The Apocalypse by Hieronymus Bosch |
White
supremacy, dressed up in the modern, Internet garb of “white nationalism,” has
not returned to America; it never left. How I wish it had…how I wish that all
of us who believed in our heart of hearts that by 2019 what I saw—what my
generation saw and spoke against, protested against, fought hard against, and
sometimes died against—50 years ago would have been carried away by the cleansing
winds of history, deposited in the deserts of dead and desiccated memories, and
covered up by the sands of time. We know this to be a futile dream, a dream of avenging
angels standing with the oppressed, their swords of righteousness cutting down
the haters and procreators of racial villainy. It seems all our socially conscious
efforts to redeem white America’s injustices toward minorities—to speak truth
to ill-gotten power and falsely legitimized authority—were little more than
ephemeral gestures, like seeds of good will scattered on granitic rocks of
white supremacy.
I lived next
door to it in Shreveport, Louisiana, when I was 15 and young men were being
lynched a few hundred miles away; I saw it on “White Only/Colored Only” signs
in too many places to remember now; I saw it on the face of Mayor Daley at the
Democratic National Convention; I saw it on the faces of white men and women
when John F. Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy, Malcolm X, and Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr., were assassinated; I saw it at the entrances to colleges where young Black
men and women were denied entry; on the brave posture of a small Black girl on
her way to an “integrated” school; I saw it wherever Black men and women were
being beaten and jailed and red-lined; I saw it on the faces of Lincoln
Rockwell's Nazi followers in Arlington in the late 60s; I saw it on the faces
of countless Southern governors, senators and congressmen when I was on the
Hill and working in the news media. I saw it on the faces of too many Northern,
New England, Midwestern, and Far-Western politicians as well. I saw it on the
faces of classmates at a private boarding school in Chattanooga, Tennessee, a
Jesuit school in Louisiana, a middle school in Lincoln, Nebraska, and at a high
school in Northern Virginia (as progressive as it was for its time, it could
not filter out the ignorance of racial animosity).
Many of us
thought at the time that America had reached a tipping point when Lyndon
Johnson (as flawed a man as there ever was), used the power of the presidency
to push through civil rights legislation. We thought, naively perhaps, the
songs of our time—Blowin’ in the Wind,
Turn, Turn, Turn, The Times They Are a-Changin’, We Shall Overcome, Teach Your
Children, and so many more—were beginning to inoculate the public against racial
animosity, social divisiveness, economic inequality, and the cancer-like disease
of white supremacy, nationalism, and hatred.
I admit I
was not completely “listening” to what the protests were all about—I was “hearing”
but not listening. I was reacting, not pro-acting. When I first heard Nina
Simone sing Langston Hughes’s poem, The Backlash
Blues, in the late 1960s, I could not fully appreciate the depths of those
lyrics:
Mr. Backlash, Mr. Backlash
Just who do think I am
You raise my taxes, freeze my wages
And send my son to Vietnam
Just who do think I am
You raise my taxes, freeze my wages
And send my son to Vietnam
You give me
second class houses
And second class schools
Do you think that all us colored folks
Are just second class fools
Mr. Backlash, I’m gonna leave you
With the backlash blues
When I try to
find a job
To earn a little cash
All you got to offer
Is your mean old white backlash
But the world is big
Big and bright and round
And it’s full of folks like me
Who are black, yellow, beige and brown
Mr. Backlash, I’m gonna leave you
With the backlash blues
I could not
fully appreciate those lyrics because I was: a) White; b) privileged and comfortable;
c) never going to Vietnam because my lottery number was so high (364), and I
was in college; and d) convinced that the world was turning toward, not away
from, the notions of white supremacy and white nationalism, because, after all,
weren’t we all holding hands and singing songs and marching and becoming
believers? My teenage self sat in a coffee shop in Arlington, with my 12-string
Gibson, and sang “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” and “This Land is Your
Land,” and even “Buddy Can You Spare a Dime?” in the hopeless imagining that I
was a part of the folk era that was contributing to a new world a-coming.
Even though Steven
Still’s song, “For What It’s Worth,”
made famous by the Buffalo Springfield, was not actually about Vietnam, it’s
opening line “There’s something happening
here; what it is ain’t exactly clear,” and its concluding refrain, “It’s time we stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody
look what’s going down,” transcended the actual event of police action
against curfew-evaders on the Sunset Strip in 1966, to become a mantra for
those wishful thinkers raging against violent authority.
"Paranoia strikes deep
Into your life it will creep
It starts when you're always afraid
Step out of line, the man come and take you away."
As I sit
here writing, I look at that last line and think of all the Black men and women
and children, all the immigrants, all those who don’t match the right profile, who
have been pulled over, handcuffed, jailed or threatened with deportation…and I
know there never was, and aren’t now, any songs that will change the minds of
those who seek supremacy over others.
Still, we
all have our own songs that inspired—and continue to inspire—us to think we are
beating back the darkness, anger, and hatred. I know some of those 1960s and ‘70s
lyrics seem, today, to be trite and ignorant and rose-colored; but if you did
not live through that time, if you are younger and look at us older folks as if
we were just hapless and clueless kids, you are selling us short because we did
really, truly, honestly believe we were pulling down on a transformative lever. Why did we believe that?
My lever reference is from a statement
attributed to Archimedes, “Give me a
lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the
world.” Our lever was political potential; our fulcrum was national awareness,
and the motive power to pull down on that lever was the effort of the combined
mass of all of us who believed in our unified ability to move the nation away
from hate and toward peace, to lift the world we knew into a better place.
Laugh at our innocence if you will, but so many of us embraced a mutual
commitment to create a better world for the next generations.
