Conventional wisdom holds that peaceful
and non-violent change is in the ultimate best interest
of a social system. Seldom is the use of force seen as
socially productive. By and large this is true. Regardless
of the causes, very few civilizations have survived cataclysmic
violent internal upheavals, or the long-term decay of
their institutions of social control (which amounts to
the same thing, for institutional decay results in unreasonable
resort to force and repression, thereby causing violent
social reaction). If a society thrives through peaceful
change, then the exercise of power must be perceived as
"just" or at least indicative of a common moral
identity. No status-quo power can long maintain itself
without some claim to moral integrity unless it does so
by use of naked force, and history illustrates that force
alone is insufficient to maintain and hold power.
When we
rethink the concept of "self-defense" against
racist aggression we are also reevaluating the ethical
grounds for the use of force in a particular social context.
Any concept of "legal" force is determined by
the prevailing ideas of those who govern the use of violence.
In U.S.
society these prevailing ideas are erected upon the notion
of white-skin privilege, that is, of European superiority.
This notion holds that a white persons life is somehow
intrinsically worth more than the life of a person of
color. This of course, has played itself out in history.
The genocide of Native Americans, the establishment of
the African slave trade, and the subsequent era of European
colonialism all testify to the fact that white-skin privilege
ideologically justified the use of violence in pursuit
of European profit and control over people of color. This
is the context in which Black people must discuss the
idea of self-defense. No rational discussion of self-defense
for Black people can proceed without at least this basic
understanding.
Perhaps
it would be useful to further examine the relationship
of force to the American national character, and how this
relationship has been institutionalized. Very few people
can argue, with any credibility, that the establishment
of the United States was a non-violent historical episode.
The seizure of the North American land mass from its native
population was a decidedly genocidal undertaking. The
consistency of this enterprise over such a long period
of time over 250 years refutes any notion
that European racism was merely the aberration of a particular
era. The use of African chattel slave labor to establish
the foundation for the great North American economic and
industrial "miracle" was steeped in ruthless
cruelty and maintained by the omnipresent threat of violence.
It is estimated by some historians that over 20 million
Native Americans were killed by European settlers of the
Western hemisphere between the 15th and 19th
centuries, and that over 50 million Africans died in the
middle passage between Africa and the Americas in the
period between the 16th and 19th
centuries. In the early 20th century, the projection
of U.S. power into Central America, the Caribbean and
elsewhere proceeded in the wake of gunboats or relied
upon the bayonets of U.S. marines. Indeed, the U.S. has
invaded Central America over two dozen times in the last
century, and has annexed territories it seized from other
European colonial powers defeated in "just wars."
In the
words of a 1960s activist, "violence is as American
as apple pie." Force and violence are part of the
American male "folk wisdom" that socializes
generations of white male into macho notions of aggression
toward people of color. One small example of this is the
cliché that the West was "won" by the six-shooter.
Indeed, the sanctimonious glorification of equality based
upon force could be summed up in a play on the words of
the U.S. Declaration of Independence which states that
"all men are created equal." A popular saying
on the 19th century frontier was that "God
may have created men, but Sam Colt made em equal,"
Sam Colt, of course, being the renowned American gun-maker
and founder of Colt Firearms Corporation. Flowing out
of the notions of white-skin privilege and the white-male
"frontier mentality" is the subconscious presumption
(now normative for white American cultural ethics) that
all Europeans have a moral right, even a responsibility,
to use force whenever their position is threatened, and
that people of color have no equivalent moral right to
defend themselves from European aggression especially
when the aggression is cloaked under the name of "law
and order" or U.S. "national interest."
When we
witness the countless incidents of racist police brutality
and murder that are an everyday feature of the Black experience
in the U.S., or the use of U.S. military force in Nicaragua,
Grenada, Panama and the Persian Gulf, it is evident that
there is a double standard when it comes to the use of
violence: one standard for Europeans and another for people
of color. It has been said that "patriotism is the
last refuge of a scoundrel." Perhaps it can be said
as well that racism is the first refuge of the insecure.
