, against Kahn's arguments.[37][38] The SDS exclusion clause had barred "advocates of or apologists for" "totalitarianism".[39] The clause's removal effectively invited "disciplined cadre" to attempt to "take over or paralyze" SDS, as had occurred to mass organizations in the thirties.[40] Afterward, Marxism Leninism, particularly the Progressive Labor Party, helped to write "the death sentence" for SDS.[40][41][42][43] Nonetheless Kahn continued to argue with SDS leaders about the need for accountable leadership,[44] about tactics, and about strategy.[30] In 1966, Kahn attended the Illinois Convention of SDS, where his forceful arguments and delivery overwhelmed and were resented by the other activists;[30] Kahn was then 28 years old.

Kahn's determined style of debate emerged from the socialist movement led by Max Shachtman. Kahn expressed his admiration for Shachtman's intellectual toughness in his 1973 memorial:

"His answers, of course, could not always be correct. But they were on target and always fundamental."[45]

Social Democrats, USA

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Kahn and Horowitz were leaders in the Socialist Party USA, and supported its change of name to Social Democrats, USA (SDUSA),[2] despite Harrington's opposition.[46] Ben Wattenberg commented that SDUSA members seemed to be

... ingeniously trying to bury the Soviet Union in a blizzard of letterheads. It seemed that each of Tom's colleagues—Penn Kemble, Carl Gershman, Josh Muravchik and many more—ran a little organization, each with the same interlocking directorate listed on the stationery. Funny thing: The Letterhead Lieutenants did indeed churn up a blizzard, and the Soviet Union is no more.

I never did quite get all the organizational acronyms straight—YPSL, LID, SP, SDA, ISL—but the key words were "democratic", "labor", "young" and, until events redefined it away from their understanding, "socialist". Ultimately, the umbrella group became "Social Democrats, U.S.A", and Tom Kahn was a principal "theoretician."

They talked and wrote endlessly, mostly about communism and democracy, despising the former, adoring the latter. It is easy today to say "anti-communist" and "pro-democracy" in the same breath. But that is because American foreign policy eventually became just such a mixture, thanks in part to those "Yipsels" (Young People's Socialist League), with Tom Kahn as provocateur-at-large.

On the conservative side, foreign policy used to be anti-communist, but not very pro-democracy. And foreign policy liberal-style might be piously pro-democracy, but nervous about being anti-communist. Tom theorized that to be either, you had to be both.

It was tough for labor-liberal intellectuals to be "anti-communist" in the 1970s. It meant being taunted as "Cold Warriors" who saw "Commies under every bed" and being labeled as—the unkindest cut—"right-wingers".[47]

Kahn worked as a senior assistant and speechwriter for Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, AFL–CIO Presidents George Meany and Lane Kirkland, and other leaders of the Democratic Party, labor unions, and civil rights organizations.[1][2] He was an effective speechwriter because he was able to express ideas to an American audience, according to Wattenberg.[47]

Estrangement with Harrington

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Another protégé of Shachtman's, Michael Harrington, called for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam in 1972. His proposal was rejected by the majority, who criticized the war's conduct and called for a negotiated peace treaty, the position associated with Shachtman and Kahn. Harrington resigned his honorary chairmanship of the Socialist Party and organized a caucus for like-minded socialists. The conflict between Kahn and Harrington became "pretty bad", according to Irving Howe.[48]

Harrington handed former SDS activist and New York City journalist Jack Newfield a speech by AFL–CIO President George Meany. Addressing the September 1972 Convention of the United Steelworkers of America, Meany ridiculed the Democratic Party Convention, which had been held in Miami:

We heard from the gay-lib [gay-liberation] people who want to legalize marriage between boys and boys, and between girls and girls ... We heard from the people who looked like Jacks, acted like Jills, and had the odor of Johns [customers of prostitutes] about them.

