When Ted Hayes announced his intention to join with
the white supremacist Minutemen organization, he became the latest
in a long line of opportunists, fortune seekers and ordinary Uncle
Toms, who are willing to do the bidding of black America’s enemies.
The quickest way for black people to find fame, fortune and good
press is to publicly denounce what is in the best interest of
their own people.
Hayes’ moniker
is “homeless activist.” He began cashing in on his local renown
in Los Angeles when he campaigned for President Bush in 2004.
As a reward he became the subject of fawning coverage in the Wall
Street Journal. The Journal was pleased not only to find a
black Republican to promote, but one with locked hair whom they
dubbed the “Rasta Republican.” Now Hayes is the toast of Fox news,
having formed the Crispus Attucks Brigade and declaring his intention
to join the Minutemen
along the border of the U.S. and Mexico.
The Minutemen claim to be upset only about the illegal
nature of immigration. It is an inconvenient fact that self-described
white supremacists have promoted the Minutemen and their effort
to patrol the border. Confederate and Nazi
flags have been proudly unfurled at Minutemen events.
Black people marching arm in arm with white supremacists
is the ultimate insult, a sign that black leadership has utterly
failed to create an agenda that is of any use. Nature abhors a
vacuum, and Ted Hayes and company are happy to fill it.
The activism in the mostly Latino immigrant community
has been controversial throughout the country, but that controversy
is especially tragic for black America. The sight of millions
of recently arrived Americans who demand citizenship and the full
rights of other Americans, has created resentment among a group
who should see the opportunity for allies on a host of issues.
Most of the resentment towards immigrants is caused
by fear of competition for scarce jobs and resources. The magnitude
of the activism should tell us that this sea change in the demographic
and political landscape need not be detrimental to black people.
At a time when thousands of well paying blue collar
jobs disappear from General Motors and Delphi, the need for labor
activism should be obvious. The need to work with other groups
who are willing to march en masse should be obvious.
While we wonder if marching is still relevant, newly
arrived immigrants who don’t speak English risk deportation and
take to the streets by the millions. As the rates of job loss,
incarceration, and stolen votes all increase, our supposed leaders
ask if marching is still relevant. Immigrants should be an inspiration
if nothing else.
Hayes may be a true believer in the nativist cause,
he may be an opportunist, he may be crazy, but he isn’t completely
stupid. Naming his group for Crispus Attucks may give him credibility
with the credulous. Attucks was a black man who was the first
to fall in the Boston
Massacre in 1770. Bringing up a revered name in black history
can keep even a Wall Street Journal icon out of trouble.
Hayes
has made good on his new notoriety, spouting statements so foolish
that even Sean Hannity of Fox
News sees the need to rephrase and clarify.
HANNITY: You're under fire for saying the biggest
threat to blacks in America since slavery is illegal immigration.
A lot of people don't like the fact that you made that analogy.
How do you...
HAYES: Absolutely. Because it's true.
HANNITY: I've known you a long time. You never –
you never shy away from a fight or a controversy. What did you
mean by that for maybe somebody who didn't understand what you
meant?
HAYES: If this illegal immigration process continues,
it is going to completely destroy us. We are losing our homes,
our lands, our houses, our employment.
HANNITY: But is it wrong to compare it to slavery
– the criticism?
HAYES: What do you mean is it wrong to compare it
to slavery?
HANNITY:
You use the words "biggest threat to blacks in America since
slavery" and people are offended that you said that.
HAYES: Yes, yes. Yes, because it's destroying us.
We're dying as a people, and they're doing it in the name of our
civil rights. They're invoking the name of Martin Luther King.
They got nothing to do with that.
HANNITY: In other words, you're saying the moral
comparison is unfair?
HAYES: Yes, it is. They cannot be claiming what
they're going through is the same as slavery. We are immigrants,
not by choice. We came here against our will. We came in here
backward. And we've been struggling from slavery through Jim Crow
and 40 years of social welfare. It's destroyed our people.
Like the broken clock that is right twice a day,
Hayes is correct that black America is struggling. The struggle
is not caused by day laborers looking for work at Home Depot.
It exists because corporate interests who once employed millions
of Americans and paid living wages no longer do so. The struggle
exists because a functioning public education system has been
replaced by a prison industrial complex.
As Hayes marches arm in arm with nativist racists,
all Americans are losing what remains of their rights of citizenship.
It took a group of newcomers to remind us what is at stake in
this country. They are the marchers we need to join, not white
supremacists and certainly not Ted Hayes.