Racism, having exercised considerable influence in the
development of western nation-states, has built into these
states this dual standard of humanity, which is so ingrained
that it is often taken for granted. As a consequence,
"freedom" for the national "racial"
minority, as a whole, often requires the radical disruption
of the social status quo and a complete reevaluation of
the dominant values and norms. It is little wonder therefore
that the demand for human rights by the victims of racist
subjugation is always perceived by the dominant culture
as unreasonable and threatening. Nowhere is this better
illustrated than around the issue of force, as it relates
to self-defense against racist violence.
In the
United States, poor people and especially African-Americans
are universally encouraged to pursue non-violence in their
struggle for human rights. It is argued on the one hand
that "violence" per se is unproductive and only
begets more violence, and, on the other hand, that "you
cant win anyway." "You" of course
being the poor person of a darker hue. Subsidized by "
liberal" foundation grants, institutions exist to
train the poor in non-violent attitudes and actions. The
mainstream media, decidedly male and white, while bombarding
the populace with esoteric violence in the form of cop
shows and Rambo movies, send the subliminal message to
the white male population that the use of force and violence
by underclass African-American and Third World peoples
is by its very nature either criminal or morally suspect.
African-American history is rewritten to emphasize the
"non-violent" struggle for human and civil rights,
while equally heroic but violent examples of struggle
are pigeon-holed and dismissed.
Even the
history of "non-violent" activism in the African-American
struggle for "equality" is presented in a sterile
light. The Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. is consistently
portrayed by the mainstream white media and in American
history books as a toothless moral dreamer who essentially
endorsed the proposition of the American capitalist state
and its support of reactionary movements around the world.
Of course nothing is further from the truth. Clearly,
"non-violence" as preached by the mainstream
media to Black Americans and the poor is never put forward
as a tactic, but as a goal in itself.
While
the disenfranchised Black community is fed the psychological
pabulum of non-violence, the enfranchised majority white
community trains its children in the use of force in its
war colleges and police paramilitary institutions. Moreover,
Eurocentric American nationalism provides the mass culture
with a moral and ethical framework in which to act out
the violent impulses of their institutional training.
The tradition of "conservatism" and the "right"
are fundamental standards by which all other perceptions
and views are measured. Thus an unfair imbalance is achieved
between the benefactors of a racist society and its underclass.
Indeed, the so-called "liberal" American tradition
operates within this race- and class-bound imbalance,
which is one reason why the so-called "two-party"
(Democrat-Republican) body politic and the principle of
separate branches of government are bankrupt, and never
prevented U.S. intervention in the Third World, e.g.,
Korea, the Congo, Vietnam, Grenada, Angola, the Middle
East, Libya and Central America, and it never secured
for African Americans equal and fair treatment under existent
law.
The obvious
consequence of a dual standard of human expectation is
a unique system of democratic fascism and a permanent
condition of police or military repression aimed at the
underclass and social dissidents. Limited political "democracy"
is permitted while corporate control of the economy dictates
the real content and direction of the state. In this context
the specter of racist subjugation resolves itself in an
ongoing and continuous cycle of police repression, underclass
crime and social deprivation in other words a permanent
state of crisis.
The highest
expression of this system of democratic fascism appears
to be the "National Security State," or NSS.
This Orwellian corporate government structure has developed
both as a corporate political manager of, and a reaction
to, the condition of permanent domestic social crisis
and an insurgent post-colonial Third World. The American
NSS, as an institution, sponsors and sanctions racist
violence of "law enforcement" at home and euphemistic
"low-intensity conflict" in the Third World.
In terms of its breadth of organization and its management
of violence as an instrument of policy, the NSS is the
ultimate purveyor of force on the face of the earth.
The bureaucracy
and technocrats of the NSS serve the transnational interests
of corporate America. It derives its strength and power
from control of technology, the military-police apparatus,
and its capacity to control the primary sources of information.
