He
shrugged his shoulders and offered me one of those smiles that is
really not a smile; a facial expression that suggests that life
often presents you with very unexpected challenges.
The “he”, in this case, is a good friend of mine who is a
long-time progressive activist. He had just informed me that he
had received a written death threat from a right-wing, underground
group. The death threat is being taken seriously by the police
because this same group has made other death threats. My friend’s
security has been increased, and he has to look over his shoulder.
Why the death threat? Apparently because he was publicly
outspoken against the Arizona anti-immigrant law. It is also my
guess that given that he is white that some of these right-wing
idiots especially take exception to his opposition to white supremacy,
as recently represented by the passage of the SB 1070 anti-immigrant
legislation.
The death threat received by my friend brought much closer
that the old adage that “…words will never hurt you…” is wrong.
Words are extremely powerful, which is one reason that the political
Right concentrates on manipulating them. They know that words create
images and that words articulated by certain people who are considered
either opinion-makers or, in this case, race traitors can have an
impact on multitudes.
Whether this particular death threat is serious is impossible
to judge. What is clear is that the language of ‘civil war’ has
become central to an important segment of the political Right.
It is not simply about the suppression of alternative points of
view. The political Right has always been intolerant. What is
emerging is a language of what some people would call “neo-Confederacy”,
that is, that it is time for good white people to take back
the USA by any means necessary and, in effect, implement, in a 21st
century variation, the objectives of the Confederate States of America.
“Take back,” you ask? As this same friend said to me, the
combination of dire economic conditions along with an African American
in the White House just drives the political Right crazy. This
fact is one that we on the left side of the aisle must take very
seriously. For all of the criticisms that we have of President
Obama—correct criticisms in most cases, by the way, ranging from
his approach to Iraq and Afghanistan to his pro-corporate slant
on healthcare reform—what we must grasp is that the political Right
simply cannot stand the symbolism of an African American having
risen to the Presidency of a nation-state that they believe to be
destined for them alone. How else can anyone make sense of the
otherwise intelligent individuals, such as Newt Gingrich, suggesting
that President Obama is a socialist? Obama is no more a socialist
than I am an astronomer, but that does not matter. What he represents
for the political Right is what matters.
So, the death threat received by my friend is about an attitude
toward political struggle in the USA and about the future of this
country. An important segment of the political Right, egged on
by those who suggest that it is time to go to war (even when they
use the term euphemistically), simply cannot tolerate the disappearance
of the Confederate dream; the ultimate dream of the settler.
Sticks
and stones will definitely break your bones, but words are far more
powerful. This is why the Right sees in institutions such as Fox
News the means and opportunity to present a story that appeals and
energizes their constituency; a story that drives this constituency
to distraction, combining nightmares with myths to the point that
reality is not real but is a zone of fantasy mixed with fear.
When the political Right cannot distinguish reality from
this zone of fantasy the consequences can be fatal…for the rest
of us. For this reason none of us can afford to ignore these threats
or write off the language of war arising from the Right. They actually
mean it.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher,
Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate
past president of TransAfrica Forum and co-author
of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines the crisis
of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher. |