May
15, 2008 - Issue 277 |
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Think Piece |
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At the root of any discussion of
racial-relations/slavery/white-supremacy is the conundrum of The Debt:
what (if anything) is owed, who is owed, how much is owed, how to collect,
how to distribute and whom to distribute to, etc. The majority of people
in the Blacks slice those balance books
at a longitudinal angle rather than at a contemporaneous angle. The
black view demonstrates that phrase “the past isn’t past.” Their view
is through the depths of the injury. Blacks count the loss of the contribution
of a great mass of humanity that totals more than twenty million souls.
They count the loss of earned equity and the over-writing of essential
African cultural building blocks versus the resultant distribution through
the population of economic wealth as compared with those groups who
have lived in this country of the Some crimes have no statute of limitations and regardless of the opportunities and well-being of the victim or the descendants of the victim, justice still requires accountability. Blacks see segregated communities that are not “gated” enclaves, mis-education, and misappropriated governmental resources. Starting from an equitable “starting line” today will not make up for generations of stolen lives and mal-accumulated material and social assets. Blacks see a money-weighted electoral system that disadvantages them and bends the government to favor the status quo, a status quo that is weighted with the encrustation of counting Africans as 3/5 of a person who could not even cast that 3/5 vote fraction nor have standing in the courts. Blacks point to persistent poverty unalleviated by any previous efforts, and, most particularly, an unjust criminal justice system that herds their youth onto the slippery slope of criminality at an early age. They see continued discrimination in hiring, promotion and college entrance; and they see, last but not least, environmental racism (Katrina). This is evidence of The Debt that persists despite any law that is on the books. That adds up to The Debt that is not just unpaid and not just a check, marked insufficient funds, but also a continued piling-up of The Debt and persistent blindness to the consequences. That should make people angry. Only those without the ability to feel empathy for a human target of injustice would not understand that anger. That anger grows when the victims of the crimes are blamed for their deficits or when their very being, physical or cultural, is blamed. Feelings of shock and paranoid fear from displays of African American anger will arise in those who are blind or in denial about The Debt. African American culture is a wondrous,
life-saving, reactionary construction to slavery and discrimination.
African American culture is forged in the “manifest destiny,” “chosen
people” expression of cultural oppression; that is from where black
cultural intensity arises including the prophetic tradition of the These are the precipitating elements
of this Debt: an insufficiently checked historical momentum of racism,
the structural rigidity of Blacks say that balanced books and
forgiveness are available with reparations (repair) and change. Justice
is more than an apology (which has not been forth coming except from
a tiny number of Clearly, this would entail rooting
out the institutional biases that militate against non-European (white)
cultural adepts, the poor, those who have criminal records, and/or have
limited education. With ALL the land and resources that
have been stolen, there should be no homeless person in the [i] The Civil War was about the balance of power between
white males in the North and white males in the South – read the actual
language of the Emancipation Proclamation and BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Wilson Riles, has been serving
the people of
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