Attorney
General Eric Holder in a few recent speeches at the Roosevelt, NY
Memorial Presbyterian Church, at a church in Queens, NY, and at
a Townhall meeting at Morehouse College in Atlanta has rehashed
the theme of the irresponsible black male. It seems
like something of a campaign by President Barack Obama and his Attorney
General that sounds so much like the Conservative playbook on race
we have witnessed for the past 30 years.
I
have strongly opposed the tendency to continually degrade black
males in public for several reasons. The first is that those who
participate in this are not resolving or clarifying anything, instead,
they are participating in the nationalization of a racial stereotype
that is derived from slavery � that black people are slovenly, irresponsible
and as such create the conditions in which they live themselves. This
has made it easier for those with resources, both public and private,
to withhold them deliberately because of the view that blacks would
not benefit even if they were extended to them. It is
also a narrative that purposefully neglects white males, who have
perpetrated most of the misery blacks experience and who themselves
have issues of irresponsibility.
The
second reason I oppose this is that fundamentally the creation of
the black male image is managed by powerful American institutions. They
range from the entertainment industry to the prison industry. We
witness this repeatedly, such as when Denzel Washington couldn�t
win an Emmy for his portrayal of Malcolm X, but he did win for being
a corrupt drug-running bad cop. The Hip Hop industry,
not controlled by blacks, produces a product that is
dangerous and exotic, that titillates the senses of what it means
to be always on the edge of legality and when being �real� means
crossing over that line it validates the image. The
circus ride of Tiger Woods from his choice of being a �Cablinasian�
to theirs of his being a black man is being managed as we speak,
not by blacks, by stripping him of resources so that he will land,
fitting comfortably into the stereotype of the over-sexed black
male that he helped to make.
The
prison institution is not a product of the black male, but his impotence
in the face of an economic system that will not provide him with
valid options to support himself and his family. For
most incarcerated black males, lack of skills and globalizing jobs
has left the drug trade to become legitimate and lucrative in the
absence of better options. Public Policy that blacks
males didn�t make contained targeted policing in black neighborhoods
and racist sentencing by the courts that resulted in the fact that
80% of the one million black people in prison are there for nonviolent
offenses. This a powerful connection to damage done to
the black female who was left alone to raise children as the head
of household.
Third,
the Obama/Holder message to the Black male is far more complicated
than Bill Cosby made it sound. It sounds a bit like,
if black males would just change their mind they could overcome
the power of American institutions. Well, for some. But
for most, it would take public officials like the President and
the Attorney General doing their jobs and provide the enforcement
of justice and the necessary resources that blacks could not provide
for themselves.
It
would also take doing something Obama has refused to do � take specific
aim at the problems of those black people who need government most. In
another place I reviewed many reasons why he feels he could not
do that and I understand them well. But that doesn�t
remove the urgency for him to do it. The whole history
of civil rights was about recognizing that black people in America
had gotten the short end of the historical stick in the evolution
of those things that made this country great and for that we demanded
justice and equality. Now, it seems that we will
settle for high black officials treating us with the diffidence
of those who have gone before them � with other blacks making excuses
for them.
Obama
and Holder cannot have it both ways, being �brothers� when they
come into black audiences and lambasting black males, and being
�President� and �Attorney General� refusing to deliver resources
to our community to the degree they are needed. Real
�brothers� would do more.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, is the Distinguished
Leadership Scholar, Director of the African American Leadership
Center and Professor of Government and Politics at the University
of Maryland College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press). Click here to
contact Dr. Walters. |