An Obama Victory Would be a Milestone, but Could Stall Struggles Against
Racism
Forty-one years
ago, racial tensions - festering since slave times - burst into the Long
Hot Summer in the tri-state area. Thirty-four died in Newark,
but the most dramatic upheaval came from Plainfield,
N.J., a quiet suburb 30 miles from New York City. Amid minor but widespread skirmishes
spreading across the region, a lone police officer beat and shot a black
youth in the boy’s neighborhood. The boy survived, but the cop, quickly
surrounded by enraged community members, did not make it out of the neighborhood
alive.
Ashanti Alston,
a political prisoner activist with the Jericho Movement
and former Black Panther, who was a teenager in Plainfield
at the time, traced the escalating plot for The
Indypendent. “The thing about Plainfield
that stood out from all the other rebellions was that folks made their
way to a gun manufacturing place right outside of the city,” Alston says.
“They came back to the community with rifles and it was a whole different
ball game. It wasn’t until the National Guard came that they were able
to retake the black community.”
Today, decades
later, why does racial conflict no longer generate the same kind of heat?
Not for lack of ignition. In Queens in November 2006,
an undercover vice operation turned into an execution. A 50- shot cop
fusillade killed Sean Bell, a young black man heading home on his final
night as an unmarried man, and injured two of his friends, all unarmed.
The murder won state sanction in April 2008, when a New York State Supreme
Court judge accepted at face value the officers’ contention that they
feared for their lives, making their killing fully
legal.
The verdict generated
both outrage and despair. Hundreds of people marched that afternoon and
“Justice for Sean Bell” signs sprang up throughout the boroughs. But an
Al Sharpton-led civil disobedience action in June that might have been
the first in a line of battles, instead, turned out to be the denouement.
Things died down.
It’s increasingly
popular to argue that the fuel for unrest has disappeared because the
problem of racism has receded into America’s past. This idea has long held sway on
the right, but, paradoxically, it’s taken Barack Obama’s candidacy to
elevate this persistent right-wing myth into conventional wisdom.
Civil Rights Unfulfilled
“The history he
[Obama] needs to know is the history he rejects,” says Lenore Daniels,
editorial board member of the Black Commentator, a weekly online magazine. “He rejects
the whole Black Power movement: ‘Just the civil rights were fine, we’ll
leave it at that, there was progress.’ [But] the Black Power movement
is still relevant. That was a movement talking about economic equality,
where King left off.”
Histories of struggles
are written by the victors. The movements of 40 years ago had winners
and losers and, like any war, are remembered more ideologically than objectively.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 ended Jim Crow and for the first time in
U.S.
history, granted black people formal equality before the law, but failed
to transform their lives day-to-day. After 1965, all wings of the movement
turned to address this gap: King turned from law and morality to economics;
Malcolm X’s militancy spread despite his assassination; Black Power was
born; and the movement moved north.
Obama’s view of
a united, post-racial America
is in the tradition of how the political establishment - Democrat and
Republican - responded to heightened militancy. There was forceful repression,
but also a more subtle, ideological response. The language of Jim Crow
segregationism gave way to political correctness and new coded terms like
“war on drugs.” Those who were never allies of the oppressed lauded King
and proclaimed the end of discrimination. And black elites, once viewed
with suspicion, were welcomed to the table as long as they left their
baggage behind. It was unsparing market capitalism for the rest of the
community.
The result, as
Columbia University
historian and BC Editorial Board member, Manning Marable, puts
it, is that “Jim Crow no longer existed, but in its place stood a far
more formidable system of racial domination, rooted within the political
economy and employing a language of fairness and equality.” Racism in
America may not look like
all-white police forces, dogs on black men, or sound like speeches by
white supremacist politicians. It’s more like a termite-infested house
- political correctness and black representation in business, media and
politics compose a nice-looking picture on the outside. But gashes in
the façade expose structural disparities as racially aligned as ever.
Statistical measures on rates of poverty, housing, employment and income
are not far removed from their 1960s levels.
Bland and White
At times, Obama
sounds more like Richard Nixon than someone concerned with racism. At
the 1968 Republican National Convention Nixon proclaimed, “To those who
say law and order is the code word for racism, here is a reply: Our goal
is justice for every American.” Obama’s response to the persecution of
the Jena 6 nearly 40 years later sounded a similar note: “Outrage over an
injustice like the Jena 6 isn’t
a matter of black and white. It’s a matter of right and wrong.”
Obama did not
dwell on the marks of racism, so clear to many of us, in the demography
of disaster left by Hurricane Katrina. “I do not subscribe to the notion
that the painfully slow response of FEMA and the Department of Homeland
Security was racially based,” he said. “The ineptitude was color-blind.”
And Obama did not object to the Sean Bell ruling, saying, “The judge has
made his ruling, and we’re a nation of laws, so we respect the verdict
that came down.”
Obama’s candidacy
is seen as an indication that racial barriers no longer exist in the United States. Indeed,
the election of a black president would be an undeniable milestone in
American history, forcing many white Americans to confront latent fears
and distrust of black people. And many see progress in the fact that a
black man can run a campaign in which race is incidental. Yet it’s taken
Obama’s embrace of post-racialism, and concurrent distancing from traditional
civil rights-style black leadership, to lend viability to his campaign.
Some activists see him as the culmination of a trend over the last 40
years of black leaders moving away from the communities they’ve traditionally
served and closer to the political and corporate power that dominates
the Democratic Party.
Movement Politics vs. Electoral Politics
Alston feels that
since the 1970s, the face of mainstream black activism has moved from
a base in communities to big money and corporate sway. “No longer do you
have the real radical movement folks that were coming out of grassroots
movements,” Alston says. “You have people tied to money, or tied to established
political power. What I look at today is that the Sharptons, the Barack
Obamas, the Jesse Jacksons and even a lot of these mega-preachers now
are not leaders from the grassroots. They’re system leaders that were
chosen by either political forces or corporate forces.”
After attending
Columbia University,
Obama put in three years as a community organizer working on a range of
neighborhood issues in the largely black Southside of Chicago. But his
trajectory afterward - Harvard Law School and a stint as a law professor at the University of Chicago - looks more like the record of black politicians rising up
in municipal politics in the 1980s and 1990s than the résumé of earlier
leaders like King, Stokely Carmichael or Angela Davis. As he entered politics,
he increasingly relied on allies culled from the Chicago elite - after
the 2000 Census, he had his state senate district redrawn to make it,
according to Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker, “wealthier, white, more
Jewish, less-blue collar and better educated.” The connections he cultivated
with his new well-to-do constituents were vital to his successful 2004
campaign for a U.S. Senate seat.
As Democratic
dominance of national-level black politics accelerated, communities’ sense
of action eroded into the passive live-with-your-fate mode that presently
defines U.S.
democracy. “When we go back to the 1950s and 1960s,” Alston says, “that
was the period when people were not relying on the Democratic Party, the
party that black folks are so tied to [today]. People were in the streets,
people voted through their civil disobedience and direct action and organizing.”
The key question
is whether much of the agenda in the fight against racial inequality remains
unfulfilled. If so, there’s plenty to drive modern-day movements, taking
outrages like the Sean Bell verdict to illuminate the living economic
inequality untouched by 1960s activism. If not, then what happened to
Sean Bell is just an aberration that could have happened to anyone, of
any class and any race, in a country that has finally fulfilled its egalitarian
ideals. That may be an America
to hope for, but it’s not the one we have today.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator, Aman Gill, is a freelance writer. Click here to contact Mr. Gill. |