All of the Western nations have been
caught in a lie,
the lie of pretended humanism;
this means that their history has no
moral justification,
and that the West has no moral
authority.
James Baldwin, “To Be
Baptized,” No Name in the Street
It’s embedded in this Western
wealth-centric culture. The whole idea behind competition is to teach
the young to want what’s the best. By
hook or crook, huh? By whatever means necessary. Even by sanctioning
the oppression of other human beings.
Children
aren’t encouraged to pursue the interests they love. Instead,
children economically disadvantaged and now apparently even children
from affluent, very affluent families, are directed to look toward
careers in engineering or law or medicine, as if the world could
afford to lose the artistic or creative-minded children drawn toward
poetry or literature. Humanity, this narrative of wealth seems to
suggests, doesn’t need another Jane Goodall or Toni Morrison.
Let’s
think on money or not at all. And some wonder why the Opioid
addiction ever took hold in America. Why the despair and depression?
How
many times has a news anchor or late-night talk show host report on a
news item about the “rich and famous” only to quip in the
next breath how he or she should be so lucky—that is, to be as
wealthy—and own an estate, or a massive yacht or any apparel
designed by Yves Saint Laurent or Karl Lagerfield. Owning a private
jet like the world’s wealthiest man, Jeff Bezos, would be
arriving at the proverbial gates of heaven: you have been granted
entrance, you lucky one!
That must be nice!
How
then is it possible to empathize with those without homes, or access
to transportation, or a decent pair or shoes or dress?
Politicians
announce their agenda, “I’m a candidate for the middle
class,” and waste their time not
with the homeless or the poor working class. It’s out in the
open. Right there. Audible as well as visible. I’m
for the middle class.
In
the meantime, the homeless and poor working class waits, as these
classes of people have waited and waited and waited for generations.
Waiting for the trickle down. For the return of a great
America.
So
absurd, if not heartless: to want to continue sustaining the
existence of a systemically destructive economic apparatus! To say
that the lives of our children, or future generations matter, but
institute, with due diligence, a hierarchical structuring of society
that eliminates from the start the majority of humanity is to
continue a vile and shameful practice that is anything but moral, let
alone humane.
Privilege
the class best situated to run the best race to the top and the hell
with everyone else! That’s capitalism for you! And there
nothing humane about promoting an agenda that sustains a privileged
few.
This,
as Toni Morrison’s Sethe would say, is nothing to pass on!
Certainly, nothing for any of us to engage in.
And
yet, here we are today in 2019 where we have been since before the
colonies became a nation. The white supremacist eye the demographics
just as their ancestors did when the Indigenous became too numerous
and troublesome to the colonists and when blacks began to talk about
freedom. Equality. America is changing. It’s never been the
change the wealthy ownership class and white supremacists ever wanted
to experience in their America.
Most
Americans today would argue that the legacy of a developing wealthy
class of owners and white supremacists is NOT their heritage. Most
Americans today shy away from organized hate
groups. The KKK or the Proud Boys are groups for the “extremists.”
Americans on the fringes of society. The wealthy are the few, the top
one percent. This top one percent is moving on and up, climbing up
ever higher on the proverbial ladder of success. American success!
And
these few are not alone: Most Americans, even if at the very bottom
of the rung, look up, and dream of one the one day in which, sitting
to the left and right of Gates, and even Bezos, they shout down—I’ve
made it!
If
there’s one thing the US college bribery scandal has taught us,
it’s that everyone is climbing, everyone is climbing that
ladder to success—by hook or crook—and in America, over
the majority of Americans who’s ancestors built this nation.
Whether or not individual Americans profess an oath to uphold the
principles of the KKK or any other organized white
supremacist group, the laws and policies benefit the wealthy
ownership class and white Americans.
So
“great” America returns again: the 50 Americans charged
in the college bribery scandal, ultra rich, the best of the
best, parents, academics, and
coaches, will be punished for wanting more. But when the cable news
cameras turn their attention, say, back to the Mueller investigation,
about a select few of the ultra wealthy in the US and Russia wanting
more and more and more, all Americans should examine how all-too
familiar this story of the wealthy and white, ultra rich, demands
fundamental change in the way Americans think about what it means to
be an American.
Is
being and American all about the amassing of money in order to sit
atop the ladder, “excelling” through oppression and
annihilation and disregarding the rights of all of humanity to pursue
a life not determined by the monetary worth of an individual or
population? Is being American about running a race to the top, and
nothing else matters?
Perhaps.
We’ve
been living a scandal when
it comes to access to education any American about America’s
true history of one scandal after another. The super-wealthy pledge
funds for black, brown, and Indigenous children, too. It’s just
that those funds are used to build walls, prison walls, to house this
population of children generally for non-violent crimes. How many
Americans assume this contribution of the wealthy and white to be
American?
In
the early 1970s, as a first-in-family to attend college, whites
classmates assumed it was “affirmative action” darkening
the halls of academia and the dorm rooms. We were “invaders”
occupying spaces that would have been for the rightful American.
We blacks and people of color were acquiring monetary “entitlements”
not meant for the great Americans!
Even
today, at age 65, I still encounter Americans who believe I, and many
other people of color from the working class in my generation, was
handed a “free ride.” From college to the doctorate. Just
like Jared Kushner, huh?
But
then how do you have a rational conversation with a white American
for whom acquiring the “facts,” that is, the historical
facts, gets in the way of being
an American and climbing the ladder to success?
How
ironic, then, this so-call college bribery scandal. White Americans,
super-wealthy Americans, with faith in the American Dream, by hook
and crook, managing to send their children to the best of
colleges—the Ivy League universities…
The
opening paragraph of an article in the Guardian in
March, 2004, recalls a plaque on the campus of Brown University. It
reads: “Erected in 1822 by Nicholas Brown.” As the author
of the article states, not surprisingly, there is no mention of
Brown’s family’s money acquired from the slave trade.
Brown
University isn’t alone. There’s Yale, Harvard, Princeton,
William and Mary, Rutgers, Darthmouth, and Columbia. And the
generations of white children who pass through these slave-funded
halls of academia—do we know if they were grateful to those
Americans that made their “success” possible?
Everyone
wants a piece of the American pie. Everyone in America. Most in lands
afar. Even if poor or poor working class. Even if there’s
knowledge that the system is rigged. Even if there’s evidence
of any way of being an American. Being human.
Suggested
Reading:
Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery,
and the Troubled History of America's Universities
Craig
Steven Wilder
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