What we didn’t
count on—what so many of us believed could not transmogrify, in the grotesque sense
of the word, over the next 50 years—was the sub-surface roiling of white hatred,
white xenophobia, white fear, white insecurity-turned-bitter. We thought our
marches trampled it; we thought our newly-enlightened educational systems and
civil rights breakthroughs had quashed it; we thought we’d left it by the roadside
to wither and disassemble and disintegrate. Let entropy take it down to its fundamental
atoms and the absolute zero of existence.
It's not gone.
It wasn’t just living in the shadows, either; don't fool yourselves. It's been
as close as your grocery store, your church, your courts, your strip-mall
restaurants and dry cleaners, your children's schools. Your polling places.
One only has
to recall the white-shrouded candidacy of Roy Moore in Alabama, or the presidentially-commended
viciousness of Arizona’s Joe Arpaio, or the comments by Fox’s Jeanine Pirro directed toward Representative Ilhan
Omar's wearing of a hijab, or the gutlessness of Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell to push back against his party’s reluctance to call out the pusillanimous
and pustulating specters of racism, misogyny, educational and economic
inequality, and white privilege wherever they skulk in America.
As I was drafting this blog, an old friend of mine…a far wiser man whose
intellect and international experience soars above mine, emailed me to share a
note his niece wrote about this subject. I quote it
here:
“I
absolutely agree that the terrors of white supremacy are nothing new, and yet,
with each new iteration of its horrors, I still find myself shocked and
gutted.
White
supremacy in America isn’t shocking, but what IS deeply dismaying to me is the
moral cowardice and cynical self-interest of our elected officials who are, for
one political calculation or another, not taking meaningful and immediate
action to recognize this presidency as the TRUE national emergency that it is
and to issue full-throated daily condemnations of it, and to begin impeachment
proceedings immediately.
The
media, as usual, remains shockingly and appallingly complicit in normalizing
and downplaying the truth of the white nationalist scourge that has become
terrifyingly emboldened because of this president, and even the most
liberal-leaning media still treat the subject with kid gloves and refuse to
name it as the single greatest threat to our standing as a nation in the world,
and to our ability to survive as a nation at all.
It’s
clear to me that the gun-obsessed white supremacists in this country are
itching to re-litigate the Civil War, and think they can achieve a different
outcome this time; what remains unclear to me is what the rest of us are going
to do about it.”
I agree with the comment about media
complicity and normalization of horrific events. It is something, speaking as a
former newsman, that both baffles and stings me…and I’m sure my colleagues with
whom I came of age in the business, all agree.
Many of us remember when the media
writ large was generally honorable and/or reliable in reporting events as they
were, even with the inherent biases of publishers and producers. Yes, there were yellow journals and scandal
sheets that preyed on a sensation-seeking audience, but nothing then compares
to the graphic, gleeful, almost hate-extolling media outlets of the 21st
century. The rise of the Internet, the uncontrollable spewing of social media,
the inflammatory rhetoric and stiletto-like flicks of dehumanizing language
that are broadcast from the very wells of the House and Senate floors sadden me
as they do millions more of us here in the States and around the world.
It seems sometimes to me that America
has become a gyroscope no longer fully spun up and stable and precise in its
position. Rather we are spinning down, tilting, wobbling, wandering aimlessly
across the global tabletop. This directionless amble away from our founding
principles can only lead to a terrible, inescapable conclusion—Americans may
not be the ones capable of righting ourselves to our original image, becoming
vulnerable, instead, to the rough hands of others who see in our instability
and teetering, an opportunity to use our weakness for their own designs. I fear
very much for that. The nationalism that awaits will not be ours if our leaders
continue to ignore what is needed to re-spin the promise of democracy; not a
white democracy, not a monied democracy, not a privileged democracy, but a
fair, just, inclusive, responsible, and accountable democracy.
We must resolve to recognize white supremacy,
or white nationalism, for its manifold appearances in our society.
It poses as
poverty; it poses as privilege; it poses as stupidity, and it poses as
knowledge. It poses as the best of the past and it poses as the hope for the
future. It poses in rags and it poses as high fashion. It poses with a sneer
and it poses with a smile. It runs for office on the fumes of impossible
promises, and it gets elected on the sad dreams of misbegotten glory of fools
and haters and idiots.
What happened in New Zealand is what happens in our hometowns
when innocents of the wrong color, faith, ability or mere happenstance of birth
are mowed down like spring grass, under the cruel, and hand-sharpened blades of
hate. It is nothing new.
No, white supremacy has always been with us...it only needed a
champion of the highest rank--a seemingly untouchable torchbearer--to give it
the brand of righteousness it has been seeking, a sense of entitlement and
empowerment to lay its atrocities before us...unafraid of consequence, because
its master holds the highest office and lets loose the dogs of discord and
death with his every breath.
If we want,
truly, to banish those nationalist hounds of Hades…each a Cerberus intent on disemboweling
all national comity, truth, justice, economic stability, equality, and electoral
fairness…we must stop recognizing, nominating, and electing men and women whose
goals are to normalize and perpetuate the white-power policies of the past and
who seek office only to establish a perverted form of executive and legislative
authority over a cowed and eyes-averted nation.
Bravo Jim! While as a wide-eyed rebel 18-22 year-old I did believe we could banish racism and white supremacy...I am damn proud of what "we" did accomplish: the vote for 18 year-olds, who were old enough to fight/kill, but not to vote; The Civil Rights Act, The Voter Rights Act, the Peace Corps, NEA, NEH, WWF, James Meredith getting into UMISS, landing on the moon and I do believe that the uprising and protests against the Vietnam War led to the country finally getting out.
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