This gay-baiting taunt was attributed to Kahn by Harrington, and repeated by Newfield in his autobiography.[49] Maurice Isserman's biography of Harrington also described this speech as Kahn's self hatred, as "Kahn's resort to gay bashing".[50]

The blaming of Kahn for Meany's speech and Isserman's scholarship have been criticized by Rachelle Horowitz, Kahn's friend, and by Joshua Muravchik, then an officer of the Young People's Socialist League (1907). According to Horowitz, Meany had many speechwriters—two specialists besides Kahn and even more writers from the AFL–CIO's Committee on Political Education (COPE) Department. Horowitz stated, "It is in fact inconceivable that Kahn wrote those words." She quoted a concurring assessment from Arch Puddington: [Isserman] "assumes that because Kahn was not publicly gay he had to be a gay basher. He never was."[51] According to Muravchik, "there is no reason to believe that Kahn wrote those lines, and Isserman presents none."[52]

Harrington failed to support an anti-discrimination (gay rights) plank in the 1978 platform of the Democratic Party Convention, but noted his personal support after being criticized in The Nation.[53] Along with others in the AFL–CIO and SDUSA, Kahn was accused of criticizing Harrington's application for his Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee to join the Socialist International and to organize a 1983 conference on European socialism; Harrington complained for six pages in his autobiography The Long Distance Runner, and "brooded" about Kahn's opposition, exaggerating the importance of the Socialist International to America, according to Isserman's biography.[54] In 1991, even after Harrington's 1989 death, Howe warned Harrington's biographer, Maurice Isserman, that Kahn's description of Harrington "may well be a little nasty" and "hard line".[48]

AFL–CIO support for free trade-unions

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After becoming an assistant to the President of the AFL–CIO in 1972, a position he held until 1986, Kahn developed an expertise in international affairs. In 1980 AFL–CIO officer Lane Kirkland appointed Kahn to organize the AFL–CIO's support for the Polish labor-union Solidarity, which was maintained and indeed increased even after protests by the USSR and Carter administration.

Support of Solidarity, the Polish union

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The Polish labor-union's demand for legality were supported by Tom Kahn, who testified on behalf of the AFL–CIO to the US Congress.[55][56] The picture displays the 21 demands of Solidarity.

Kahn was heavily involved in supporting the Polish labor-movement.[4][5][56][57] The trade union Solidarity (Solidarność) began in 1980. The Soviet-backed Communist regime headed by General Wojciech Jaruzelski declared martial law in December 1981.

In 1980 AFL–CIO President Lane Kirkland appointed Kahn to organize the AFL–CIO's support of Solidarity. The AFL–CIO sought approval in advance from Solidarity's leadership, to avoid jeopardizing their position with unwanted or surprising American help.[4][55][56][58] Politically, the AFL–CIO supported the twenty-one demands of the Gdansk workers, by lobbying to stop further U.S. loans to Poland unless those demands were met. Materially, the AFL–CIO established the Polish Workers Aid Fund. By 1981 it had raised almost $300,000,[56] which was used to purchase printing presses and office supplies. The AFL–CIO donated typewriters, duplicating machines, a minibus, an offset press, and other supplies requested by Solidarity.[4][55][56][58]

 
Tom Kahn was appointed by Lane Kirkland (pictured), the President of the AFL–CIO, to organize the AFL–CIO's aid to Solidarity, the Polish labor union that challenged communism in 1980.[56]

It is up to Solidarity ... to define the aid they need. Solidarity made its needs known, with courage, with clarity, and publicly. As you know, the AFL–CIO responded by establishing a fund for the purchase of equipment requested by Solidarity and we have raised about a quarter of a million dollars for that fund.

This effort has elicited from the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and Bulgaria the most massive and vicious propaganda assault ... in many, many years. The ominous tone of the most recent attacks leaves no doubt that if the Soviet Union invades, it shall cite the aid of the AFL–CIO as evidence of outside anti-Socialist intervention.[59]

All this is by way of introducing the AFL–CIO's position on economic aid to Poland. In formulating this position, our first concern was to consult our friends in Solidarity ... and their views are reflected in the statement unanimously adopted by the AFL–CIO Executive Council:

The AFL–CIO will support additional aid to Poland only if it is conditioned on the adherence of the Polish government to the 21 points of the Gdansk Agreement. Only then could we be assured that the Polish workers will be in a position to defend their gains and to struggle for a fair share of the benefits of Western aid.[60]

