The just
concluded presidential election was all about Iraq, with the
state of the economy lagging
in importance while questions about poverty, economic inequality
and racial justice languished in the shadows. As always, the
concerns of black people were invisible to the parties and to
white America. Black American voters were again caught in a
vise between the vengeful white nationalist conservatism of the
Republicans and an increasingly indifferent business liberalism
of the Democrats. But one gets the sense
that black America is at a breaking point in matters of politics. The old alliance
between blacks and the Democrats is about to end while the war
between blacks and conservatives is going to get much worse. Most
of all, the unique solidarity between the black middle class
and the black poor will soon end as the pressure of economic
survival turns former allies into enemies. Poor black people
are about to become the victims of a great political betrayal
that is as predictable as it is awful. This betrayal is due
to the unyielding logic of modern economic life, which has slowly
but inexorably destroyed the basis for black unity. A brief
assessment of our current economic predicament shows why the
old forms of black unity cannot endure.
The Republican Party, that peculiar union of
fundamentalist capitalists and fundamentalist Christians, is
all about cutting the size of
government through low taxes and fewer regulations, including public
action to counter the outcomes of private racial discrimination
in the economy or other parts of the private sector. Republicans
have done a brilliant job of building an alliance between capitalists
and racists that does not rely on government power to promote racial
segregation or racial inequality. Instead, the leading sectors
of conservative America have relied on the typical mechanisms of
economic inequality and social class to sustain racial hierarchies
in America, allowing them to champion competition, choice and individual
rights in the face of persistent racial disparities in economic
outcomes.
Modern America is, according
to Republicans, a place where the economic fortunes of different
groups reflects
the cultural and intellectual capital that these groups bring
to an impartial competitive marketplace, which assigns value
to people on the basis of what they do rather than what they
are. So, according to this view of things, black people are
poorer than other folks because, well, they are just not as smart
or as industrious as other people. Poverty and racial inequality
are not due to discrimination, but rather mean that black people
should imitate the culture of successful groups if they want
to get ahead. This hoary “culturalist” stance on racial inequality
is an electoral winner for free market advocates who oppose most
forms of redistribution as well as white nationalists who are
loathe to support blacks who they view as biologically and morally
inferior.
Can blacks appeal to American
liberals and progressives for support in their drive for real
equal opportunity? Not
really. The Democratic Party has largely abandoned its concern
with the needs of poor and badly schooled Americans of all colors
in the modern, technology driven global economy in favor of a
program of business liberalism that is largely indifferent to
black interests.
The harsh reality of American
economic life is that the blue collar road to the middle class
has collapsed
in the face of a world economy dominated by trade and technology. A
large fraction of the American work force have been stranded
in the declining sectors of the American economy, even as their
luckier counterparts in the growing sector are experiencing a
sustained economic boom. The majority of black American workers
have been stranded on the wrong side of the economic divide between
skilled and unskilled labor, a far larger fraction than among
the white majority. Even skilled workers face job and employment
threats from trade and technology, so they are in no mood to
help people in even greater need then themselves.
Black Americans need government
help more than whites in order to achieve a middle class standard
of living which, in America, means their claims fall on deaf
or hostile ears. The Republicans argue against Big Government
help for anybody, thereby ensuring that poor people stay poor
forever. Every time that a conservative claims that “people
can spend their money better than government can,” he or she
is also saying that poor people are on their own because right
wing government is not about to offer them a bridge from the
broken blue collar economy to the growing part of the global
economy. Even educational reform is a fraud, since most dollars
for schools come from local districts which depend on local and
state tax monies that reflect yawning disparities across class
and color lines. Small government conservatism, as a practical
matter, means that poor people will be locked out of educational
opportunity for as long as the right is in power.
The Democrats are not much
better. The
Democrats’ business liberalism promotes the well-being of the
middle class majority by increasing the competitiveness of the
business sector in a hyper-competitive world. For example, Democratic
support for cutting the cost of health care for families and
businesses is perfectly sensible and should be applauded, especially
when compared to the Republicans’ limited initiatives that leave
too many people without insurance. The same is true of Democratic
proposals to reduce the burden of college tuition and housing
on family budgets, which use various tax incentives and subsidies
to help people pay for the goods that they need.
