It has been accurately
said that, "America
Is Like A Melting Pot - The People At The Bottom Get Burned And
The Scum Floats To The Top." Perhaps, nothing is more indicative
of this in the 21st century than the insipid manner in which
the institutions of white America continue to reinvent the myth
pertaining to America's birth and concomitant democracy. The fact of the matter is that the expression 'American democracy'
is in itself a contradiction in terms, for had there been American
democracy on this continent the United States of America, would
never have come into existence. To deny this fact is to deny
the obvious.
Despite white America's ongoing collective
denial of the obvious, the foundation of the United States
of America is genocide, brutal
and massive slavery, and most notably deceit; all of which are
the antithesis to any serious or real application of democracy.
The Ku Klux Klan, White Citizens Councils, John Birch Society,
Neo-Nazis and Minute Men are not some mere antidemocratic American
aberrations; they are in fact integral to the perpetuation of
America itself. Likewise, the American infliction of human suffering
at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo for example, is not American aberration;
it is part and parcel of the American norm - an ongoing, perpetual
cycle of deceit and torture - all in the name of a nebulous,
nonexistent democracy. This is but a reflection of the physical
and cultural pillage and decimation by white America of the indigenous
so-called "Indian" peoples and the slavery, lynchings,
and the current 21st century slave plantations in America known
as "prisons"; where more Black, Brown, and Red - men,
women, and children are incarcerated than anywhere else on earth.
An open secret that America has always known is that democracy
for the few, is no democracy at all. In the 21st century, as
the trappings of America's decaying, greedy corporate capitalist
system begin to negatively impact even some white Americans,
it remains to be seen as to how many more John Brown's, Frank
Little's, or Viola Liuzzio's might yet come to fruition. Yet,
one thing is crystal clear: America's powerful sometimes blatant
- sometimes subliminal - message to whites continues to be, 'Even
if you're poor, getting poorer, have very little formal education,
and no health insurance - at least you're white!' While the age
old de facto message to Black folks remains, 'Lighten up and
think white by ridiculing, emasculating, and distancing yourself
from the Black liberation struggle, or die!' In this context,
the word 'democracy,' as used by American politicians, pundits
in the US news media, and its many institutions, is nothing more
than a cruel and demeaning hoax. For Black people and other people
of color, such 'democracy' is cultural - and ultimately physical
- genocide.
Often used catch phrases such as 'the national American conscience'
are absurd, as America has never had a conscience, national or
otherwise. To grasp how utterly ridiculous and contradictory
the very notion of 'American Democracy' is, a brief historical
look at what makes America - America, is in order.
The name 'America' is a misnomer and was derived from the European
Amerigo Vespucci; as such is an affront to the legacy of millions
of indigenous peoples whose home and land this was, long before
the coming of the deceitful and land grabbing Europeans. Moreover,
the indigenous peoples of what are now commonly known as the
continents of North and South 'America,' already had their own
names for this land that they cherished and respected, well prior
to the disastrous arrival en mass of Europeans, whose God approvingly
smiled upon their subsequent systematic decimation of the Red
peoples and the brutal enslavement and dehumanization of Black
people - all in the name of the 'Manifest Destiny,' and democracy.
To reiterate: Democracy for the few is no democracy at all. As
Black slave rebellions were bloodily and ruthlessly suppressed
in 'the America's,' many white men and women slave holders were
enjoying their 'democracy', as were, to a lesser degree, even
those whites who weren't direct human property owners, but nonetheless
enjoying precious color privilege, which continues unabated in
the 21st century, to the enormous detriment of Black and other
people of color.
Only euphemistically can the United States of America be accurately
described as a democracy, and euphemism has little to do with
reality. America is not a democracy. It is a nation of endless
hypocrisies.
America's hypocrisy and deceit is today visible on every level
of existence, both nationally and internationally, from assassinating
Black American leaders and then hypocritically placing their
images on US postage stamps (as if America honored and respected
them) - to having historically directly or indirectly invaded
Mexico, Cuba, Vietnam, Grenada, Somalia, Iraq, and an endless
list of other nations around the world, to the present where
America foments coups and unending blood shed, all in the name
of a 'democracy' which America itself does not have or practice
within its own stolen borders.
Without the virulent arsenal of hypocrisy
and deceit there would be no United States of America. America's
actual nonexistent
democracy, like Frankenstein's monster has been transformed into
somehow having supposedly become the self-touted bastion of democracy.
It is a nation that has engaged in genocide and slavery but stubbornly
refuses to pay reparations to its Black victims or their descendants.
Even European nations paid reparations to each other for their
atrocities, albeit often with the loot of the ill gotten gain
from the colonialism and ongoing neocolonialism - most notably
of and from the African continent. The United States of America
however, which was built upon, and exists due to, the slave labor,
dehumanization, and mass murders of Black people, remains in
the 21st century in racist and stalwart refusal to pay reparations
to the Black victims of its so-called 'democracy.' As Dr. Robert
L. Brock, the father of the contemporary Black reparations movement
in the United States stated, "Blacks touched the United
States by being brought here without a passport, immigration
papers and consent. But they were brought over the ocean, which
is admiralty law. Admiralty law is international law. Blacks'
rights lie in international law." [Reference ABA Journal
/ The Lawyers Magazine, November, 2000, article entitled, 'Repairing
The Past.'] The US contempt for human rights and international
law did not begin with Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo. It can be traced
to the African holocaust consisting of at least 100 million deaths
of Black slaves and millions more who labored under the most
despicable and dehumanizing form of slavery ever devised - that
which resulted in the building of the United States of America.
Any real democracy would have long ago equitably addressed the
matter of reparations, instead of ignoring this carnage and its
affects, and proceeding to incarcerate at ever increasing stunning
proportions the descendants of those who built this nation.
Black people know only too well that corporate
greed, racism and capitalism do not serve our interests or
those of humanity
as a whole, nor are they in any fashion representative of real
democracy. Moreover, now is not the time to become ensnared by
the dangerous and meaningless rhetoric of politicians who claim
to be, among other things, the "offspring" of the civil
rights movement and/or the Black liberation struggle - but who
in fact are the opportunistic beneficiaries of it. Now is however
the time, especially for Black America, to redefine its role
and to seriously and consciously shape an independent Black political
thought which translates into independent Black political, economic,
and social action for the 21st century. At stake in this is our
very survival and that of the planet.
Larry Pinkney is a veteran of the Black
Panther Party, the former Minister of Interior of the Republic
of New Africa, a former political prisoner and the only American
to have successfully self-authored his civil/political rights
case to the United Nations under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights. Click
here to contact Mr. Pinkney. |