Bolsonaro’s Handling of COVID-19 Has Unleashed a Layered Crisis in Brazil – The Wire

This is the fourth article in a six-part series that is looking at how the COVID-19 pandemic is playing out in the BRICS countries.Part 1: Introduction|Part 2:Russia | Part 3: South Africa

Around the world, people are bored in quarantine. But not in Brazil. Here, politics is accelerating at a frantic pace, led by a potentially suicidal president. Unlike Vikor Orbn or Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Jair Bolsonaro did not take advantage of the pandemic to concentrate power and restrict civil liberties. Instead, he seeks to enhance support for his moral and political agenda: an inverted revolution, in the fashion of fascism.

Lets review the context. After a successful decade, in which modest improvements for those from below combined with the usual privileges of those from above, Lulism lost traction. By Lulism we understand amode of regulationof class conflict that engaged the passiveconsent of the subaltern classes to a government project led by a trade union bureaucracy entrenched in the state, which ensured modest but effective concessions to workers.

A decade of relative social pacification ensued against the backdrop of economic growth fuelled by the commodities super-cycle. However, the conjunction of the June 2013 days (the largest cycle of mass demonstration in Brazils history), corruption scandals and economic recession shifted the ruling classes approach from inclusive neoliberalism to social dispossession, and from conciliation to class warfare. This is the background to Lulas successor Dilma Rousseffs deposition in 2016, Lulas arrest and Bolsonaros victory in 2018.

Bolsonaro offers the framework of authoritarian neoliberalism, which is the police state. Without a programme of his own, he outsourced the management of the economy to a genuine Chicago boy, Paulo Guedes. As a filling, he advances a retrograde behavioural, cultural and scientific agenda which the elite tolerates, but considers distasteful. Its support for the former captain is a marriage of convenience, as it ideally seeks a Bolsonarism without Bolsonaro.

Also read: Bolsonaros Colossal Negligence Sparks Genocide Debate in Brazil

However, Bolsonaro has ideas of his own: a dynasty, with the military as its party and the evangelicals as its social base. In order to understand popular support he enjoys, it is important to consider that the escalation of the governments political violence reflects a social unease regarding the ongoing fraying of labour relations. In a world marked by the deepening of informality and widespread job insecurity, the resentment of subordinates against those perceived as privileged extends to the rights of organised labour.

In place of unions, informal workers are welcomed by evangelical churches instrumentalised by the fundamentalist right wing which, through a theology of prosperity, offer them both spiritual support and the will to work. After all, in order to function in an uncertain and violent environment, the entrepreneurship that typifies the informal economy requires massive doses of self-discipline that, in practical terms, only popular religiosity is capable of providing.

Bolsonaro counts on affinities with the evangelicals to build an organic base, as part of his effort to convert the virtual support that elected him into real mobilisation, internet users into black shirts.

In this, Bolsonaro follows an invariable script: he chooses enemies to attack, while portraying himself as a victim. Bolsonaro accuses people, but also institutions and the press, of being obstacles to his project, contriving a logic of self-fulfilling prophecy.

So when the president accuses Congress of boycotting him, he shifts responsibility for his failures to those who dont let him rule, while at the same time mobilising popular support to face the institution that, in the eyes of citizens, synthesises rotten and corrupted politics. When the Congress reacts, the presidents narrative is legitimised, and therefore he raises the tone. When it shuts up, the president advances another square. In this game of inversions, Bolsonaro appears as subversive, while the Left brandishes the constitution in defence of order.

Gravediggers wearing protective suits bury a coffin at Vila Formosa cemetery during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Sao Paulo, Brazil, July 16, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Amanda Perobelli

Bolsonaros simple answers to complex problems in Brasilia correspond, on internet channels, to the narrative of a hero who faces successive villains, as in a video game. In this logic, the governments achievements do not matter, because the rule of political effectiveness is different: to inflame its supporters and naturalise what was, until recently, intolerable. Bolsonaro rewrites what is normal, expanding the aspirational horizon of his base.

