Somerset decision (1772) in Great
Britain impressed Anglo-Americans in the
colonies. In Slave
Nation: How Slavery United The Colonies And Sparked The American
Revolution
, the author writes, “Somerset
never knew that his private quest for freedom was the spark that
helped start the American Revolution and that has haunted the
nation down to the present day.”
They’ve been given their orders from Wall Street, the Obama administration
- Save the corpse! Wall Street is waiting! Clean up the economic
system! Bring it back to life! The administration and ex-Wall
Street “geniuses” are busy cleaning and scrubbing the corpse.
But the natural process of decomposition is overtaking their efforts.
Thousands
are laid off one week and thousands more another. Unemployment
benefits are running out. But the American people hear the buzz:
new jobs are coming right up! Stability is coming! More lay offs.
More bankruptcy claims. But all attention is on the absurdity
of a remedy that is no remedy at all.
In place of this rotting corpse, who will wake up?
It’s something to think about in case the triumvirate ruling the country
insists on its obsession with the corpse. Who will wake up and
take to the streets? Americans are angry. They’re “furious,” writes
The Nation’s, Nicolas Von Hoffman: people have been “used,
gamed, duped, lied to, betrayed, ripped off, conned, humiliated,
scammed, cheated, plundered, rooked, screwed over, hosed, dissed
and dishonored. Americans, left, right and center, have had it.”
In
Europe, the atmosphere is “explosive,” writes
Joshua Holland in an AlterNet, “The Whole World is Rioting
as the Economic Crisis Worsens - Why Aren’t We?” Thousands of
angry, shouting, banner-toting people are in the streets. Among
the “furious crowds,” raging war against “skyrocketing food and
energy prices, stagnating wages and unemployment” in “India, Senegal,
Yemen, Indonesia, Morocco, Cameroon, Brazil, Panama, the Philippines,
Egypt, Mexico and elsewhere” - this scene is commonplace. “Wealthier
countries” take “little notice.” But now the “furious crowds”
are showing up in European streets demanding accountability and
an end to corporate world manipulation of their lives, Holland writes.
Yet
“notably absent from the list of countries where the economic
crunch is rending the social fabric,” writes Holland,
“is the good ole US of A, a state with the greatest level of economic
inequality in the wealthy world.” And he asks: Why aren’t U.S. citizens in the streets
en masse?
The
citizens of the US - a country born of revolution, but with an
elite that’s been terrified of that legacy since immediately after
its founding - have been calm, despite opinion polls showing that
Americans are more dissatisfied with the direction in which the
country has been headed since they began measuring such things.
The
“elite,” the ruling class have been terrified of the legacy of
revolution while the American public, dissatisfied with the leadership,
nonetheless remains calm. What’s missing from this picture?
We
know. Can you say the enslavement and exploitation of Africans
and their descendents in the U.S.?
The Revolutionaries couldn’t shake their fears, and if fear is
the legacy, then descendents of these revolutionaries who implemented
“security” policies (the 1793 Fugutive Slave Act, for example)
to usher in the beginnings of a “police state” and who subjected
“freed” and enslaved Blacks to rendition - by law, weren’t focused
on freedom and democracy, were they? Control the source of labor
and capital will flow upward to the top and keep us on top!
Why
aren’t Americans in the streets?
Holland recalls a 2005 interview
in which Frank Ames suggested that Americans “have created a powerful
slave mentality.” The “slave mentality” is stronger here than
anywhere else because “no other country on earth has so successfully
crushed every internal rebellion,” writes Ames.
America has put down every rebellion, brutally, from the
Whiskey Rebellion to the Confederate rebellion to the proletarian
rebellions, Black Panthers, white militias - you name it. This
creates a powerful slave mentality, a sense that it’s pointless
to rebel.
In
the Caribbean, the enslaved “rebelled a lot
more because their oppressors weren’t as good at oppressing as
Americans were.”
How
do you control an expanding base of labor and labor advocates?
Brutally!
But
there is anger from below, Hoffman and Holland
report. Yes, and there are tiers of people below the ruling class.
