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The authors are Glen Ford and Peter Gamble, Co-Publishers of
The Black Commentator.
The Black Commentator has gone on hiatus for
August, as we did last year, so that we can accomplish some tasks
that the usual
weekly toil prevents. It has been a good year for the publication,
our third. It has been a bad year, politically, for Black people
and, therefore, for progressive prospects in the United States.
Most dramatically, the mid-Nineties corporate decision to throw
dollars at rightwing Black Democrats, in an effort to create an
alternative “New Black Leadership,” has been bearing fruit. Confusion
abounds – as would be expected when a community that has been shunned
and ignored for centuries is suddenly wooed and regaled by the
corporate Right.
Inexorably, the rich solidify their rule. In
the Democratic Party, they ejected traditional Black organizations
from meaningful participation
in the 2004 presidential and congressional elections, in favor
of “527” organizations run by white people and funded by super-rich
Democrats. The Black Commentator documented this “expression
of…utter contempt for mainstream African American organizations” in
our October 14, 2004 Cover Story.
Unions also defunded their minority constituency
organizations, in the 2004 campaign. Is there any mystery as
to why the Republicans
won/stole the election? Racism has always crippled progressive
movements in the U.S., but 2004 was a watershed. It seemed that
rich white folks had convinced themselves that Blacks could be
dismissed out of hand. If this policy is allowed to continue, there
will be a total collapse of resistance to the crazed, race-based
Republican onslaught. Corporatism is rampant in the Democratic
Party – and even in the unions, which jettisoned their most loyal
and active sectors in 2004, in favor of rich whites who thought
they knew best. And lost.
Eleven percent of the Black electorate voted
for George Bush – less
than the Black vote for Ronald Reagan in 1980, but two percent
more than Bush got in 2000. The Black Commentator did the math,
and found that the real shift in Black votes was about one quarter
million, nationwide – a very expensive fraction, given the tens
of millions of dollars in bribes doled out to Black preachers through
Faith-Based Initiative programs. Our conclusion, on November 4,
was that Blacks and progressives should “Concede Nothing to Bush:
Black Consensus Remains Intact.”
Clearly, the Black masses know what’s up, and vote accordingly.
Many do not vote, because of terminal disillusion with the increasingly
corporate Democratic Party. But Black Republicanism hardly exists.
We ain’t stupid. However, Black “leadership” has been seriously
infected with corporate cash, or the expectation of access to the
vaults. The Black Commentator shouted a warning , forecasting that
treachery was in the wind. The Congressional Black Caucus, which
had for more than three decades acted in unison on behalf of their
constituents’ progressive yearnings, had been undermined by the
Democratic Leadership Council (DLC).
The DLC was created by white southern Democrats
(most notably, Bill Clinton and Al Gore) to prevent the “blackening” of the Democratic
Party in the South, and to preserve white leadership. These white
Democrats were particularly disturbed by Rev. Jesse Jackson’s successes
in the 1984 and 1988 primaries in the South. They were determined
to stem the flow of Black power in the party organization, and
called on corporate America to come to their aid. The response
from the boardrooms was enthusiastic – and lucrative. However,
the DLC organizers knew that they had to corrupt key Black politicians
if they were to have any credibility among the base of Democratic
voters in the South and urban centers: Blacks. Money would do the
trick.
By 2004, the Congressional Black Caucus was infested with DLC
members, as we reported on December 2.
”But don’t expect the Congressional Black Caucus
(CBC) to move as a body in the right direction. To paraphrase
Pogo, the old cartoon strip: ‘We have seen the enemy – and some
of them are us.’ One-fifth of the CBC are members of
the DLC.”
Our colleague Maya Rockeymoore, who at the
time was Vice-President of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation,
led the way in
the resistance to George Bush’s attack against Social Security,
which included a highly organized theater of operations to subvert
Black America. Dr. Rockeymoore flipped the script on the fool,
with devastating effect, in her February 10, 2005 expose of the
administration’s lies and false assumptions.
