“White” does not mean white. “White” in radical parlance means anyone of any race, creed, nationality, color, sex, or sexual preference who embraces capitalism, free markets, limited government, and American traditional culture and values.”
This philosophical concept belongs to Noel Ignatiev, a white American of Russian origin, who is the ideological founding father of numerous radical black movements in America. The author of this concept was even lucky enough to see his best students -- Black Lives Matter (BLM) -- in action.
Research into the work of this former Harvard professor finally answered the question of why BLM proponents are so negative about the perfectly rational slogan “All Lives Matter.” The fact is that the “black” in the interpretation of Ignatiev is a revolutionary Marxist. All those who do not agree with the Left ideology should, according to Ignatiev, be eliminated.
The slogan “All Lives Matter” blurs the concept of the enemy and brings confusion to the minds of revolutionaries. That is why any mention of “All Lives Matter” (or its version in support of the police -- “Blue Lives Matter”) provokes such an acute reaction of the Left.
According to Ignatiev, “black” is not the level of pigment in the skin, but the level of adherence to the Marxist doctrine.
American Thinker - Gary Gindler
Neo-Marxism and Critical Criminology
Some Marxists who sought to adapt Marx's ideas (known as neo-Marxists) took onboard some of the criticisms, particularly concerning the apparent passivity of the working class. Neo-Marxists recognised that working-class criminals made an active choice to break the law.
However, they argued that sometimes this was a positive political act against the bourgeoisie: e.g. the Black Panthers – a radical black rights group in the US in the 1960s and 1970s who did engage in criminal activity in the course of their political activism. This neo-Marxist approach to crime and deviance became known as critical criminology or, sometimes, radical criminology.
Young and Taylor's The New Criminology (1976) tried to establish the "fully social theory of deviance". When considering any deviant act, they argued that Marxists should consider: See Study Notes tutor2u.net