The level of anger varies from one rung on the ladder to the next
because anger depends upon how much is remembered. It depends
on memory. People in France, Russia,
Morocco, India and elsewhere possess a collective memory
of their history in struggle. Here, people possess the memory
of movie stars, TV shows, songs, malls, fashion designers.
Now,
this late in the game, when the corpse is not cooperating, we
shouldn’t waste time wondering why Americans aren’t in the streets
because it’s only a matter of time now. Both Hoffman and Holland
avoid the unspoken: Who will be in the streets?
Hoffman
and Holland’s articles
speak to the new angry people, for the most part, the newly
unemployed, losing health care and homes. The new angry
people see the here and now - today, and today doesn’t
look good to them because it isn’t good for them! But
it hasn’t been good for many and for a long time but the new angry
people are short on collective memory of the history of struggle.
But Americans do possess the memory of fear!
I
suspect that for most Anglo-Americans there are two images of
Blacks and both involve Blacks in the streets! In one, Blacks
walk behind Martin Luther King, Jr. Practitioners of “non-violence,”
Blacks look peaceful enough. It’s the sheriff or the governor
or the KKK guys at the podium who threaten to damage the U.S.
image of itself among other nations. The other image of Blacks,
dressed in black leather jackets, carrying rifles, looking angry,
garners fear in white Americans sitting before their television
screens.
For
Black Americans, too, there’s a memory of fear. In these images,
many remember sitting in their homes, hearing the knock at the
door late at night. It’s the sheriff or the governor or the KKK
guys at the podium who threaten to destroy homes and businesses
and massacre whole Black towns. It’s the body hanging from a noose
and a dead unarmed young man standing beneath a city policeman’s
gun.
To
be sure, whites and Blacks sit down at the lunch counter these
days, and there’s an African American at the White House, and
he sits in the Oval Office, occupying the biggest chair.
But
the masses of Black Americans have been left behind. Forget the
“left, right and center” ideologies, this group, on the lasts
rungs of the ladder, have been “used, gamed, duped, lied to, betrayed,
ripped off, conned, humiliated, scammed, cheated, plundered, rooked,
screwed over, hosed, dissed and dishonored,” and for sure they have “had it” too - and have “had
it” the longest! Simmering at the bottom for so long, enduring
the pressure of every bump up the ladder for the wealthy and middle
class, the poor, the low-wage earner, barely working classes,
the homeless, and the from-pillar-to-post class now believe they
see hope! The people left behind in the 4th Ward of New
Orleans long before Katrina swept into town or those cast away
by the auto industry in Detroit have been told to hope! Those whose occupancy in a prison
cell puts food on another family’s table - they’ve been told to
hope! Every U.S.
military venture from the Gulf War to the present expenditures
of billions for the war in Afghanistan
and the invasion of Iraq
reduced educational and welfare programs for this group, and every
consultant who earned a fee for suggesting a new plant in India
or China,
meant the loss of decent housing for this group. But the people,
now, have hope - and they expect change just around
the corner!
Do
you see this population in the streets?
The
masses of humanity living in the U.S. as unwelcome members of this “democratic”
society, often live not far from “gated communities.” They have
long endured an increasingly comprehensive police state and, at
the same time, an increasingly comprehensive marketing strategy
intended to break their spirits and will to resist. Corporate
television programming keeps this population invested in the doings
of the fictitious and fanciful. It’s not surprising that of all
the “wretched of the earth,” this population of the “wretched”
in America
misses the ongoing Left analysis of the U.S. as a corporatist state. As a result, corporate
media arrogantly proclaims to this population that they, “the
viewers” rule - corporate owners supply the audience what it wants!
The “wretched” in the “belly of the beast,” miss the analysis
of class division within the “Black community.” They miss
the analysis of how the STRUGGLE became just their personal
struggle, highlighted occasionally on day-time talk shows.
In place of the STRUGGLE, this population has been
sent the message that collectivism (or worse, socialism) is unpatriotic,
if not downright evil! They can press the button for further accounts
of this “evil” or just escape all talk of the world. For there’s
a gold-chained pastor, with a mega-church just down or up the
channel, more concerned with Armageddon than educating the demoralized
to fight the crooks here on earth.