Do the Democrats have a
program to create genuine equal opportunity for education, health
care and life
chances in America? No. Middle America is far more interested
in shoring up schools, medical care and life chances for themselves
and their children than they are in creating real fairness for
all. In this divided society where a sizeable group of poor
and working class people simply cannot make it on their own,
an insecure middle class is not about to spend money on other
people, particularly if they are black.
The Democrats have no reason
to champion real equal opportunity because it is expensive and
would take
at least a generation to achieve. The problem with the Democrats
is that they do not have a common program of economic reconstruction
that can unite the poor and the middle class. The fact that
there are millions of people who cannot make it on their own,
no matter how hard they try, will not convince Middle America
to help out their struggling countrymen unless they see something
in it for themselves. This sense of looking out for number one
is not just selfishness or even racism, but is also rooted in
the politics of economic survival.
So why do black people
stay with the Democrats, even if the party has no real program
for creating
genuine equal opportunity that can command enough support from
Middle America to counter opposition from free market conservatives
and their racist allies? A different politics of survival: the
black middle class needs the Democrats to protect them from white
nationalist animus, while the working class and poor black majority
are just holding on for dear life. Black America is in an existential
bind between a party that will tolerate their presence so long
as they support business liberals and the fierce white nationalist
wing of the Republican Party bent on pushing blacks back into
society’s basement. White nationalists in America are convinced
that black people are an inferior sub-race that could never rise
above a lowly station without help from misguided liberals. But
the black middle class believes that the only way it can resist
the onslaught of white nationalism is to make common cause with
the Democrats by offering to deliver the votes of the black poor
to the ballot box.
Of course, black people
are in a terrible bargaining position vis-ŕ-vis the parties. The Democrats can
plausibly insist that black people fold some of their interests
under the party’s general program – and shut up about whatever
else they need – in exchange for limited protection from racist
bullies. Republican entreaties for black support are cruel jokes
since the right has no intention of dealing with the economic
sources of black distress, nor do they intend to exchange their
white nationalist coalition partners for a smaller, poorer and
darker group that does not command the respect of a large portion
of the white population. President Bush’s appeals to blacks
to vote Republican amount to a vicious mockery of a people caught
between an indifferent liberal protector and an eager conservative
assailant.
The Cosby Dilemma
There are two ways out
of this trap: either black people themselves must come up with
a program of
national economic policy that creates equal opportunity under
modern global capitalism or else find a way to expand the size
of the black middle class without government help. There is
rather little chance that black Americans will be able to craft
a program of opportunity and economic renewal that will command
the assent of enough white people to become the agenda for the
nation. A new program of growth with equality is hard enough
for the richest and most powerful segments of American liberalism,
much less a group pushed to the wall by the economy on one side
and malignant conservatism on the other. While the emergence
of Barack Obama suggests that a growing portion of non-black
America might be willing to listen to public policy proposals
from an African face, it will be some time before Senator Obama
or someone else presents a comprehensive program to the nation.
That leaves the road of
self-reliance as the sole road to black economic development
in these times
of economic change and right wing assault. But the black community
is no more immune to internal class conflict than the larger
American society, particularly when economic survival is at stake.
When Bill Cosby lambasted
what he described as “a culture of victimhood” and the failure of black America
to take responsibility for its actions, he made national headlines
and spurred the usual round of pundit debates. The real story
behind the Cosby uproar is not what he said, but what it reflects
about black America, which is witnessing the fraying of a historic
bond between the black middle class and the black poor. His
sentiments reflect the breakdown of a bond between middle class
and poor black people being torn apart by the economic reality
that the well-educated are riding high while the poor black folks
are battered by the US economy’s turn against poorly educated
workers.
The hard truth of our time
is that the economic needs of poor black people are much closer
to those
of other poor Americans than they are to those of middle class
blacks. Poor blacks, like all poor people in America, need an
immense array of social goods and services that they cannot pay
for – from health care and education to safe streets and housing. Middle
class blacks, like all middle class Americans, want high quality
public services balanced against low taxes in a society of self-reliant
individuals.
Middle class black people
support greater degrees of regulation and redistribution in economic
life because
they are poorer than whites and are still subject to discrimination. But
the black middle class does not need or want government to the
same degree as poor blacks because they are no longer trapped
in the basement of the American job market. Many middle class
black people are no more interested in paying taxes to support
poor people than their white counterparts, not least because
they see themselves as proof that hard work and perseverance
in the face of white nationalism can pay off in still all-too-racist
America.