”… his Administration’s attempts to gloss over
the existence of minority health disparities, inattention to
policies that expand affordable, quality health care to all Americans,
and efforts to slash funding for Medicaid – a health care program
disproportionately serving African Americans – have contributed
to the negative health indicators driving the black/white gap
in life expectancy and will, ultimately, contribute to the continued
black/white gap in the number of Social Security retirement beneficiaries.”
Bush, however, had a Black ally in the form of Harold Ford,
Jr., the Black congressman from Memphis, Tennessee. Ford, a DLC
member, had spent two years meeting with rightwing white organizations
to give lip-service to privatization of Social Security. He was
their Great Black Hope.
The Black Commentator is most concerned with
the internal politics of Black America. Unfortunately, much
of our politics are not
internal, but dictated by external, corporate forces. Harold
Ford is one of the worst examples. Representing one of the poorest
districts in the nation, he votes with the rich at an appalling
rate. Ford is the point man in the rightwing intervention in
Black national politics, as we explain in our March 17, 2005,
article, “Why We Can’t Trust Harold Ford Jr.” Ford showed his
true colors – a Republican in everything but name – when he said:
”…there are some things some Democrats
believe that I don't. I don't think government is an insurance
program"
But the rot has spread far beyond
Memphis. Georgia Black congressman David Scott is a total sellout – in
our words, “The
Worst Black Congressperson.” Elected in 2002, Scott is beloved
by the most determined enemies of Black people – and for his
crimes, is able to raise a quarter million in corporate dollars
at a single event. We detailed his transgressions on March
31, 2005:
”Scott leads the pack, having managed to vote with Republicans
more than any other member of the Congressional Black Caucus….”
It was becoming apparent that the avalanche
of corporate money was rapidly eroding Black leadership. The
people were not at
fault, but their elected leadership were being corrupted. In
April of this year, the Congressional Black Caucus saw its most
shameful period in history – unthinkable only a decade before – when
15 members voted with Republicans on one or more of three “bright
line” issues: bankruptcy, the estate tax, and energy subsidies
to multinational corporations. The Black Commentator listed their
names, in our April 28, 2005 Cover Story, “How to Fix the Fractured
Black Caucus.” which displays a chart of the CBC members that
voted with Republicans on bankruptcy, the estate tax, and energy.
Note that a number of these
Black congresspersons are also members of the Progressive Congressional
Caucus – and
voting with Republicans! There is no question that we have been
betrayed, and that the Black conversation must be started all
over again, so that leadership can be made to get in synch with
the people. Or get the hell out, and go to work for a multinational
corporation.
We at The Black Commentator believe that
Black labor leadership is the most fit to stand against racist,
corporate rule – the
scourge that threatens all of humanity. The “aspiring” Black
classes that seized control of our movement in the late Sixties
have served no one but themselves. Working people – and people
who want to work, but are prevented from doing so – are the folks
who will uplift our people. We have been bequeathed a leadership
that cannot even speak to the youth, guaranteeing that there
will be no “movement” – since all mass movements are based on
youthful action.
We are frozen by a corrupted class.
We need a full reevaluation of our political conduct since 1972,
when the Gary, Indiana National Black Political Convention occurred.
We have been misled, and now we are under massive attack, with
skillfully effective infiltration by corporate forces that engage
corporate media to pick and choose our leaders.
We are in trouble. More than a third of the
Congressional Black Caucus cannot be counted on to vote like
civilized men and women.
They have been subverted by corporate dollars. We must create
a countervailing force: a Black Progressive PAC that will finance
campaigns by people who speak our people’s language, and vote
accordingly.
But first, we must be clear on what we are
talking about. For three decades and more, we have allowed
the hustler, “aspiring” classes
to speak for us. That must end. Bill Lucy, President since 1972
of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU),
has called for a national conference – “Going Back to Gary,” as
it was announced at the CBTU’s national convention in Phoenix.
This gathering will occur in March.
The conference must take fan open-eyed, objective
look at the general status of Black people since the last gathering,
in 1972.
Thirty-three years ago, the mood was celebratory. Black mayors
were getting elected all over the place. We were “moving on up.” But
Black people got hijacked by a political class that was focused
on only their own mobility – and called each and every million
they put in their pockets “Black progress.” Meanwhile, the masses
of us were subjected to vicious police and prosecutorial assault,
that demolished our opportunities to build families and community.
