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Rev Left Radio

Eric Mann on Revolutionary Struggle: The Weather Underground, the Long 1960s, and the Fight for Liberation Today (Part 1)

Rev Left Radio

Breht O'Shea

Communism, Politics, Liberalism, Society & Culture, Philosophy, News, History, Leftwing, Socialism, Marxism

4.83.4K Ratings

🗓️ 27 September 2025

⏱️ 139 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Breht speaks with veteran organizer, revolutionary strategist, and author Eric Mann.

In this wide-ranging conversation, Mann reflects on his decades of struggle; from his early work with SNCC and SDS, through his involvement with the Weather Underground and his time as a political prisoner, to his rank-and-file organizing as a UAW autoworker. Along the way, Mann wrestles with the realities of repression and counterinsurgency, the need for disciplined cadre and a Black-led united front against imperialism, and the history of the Marxist Left in the 60's and 70's in the USA as told through his personal experiences. His story is both a living history of the U.S. Left and a revolutionary call for commitment and organization for a new generation of revolutionaries.

More Biography of Eric Mann: Eric Mann (born December 4, 1942) is a civil rights, anti-war, labor, and environmental organizer. He has worked with the Congress of Racial Equality, Newark Community Union Project, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the Black Panther Party, the United Automobile Workers (including eight years on auto assembly lines) and the New Directions Movement. He was also active as a leader of SDS faction the Weathermen, which later became the militant left-wing organization Weather Underground. He was arrested in September 1969 for participation in a direct action against the Harvard Center for International Affairs and sentenced to two years in prison on charges of conspiracy to commit murder after two bullets were fired through a window of the Cambridge police headquarters on November 8, 1969. He was instrumental in the movement that helped to keep a General Motors assembly plant in Van Nuys, California open for ten years. Mann has been credited for helping to shape the environmental justice movement in the U.S. He founded the Labor/Community Strategy Center in Los Angeles, California and has been its director for 25 years. In addition, Mann is founder and co-chair of the Bus Riders Union, which sued the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority for what it called “transit racism”, resulting in a precedent-setting civil rights lawsuit, Labor Community Strategy Center et al. v. MTA.

Mann is the author of books published by Beacon Press, Harper & Row and the University of California, which include Taking on General Motors; The Seven Components of Transformative Organizing Theory; and Playbook for Progressives: 16 Qualities of the Successful Organizer. He is known for his theory of transformative organizing and leadership of political movements and is acknowledged by many as an veteran organizer on the communist left.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello everybody and welcome back to Rev Left Radio.

0:09.2

Okay, we have a monster episode for you here.

0:12.5

We are taking an odyssey through a journey through the life of veteran organizer Eric Mann.

0:21.1

He has been active since the 60s.

0:25.1

He has been in multiple organizations and adjacent to multiple organizations.

0:31.7

The Congress of Racial Equality, SNCC, Corps, students for a democratic society, you know, engaged in struggles against

0:40.7

the Progressive Labor Party, you know, operating adjacent to the Revolutionary Youth Movement,

0:46.6

personal friends with Howard Zinn, talks about his time with the Weatherman, his arrests

0:53.1

as part of a direct action that the weatherman participated in.

0:58.2

And, you know, he talks about, we'll get into this in part two and maybe even a part three,

1:02.5

but his time in prison, organizing in prison, coming out, joining other communist organizations,

1:08.0

being a communist organizer inside the UAW, etc.

1:11.3

But for this part one, we traced his journey through the 60s and into the very end of the 60s,

1:18.6

from his being taken under the wing of black organizers in the black community and black

1:24.2

movement, which shaped his third world, anti-imperialist politics

1:29.6

through his struggles in the SDS.

1:33.0

They're intra-factional fights, which are just fascinating, sometimes literal fistfights,

1:37.3

breaking out to the direct actions of the, of the Wetherman attacking the Harvard building for international affairs and his subsequent

1:47.6

harsh, you know, prison sentence for engaging in that. And that's where we wrap up part one.

1:55.1

So Eric is a wonderful organizer. He's still organizing in his community with deep roots. He has a very

2:03.1

principled and unique anti-imperialist, anti-colonial third world perspective in his politics

2:10.0

that are really important. And he was brought up as a Jewish man from Brooklyn, a Jewish

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