Because the NSS sees itself as preserving "the American
way of life," i.e. status quo power, it views its
own citizens as subversive to "national security"
whenever they disagree with the police or the interests
of the NSS. Consequently "law enforcement" takes
on a decidedly political function. Behind criminal law
enforcement lurk the political police whose job it is
to contain the unruly, quiet the outspoken, and destroy
the dreamers of a new order. Effective mass organization
of people against racist/class inequality, against high
minority unemployment, against socio-economic dislocation
(homelessness), or for the redistribution of wealth, reorganization
of national priorities, and social control of technology,
is always seen by the NSS as disruptive of the status
quo. For this basic reason, essentially moral and economic
issues such as street crime, drug abuse, criminal justice,
or the African-American "underclass" are political
campaign issues gratuitously used to manufacture an ill-informed
public consensus which endorses "democratic"
repression of dissent and of the disenfranchised, as the
Willie Horton issue was used by the racist right during
the 1988 presidential campaign. An accurate assessment
of the use of violence against minorities in a racist
culture would be very difficult if African-Americans did
not take a serious look at the nature of the National
Security State.
Covert
Action Information Bulletin, a Washington, D.C.-based
non-profit civilian watchdog organization, recently reported
the existence of the little-known "State Defense
Forces" (SDFs) being created throughout America.
According to CAIB, these "State Defense Forces"
(a generic term) have been organized in approximately
twenty-four states as auxiliaries to the already legally
constituted state National Guard. It is presumed that
a domestic SDF will be needed to control dissent and civil
unrest in the event of a national emergency arising out
of an unpopular U.S. military invasion abroad in which
the National Guard is federalized and sent overseas. Recruits
for the SDFs are unpaid civilians, and though it appears
that anyone can join the SDF, its ranks are at present
filled by zealots of the political right. This is significant,
especially for African-Americans who are considered by
the NSS to be an acute threat to Americas "domestic
security" by virtue of the justice of their grievances.
It should come as little surprise to know that the SDF
cadres are being trained in urban riot and crowd control,
and in the use of weapons such as shotguns, M-16s, M-60s
and 45-caliber pistols, as well as in various police techniques
of anti-insurgency. While African-Americans are being
taught, trained and indoctrinated into a non-violent frame
of mind, the white American National Security State is
teaching, training and indoctrinating its adherents to
employ lethal force in suppression of dissent and protest.
This is not a coincidence. The violent mentality of the
racist status quo and the white fear of Black America
are almost symbiotic in nature. This seeming symbiosis
has as its objective the denigration of the political
option of self-defense for people of color, and the criminalization
of the advocacy of such options. Thus, people of color
are encouraged to rely on the very system of violence
that subjugates them.
In January
of 1989, Don Jackson, a Black police officer on leave
from the Hawthorne, California police department drove
through predominantly white Long Beach, California on
a personal fact-finding mission. He was investigating
reports of racist police harassment. Mr. Jackson was shadowed
during his drive by an unmarked KNBC-TV van. What happened
to Mr. Jackson was nationally televised in graphic detail:
he was stopped arbitrarily by policemen from Long Beach,
one of whom slammed his head through a plate glass window
to impress upon him exactly who was boss. Mr. Jackson
wrote in a January 23rd New York Times op-ed
article, "Police Embody Racism to My People,"
that police brutality inflicted on Black people has a
greater historical function than mere gratuitous violence:
The Black
American finds that the most prominent reminder of his second-class citizenship is the
police. In the history of this country, police powers were collectively shared among
whites regarding black people. A slave wandering off the plantation could be stopped and
detained by any white person who saw fit to question his purpose for being away from
home
A variety of stringent laws were enacted and enforced to stamp the imprint of
inequality on the black American. It has long been the role of the police to see that the
plantation mentality is passed from one generation of blacks to another. No one has
enforced these rules with more zeal than the police. (emphasis added)
The irony of
Mr. Jacksons assessment is that the "collectively
shared" police powers of whites has given way to
a collectively shared perception of Black people as potential
criminals and terrorist. Indeed, even Mr. Jacksons
effort to expose the truth fell victim to the need for
white society to obscure it. The dramatic racist police
mistreatment of Mr. Jackson was juxtaposed on national
news broadcasts next to Black people "looting"
white and immigrant Hispanic-owned stores in Miami. The
white media, as if by reflex, played to the dual realities
of a racist culture. Surely white America got the message
that the police have their hands full dealing with potentially
volatile Blacks, and that if they are somewhat aggressive,
who can really blame them? At the same time, Blacks were
made to feel as if their truth was being told. The duality
of historical experiencesone Black, one whitewhatever
the facts, makes "democratic" consensus without
equal power impossible.