It is a movement that cannot recede, but on the contrary, only accumulates mass, speed and violence. As such, the president summoned his base to demand the closure of the National Congress on March 15. Three days later, a demonstration was planned by various social movements, unions and left-wing party activists in defence of education, which under the circumstances, took on the shape of a counter-demonstration.

It is in this context that the COVID-19 pandemic landed in Brazil. The March 15 act ended up cancelled, but some diehard supporters took to the streets and were personally greeted by the president. Against the background of Bolsonaros negationism, the demonstration of March 18 became a successful national strike. It unexpectedly revealed that Bolsonaros support is declining among the rich and the middle class, the first to be hit by a virus that arrived through Brazilians who hold passports.

The president responded by radicalising denial and collected enemies in the process. At each of his speeches, pots ring out of windows. Was the president lost in his parallel world? In the survival calculations of this perverse political animal, any death drive is a political opportunity. It is necessary to seek reason behind the madness.

Bolsonaro assumes that the crisis has two dimensions, sanitary and economic. The discourse against distancing is aimed at those who die of hunger, not of COVID-19. Bolsonaro correctly assumes that workers want to work. Evangelical leaders, whose churches have been emptied, are also opposed to the social isolation measures implemented by governors and mayors, as are traders and businessmen.

Also read: Fake News, Hiding Data and Profits: How COVID-19 Spun Out of Control in Brazil

The other side of this politics is the certainty that the Brazilian state, concocted under slavery, will never assist workers as in Europe: on the contrary, legal measures have facilitated wage cuts and layoffs. The neoliberal fundamentalism of the economy minister supports Bolsonaros political calculation.

Obviously, this is a risky bet, which is leading the country to a catastrophe. As Pierre Salama noted, if fighting COVID-19 is depicted as a war, then Bolsonaro is a war criminal. In this scenario, the fact that a president who appears both suicidal and genocidal is tolerated by the population, and by Congress, indicates the despair of those from below and the cynicism of those from above.

Meanwhile, Bolsonaro doubled his bet, in a government that has more military in top posts than the military dictatorship (1964-1985) ever did. Criticised in the press, intimidated by the judiciary, harassed by the ruling class and with his popularity threatened, Bolsonaro contemplated a fuite en avant. He announced emergency aid of R$600 for more than 50 million people that is four times more money to four times more people than the Bolsa Famlia programme, the social star of Lulism.

A woman wearing a protective mask and a face shield talks on the phone as people walk at a popular shopping street amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Sao Paulo, Brazil, July 15, 2020. Picture taken July 15, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Amanda Perobelli

Then, surrounded by the military and without the economy minister, he announced a public investment plan opposed to neoliberal orthodoxy. The move was clear: to strengthen direct links with those from below, supported by the military, to the detriment of class solidarity with those from above. A kind of Lulism in reverse, as philosopher Paulo Arantes said.

However, the president walks on thin ice. Political turbulence troubles capital and has forced Bolsonaro to retreat, reaffirming full powers to the Minister of Economy. Against the pot ringing of his opponents, his constituency drive their cars and honk in front of hospitals, opposing confinement and everything in the way of their leader.

At the moment, none of these camps have the strength to tip the balance, and the future of the country is held hostage by parliament the one the president intends to close. Without the strength to do so, Bolsonaro buys his stability through horse-trading politics with the large centre, a heterogeneous cluster of small venal parties full of love to give, in exchange for posts and funds. In short, he does politics as usual.

Beyond Braslia, Brazil became the global epicentre of the epidemic in June, surpassing the United States in daily coronavirus deaths despite notorious underreporting of cases. Studies showed a correlation between the presidents popularity, disrespect for isolation and the collapse of the public health system in several regions. In urban peripheries, isolation is impracticable, while workers crowd together to receive R$ 600 in the banks. In the countryside, the chance for medical assistance is small and the virus has reached indigenous territories, with a potentially devastating effect. In short, the social apartheid as usual.

