Racist
memes (memes = the elemental foundations of culture) arise
again and again in new forms out of the roots that are deeply
imbedded in the myths of Western Culture. The unique form
of slavery that was practiced in the West was fueled by
the stories and myths that justify dominance over Outsiders
and familial, tribal, and nationalist superiority. Slavery
is just one example; it transformed into Jim Crow and eventually
evolved into mass incarceration.
This process is sometimes conscious in
individuals but is most often, today, buried in the unconscious
through mechanisms of denial and the projection of the evilness
of self onto The Other. These social psychological processes
are constantly stimulated in the Public Mind through literature,
drama, and other forms of “entertainment.” The roots of
racism - out of which these memes arise - are watered by
the economy of the entertainment industry and camouflaged
through blinkered analyses. Memes have social psychological
power because they push deep emotional buttons of fear and
desire - broadly, repeatedly and consistently.
I find TV dramas instructive about the
status and twists of these memes in the Public Mind. Or
better said, what is instructive is how a very few culturally
powerful people - who make a lot of money because they frequently
convince those with money that they know what attracts and
holds public attention - evidenced by the fact that their
TV dramas are made and played - how these few people view
the Public Mind through the shape of their dramas is instructive.
Making a match between the artistry and what will spark
public attention and hold enough of it sufficiently long
to make money is both a science and an art that is highly
paid. You would expect the media industry to attract the
best talent available to make these judgments. That such
a thing as the Uganda related “Invisible Children” phenomena
happened is but one example of the many opportunities that
these highly paid gurus-of-public-attention miss.
It should not be startling to learn that
the preponderance of lost opportunities and ‘failed’ programming
in US TV-land has to do with treatments or the lack of treatments
of ethnicity, race, and class. That is why the public-attention
market is racialized, gendered, ethnicized, and economically
stratified despite highly paid efforts to cross those boundaries
consistently. Artists and dramatists segment the market
and apply different combinations of memes to hold the attention
of segmented audiences. The market is currently going through
a re-sexualizing phase to appeal to a lucrative, desperate-for-integration,
homosexual and homosexual-friendly audience. Dramas with
highly mixed memes that can hold the attention of highly
diverse subcultures are mostly beyond the abilities of the
current talent pool. Efforts to bridge those boundaries
are noteworthy.
A recent TV-crime-drama made an interesting
and instructive attempt to crisscross memes of police good-guy-ism
and race. In this drama three pick-yourself-up-by-your-boot-straps
black college students reunite in the gritty urban neighborhood
where they grew up only to be shot down in the street by
three Hispanic young wanabe-gangbangers. Two of the victims
die on the spot and the young female victim lingers. The
white detectives work harder than usual - portrayed mostly
in the dialog - to show how much of an injustice this shooting
is and how much they really care for the victims and their
families. The acting wasn’t bad. But the story unfolded
to jar my cultural-competency-detector and stimulate my
natural aversion to the racist rot at the root of Western
Culture.
The drama made the principal shooter out
to be a psychotic-illegal-immigrant out to fully model the
infamous US gangster killers. I kid
you not! In the closing scene, a white male detective has
just reached his hand out to gently touch the hand of the
black mother at the bedside where the lingering victim has
died and offer his proverbial, “I am sorry for your loss,”
after which he walks away and says to his partner, “I do
not know how many hundreds of times I have said that…but
sometimes you really mean it.”
My moment of learning came when I flashed
on who are the most horrific psychotic killers in the history
of the world. It was a group of white males that made the
decision and carried it out to drop two atomic bombs on
Japanese cities, horribly killing hundreds of thousands
of innocent people. These are the only folks in the world
that actually used the most destructive WMD ever known.
Western history is the bloodiest - by far - of any I know,
and for the longest period of time. Mass genocide through
infection with smallpox contaminated blanket-gifts was a
germ warfare tactic repeatedly used to effectively murder
tens of thousands of Native American women and children.
Lynchings of black men were a family picnic occasion in
the South and “lynching” has hardly ended. Today, US soldiers
are pissing on corpses, cutting off body parts, and taking
gruesome souvenirs.
In the crime drama I watched on TV, the
Western psychotic-identity of a white male gangster is stuffed
into a young undocumented Hispanic character to make heroes
of the detectives and to gain sympathy from a pro-lift-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps
white and African American audience. This is a fiction loaded
with memes. It has enough simplistic plausibility to be
believable. That is the art. But the structure of this drama
is a very old story/myth in Western Culture. It is the fear
of The Other meme that has been used all too often to justify
lucrative militarism, injustice, and to attract eye-ball-attention
for product sales. For me, this drama set off alarms.
It lays out a narrative for middle-class-aspirational
blacks to fear undocumented Hispanics; it subtly counters
(through interracial fear) the expanding denouncement of
the racist nature and growing revulsion of the racist consequences
of the criminal justice system and the incarceration-industrial-complex;
it facilitates denial and furthers the social psychological
projection of internal evils onto another Other.
These Western Cultural dramatists and
their rich backers are the same guys that do not know who
I am as a black male whose character structure has evolved
from my ancestors. My ancestors and their stories were interlaced
with these dramatists’ ancestors and their stories in many
cases for hundreds of years, with too little melding and
mending. The - most likely white - dramatists’ character
and perspectives emerge out of the same cultural “soup”
as my own, and yet, they have little sense of how viscerally
grating is their vision to me. They seem to have little
sense of how they are promoting lethal racism.
It has started anew again.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator, Wilson Riles, is a
former Oakland, CA City Council Member. Click here
to contact Mr. Riles.
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