Things are happening in Mississippi and
not in a good way. Multiple white Rankin County
deputies were fired after two
Black men filed a federal lawsuit alleging
the deputies illegally entered their home and
tortured them for almost two hours. Michael
Corey Jenkins, 32, and Eddie Terrell Parker, 35,
claim the deputies entered their residence
without a warrant, hurled racial epithets, waterboarded, cuffed, tased and attempted to sexually
assault them. Jenkins claims one of the deputies
put a gun into his mouth and shot him.
And this is just the tip of the iceberg.
Authorities in Taylorsville, Miss., have come
under fire for slow-walking the investigation
into the death of Rasheem
Carter, whose dismembered and decapitated
remains were discovered in the Mississippi woods
after he had told his mother about “racist white
men trying to kill me.”
Mississippi, also known as the Magnolia State and the
Hospitality State, is emblematic of the
challenges and opportunities Black people face
for justice in America.
Mississippi ranks at the very bottom of
the barrel or near the bottom in every
socioeconomic index, including 50th
in life expectancy, 49th
in health and the economy, 47th in infrastructure and 41st in
education. The home of Fannie
Lou Hamer — the civil rights leader who was
brutally beaten and forcibly sterilized — is one
of the worst in maternal
mortality and infant
mortality and has one of the widest pay
gaps for Black women, who make only 55
cents for every dollar a white man earns. And
for all the talk about family values,
Mississippi ranks 48th
in child well-being and 50th in family and community.
This reality reflects a long history of human rights
violations in Mississippi — of not treating
people right, of mistreating poor and Black
people and refusing to invest in communities, of
enslavement and Jim Crow.
The Blackest and poorest
state in the union is deep red due to
racial gerrymandering and voter suppression.
More than 15% of Black people in Mississippi are
permanently
barred from voting because of an 1890 Jim Crow law
designed to disenfranchise Black men convicted
of certain crimes.
“We came here to exclude the negro.
Nothing short of this will answer,” said the
president of the 1890
state constitutional convention that enacted the law, along with a
poll tax and literacy tests for voting, and
stripped Black people of their political and
social rights and gave all the power to the
White man. No Black person has held statewide
office in Mississippi since 1890.
Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the
Mississippi voter disenfranchisement law to stay
in place.
And the poorest state is rife with
corruption and embroiled in a welfare
fraud scandal where $77 million in
welfare funds were misappropriated. The scandal
included the misuse of $5 million in federal
welfare money for a volleyball facility at the
University of Southern Mississippi, where former
NFL star Brett
Favre attended, and his daughter played
the sport.
The capital city of Jackson, one of the country’s Blackest cities,
has a water
crisis and the white nationalist state
legislature is taking greater control over the
city’s police and court system in a colonial
fashion.
The Hospitality State always was
inhospitable to Black folks. Nina Simone had
something to say about the state in her iconic
song, “Mississippi Goddam,” which captured the hot Jim Crow
mess that the state was in 1963, the year NAACP
leader Medgar Evers was assassinated in his
driveway in Jackson:
Alabama’s gotten me so
upset
Tennessee made me lose
my rest
And everybody knows
about Mississippi, goddamn
Can’t you see it, can’t
you feel it
It’s all in the air
I can’t stand the
pressure much longer
Somebody say a prayer
In 2023, Jim Crow is alive in a state
that has not addressed its legacy of racial
oppression and injustice. A white district
attorney named Doug
Evans just resigned after 30 years of
prosecuting a Black man six times for murder and
excluding Black jurors. As a result, the U.S.
Supreme Court overturned the man’s conviction
and death sentence.
Mississippi executes death row prisoners by lethal
injection, with other options including nitrogen
hypoxia, electrocution and firing squad.
Between 1880 and 1940, Mississippi had
the highest
per capita rate of lynchings in the country, according to the
Equal Justice Initiative. In the state where the
Black teen Emmett
Till was lynched seven decades ago and three
civil rights workers were lynched six decades ago, the lynchings
never stopped.
And yet, Brandon
Presley — Elvis Presley’s cousin and member
of the Mississippi Public Service Commission —
could win for governor as a Democrat, in light
of the poverty plaguing the state and the
rampant government corruption associated with
the unpopular current governor, Tate Reeves.
Mississippi, the Blackest state in the country is
paradoxically one of the reddest, but like other
Southern states only artificially so. Like
America as a whole, the white nationalist
establishment in Mississippi is clinging to the
status quo of decades of systemic racism and
racial hierarchy. As the melanin count
increases, white Mississippi responds as it
always has — through racial backlash, Jim
Crow apartheid and running the state like a
plantation. Bet on the people organizing in
Mississippi that this will not last forever.
This commentary is
also posted on The
Grio.
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