In testimony to the Joint Congressional Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Kahn suggested policies to support the Polish people, in particular by supporting Solidarity's demand that the Communist regime finally establish legality, by respecting the twenty-one rights guaranteed by the Polish constitution.[61]

The AFL–CIO's support enraged the Communist regimes of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, and worried the Carter Administration, whose Secretary of State Edmund Muskie told Kirkland that the AFL–CIO's continued support of Solidarity could trigger a Soviet invasion of Poland. After Kirkland refused to withdraw support to Solidarity, Muskie met with the USSR's Ambassador, Anatoly Dobyrnin, to clarify that the AFL–CIO's aid did not have the support of the U.S. government.[58][62][63] Aid to Solidarity was also initially opposed by neo-conservatives Norman Podhoretz and Jeane Kirkpatrick, who before 1982 argued that communism could not be overthrown and that Solidarity was doomed.[55][58]

The AFL–CIO's autonomous support of Solidarity was so successful that by 1984 both Democrats and Republicans agreed that it deserved public support. The AFL–CIO's example of open support was deemed to be appropriate for a democracy, and much more suitable than the clandestine funding through the CIA that had occurred before 1970.[4] Both parties and President Ronald Reagan supported a non-governmental organization, National Endowment for Democracy (NED), through which Congress would openly fund Solidarity through an allocation in the State Department's budget, beginning in 1984. The NED was designed with four core institutions, associated with the two major parties and with the AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (representing business). The NED's first president was Carl Gershman, a former director of Social Democrats, USA and former U.S. Representative to the United Nations committee on human rights. From 1984 until 1990, the NED and the AFL–CIO channeled equipment and support worth $4 million to Solidarity.[5][64][65][66]

Director of the AFL–CIO's Department of International Affairs

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In 1986 Kahn became the Director of the AFL–CIO Department of International Affairs, where he implemented Kirkland's program of having a consensus foreign policy. Working with leaders from member unions, Kahn helped to draft resolutions that represented consensus decisions for nearly all issues.[67]

Kahn acted as Director of the AFL–CIO's Department of International Affairs in 1986,[6] after Irving Brown suffered a stroke and resigned that same year; after Brown's death in 1989, Kahn was officially named the Director.[68]

Living with AIDS

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Earlier in 1986, Kahn had learned that he was infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), "which was then a death sentence". Kahn longed to spend his remaining years with his "new and most beloved partner",[69] who was "the love of his life".[8] However, he accepted the office of Director out of a feeling of duty, knowing that he was taking "a job that would most surely work him to death".[69] He warned his co-workers that his terminal condition would bring intellectual degeneration, and asked that they monitor him for signs of debilitation. An upgrade of the International Department's computer systems was to have allowed Kahn to work from home.[8]

Kahn died from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in Silver Spring, Maryland on March 27, 1992, at the age of 53, after having been cared for by his partner and supported by his friends and colleagues.[8] He was survived by his partner and also his sister[1][2] and his niece.[6] Kahn planned most of his own memorial service, which was held in the AFL–CIO headquarters.[8]

