In the United
States , the colorline is a paradox. It is
story of continuity and change.
The colorline in the Age of Obama, and the post civil
rights, era more broadly, are built upon a skeleton of white supremacy and
white privilege even while the shape of its superstructure may suggest that
much racial progress has in fact been made.
In the United States, the result—what is a type of
institutional white supremacy that still features moments of direct, interpersonal
“old fashioned” racism by the State and white individuals against people of
color—is a riddle of sorts, the answer to which most reasonable, just, and good
people already know. Unfortunately, White America continues to treat justice
along the colorline as a type of unsolvable puzzle when in reality the answers
are readily apparent.
There has been substantive racial progress in the United States
in terms of dismantling de jure white supremacy. But, the impact of centuries
of white supremacy as law, day-to-day practice, and culture, has not been fully
(or I would suggest even significantly) remediated.
The symbolic progress along the colorline is substantial. The
American people elected a black man as President. Post civil rights era America
features a multicultural neoliberal leadership class and elite. While embattled
by the Great Recession, the black and brown professional classes comprise a
substantial part of the African-American community. America ’s popular culture is
global—and one of its hallmarks is the hyper-visibility of black and brown
faces. “Diversity”, “tolerance”, and “anti-racism” are fully enshrined in America ’s civil
religion (even while not being fully embraced by all Americans in private or
translating into full racial equality in the public sphere). The Black Freedom
Struggle also inspired other groups of people such as gays and lesbians to
fight for full equality under the law.
The symbolic progress along the colorline exists in tension
with semi-permanent racial inequality in a society structured to protect,
maintain, and advance white privilege.
For example, the United States maintains levels of
school and residential segregation that have been unchanged since Jim and Jane
Crow. Personal social networks are also highly segregated: 75% of white Americans do not have one non-white friend. Wealth and income inequality along
the colorline is stark: white Americans have at least 10 times the wealth of
black Americans (with some estimates suggesting that the gap may be almost 70
times greater). The Republican Party and the White Right have launched a
viciously racist assault on the won in blood victories of the Black Freedom
Struggle such as the Voting Rights, Civil Rights, and fair housing laws.
From the racist origins of modern policing in chattel
slavery, through to Jim Crow era debt peonage and chain gangs, the American criminal
justice system remains one of the most racist and discriminatory political institutions
in the United States as it disproportionately and more severely punishes black
and brown Americans as compared to whites.
The body of Freddie Gray, and the community of Baltimore in which he
lived, display those attributes in stark and bloody relief.
The 1968 Kerner Report on the urban “riots” of the 1960s is
a magisterial accomplishment.
However, the Kerner Report was not the only document to
detail and explore the causes of the urban rebellions of that tumultuous
decade.
Less known among the general public, David
Sears’ and Tim Tomlinson’s 1968 article Riot
Ideology in Los Angeles: A Study of Negro Attitudes was part of
pioneering work in public opinion that actually sought to understand the
beliefs and values of black Americans who lived in the urban communities that
rebelled against white supremacy and racial inequality during the 1960s.
Sears and Tomlinson’s findings about the divergent
understandings held by white and black Americans in response to the urban
rebellions in the 1960s resonate in the present.
For example, in the aftermath of the Baltimore uprising, NBC and The Wall Street Journal conducted a poll which found:
Six-in-10 African-Americans said
that the discord in Baltimore
is attributable to "people with longstanding frustrations about police
mistreatment of African Americans that have not been addressed."
Twenty-seven percent said that the riots were "caused by people who used
the protests about the death of an African-American man in police custody as an
excuse to engage in looting and violence."
Among whites, those results were
almost exactly flipped. Just 32 percent cited longstanding frustration about
African-Americans' treatment at the hands of police, while 58 percent said the
Baltimore violence was caused by those using Gray's death as an excuse for
looting.
Sears and Tomlinson detailed how 58 percent of whites in
their research felt that the Los
Angeles area disturbances of 1965 were a “riot” as
compared to 46 percent of blacks who felt the same way. Approximately 50 years
later, white attitudes toward black “riots” have remained virtually unchanged.
By contrast, more than a third of blacks surveyed by Sears
and Tomlinson felt that it was a “revolt, revolution, or insurrection”. Only 13
percent of whites had similar feelings. Almost a third of whites also felt that
the “riots” were some type of “disaster, tragedy, mess, disgrace,” or other like
term.