The
“wealthy educated Black bourgeoisie [,] who… escape [but] never
reach back and pull the rest of our people out with them,” as
Malcolm noted in the 1960s, is now the one enforcing the law.
“Black masses remain trapped in the slums.” Escape is impossible.
Run to alcohol or “to the dreadful needle,” and there’s an under-funded
or non-existent mental or rehabilitation center. This “escape”
entraps them in a “mug” shot just over the shoulders of a blond
anchor woman: and the winner of “local” news is: A “looter” or
a drive-by shooter! Or “escape” puts some of them on the road
to a corporate “music” guru who cleverly lifts the angry voices
that mirror the sexual perversity and psychopathic legacy of the
“peculiar” institution of slavery. Or “escape” is the momentary
“human interest” story of woe by the “inarticulate” as opposed
to the “articulate” Black speaker - always good for a “colorful”
story about the poor or downtrodden - but only for a few seconds.
This
alienated population is segregated by prison walls and neighborhood
police patrols. The desire for upward mobility ironically
saddles young Black women with babies, government welfare, and
often, AIDS. If the older population among this group should develop
diabetes or heart problems, they ended up paying more for home
care and vital medication. American slander, packaged as significant
“university research,” has called this population of American
citizens “deviant,” “dysfunctional” - a downright “underdeveloped”
class.
But,
if they were given nothing else in the last 40 plus years, they
were given guns! The government and American society has ordered
them to go and kill: Kill all the brutes! Kill all the niggers,
criminals, and terrorists. This population has obliged the triumvirate
by engaging in suicidal behavior - the dirty work of the U.S.
government, its law enforcement, and its judiciary system. Ultimately,
unlike communities of NRA-ers with guns, Americans have come to
rely on law enforcement to keep this population in check, keep
it to the business of killing and suicide.
The
Black masses have been left behind while other groups of Americans,
who believe they have left the plantation, have pursued the “American
Dream.” Everyone knows this. It isn’t the exclusive thought and
hope of blatant racists! How many from this alienated population
are invited to join a Code Pink group or a local Green Party campaign?
Americans have come to expect that the masses of Blacks remain
invisible! David Harvey, Distinguished Professor at CUNY, writes
in The Bullet, that in order for the stimulus package to
work, it “must be directed to those who will spend it, which means
the lower classes.” But, he adds, there’s the “prevailing hostility
in the United States to ‘spreading the wealth around.’”
How true. We have heard. President Obama will signed into effect
a stimulus package that cuts 20 billion for education and another
30 billion for social services for the poor and unemployed from
the original package - but assures trillions to the banking industry!
Think
the invisible will remain invisible for long?
So
what will happen when this group has had enough of the brothers
and sisters on the Hope and Change ship in Washington?
What will happen when they see, as many of us Blacks have seen
for years that Washington means to trick them again? What will
happen if they decide they have “had it,” too, and their anger
returns? What will happen when America
isn’t their America
- again? What will happen when they wake up from hope and
realize they have been lied to - again?
Allegiance
with the capitalists (the Masters) sent Americans driving past
this population on the way to the Malls, and now it seems a mystery
why this new angry crowd is outraged but timid about stepping
into the streets! Well, the timid are held back by the trace of
memory: the true heritage of field Negroes is that of freedom
warriors! But they have been a little tweaked since then.
So
now, what if the masses of invisible Blacks wake up and take to
the streets?
Are
you going to stay home? Are you going to urge the government to
lock up more “terrorist” and “criminals” so you can be “free”
to watch as Washington and Wall Street try to bring the corpse
to life? What side are you on? What side of freedom have you ever
been on?
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has been a writer,
for over thirty years of commentary, resistance criticism and
cultural theory, and short stories with a Marxist sensibility
to the impact of cultural narrative violence and its antithesis,
resistance narratives. With entrenched dedication to justice and
equality, she has served as a coordinator of student and community
resistance projects that encourage the Black Feminist idea of
an equalitarian community and facilitator of student-teacher communities
behind the walls of academia for the last twenty years. Dr. Daniels
holds a PhD in Modern American Literatures, with a specialty in
Cultural Theory (race, gender, class narratives) from Loyola
University, Chicago. Click
here
to contact Dr. Daniels.