Works

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Saxon (1992)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Horowitz (2007)
  3. ^ a b Rustin, Bayard (February 1965). "From protest to politics: The future of the civil rights movement". Commentary.
  4. ^ a b c d e Bernstein (1992)
  5. ^ a b c Domber (2008, pp. 103, 131–132, 135, 205–209, 216, 342)
  6. ^ a b c Hardesty (1992)
  7. ^ Horowitz (2007, p. unpaginated source)
  8. ^ a b c d e Kastor (1992)
  9. ^ Drucker (1994, p. 269):
    Drucker, Peter (1994). Max Shachtman and his left: A socialist's odyssey through the "American Century". Humanities Press. ISBN 0-391-03816-8.
  10. ^ Horowitz (2007, p. 210)
  11. ^ Kahn (2007, pp. 254–255)
  12. ^ Horowitz (2007, p. 211)
  13. ^ Horowitz (2007, p. 213)
  14. ^ Isserman (2000, p. 159)
  15. ^ Isserman (2000, p. 160)
  16. ^ Isserman (1987)
  17. ^ a b c D'Emilio (2003, p. 278)
  18. ^ In the 1950s, "[Gay men] were not in the closet—[they] were in the basementUnder the basement!" stated musician Quincy Troupe; "the vast majority of gay people were locked away in painful isolation and fear, doing everything possible not to declare themselves", according to Martin Duberman, as quoted in Phelps (2007, pp. 2–3).
  19. ^ Muravchik, Joshua (January 2006). "Comrades". Commentary Magazine. Retrieved 15 June 2007.
  20. ^ Phelps (2007, p. 10) discusses both McReynolds and Kahn on the same page, in his discussion of the culture of young socialists in the 1950s.
  21. ^ D'Emilio (2003, p. 320)
  22. ^ a b Thelwell, Ekwueme Michael (1999–2000). "The professor and the activists: A memoir of Sterling Brown". The Massachusetts Review. 40 (4 (Winter)): 634–636. JSTOR 25091592.
  23. ^ a b Smethurst, James (2010). "The Black arts movement and historically Black colleges and universities". African-American poets: 1950s to the present. Vol. 2. Chelsea House. pp. 112–113. ISBN 9781438134369.
  24. ^ a b Puddington (1992, p. 43)
  25. ^ Carson (1981, p. 263)
  26. ^ Cartledge (2009, p. 3).
  27. ^ Jervis Anderson, A. Philip Randolph: A Biographical Portrait (1973; University of California Press, 1986). ISBN 978-0-520-05505-6
  28. ^ Anderson (1997) and D'Emilio (2003)
  29. ^ Johnpoll, Bernard K.; Yerburgh, Mark R. (1980). The League for Industrial Democracy: A documentary history. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  30. ^ a b c LeBlanc, Paul (July–August 2008). "Reluctant memoir, part 2 ('Old left / new left interplay' and 'Heart and soul')". Against the Current. 135. Solidarity: "A socialist, feminist, anti-racist organization".
  31. ^ Kahn, Tom (1964). The economics of equality. L.I.D. pamphlet. Foreword by A. Philip Randolph and Michael Harrington. New York: League for Industrial Democracy. pp. ii & 1–70. ASIN B0007DNABQ.
     • Kahn, Tom (1965) [1964]. "The economics of equality". In Ferman, Louis A.; Haber, Al; Kornbluh, Joyce L. (eds.). Poverty in America: A book of readings. Introduction by Michael Harrington. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press. pp. 240 et seq. ISBN 0-472-08331-7.
  32. ^ Miller (1987, pp. 24–25, 37, 74–75: c.f., pp. 55, 66–70)
  33. ^ Sale (1973, p. 29)
  34. ^ a b Gitlin, p. 119.
  35. ^ Sale (1973, pp. 22–25)
  36. ^ Miller (1987, pp. 75–76, 112–116, 127–132, c.f. p. 107)
  37. ^ Sale (1973, p. 105)
  38. ^ Todd Gitlin later acknowledged that LID Director Tom Kahn, "to his credit", was correct in opposing that deletion, which helped Marxist Leninists to take over SDS, in discussion with Irving Howe (Howe 2010, p. 88).
  39. ^ Sale (1973, pp. 25–26)
  40. ^ a b Gitlin (1987, p. 191)
  41. ^ Sale (1973, p. 287)
    Sale described an "all‑out invasion of SDS by the Progressive Labor Party. PLers—concentrated chiefly in Boston, New York, and California, with some strength in Chicago and Michigan—were positively cyclotronic in their ability to split and splinter chapter organizations: if it wasn't their self‑righteous positiveness it was their caucus‑controlled rigidity, if not their deliberate disruptiveness it was their overt bids for control, if not their repetitious appeals for base‑building it was their unrelenting Marxism". (Sale 1973, p. 253)
  42. ^ "The student radicals had gamely resisted the resurrected Marxist-Leninist sects ..." (Miller 1987, p. 258); "for more than a year, SDS had been the target of a takeover attempt by the Progressive Labor Party, a Marxist-Leninist cadre of Maoists" (Miller 1987, p. 284). Marxist Leninists are described further by Miller (1987, pp. 228, 231, 240, and 254: c.f., p. 268).
  43. ^ Sale wrote, "SDS papers and pamphlets talked of 'armed struggle,' 'disciplined cadre,' 'white fighting force,' and the need for 'a communist party that can guide this movement to victory'; SDS leaders and publications quoted Mao and Lenin and Ho Chi Minh more regularly than Jenminh Jih Pao. and a few of them even sought to say a few good words for Stalin" (Sale 1973, p. 269).
  44. ^ Gitlin (1987, p. 149)
  45. ^ Kahn (2007, p. 257)
  46. ^ After resigning from SDUSA in 1973, Harrington then founded the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (Isserman 2000, pp. 424, footnotes 52–53).
  47. ^ a b Wattenberg (1992)
  48. ^ a b Howe (2010, p. 305):
    Despite his having sided with Harrington against Kahn and Shachtman, Howe considered Tom Kahn as "a very talented fellow"—"One of the most talented around that milieu" (Howe 2010, p. 294) and "quite as smart as I, maybe smarter" (Howe 2010, p. 189).
  49. ^ Newfield (2002, p. 66):
    Newfield, Jack (2002). Somebody's gotta tell it: A journalist's life. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-26900-5.
    Newfield was one of the early leaders of SDS, who participated in the drafting of the Port Huron Statement. His autobiography states that Tom Kahn was called a "traitor" by Tom Hayden, who threw a pencil at Kahn; Newfield thought that Hayden was poised physically to assault Kahn (Newfield 2002, p. 66).
    According to Hayden's memoir, Kahn was "slender, sallow, and the first gay man" he had met (Hayden 1989, p. 88); Kahn's being gay "made him a wimp" in Hayden's 1962 judgment (Hayden 1989, p. 88). Hayden remembers having a phobia against meeting Kahn in Rustin's apartment (Hayden 1989, p. 88).

