These are very difficult times for progressives
in America. There is one-party, right wing rule in Washington, a media
that serves only corporate interests,
and an opposition party that doesn’t do a very good job of opposing.
These are difficult times for black people too. Our leadership, such as it
is, has succumbed to the right wing thought police, a la Bill Cosby. They have
joined in the beat down of the most powerless and soft-pedaled the misdeeds
of the powerful. The current climate should bring all progressives together,
but apparently even some on the left need to be reminded who and what we should
fight.
Consider the case of Eric Alterman and his recent comments on Al Sharpton.
Alterman is a longtime writer for The Nation magazine, and the author of books
such as What Liberal Media: the Truth About Bias and the News, and most recently
co-author of The Book on Bush: How George W. (Mis) Leads America. He is a solid
Democrat and an excellent writer.
On the other hand, Al Sharpton has been a problem child in the past year.
Black Commentator took him to task when an acute bout of Jesse
Jacksonophobia caused him to dismiss black leadership as a mere “club” and
initially oppose filibustering the nomination of the reactionary Janice Rogers
Brown to the
federal bench. Just when it seemed that Sharpton couldn’t fall any further
he employed the services of one Roger Stone, a Republican dirty
trickster who aided and abetted the Florida vote theft in 2000.
Unfortunately, Alterman’s reasons for criticizing Sharpton carry a lot less
weight than Black Commentator’s. In an August 2, 2004 post on his Altercation
weblog Alterman came close to calling Sharpton a Nazi:
“I don’t know what to do about Sharpton. He is a truly awful man,
who has never come clean about the reputations he’s ruined, the dissension
he’s created and the lies he’s perpetrated in New York City, where his egomaniacal
plotting have done much to set back the cause of race relations and of black
equality. On the other hand, he seems to be saying that if we agree to
forget all that, he’ll use all of his considerable rhetorical and inspirational
powers for good, for healing and for defeating the forces of evil of which
he was so recently and intimately a part.
”It’s clear what the pragmatic thing to do is; ignore the evil of the past
and let the man do the good he wants to do. But does that make it right? I
really don’t know. The United States justified the embrace of high-level
Nazis on the basis of this kind of logic and I’m not so crazy about that decision. Now
Sharpton’s not a Nazi, of course, but where’s the line? The entire Tawana
Brawley episode makes me sick, not least of which for the idealistic people
he deliberately misled as well as the reputations of honest cops he sought
to destroy. I guess it’s fortunate that a) this isn’t up to me but
to black people, and b) hello, the amazing and perhaps too-good-to-be-true
Barack
Obama just made Sharpton a lot less important.”
A writer of Alterman’s caliber ought to know that if he doesn’t think Sharpton
is a Nazi, he shouldn’t have made the analogy. As for the assertion that Sharpton
has worsened race relations or damaged the cause of equality, Alterman’s willful
ignorance is stunning. If Al Sharpton created white supremacy or unfettered
capitalism he could be blamed for the sorry state of race relations. Of course
Sharpton is responsible for neither of these pathologies, so Alterman’s statement
is ridiculous.
How does one explain the sloppy thinking of a writer of Alterman’s caliber?
Alterman was never fooled by the propaganda supporting the occupation of Iraq.
He has been a mainstay of the progressive voice in American politics. Why would
he make the statement that the still grossly unequal treatment of black America
was caused by any black person?
Why do white progressives sometimes act more white than progressive? If Alterman’s
only reason for disliking Sharpton is the Tawana Brawley case, there is no
reason for him to compare Sharpton to a Nazi. The murky story and Ms. Brawley’s
ill-advised decision not to testify in court are sufficient reasons to ask
hard questions about the case, but not to make even a remote connection between
Sharpton and Nazism. Alterman uses the word “evil” twice in characterizing
Sharpton. I can’t claim to have read everything that Alterman has written,
but I certainly hope that he has used the same word to describe people who
occupy other nations and kill thousands of people in order to turn a profit.
It seems that for all his eruditeness on many other subjects, Alterman wasn’t
sufficiently displeased with the racist status quo in American politics. Sharpton
emerged as a leader in New York because he went where others, white liberals
especially, would not. He spoke uncomfortable truths to the powerful when black
New Yorkers had no political voice. Black New Yorkers had politicians, but
they were too often ineffective or uninterested in making demands when it took
courage to do so. Because of the limits inherent in elected office, having
a Senator Obama will not lessen the need to have outspoken activists at the
ready.
If Eric Alterman and other white liberals were willing to fill the political
void that Sharpton filled, they would have no cause for complaint. Black Commentator
said it best:
”We must ask why Al Sharpton emerged as a contender for national Black leadership
via the presidential primaries. The answer is simple, and should be deeply
troubling: He was the only one to step forward. Such was also the case in the
decades of Sharpton’s rise to prominence in New York. When police brutalized
African Americans, Al Sharpton was there. When demonstrations needed to be
mounted, Sharpton was on point. When Black anger rose, Sharpton rose to the
occasion – year, after year, after year.”
If history is any guide, it is inevitable that more black people in New York
and elsewhere will be killed by police brutality. When that happens I expect
to hear from Eric Alterman. Alterman is wrong when he says that Sharpton’s
leadership is an issue only for black people. It is an issue for him as well.
White liberals are too often silent when injustice seemingly falls only on
black people, but racism is their problem too. George W. Bush is President
in large part because of racism. Iraq has been occupied because of racism.
The belief that black people have no right to live makes it easy to believe
that Iraqis have no right to live. Eventually no one has any rights and we
have a Patriot Act and FBI
harassment of anti-war protesters. White liberals
have to speak up now or forever hold their peace, even when issues seem to
involve only black people.
Of course, Alterman’s indecision in knowing how to deal with Sharpton is somewhat
understandable. It must have been mystifying to white liberals when the crackpot,
so-called educator Bill Cosby said that having the name Mohammed was an automatic
ticket to the gray bar hotel, and Jesse Jackson and Kweisi Mfume defended his
asinine remarks. So if he needs permission, I hereby give Eric Alterman the
right to criticize Al Sharpton or anyone else who is black. I only ask that
his criticisms make sense and that he join the black community when the lifting
gets heavy.
Margaret Kimberley’s Freedom Rider column appears weekly in . Ms.
Kimberley is a freelance writer living in New York City. She can be
reached via e-Mail at [email protected]. You can read more
of Ms. Kimberley's writings at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com/ |