Many hit pots, but didnt let their maids go. Others lived in confinement with their servants, who did not return to their homes. Companies increased the commissions charged to bike couriers who supplied home offices with everything, while the couriers themselves at first protested in vain, on empty avenues. The senzala (slave quarters) revamped as always.

However, on the first of July, a national courier strike mobilised tens of thousands of informal workers in at least six state capitals. The spectre of senzala rebellion, as always too.

Also read: In Brazil, a Requiem for Democracy

Against the indifference of the rich and the cynicism of Brasilia, networks of solidarity blossomed in poor communities. An iconic image shows 425 street presidents in a favela in So Paulo who gathered in a soccer field, six feet away from each other, to discuss their solidarity campaign. The landless movement (MST) had donated over 2,300 tonnes of food they produced before June. Thousands of initiatives have been mapped at a grassroots level, completely disconnected from the state but also from the established Left, whose focus is Brasilia. On that front, over 20 impeachment demands were filed against Bolsonaro in the first month of the pandemic none started by the PT, who just recently changed its game. The established Left seems condemned to irrelevance, as never before.

Crime has fallen, the sky has cleared up and birds sing in the windows of the middle class. Underneath the calm, suffering is creeping. The economic crisis hits everyone unequally, spreading tension in a society hoping for a future better than the present, but hopeless that it will be better than the past. In Brazil, there will be no Keynesian reflux or a revival of a welfare state that never existed. Instead, the trend towards dispossession will be resumed with redoubled fury, amidst a population anxious to return to some kind of normalcy, even if more and more debased, with or without Bolsonaro.

Fabio Luis Barbosa dos Santos is Professor, Federal University of So Paulo and author, most recently, of Power and Impotence: A history of South America under progressivism, 1998-2016 (Brill: 2020).

Ruy Braga is Professor, University of So Paulo. His most recent book published in English is The Politics of the Precariat: From Populism to Lulista Hegemony (Haymarket: 2019).

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Bolsonaro's Handling of COVID-19 Has Unleashed a Layered Crisis in Brazil - The Wire

Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed – Destin Log

This story is part of The Confederate Reckoning, a collaborative project of USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South to examine the legacy of the Confederacy and its influence on systemic racism today.

The white men stand, immortalized in metal and stone, in parks, public squares and the halls of government.

Statues of prominent figures in the Confederacy are a common sight in the South. But the visibility of their monuments often belie the way their lives and legacies are obscured by myth.

Like other symbols of the Confederacy, such memorials have been defended for generations as pieces of Southern heritage, or simply uncontroversial artifacts of history. But for many people, they are ever-present reminders of racial discrimination and violent oppression that has never gone away.

The removal of statues of Confederate leaders as well as those of others who promoted or profited from slavery and racism has become a focal point of calls for a true confrontation with racial inequality in the United States. As part of that conversation,USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South are taking a critical look at several such figures to understand who they were and what they believed.

***

For more than four decades, a bronzesculpture of thebust of Confederate Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest has been featured prominently in the Tennessee state Capitol.

A statue portraying Forrest was one of three removed in Memphis in late 2017 afterthe city found a loopholeto legally take down the monument that residents widely agreed should not stand in a public park.

But as the fate of the Capitol bust hangs in the balance pending a state commission meeting later this year and after years of debate among Black and white lawmakers, and Democratsand Republicans who was Forrest and why is he so controversial more than 150 years after the Civil War?

Among the most notorious parts of Forrest's legacy is his reported involvement leading Confederate soldiers in the West Tennessee Battle of Fort Pillow in April 1864, which has commonly become known as a massacre of surrendered Union troops, many of whom were Black.

Primary documents from a variety of sources refute argumentsmade by some Forrest apologists including some who have raised the possibility during conversations at the legislature about the bronze bust and Forrest's legacy that he was not responsible for the mass killings at Fort Pillow.

"We've been going through these excuses for Bedford Forrest for the longest while, and none of them are holding up under scrutiny," said Richard Blackett, a history professor at Vanderbilt University.