Equal
power? What does this mean for African-Americans? Perhaps
we would do well to reevaluate our idea of what equality
means, for if we are of the notion that individual freedom
in a racist culture can be acquired at the expense of
the collective freedom of the victims of that culture,
then we have accepted the amoral concept of "equal
opportunity exploitation," the very same concept
that enslaved our ancestors and which divides the world
today into two antagonistic divisions of "haves"
and "have nots," exploited and exploiter. Malcolm
X once said, "history is the best subject to reward
all research." There is no way we can judge the relationship
between African-Americans and European-Americans under
imagined conditions of equal power, that is, absent our
history of subjugation, absent the consequences of chattel
enslavement driven by profit incentive, or regardless
of the elaborate edifice of legal and social discrimination
erected to maintain African-Americans in a purely "minority"
status in which their interests are subsumed by the interest
of the dominant caste and class. The common humanity of
both African-Americans and whites has had to endure and
suffer the predatory appetite of a system devised to enrich
the few at the expense of the many. Whatever episodic
sparks of humanity that the races may have exhibited toward
each other surely occurred despite the European nation-state
systemnot because of it. The struggle for Black
empowerment can ill afford to ignore history. There is
no power without the capacity for independent self-defense.
Whenever
the question of Black self-defense arises, it inevitably
stumbles over the issues of "legality" and "appropriateness
of violence" (which all too often amount to the same
thing, that is, violence is always considered appropriate
ifand only ifit is "legal"). This
is because self-defense against racist attack is generally
viewed in a very narrow fashion which is unjustified by
our experience as a people. To combat this, in the first
place, the idea of the use of force to defend oneself
has to be stripped of racist duality. Secondly, we have
to understand the function of force as the European power
elite perceives it, and third, we must evaluate the utility
of a newly derived definition of self-defense in assuring
collective survival.
Should
we examine Mr. Jacksons historical assessment of
police violence we would see that it is the same as the
organization of racist terrorism. Violence was historically
used in conjunction with other psychological factors to
dehumanize the African slaves and secure their system
of servitude. For the men who controlled this system,
slave control was not only an economic consideration but
a matter of physical self-defense as well. The fear of
Native Americans and of African slave revolt were two
permanent features of early European-American colonial
life. In 1710, the governor of Virginia, Alexander Spotswood,
advised the Virginia Assembly in these words:
"Freedom wears a cap which
can, without a tongue, call together all those who long to shake off the fetters of
slavery, and as such an insurrection would surely be attended with most dreadful
consequences, so I think we cannot be too early in providing against it, both by putting
ourselves in a better posture of defense and making a law to prevent the consultations of
Negroes."
Apparently the
honorable governors advice did not fall on deaf
ears because the Virginia slave code mandated that should
a slave run away and not immediately return, "anyone
whosoever may kill or destroy such slaves by such means
as he shall think fit." In addition the courts had
authority to order dismemberment or any other measure
"as in their discretion shall think fit, for the
reclaiming of any such incorrigible slave, and terrifying
others from like practices." Other examples abound
of the terroristic use of violence codified into law with
the express purpose of maintaining our ancestors in a
position of abject fear and servitude. If times have changed,
the residual and accumulative benefits of white-skin privilege
still ensure the legal codification of violence in maintenance
of the status quo. It is this status quo, with all the
moral righteousness of the founding fathers behind it,
that now preaches against the evils of terrorism. Former
President Ronald Reagan admitted to a profound historical
analogy when he equated the terrorist and murderous CIA-backed
Nicaraguan "Contras" to the "moral equivalent
of Americas founding fathers." To borrow a
phrase from the distinguished Governor Spotswood of Virginia,
African-Americans would do well by putting themselves
in "a better posture of defense."
The purpose
in drawing attention to early American history is not
to revel in moral self-righteousness or engage in useless
judgement of another period when behavior and attitudes
were determined by different standards than today. It
should not be too difficult to see that the "founding
fathers" of America were men of property driven by
the contradictions of European culture, a culture based
on agriculture, with feudal hierarchies of the nobility
(lords), vassals and peasants, which evolved from the
slave societies of Greece and Rome. History is clear:
erected upon the European conquest of North America, upon
the genocide of the Indians and the racist brutality of
slavery, Europeans stratified a civilization based on
private property. The European need for land and space,
combined with the dubious ethics of mercantile capitalism,
made racism and genocide integral to the society and system
we know today. The rhapsody of the American dream sold
to countless immigrants is only a part of the true story.
