America
is playing a deadly game with the black worker. And the
game is fixed. Our country no longer needs or wants black
labor. The explosion in immigration we have been witnessing
for the past generation is the result of a new approach
to the control of those in the working class. As of now
all of us aren't suffering from this new policy but those
of us who are unskilled or semi-skilled have been triaged
and are being allowed to die from economic exclusion. It
looks like blacks in the public sector are next.
There are excuses given for not employing the black worker. However
the real reason is that we are no longer sufficiently passive
to suit the employer class. Therefore other workers are
being imported to fill those positions which we traditionally
occupied. These new workers aren't taking our jobs. The
jobs are being given to people who come from feudal cultures
and consequently are acclimated to excessive control, long
hours without overtime compensation and a general working
atmosphere where authority is not questioned. As a
result of this exclusion large numbers of blacks are idle,
angry and driven to desperation and outlawry. A few years
ago a young black man in Oakland, California named Lovelle
Mixon, who was looking for work but couldn't find any
exploded and engaged in a firefight with police. Four policemen
died and so did Lovelle. Isn't it too bad that no one could
hire this young man and relieve his sense of hopelessness?
Lovelle belonged to what has been called the Underclass. When did
this class come into existence? And who comprises this new group
in America? How is it even possible to be permanently
unemployed in the richest country in the world? Are black
Americans the only members of this underclass? Are there
any Japanese, Jews or maybe Koreans in this group of outcasts?
Mexicans aren't in the underclass because they are readily
employable. Obviously we have been targeted for exclusion
from society because you can't have a role in society without
a role in the economy. We had definite roles in the American
economy until we rebelled in the 60's. Since then the think
tanks and their sponsors have devised ways to try and insure
we never raise our wooly heads again. Economically we are
being destabilized without our realizing what's going on.
Our demographics are diminishing as a proportion of the
national population not due to infertility but due to a
lack of economic viability and the lack of a wage with which
to head a family. All over the country black men of working
age are wandering the streets aimlessly and demoralized.
The claim that there are people who don't want to work is
false and is a cover up for not giving certain workers a
chance. The victims are being blamed for being passed over.
What might we do to offset these efforts to flush us down the commode?
That depends on what we want. Do we want economic independence?
If so it will require great efforts because we're starting
from almost zero. Do we want justice for the executions
of black pedestrians and motorists? That will require major
sacrifices! Whatever we want it will require acknowledging
our oppression and the fact that black Americans live in
a hostile environment. Historically only the Nation of Islam
and the Black Panther party have explicitly warned us to
be alert and get busy. Obviously we need to be told again.
If we dare to face what we are up against in the job market surely
we can devise some form of organizations, or mutual aid
societies to get our people off the street. Waiting for
the government is obviously useless. Given the massive unemployment
that exists in some of our communities any job however humble
would help relieve the demoralization and fury which
too many young blacks suffer from. Whether we choose or
not we are our brothers keepers. As Harold Cruse told us
long ago in his book The
Crises of the Negro Intellectual From It's Origin to the
Present
all power is group power and as long as any of us belong
to a weak group it will affect us all. Perhaps we can
go from each one teach one to each one hire one! The solution
is in our hands.
If we dare to face what we are up against with wanton police terror
surely we can find a way to defend ourselves. Despite having
a black attorney general, black supreme court justice and putative
black president the legal system is not working for
us. On the contrary the courts and police are waging an
undeclared war on its black citizens. Where is the determination
to fight back? Have we been totally terrorized into submission?
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BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator Wallace Nixon is a BC reader and subscriber,
a graduate of Knoxville College, an historical black college,
and has attended the universities of Illinois and Tennessee.
He is currently a free lance English teacher in Tenochtitlan,
Mexico. Click here
to contact Mr. Nixon.
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