In 1868, Forrest gave an interview with a Cincinnati Commercial reporter that was widely published in newspapers around the country. In the interview, he said the Ku Klux Klan had "no doubt" been a benefit in Tennessee. While he denied being an official member, he said he was part of the organization "in sympathy," and later when Forrest testified before Congress about the KKK he eventually disclosed that he was familiar with rituals and practices.

Repeatedly in the 1868 interview, Forrest tried to suggest that he had more disdain for white Radical Republicans and Northerners trying to infiltrate Southern politics than he did African Americans, but he still remained fiercely opposed at that point to Blacks gaining the right to vote or having equal standing in society.

"I am opposed to it under any and all circumstances," Forrest said.

"And here I want you to understand distinctly I am not an enemy to the negro.We want him here among us; he is the only laboring class we have."

***

Jefferson Davis was a man of many words. He literally wrote volumes during his lifetime and spent the last decade of his life writing about the history of the Confederacyandan in-depth analysis of the Civil War.

But Davis (1808-1889) most notably is known for his role withthe Confederate States of America, of which he was named its first and only president.

Susannah Ural,professor of history and co-director of the Dale Center for the Study of War and Society at the University of Southern Mississippi, said Davis seemed to be a natural choice for president of the Confederacy.

Although he did not support secession, he felt duty-bound to represent his state, which voted to secede, and the new government to which he was appointed president. However, he also believed secession was a right afforded tothe states.

Davis wrote in his book,"The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government," that slavery "was not the cause of the war, but an incident."

In his preface to the bookhe said,"the States had never surrendered their sovereignty," and that states should be allowed to make their own decisions regarding slavery.

Davis saidthe federal government was usurping its authority by forcing unwanted laws on the states, first and foremost the abolition of slavery, which was an integral part of the Southern states' agricultural economy.

"(Slavery is) the primary cause, but it's not the only cause," Ural said. "When you talk about states' rights, when you talk about what powers the federal government should have versus state authority, one of the centralissues to states' rightswas the right to slavery."

However, she said, determining the Civil War happened because of slavery isn't entirely accurate.

"There's never one cause ofa war, and things thatmotivatepeople to fight in a war change over the course of time," she said. "To boil the Civil War down to slavery is problematic, but the bigger problem was that for decades, we just kind of pushed slavery aside and didn't really talk about it."

***

Even in his last days, Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general, had already become a myth a myth that gave a defeated South something to cling to; a means of understanding its defeat.

In 1865, Lee surrendered to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia. His exploits during the war and his canonization by defeated Southerners have rendered him among the most famous losers in military history.

To Emory Thomas, who wrote "Robert E. Lee: A Biography,"published in 1995, historical evidence shows Lee was a man who lived by a strict moral code, a sense of honor and duty; a great soldier and engineer who rose to the challenges he faced.

He was also a slave-owner and a white supremacist. While Lee believed slavery was morally wrong, he did not believe the abolition of it should come through the works of man, but, instead, the will of God.

In an interview, Thomas referenced a famous letter Lee wrote about slavery in 1857. In it, Lee distilled his views as a slave owner on race.

"In this enlightened age, there are few I believe, but what will acknowledge, that slavery as an institution, is a moral & political evil in any Country. It is useless to expatiate on its disadvantages. I think it, however, a greater evil to the white man than to the black race," Lee wrote. "The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, socially & physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instruction as a race, & I hope will prepare & lead them to better things. How long their subjugation may be necessary is known & ordered by a wise Merciful Providence. Their emancipation will sooner result from the mild & melting influence of Christianity, than the storms & tempests of fiery Controversy."

In that letter, and other moments throughout his life, including testimony before Congress after the Civil War, Lee displayed views on race that Thomas described as compatible with social Darwinism a worldview that arose later in the 19th century and early 20th that Western governments, particularly that of the U.S., used to justify colonization, war and imperialism.