    Hayden, Tom (1989). Reunion: A memoir. Collier Books. ISBN 978-0-02-033105-6.:

  50. ^ Isserman (2000, p. 298)
  51. ^ Horowitz (2005, footnote 58, pp. 249–250)
  52. ^ Muravchik, Joshua (August 28, 2000). "Socialists of America, disunited". The Weekly Standard.
  53. ^ Isserman (2000, p. 424, footnote 61)
  54. ^ Isserman (2000, pp. 353 and 430)
  55. ^ a b c d The prospects of Solidarity and the morality of aiding Solidarity were debated by neo-conservative Podhoretz, who opposed aid to Solidarity as aiding the Soviet Union and failing to help the Polish people, and Kahn, who favored U.S. financial support of Poland only if Poland agreed to allow free labor-unions and freedom of the press, among other demands. (Kahn & Podhoretz 2008)
  56. ^ a b c d e f Shevis (1981, p. 31).
  57. ^ Thiel (2010)
  58. ^ a b c d Gershman, Carl (August 29, 2011). "Remarks by Carl Gershman at a photo exhibition commemorating the 30th anniversary of the founding of Solidarity (The phenomenon of Solidarity: Pictures from the history of Poland, 1980-1981; Woodrow Wilson Center)" (html). Washington D.C.: National Endowment for Democracy. Archived from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved June 28, 2021.
  59. ^ Opening statement by Tom Kahn in (Kahn & Podhoretz 2008, p. 233)
  60. ^ Opening statement by Tom Kahn in Kahn & Podhoretz (2008, p. 235)
  61. ^ Kahn, Tom (March 3, 1982). "Moral duty". Society. 19 (3). New York: Transactions Publishers (purchased by Springer): 51. doi:10.1007/BF02698967. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 189883236.
  62. ^ Shevis (1981, p. 32)
  63. ^ "Secretary of State Muskie rushed in to assure First Secretary Brezhnev that the Carter Administration would have nothing to do with it", wrote Puddington (1992, p. 42)
  64. ^ "The AFL–CIO had channeled more than $4 million to it, including computers, printing presses, and supplies" according to Horowitz (2005, p. 237).
  65. ^ Puddington (2005)
  66. ^ Pear, Robert (10 July 1988). "U.S. supporting Solidarity fight". Albany Times Union. Albany, NY. Archived from the original on 25 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  67. ^ Horowitz (2007, pp. 243–244)
  68. ^ Puddington (2005k, p. 182)
  69. ^ a b Horowitz (2007, p. 239)

References

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Further reading

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Photographs

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