We must understand the truth of our historical experience
so that we are clear in our thinking and fully appreciate
what America is capable of.
Racism
has been an important tool in dividing the poor and working
peoples of America. It has prevented white laborers, the
middle class, and various Third World immigrant communities
from uniting against an exploitative and relatively small
white male elite. Despite this objective "function"
of racism it would be inappropriate for the African-American
to ignore the very real physical threat racism represents
to our empowerment. In the struggle for power, often perception
is more important than reality. The common Eurocentric
perception of African-Americans is that they lack certainty
of principle and a willingness to defend themselves. Our
self-destructive treatment of each other, that is, our
obsessive imitation of the most shallow white American
values, our disregard for Black youth, "Black on
Black crime" and the entire range of psychotic self-hatred
we act out every day in our social relations reinforce
white Americans with negative perceptions of Black people.
Many of the problems that now confront African-Americans
begin at home, in our community. Until we establish independent
mechanisms of community supervision that provide moral,
ethical, political and social direction, African-Americans
will continue to be the doormat of U.S. society. Depending
on outside forces to regulate and govern the African-American
community is a prescription for disaster. A community
without internal authority and control is no community
at all.
Weakness
tempts power to practice brutality and oppression. The
seeming increase of so-called "racially motivated
attacks" is in large part the consequence of the
apparent inability or unwillingness of Black America to
defend itself. While the term "racially motivated
attack" is a media buzzword intended to individualize
systemic racist subjugation, we need not fall victim to
this deception. There is nothing exceptional or individual
about racist attack in a racist society. Media buzzwords
notwithstanding, our response to racist attack must be
collective, uncompromising and most of all organized!
We should respond in a political manner to all racist
attack, as well as to conditions that invite attacks.
Both legal racist violence (police, state and institutional
brutality) and extra-legal racist violence (racist gang
violence, individual discriminatory treatment) serves
the same function: the subjugation of the targeted racial
national minority. Black people must break with the mental
baggage of slavery and shed the knee-jerk "non-threatening
negro" posture white folks love so well. Our concept
of force, its political utility, is obsolete. Force and
violence must be seen for what they are and placed in
a relevant political context: instruments of political
power, instruments of control.
The violence
of racist oppression, when internalized by the African-American
community, results in reactionary violence or negative
violence, and it must be repressed by the African community
if self-defense is to advance beyond vigilantism. Vigilantism
is not the political organization of forceit is
the social organization of civilian frustration. It can
be co-opted by the status quo, misdirected by opportunists,
and will eventually fizzle out. The political organization
of force by the Black community implies its connection
to the struggle for power and control over the entire
quality of life available to Black people. Unlike reactionary
apolitical violence, or vigilante force, the concept of
Black self-defense, e.g. the political organization of
force, is proactive force. Self-defense in this context
is as broad as the requirements of and the struggle for
empowerment. Legality and illegality are relative to the
struggle for empowermentnot sacrosanct in and of
themselves. White folks taught us the efficacy of this
approach to this use of force.
By way
of example, the tactic of economic boycott can be seen
as an economic form of self-defense against economic exploitation,
injustice of discriminationespecially when it upsets
the colonial relationship between the African-American
community and the status quo power. In this sense it is
proactive and not reactive. Taking control of social institutions
or educational systems that affect the quality of African-American
life by establishment political means, i.e. electoral
politics, and the creation of grassroots alternative institutions
which provide services to the Black community are forms
of proactive self-defense, for a primary objective of
self-defense is deterrence, and a limited political power
is better than no power at all. But it is not always enough
to deter racist attack.
Black
Americans can never relinquish the right to exert a political
consequence on those institutions and individuals who
abuse us. Questions of " legality" and "illegality"
are relativethe appropriateness is both tactical
and ethical. Insofar as Black America is unable to punish
racist brutality and exert a political consequence for
racist attack we are weak, vulnerable and unequal. It
is a moral imperative to organize Black people to defend
themselves. We must get away from the plantation mentality
and the cowardly notion that organizing force in defense
of Black people and in pursuit of our political objectives,
when necessary, is somehow amoral and therefore rightly
illegal. All people have the right to defend themselves.