Bill Cosby’s complaint about poor black
people, unfair as it is, is nonetheless the view of many middle
class black people who see poverty as a trap made worse by self-destructive
behavior. Very few members of the black middle class suggest
that poor black people have only themselves to blame for their
trouble: the quiet daily war against discrimination prevents
them from falling into that mindset.
Some people will say that
the black middle class’s slow abandonment of the black poor is a sell out
to white America, the act of selfish Uncle Toms who have forgotten
what it is like to suffer as racial and class outcasts in this
society. Nothing could be further from the truth or more irrelevant. Black
middle class abandonment of the black poor is perfectly consistent
with a strong sense of racial pride that nonetheless blames poor
black people for making their bad situation worse. It is perfectly
possible for middle class blacks to be angry at conservative
white people and poor black people at the same time.
The Revenge of the Black Middle Class: The New Washington
Solution
Can the black middle class
survive without a political alliance with the black poor? Can they survive without
the Democratic Party? Perhaps. Middle class black Americans
could, if they choose, create a culture of academic and commercial
achievement and success based on a shared understanding of the
black American experience that thrives in the face of white nationalist
assault. Indeed, the marriage of conservatism and racism that
is the modern Republican Party might recommend just such a strategy
provided that the concept of racial solidarity undergoes a subtle
shift along lines suggested by Cosby’s complaint.
Suppose that black American
middle class families begin an aggressive intellectual and cultural
movement
that sees learning, savings, competition and development as the
primary weapons in the war against white nationalism. Imagine
a situation where black Americans not only accept the marriage
of free market conservatism and white nationalism as a fact of
American life, but as an assault that must be resisted through
independent development rather than relying on American liberals. Suppose
that the number and density of middle class blacks has reached
critical mass so that they are able to sustain independent institutions – schools,
media, publishing, churches, businesses – that can support a
vibrant, diverse, but defiantly black intellectual and cultural
universe capable of sturdy interaction with the wider world. This
black world would be able to insulate black children from the
noxious influence of white nationalism over schooling, media
and character formation – perhaps by insisting on a high degree
of racial segregation in housing, schooling and inter-personal
association, perhaps by the evolution of communities that are
racially diverse but which share a common and positive view of
black intellect and ability.
These communities would
also develop mechanisms for controlling children – particularly young men – whose
unruly behavior threatens to disrupt the teaching and learning
process. The creation of middle class communities of color that
believe in black achievement, and that deliberately set themselves
against the larger white nationalist project of American conservatism
as well as the fecklessness of liberalism, would allow for the
emergence of strong norms of individual responsibility to self
and community that make it easier for these mini-societies to
promote character formation. This world would, in time, be
able to build up black social capital so that succeeding generations
of black children would acquire the tools for success in academic
and economic competition, including access to pools of financial
and cultural capital that permit them to succeed in broadly multicultural
environments.
This new, assertive black
America would be a relatively small population of ten to twelve
million were
it to magically congeal instantaneously, but would be a political
force in regions with large black populations to the extent that
its interests in economic growth, competition, knowledge and
public policy converged with those of other groups. For example,
a diverse but cohesive, assertive, achievement oriented and self-reliant
black community of 300,000 in New York City could tip the balance
of power in that kaleidoscopic city of warring tribes, using
its growing financial, cultural and political influence to shape
public discourse on everything from tax policy to the arts.
The key point here is that
a middle class black community intent on establishing and expanding
its
place in the world would be in a position to translate its current
advantages, meager though these may be when compared to whites,
into an engine for growth if it redefines its mission from one
of defending its poorer cousins to one of aggressive accumulation
and competition. A community whose ethos is founded on achievement
and competition will, like the nation as a whole, see failure
as an individual matter linked to particular choices if it has
the means to prepare its children to compete in the wider world. Persons
who fail in school, or who make bad choices that result in material
poverty, would no longer be able to “blame the white man” for
their troubles, but would instead have to accept responsibility
for their mistakes. One hopes that this black middle class community
is sufficiently fair-minded to give people who fail another chance,
though a harsh rugged individualism is not inconceivable. In
any case, once the community is able to establish a common culture
of success, failure would be seen as the exception rather than
as the norm.