The white backlash.
There has been no effective response from
the “aspiring classes” to
the massive police/prosecutorial offensive that has multiplied
the prison population six- or seven-fold in the past 30 years;
that has made it impossible to build Black families, or general
Black wealth, or cohesive Black communities. Instead, they applaud
Bill Cosby and other slanderers of Black life, blaming the victims
for the ghastly crime against a people.
Only a mass movement will solve this problem.
Mass movements create leadership, and we need new leadership
in the worst way.
It will come, and it will be young. The “business class” of Black
politician must be put out of business. We must set the engine
running, again, as BC Associate Editor Bruce
Dixon wrote on June 30, 2005:
”A mass movement aims to persuade courts, politicians and
other actors to tail behind it, not the other way around. Mass
movements accomplish this through appeals to shared sets of
deep and widely held convictions among the people they aim
to mobilize, along with acts or credible threats of sustained
and popular civil disobedience.”
America is a sick society, corrupted to the
core. Sadly, integration has allowed a certain strata of opportunistic
Negroes to bond
with the worst elements of the predatory, white corporate class.
They also call that progress, as if shared criminality equals
upward mobility. We are now witness to Black candidacies invented
wholly in white corporate think tanks and board rooms, such as
Cory Booker, the aspirant to the mayor’s job in Newark’s City
Hall, and to the throne of “New Black Leader.” The Black Commentator
outed Booker, the corporate functionary, in 2002 – and beat him.
Now, he is running again, with massive corporate backing. (See “PBS
Shills for a Black Trojan Horse: The Cory Booker Propaganda,” July
7, 2005.)
We are battling corporations that have unlimited funds to fight
the people. And we have a huge political education project in
front of us. The first thing we must do is change the language,
which has been shaped by a corrupt group of Negroes and their
white sponsors who are in business together. They are engaged
in serious business, and we must be just as serious. We cannot
let them take our language and values from us.
The “aspiring classes” among Black folks have designated localities
that are amenable to their ambitions as the “best” places for
African Americans to locate. They draw a twisted picture. The
NAACP convened in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, this year, despite the
fact that the city is the worst place possible to be a Black
male, with the highest per capita incarceration rate in the nation
and the highest child poverty rate – tightly related figures.
At the same time, the NAACP boycotted South
Carolina for five years for flying the Confederate flag – a symbolic insult to
Black people. But the disparity in incarceration rates in South
Carolina doesn’t come close to that of Wisconsin, Minnesota and
New Jersey, and many other northern states. Black people on the
street, whose sons and daughters are prey to police and prosecutors,
are not being served by a “leadership” that cares only about
their business opportunities and the existence of prime Black
housing markets.
Bruce Dixon laid it down, in a July 14 article
title, “Ten Worst
Places to be Black.”
”…public policy in America only moves in the
direction of addressing human needs when under the insistent
pressure of mass movements. Where will the mass movement
come from to change America’s racially selective policy of mass
incarceration? What will be its first tasks, and what will
it look like? These are among the key questions before
black activists between now and the time we “Go back to Gary.”
We must measure the quality of life of Black
people based on how the masses of folks live, not on how the “aspiring classes” gauge
their chances of getting a contract or a corporate job. Mass
incarceration is the great blight on Black life, that may disrupt
the aspiring classes intermittently, but preys upon the Black
masses, relentlessly. Those cities, states, and counties that
incarcerate Blacks at obscene rates must be punished – not rewarded,
as was Milwaukee by the NAACP. And we must compile lists of cities
that are the worst for Black children, Black elderly, those who
are sick, and in need of education.
If we are to have a productive dialogue in
the next “Gary” – wherever
it is, in March – we must speak a different language. The Black
Commentator will attempt to speak for the masses of our people,
not just the “aspiring classes” who seem so happy while the gulag
swallows our communities.
We must overthrow the existing order. That includes our own.
Have a good August,
Glen Ford and Pete Gamble, Co-Publishers
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