Moreover, all that is legal is not morally just.
The proper
criterion for distinguishing between "right"
and "wrong" is not mysterious. It is embodied
in the principles that advance the cause of the oppressed
and exploited over the cause of those who live by oppression
and exploitation. Even though the oppressed and exploited
may not always be "correct," their cause is
just and right. Nor should we foolishly imagine that,
by following the guidance and leadership of those who
uphold the cause of the oppressed, we are somehow conferring
favors on such leadership. For leadership is a burdensurely
the more one knows, the more one is responsible for. This
is why current Black leaders act like they dont
know whats happening in times of crisis, because
white folks will hold them responsible for the consciousness
of the masses. Our leaders must be responsible to usnot
to the status quo, which demands that our people remain
in check.
Humankind
has a weakness for falsehood, vanity and crookedness,
not because we are inured to truth and selfless devotion
to community, but because it is much easier to pursue
falsehood and vanity than to seek truth and social responsibility.
So it is, that the delusions of the material world gratify
us and yet leave an aching emptiness in our soul. Perhaps
this weakness is why African-Americans, in the tradition
of Western materialism, would much rather follow a fool
dressed in a silk suit than a wise righteous person draped
in rags. We fold our hearts like a handkerchief, tucking
it away in our back pocket, sitting on it as if embarrassed
that we possess a heart at all. Surely the corruption
of a persons heart is a great tragedyfor the
malaise of the human spirit is reflected in the social
condition of a people. Their need arises from the drifting
and unfocused hunger of Black America for a class of men,
women and youth committed to upholding the social, moral,
ethical and spiritual integrity of our communityno
matter how great the sacrifice. We need to care more about
ourselves than about what white folks think about us,
and in so doing realize that "history does not respond
to those who lack the basic instruments of bringing about
historical change." This means we must acquire independent
power. The rhetoric of "liberalism," "left"
dogma or "right" integrationist accommodation
is passé, obsolete. They are without moral or ethical
integrity and of limited utility to Black America in crisis.
The crisis of Black America is not only material (i.e.
economic), or political, or even social. It is at its
root a malaise of the heartof the spirit. The reality
of the nation-state in which we live is in transition.
Our struggle for liberation as a people must reflect this
and invigorate us with a new sense of direction and purpose.
The world
is changing. It is in a transition from a world order
dominated by European economic hegemony born out of racist
colonialism to one in which that system of domination
is under increasing strain to accommodate the interests
of the disenfranchised. Increasing awareness of the need
for a world order and redistribution of wealth unencumbered
by selfish class-based nationalism is rising in the world.
Technology has placed humankind at the crossroads of history.
What will be Black Americas role in the historic
struggles that lie ahead? Black leaders who do not frame
the struggle in this context are not Black leaders at
all.
While
we must prepare ourselves collectively to wage many struggles
at once, we must do so with a common sense of mission
and purpose. Without this sense of mission and purpose
we will succumb to the spiritual and material degradation
of a racist culture. The time in which we live portend
both hope and doom. During the long centuries of the slave-trade,
Africans had a sense of mission, of common purposeto
survive and defeat the brutal system of dehumanization
and "break de chains." In post-Reconstruction
America, when the national agenda was set for the remainder
of the century by putting "Negroes" back in
their place as neo-serfs (sharecroppers) and servants,
Black people had a sense of collective mission. When white
labor was bludgeoned into submission by the robber barons
of commerce, and the political elites of both North and
South consolidated the economic wealth of America into
the greatest material growth in human history, Black people
had a sense of mission, purpose and common direction which
culminated in the upheavals of the early-and mid-twentieth
century for civil and human rights. We must rekindle this
flame and sense of purpose, but on a much higher level.
We know what white America is capable of when it comes
to people of color. We understand the limitations and
imperatives of history, and a racist culture. The question
therefore is what do we intend to do about it.
from
the book "Still Black, Still Strong --Survivors of
the War Against Black Revolutionaries"
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