From
the stern way that President Obama dismissed the Congressional Black
Caucus last month, you�d think the CBC had insisted that every last
dollar of job-creation money go to African Americans.
And
from the way some conservative pundits responded (columnist Michelle
Malkin, for instance, called it a �shake down�), you�d think the
CBC had demanded that the Secret Service round up white folks and
force them to empty their bank accounts and hand the money over
to black folks.
But
of course they didn�t. The Congressional Black Caucus made the very
reasonable suggestion that 10 percent of the stimulus be targeted
to the poorest urban areas, where so many African Americans live.
Given that African Americans are about 13 percent of the US
population, 10 percent is a pretty modest request.
Yes,
people of all races are suffering mightily in the Great Recession,
the worst in 25 years. One in eight families receives food stamps
now. But as our grandmothers used to say, when whites catch a cold,
Blacks catch pneumonia. December�s white unemployment rate of 9%
is bad, though better than November�s; but the Black and Latino
rates jumped to the devastating levels of 16.2% and 12.9%, a 27-year
high.
Families
survive unemployment better or worse depending on how much of a
cushion they have. African American and Latino families entered
the recession with a dangerously low median net worth, according
to a new report by United for a Fair Economy, The State of the Dream
2010. In 2007, the typical Black household had a net worth of $17,100;
the typical Latino family had $21,000; and the typical white family
had $170,400. In other words, Blacks had a dime of assets for every
white dollar.
African
Americans have gotten less than their share of every federal benefit
since the Homestead Act handed out land to white settlers in 1865;
since Social Security was set up to exclude domestic and agricultural
workers; and since the Urban Renewal program of the 1960s was nicknamed
�Negro Removal� because it replaced torn-down white apartments but
rarely black apartments.
But
with the first Black president, and with a Democratic majority swept
into office by high Black voter turn-out, we would expect better
than this tilt to the white.
It
goes without saying that the recent Wall Street bailout saved the
jobs of a bunch of rich white men. And of course letting the estate
tax expire was a big giveaway to mostly white multimillionaire heirs,
since African Americans are 34 times less likely to die with the
$3.5 million needed to trigger that most progressive of all taxes.
But
even the aid for Main Street favors less-needy whites. By asking
states for �shovel-ready� infrastructure projects, the President
steered the money towards laid-off construction workers, disproportionately
white men who recently had good jobs, rather than to human services
and other more diverse occupations. The Associated Press reviewed
more than 5,500 transportation projects using federal stimulus money,
and found that 50 percent more per person will be spent in the lowest-unemployment
places than in the communities that need the jobs most.
By
boycotting a key Financial Services Committee vote, the CBC got
$6 billion for Black communities added to two bills. Six billion
may sound like a lot of money, but it�s just one percent the size
of the TARP financial bailout.
When
President Obama didn�t refuse Van Jones�s resignation, when he didn�t
contest the smokescreen charges of flakey-petition-signing and swear-words,
he took a dangerous step back from the goal Jones had championed:
targeting the new �green jobs� for the urban poor.
A
fair jobs policy would not have to explicitly spell out race-equity;
literal racial quotas might be controversial enough to kill a bill.
But as the 2009 �Put America to Work Act� proposed, it could require
the government to target job-creation spending to communities with
the highest unemployment rates, or to the workers who have been
jobless for the longest time.
President
Obama has acknowledged the existence of structural racism. He knows
that poor people of color face additional obstacles that poor whites
don�t have to deal with.
But
when he told the CBC that all he �can do for the African-American
community is the same thing [he] can do for the American community,
period,� he was operating as if he believed the tired, old, color-blind
myth that general anti-poverty programs will reach every group in
need. Only by affirmatively targeting the communities pushed backwards
by historic racial injustice will recovery efforts reach everyone.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Ajamu Dillahunt, coauthor of �The State of the
Dream 2010: Drained, Jobless and Foreclosed in Communities of Color,�
is a board member of United for a Fair Economy and the Outreach
Coordinator at the North Carolina Justice Center. (The opinions
here are his own, not NCJC�s.) Click here
to contact Mr. Dillahunt. |