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Rev Left Radio

Nonviolence is Violence, Too: Somebody's Gotta Die

Rev Left Radio

Breht O'Shea

Philosophy, Politics, Society & Culture, News

4.83.6K Ratings

🗓️ 4 February 2026

⏱️ 108 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we're joined by author and poet Too Black to unpack his essay "Nonviolence is violence, too: Somebody's gotta die," and to challenge the comforting myths that often surround "nonviolent" struggle. We dig into what he means by the claim that nonviolence is never actually bloodless, why he prefers the term "sacrificial violence," and how nonviolent movements frequently gain leverage precisely because an opponent supplies the repression that shocks the public, shifts legitimacy, and forces concessions. Along the way, we talk through the research Too Black draws on including Erica Chenoweth's work on lethal repression, and we explore his core metaphors and case examples, from confronting power like "poking a bear over honey" to the method-independent brutality of settler colonialism in Palestine.

At the heart of our conversation is a deep dialectic between Martin Luther King Jr. and Frantz Fanon, and how both frameworks, in different ways, move through violence as an unavoidable terrain of liberation. For King, suffering becomes the redemptive path, a willingness to absorb brutality to expose evil and transform the political and spiritual situation. For Fanon, revolutionary violence itself is the redemptive force, the route through which the colonized reclaim dignity, agency, and self-respect. We close by asking what this reframing means for organizers today: if rights require enforcement and "dramatizing evil" often demands real sacrifice, how should movements talk about nonviolence honestly and strategically in the world as it actually is?

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello everybody and welcome back to Rev Left Radio.

0:08.8

On today's episode, we have back on the show, one of my favorite guests,

0:12.4

recurring guests on Rev Left,

0:14.7

two Black, who is a poet, an organizer, an intellectual, writes essays,

0:20.6

is on the Black Myths podcast and recently

0:24.0

wrote an essay that is on grassroots thinking.com and I'm sure some other places as well

0:30.2

entitled nonviolence is violence to somebody's got to die. It's I think a really historically

0:37.1

dialectical materialist analysis of the

0:41.7

seeming binary between violence and nonviolence. The way that we talk about violence and

0:46.8

nonviolence and think about, those two things are often as two separate spheres, as two wholly

0:52.5

opposite things that we either pick one or the other to the

0:55.8

exclusion of the one that we didn't pick. And I think Two Black complicates that in a really

1:01.7

generative and analytical way, using a sort of dialectical materialist approach to the seeming

1:09.2

binary. And I think the discussion we have about this is, you know, genuinely deep.

1:15.7

I think the stuff that you're going to hear in the next hour or two of this conversation

1:19.8

takes a topic that many of you have probably thought about, probably talked about,

1:25.6

and deepens it and complicates it and adds nuance to it

1:29.6

in a way that I think is rare and genuinely unique. So I think this brings a certain depth and

1:35.7

clarity to a well-treaded conversation that is incredibly worth it, especially at this moment

1:42.7

of extreme violence in our society.

1:45.1

I talk about this a little bit up front from the releasing of the Epstein files and the violence

1:49.0

of the U.S. and Israeli ruling classes, the genocide in Gaza, the seeming imminent possible attack on Iran,

...

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