Note that this sort of
community does not rely on affirmative action to achieve wealth
and power. American
white nationalists, for all their hostility, are not about to
reinstate literal apartheid, which is extremely expensive and
economically inefficient. The free market partners of white
nationalists within the Republican Party go along with obsessive
racism because they want the votes of racists in order to keep
taxes down. There is no way that a business oriented white capitalist
class is going to use government policy to reinstate affirmative
action for incompetent whites over competent blacks in a global
economy that severely punishes inefficiency with bankruptcy and
unemployment. Blacks who succeed, and who are able to establish
a common culture of success in regions of the country, will be
in a position to compete with whites, and, more importantly,
just might be able to break up the agreement between free market
capitalists and racists regarding the political utility of racism. If
affirmative action disappeared, and blacks were excluded from
elite universities and from high paying jobs by virtue of “color
blind” admissions and hiring criteria, one can still imagine
a situation where the temporary fall off in black representation
would be followed by a resurgence powered by very skilled, very
elegant and very angry people.
It is important to emphasize
that what we will call the "New Washington" solution of black
middle class development (in honor of, and irony about, the legacy
of Booker T. Washington) is, by its nature, a program of economic
and cultural development that is in stark opposition to the marriage
of conservatives and racists that defines the Republican Party. The
whole point of the New Washington solution is to gather together
the economic and cultural resources of black people of moderate
means to build a self-sustaining culture of achievement motivated
by a profound historical sense of grievance against white conservatism
as well as black failure.
The emergence of an assertive
black middle class in response to the victory of the right in
American
politics will bring a very heavy price in terms of national unity. The
New Washington solution is, by its very nature, based on the
perception that the United States is so tainted by race hatred
that black self-sufficiency is the only way for people of African
descent to survive. The New Washington solution would not be
a liberal program – in large part because it is would grow out
of the failure of liberal politics to create a genuine post-racial
society. Instead, the New Washington movement would be a sophisticated,
multi-generational, non and even anti-governmental movement aimed
at creating a secure place for black Americans, and those who
would band together with them, to live, work and grow.
If all this sounds a bit
of paranoid, it should: the program outlined here is a riff on
that of the
Nation of Islam, stripped of its cultish nonsense, its racism,
its sexism and homophobia. It retains two things from the outlook
of the Nation of Islam: first, a deep belief that politics is
a dead end for black development in America precisely because
blacks will never be accepted as genuine equals, and second,
a permanent antagonism to the dominant political and cultural
discourse of the United States so long as these are organized
around commitments to white supremacy in daily life. Needless
to say, this stance will lead to even greater fragmentation of
American life by reducing the possibility of a shared sense of
American nationalism. The New Washington solution, born out
of the victory of white conservatism and the weakness of egalitarianism,
represents the emergence of intransigent, post-liberal black
nationalism at the heart of the republic that ultimately turns
its back on Martin Luther King’s dream of a “beloved community”.
The Wretched of the Nation
What would become of poor
black people who were abandoned by their former middle class
partners? They
would slip further into the shadows of American life, suffering
ever greater poverty, sickness and early death like their white,
brown and yellow counterparts. If they struck out at middle
class blacks in the usual way that poor people strike at society – through
crime – they would find themselves assailed by a rainbow coalition
of middle class folks insisting on “law and order.” Indeed, one
can imagine a situation where the New Washington solution would
lead to ever more punitive approaches to crime and punishment
once the black middle class stopped tying the fate of the black
poor to the nation’s history of slavery and apartheid. Sympathy
would shrivel still more for the poor and social outcasts, with
no segment of the middle class coming to the defense of those
in society’s basement. The United States would become an even
meaner place than it is now.
An ascendant, angry, confident and successful
black population in a cold war with conservative America; the
abandonment of the
black poor by the black middle class; a permanent war of words
and images, and maybe worse, between successful blacks and whites
who waited too long to jettison their racist partners or who treated
blacks like permanent junior partners. This is the bitter legacy
that two decades of conservative victory and liberal dithering
has in store for America. The racist right and the feckless left
are not remotely ready to reap the harvest of what they have sown.
Marcellus Andrews is an economist and senior
research fellow at the New America Foundation. Dr.
Andrews writes on economic policy and economic justice for
academic and popular
audiences, including The Political Economy of Hope and Fear:
Capitalism and the Black Condition in America (1999, NYU
Press) and Taking Back Capitalism: A Capitalist Road to
Economic Justice (forthcoming, NYU Press). Dr.
Andrews received a PhD in economics from Yale University and
has taught economics at Wellesley College as well as the City
University of New York. |