In 1862, he wouldfree his father-in-law's slaves, as required by the man's will, a matter of weeks before the Emancipation Proclamation took effect.

"He anticipated social Darwinism In the evolutionary pyramid of human beings, I think he saw white folks like himself at the top. And African Americans somewhere down the ranks, above American Indians whom he really thought were dreadful," Thomas said.

***

Known as the "Boy Hero of the Confederacy," Sam Davis' story was resurrected from obscurity in the late 1800s by journalist Archibald Cunningham, founder of the Confederate Veteran magazine. There are monuments erected in Sam Davis'honor. His boyhood home is on the National Register of Historic Places and operates as a museum.

Barely 21 in 1863, Davis was hanged for his refusal to give Union Army Gen. Grenville Dodge the names of Confederate spies. "I would rather die a thousand deaths than betray a friend," Davis said moments before he was hanged on the Public Square in Pulaski, Tennessee.

Davis wasnt a boy, but a young man whose bravery is immortalized as a symbol of the Confederacy and the Lost Cause, said Brenden Martin, a Middle Tennessee State University history professor. The underpinning of the Lost Cause was that the Confederacy was "right all along" and had a right to secede from the United States.

"All youve got to do is look at the (Confederate) Articles of Secession. The people who brought about the secession (from the United States) made it clear it was about preserving the institution of slavery," Martin said.

Slavery was the backbone of the Southern economy, Martin said.

And the Davisfamily plantation was steeped in that economy.

Data from the American Battlefield Trust notes that Charles and Jane Davis, Sam Davis' parents, originally owned a830-acre plantation located in Smyrna. By 1860, there were 51 enslaved people owned by the Davis family. Sam Davis also had his own slave, named Coleman Davis,who was gifted to him when he was a boy.

***

Anarcha was at least 17 when the doctor started experimenting on her. The year before, she suffered terrible complications during a 72-hour labor that opened a hole between her bladder and vagina and left her incontinent.

The man who held Anarcha in bondage outside Montgomery sent her to Dr. J. Marion Sims sometime in 1845. She was one of at least seven enslaved women sent to Sims by white slaveholders. They had the same condition as Anarcha, known as a vesicovaginal fistula.

Sims wanted to find a way to address it. From 1845 to 1849, the enslaved women became experiments.

By Sims own account, Anarcha underwent 30 operations as Sims tried different approaches to repairing the fistula.

These women could not say no. Neither Sims nor the white men who held them against their will showed interest in their opinions. Deirdre Cooper Owens, a professor of medical history at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and author of "Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology," said if the women protested, they "could get beaten, or they could get ignored."

Anesthesia, Cooper Owens said, was not in wide use at this time.

Despite that, a statue of Sims unveiled in 1939 remains on the grounds of the Alabama Capitol in Montgomery. A bust of Sims also stands in Columbia, South Carolina. New York City officials removed a statue of Sims in Manhattan in 2018.

***

Andrew Johnson considered himselfa champion of the common man but only when those common men were white.

The 17th president of the United Stateswas a common man himself. Born into poverty in 1808, he escaped indentured servitude in North Carolinabefore moving to Greeneville, Tennessee, where he worked as a tailor,owned slaves and launched his political career as a Democrat.

When President Abraham Lincoln died from an assassin's bullet just six weeks after Johnson took office, a fractured countryfound its stubborn new president lacked Lincoln's ability to navigate theend of the Civil War with nuance and sensitivity.

Although Johnson had helped Lincoln end slavery across the land, he nowclashed with the Republican-controlled Congress by planting himself firmly in the way of rights for newly freed slaves. He soon grew widelyunpopular and became the first president ever to be impeached.

Johnson believed in what's called "herrenvolk democracy" the idea that the lowest white man in the social hierarchy should beabove the highest Black man, said Aaron Astor, ahistory professor at Maryville College who researches the Civil War-era South.

In 1860, the year before the Civil War broke out, Johnson said white Southernersfelt so threatened by the prospectof Black freedom that poor men would unite withslave ownersto exterminateslaves rather than see them freed.