Sears’ and Tomlinson’s conversations with the black
residents in the Los Angeles area during the time period of 1965 to 1966
revealed a sense of frustration, upset, and dismay at how racism and classism
limited the life chances of the people who lived there.
In the conclusion to Riot
Ideology in Los Angeles: A Study of Negro Attitudes, Sears and Tomlinson
write how:
The causes of the riot were
described in terms of genuine grievances with those who were attacked; e.g., a
history of friction, discrimination, and economic exploitation with local
merchants and police. The purpose of the riot was seen as being, on the one
hand, to call the attention of whites to Negro problems, and on the other, to
express resentment against malefactors...Perhaps the most important fact of all
is that so many Negroes felt disposed to justify and ennoble the riot after it
was all over. It was not viewed as an alien disruption of their peaceful lives,
but as an expression of protest by the Negro community as a whole, again an
oppressive majority.
Business Insider’s recent story on the social, political,
and historical context for the killing of Freddie Gray and the Baltimore
uprising mirrors the findings of Sears and Tomlinson:
Vaughn De Vaughn, a local teacher,
told The Baltimore Sun: "This is about anger and frustration and them not
knowing how to express it."
Coates makes the point that
"when nonviolence is preached by the representatives of the state, while
the state doles out heaps of violence to its citizens, it reveals itself to be
a con."
The Baltimore Sun revealed in an
extensive investigation published in September that the city has paid
about $5.7 million since 2011 over police brutality lawsuits. The wording of
the story's opening sentences seem like ominous foreshadowing today — the
newspaper noted that "the perception that officers are violent can poison
the relationship between residents and police."
Michael A. Fletcher wrote
in The Washington Post that "it was only a matter of time before Baltimore exploded."
He continued: "In the more
than three decades I have called this city home, Baltimore has been a
combustible mix of poverty, crime, and hopelessness, uncomfortably juxtaposed
against rich history, friendly people, venerable institutions and pockets of
old-money affluence."
A
New York Times profile of Freddie
Gray’s neighborhood reveals a similar state of frustration, hurt, and
alienation from The American Dream:
With high school diplomas, they
have struggled to find well-paying jobs. Ms. Fair, prodigious at crochet, helps
pay the bills by selling hats and baby blankets. Mr. Chapman has a license to
repair heating and air conditioning systems, and he is beginning to train for a
license to drive a commercial truck.
Mr. Chapman and Ms. Fair say they
are a family just trying to make it in Sandtown, but they feel smothered by the
crime and poverty — and by the police, who regularly pull over their minivan.
“Once they look in the car and they see it’s a female with two kids, their face
changes,” Ms. Fair said.
Ms. Moody finished the thought.
“Oh, it’s a family.”
A 2011 report on Sandtown and an adjacent area,
Harlem Park, compared those neighborhoods’ social indicators with those of
Baltimore as a whole — not a high bar, since the city lags the state of Maryland
and the nation on many counts. Still, Sandtown and Harlem Park
had roughly double the city’s rates of unemployment, poverty, homicides and
shootings, as well as liquor and tobacco stores per capita. Lead-paint
violations were four times the city average, as was the percentage of vacant
buildings. Sandtown and Harlem
Park also had more
residents in jails and prisons than any other neighborhood in the city, a recent study by the Justice Policy Institute
found, with an annual cost of $17 million just to lock them up.
The dominant white media framed the uprisings of the 1960s
as “riots”. As such, even in the immediate shadow of Jim and Jane Crow white
supremacy, few white Americans were able to connect the legitimate grievances
that black Americans felt about jobs, justice, and racial equality with the
resulting urban unrest. In both the 1960s and the post civil rights era, the
mainstream news media has largely failed to provide a proper historical and
political context for the events and struggles along the colorline because it
serves and defaults to the White Gaze and the White Racial Frame. There, black
Americans are rendered as unreasonable and irrational as opposed to sensible,
considered, and full political beings that should be empathized with and
respected.
In its coverage of the Baltimore uprising, the dominant
media frame defaulted to an old habit as both Right-wing propaganda operations
such as Fox
News, and more “centrist” outlets such as CNN both disseminated a narrative of
black “thugs”, “outside agitators”, and “looters” who were interested in
acting out the violence depicted in such movies as “The Purge”.
The most ethically and morally sick among the Right-wing
media and pundit classes defaulted
to a white fantasy of African-American violence and bestiality that in turn
legitimates anti-black violence, police thuggery, and racism.
