A true Revolution should have an all-encompassing ideal and goal of a better society or world. That is what I think a true Revolution is. You are describing a class-war. In the past true Revolutions have been supported by interests financial and others but their strength comes from these all encompassing ideals, and I believe that to a great extent they have been pure. To achieve these ideals the Revolution gains control of Power to effect change and then is corrupted by it. It becomes the Establishment, corrupted by the power, often not returning it to the people it professes to serve and a new Revolution arises and the cycle continues.
Blood begets blood, and what is conquered by force needs to be expensively controlled by force. Today it is far more efficient to enter into financial agreements to obtain what you need. Revolution is not passe, but war is.
The greatest ideal in American society is the buck, if you have something to offer, you will be paid no matter who you are, and capital is power, power to lobby, and most importantly the power to strike. Bringing your war to the masses will only spark more hatred, more fear, more isolation. You are not the only ones controlled and manipulated by American government or other governments. Who is in a position to go on strike in the US? To tell you the truth I think your employers are merciful, you have no leverage, you're so deep in debt!
You say your greatest problem is your own self-hatred, which has been instilled by the white man. I don't see how. Your problem is the upbringing of children in a climate of lawlessness and disrespect for the social contract coupled with a belief that injustice has been done to them. That is what creates crime and then poverty.
I'm a very open minded person but I can't get along with people who feel they've been dealt a bad hand. It justifies cheating and more injustice. What's done is done, it's only a matter if you use it as an excuse to throw the rest of your life down the toilet or take action to make things better.
I've had the "opportunity" to spend a week in Detroit in a hotel that a black man described as "where the strong survive". On the weekend the police were over 4-5 times a night, black people would walk outside my room saying "let's go rob someone!".
At that time in Detroit every f?cking restaurant had a help wanted sign. I would eat at a place were the waitress was literally from Africa and I'm sure any brown person would be able to get a job if prepared to work.
I'm not the most altruistic person in the world, but the shear stupidity of the situation compelled me to help and had I stayed in Detroit I probably would have in some way. I've never done volunteer work of any kind and don't contribute much to charity, the group I was most compelled to help were brown folk. As a white man I see no benefit in crime, I see no benefit in the expansion of police powers and I see no benefit in my neighborhood going down the toilet. And most off all I think it is ridiculous for people to suffer in the midst of such prosperity and opportunity.