***

Albert Pike is a name well-known in Arkansas history as both a Civil War general of Native American troops and a newspaper editor.

Although Pike was known nationally after the Civil War for his involvement with the Freemasons, he gained national attention again on June 19, 2020, when a statue dedicated to him in Washington, D.C.,was toppled by a group of Black Lives Matter demonstrators. The monument to Pike was the only one of a Confederate Civil War general in the District of Columbia.

Pike was a Boston transplant to Arkansas who initially resisted secession, but followed the lead of his fellow Arkansans in fully supporting the Confederacy and even servedas an appointed brigadier general in at least one battle in Arkansas.

By the end of his life, Pike had risen among the highest ranks of the Freemasons.

Before the Civil War, he had moved from the Fort Smith area to Little Rock to pursue a career as a journalist. He eventually became editor and owner of The Advocate where he reported on the Supreme Court of Arkansas.

When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Pike was called up to be a brigadier general over a troop made up of several Native American Tribes. He was cited as being an advocate for Native Americans and the wrongs they suffered at the hands of the white man.

When it came to African Americans, however, Pikes view of slavery was one that claimed it was a "necessary evil." He claimed that slaves would not be able to hold any other job and that they were treated well by their masters. He even admitted to having his own slave for "necessary" work.

***

Gen. Alfred Mouton has become one of Acadianas most polarizing historical figures. His statue, standing on city property in the heart of downtown Lafayette, has been the focus of public outcry, protest and legal battles for decades.

As support is increasing to remove the statue, most of the controversy over Mouton has focused on the fact that he owned Black peopleas slaves and fought for white supremacy during the Deep South's most oppressive era.

While Mouton is hailed by some as a hero from Lafayette's oldest family who fought to defend his hometown from Union forces during the Civil War, the famous son of former Gov. Alexandre Mouton helped wage another civil war here.

Mouton, along with his father, trained the "Vigilante Committee" in Lafayette Parish, a group that would carry out their own form of violent justice against Black residentsthrough whippings, expulsions and lynchings.

From the late 1850s to the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, Mouton-backed vigilantes fought against other groups in Lafayette Parish's own civil war.

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This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed

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Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed - Destin Log

Will eating at college be more akin to prison fare? – The Riverdale Press

By ROSE BRENNAN

The resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement has seemingly created gaps between various institutions and law enforcement, whether justified or not. Schools are ending their relationships with local police departments amid calls to cut budgets. And mass incarceration is facing renewed criticism for its role in racial injustice.

While the countrys prison population is currently the largest its ever been with as many as one in every 100 American adults behind bars its still seemingly an issue, which disproportionately targets Black communities. As many as a third of Black men can expect to be incarcerated at some point in their lives, according to the NAACP, compared to 1-in-6 Latino men and 1-in-17 white men.

And while mass incarceration might not be a predominant issue here at home, it could feel like it. One giant in the prison industry is making its way to the neighborhood, albeit not without a fight.

Manhattan College will depend on Aramark Corp., for its dining needs beginning this fall. The Philadelphia-based company will replace both Gourmet Dining and Sodexo, beginning first with managing dining and non-residential custodial services on campus. Eventually, its responsibilities will also include facilities, energy management and residential custodial services.

The company maintains a large roster of clients employing more than 200,000 people and earning billions each year. But Aramark is probably more commonly known for its contracts providing similar services to prisons.

And thats proven to be unpopular among students who took time to research the company over the summer. As one of the largest food providers to American prisons, Aramark also is entrenched in various other controversies when it comes to employees and the inmate population of those prisons.

Aramark is known to be (a) union buster, said Brandon Martinez, a senior communications major at the school. When Aramark takes over, its only a matter of time until they try to bust the Manhattan College physical plant union.

Manhattan Colleges physical plant and residence life housekeeping employees are members of the Office and Professional Employees International Union, with Local 153 serving the tri-state area.