The National Review’s
Ian Tuttle was especially noxious:
The riots, of course, had nothing
to do with Freddie Gray. The anger over his death simply provided for the type
of person who wants to rampage the excuse to do so. What makes the situation
alarming is that the reaction of the powers-that-be was not to squelch hundreds
of stampeding criminals, but to intellectualize away their animalism. Rather
than clamp down on hordes of opportunistic thugs, Baltimore ’s Oberlin-alumna mayor treated them
as just extra-passionate protesters, whose interests required from the
government a “balanced” response.
In the arena of practical politics and the 2016 presidential
election the past lives in the present. The Republican use of “The Southern
Strategy” involved efforts to gin up white racism and white racial resentment
in the aftermath of the 1960s by evoking images of black criminality and “urban
riots” to win white working class and middle class voters.
Right-wing elites and potential 2016 presidential candidates
are
already traveling in such cynical and racially fetid waters as they attempt to
use the Baltimore Uprising to win white support.
There is an almost inevitable tragedy of loss, frustration,
and failure in the aftermath of the urban rebellions of the 1960s and the Baltimore uprising of
2015.
African-Americans who participated in the protests and
uprisings actually believe(d) that those acts would get the attention of White
America in such as a way as to produce positive change in their communities.
From Riot Ideology in Los Angeles : A Study of
Negro Attitudes:
In seeing the riot as a protest, a
majority of the Negro population thought of it as a social-change action the
principle aims of which were change in living conditions and aggression against
the oppressor. Expectations about outcome should thus serve as critical
considerations in Negroes’ thinking about the value of riots as instruments of
social change…By all odds the most salient expectation was that whites would
begin to redress Negro grievances. The effect of the riot mention first by 43
percent of the Negro respondents was help from outside the Negro community. An
additional 13 percent cited the effect of greater white awareness of Negro
problems, and more comfortable relations between whites and Negroes. Thus, a
majority thought first of favorable change among whites.
Tomlinson and Sears also offer the following sobering truth:
“Thus the changes desired by both races follow a well-worn path in American
race relations. The white population is mainly willing to adjust when it is
easy and convenient to do so…”
Theirs is a powerful observation in an era where continuity
and change coexist along the colorline in a fitful paradox. African-American
members of the leadership class, like their forefathers and foremothers in the
black leadership class of decades past, use white racist language such as
“thugs” to describe black protesters and resisters in cities such as Baltimore
and elsewhere—while not using the same language to describe the real thugs and
criminals among an out of control police that routinely murder and abuse people
of color (and the poor) with impunity.
The problems of economic and racial inequality that caused
the urban rebellions of the 1960s are the very same ones that inspired and
pushed the young people of Baltimore and other communities to rebel in the year
2015. But, these old problems are treated as something novel and mysterious
when in fact the causes have been well understood for decades.
With the killing of Freddie Gray and the Baltimore Uprising
we are “back to the future”: Jim and Jane Crow white supremacy is a poltergeist
that continues to haunt the American body politic in the 21st century.
5 comments:
http://news.yahoo.com/mississippi-city-mourns-2-officers-slain-weekend-shooting-083223118.html
Please don't ostracize me for the source.
I don't have to tell you the vitriol being hurled at those whose hue be darker than blue. No compassion. One commenter in particular said he was the voice of Mike Brown from the depths of hell...
We never left '65. '65 never left American Aparthied never left reconstruction... Even in the 80's, 90's there were those murdered by police. The coverage varied that's all.
Why would you be ostracized? These men need to be put on trial and if found guilty go to jail. I am consistent--as am others on these matters--the life of a police officer is no more valuable than anyone else's. Just as these men will be put on trial police should face the same judgement when they kill people too.
Yes, we are going back to the future, and I am afraid that as you mention the new uprisings will engender a similar, Nixonian response. I re-read the Kerner Commission report recently, noticing that the state did the opposite of what it recommended. I think you've mentioned before that it's amazing that more events like those in Baltimore have not occurred in recent years. Expect "law and order" to be an issue in next year's election.
Thug baiters notwithstanding, the Baltimore riots put social justice back on the main menu. All the old social problems have exploded in HD. Political correctness is no substitute social justice. White privilege can no longer confidently hide behind the mask of color blind racism. Riots and demonstrations are being perceived as legitimate responses to 40 years of social oppression. A political correction is in order.
The White Right is frothing at the mouth...even more so than usual. Baltimore and Ferguson will give them their Willie Horton 2.0 moment.
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