In an email announcing the deal earlier this month, Manhattan president Brennan ODonnell reassured students and union members Aramark will recognize unionized physical plant and housekeeping employees, ensuring theyll retain certain benefits theyve acquired in past collective bargaining, like free tuition.

Aramark is no stranger to the controversy surrounding the companys name. In fact, the company website has an entire page titled Get the Facts addressing those controversies and clarifying the role it plays in prisons.

While we understand and respect the passionate debate around our nations prison system and its disproportionate impact on Black and other non-white populations, we disagree with how Aramark is being characterized and cast as part of the problem, according to the website. We are actually part of the solution with a strong commitment to rehabilitating incarcerated individuals so they can transition back to their communities.

The page lists several of these rehabilitation efforts, including providing vocational training, scholarships and trust accounts for inmates efforts Aramark claims reduce chances inmates will return to prison by at least 30 percent.

Martinez, introduced a resolution in Manhattan Colleges student government calling on administrators to cease contract negotiations with Aramark. It earned the support of more than 500 students and alumni, and more than a couple-dozen faculty members.

Although the company has a reputation with prisons, Aramarks new relationship with Manhattan College is far from unique. The company says its partnered with 500 other colleges and universities, impacting more than 3 million students.

It also will launch something it calls Create Kitchen, where its on-campus chefs will teach students how to make their own meals.

And with students expected to return in the fall in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, Aramark also says its implementing a set of social distancing and sanitation procedures it calls EverSafe.

Still, having a contract with Aramark is directly contradictory to the message of social justice the college preaches, Martinez said.

It goes against all the things were taught at Manhattan College, especially the Lasallian core principles, he said.

Since the Institute of the Brothers of Christian Schools better known as the Lasallian Brothers, after founder St. Jean Baptiste de la Salle began establishing schools worldwide, its emphasized five core principles in its pedagogy: Faith in the presence of God, respect for all persons, concern for the poor and social justice, inclusive community and quality education.

Guelybel Capellan hasnt been a regular fixture on Manhattan Colleges campus since earning her masters degree last year, yet believes Aramark profits from mass incarceration, something she has described as modern-day slavery.

Aramarks response has been that they help some prisoners by giving them an education, Capellan said. Basically, youre profiting from slavery and then youre saying, Oh, but we help some of our slaves, and thats not the response people are looking for.

Those claims stretch back to the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which outlawed slavery, except as punishment for a crime. While inmates do often receive some compensation for jobs they hold behind bars, its a far cry from the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. In 2017, inmates received typical wages ranging from 63 cents to $1.41 per day, according to the Prison Policy Initiative.

We recognize that we need to work with Aramark over the coming weeks to represent the fuller story with respect to these allegations, ODonnell wrote in his email announcing the Aramark deal. This will include opportunities for members of our community to meet with Aramark leadership to discuss these concerns.

Aramark says it will form a dining committee that will meet regularly, providing real-time feedback both in-person and through digital surveys.

Martinez plans to organize protests against the Aramark contract once students return to campus in the fall.

Our voice isnt going to be pushed to the side, he said. Something like this isnt going to be just swept under the rug.

Originally posted here:

Will eating at college be more akin to prison fare? - The Riverdale Press

UK’s first anti-slavery commissioner: There will be no change until a CEO is in the dock – The National

After three years of being raped, starved and passed between families like a possession, an enslaved Indian domestic worker finally seized her moment and fled the 2 million home that had been her prison.

The woman, 40, had tried to flee before but her pleas for help had been ignored and she had been sent back to her abusers.

This time, her support team of lawyers and charities took her to a police unit specialising in human trafficking.

Everybody was speaking for her, said Kevin Hyland, then the head of the unit run by Londons police force.

I just told everyone to stop and asked her what she wanted.

She said: I just want them to go to prison. Thank you for listening to me, and she started crying.

Nobody had actually taken the time to tell her that everybody worked for her.

The case was a formative experience for Mr Hyland who after a successful police career became the UKs first anti-slavery commissioner and an advocate for its voiceless victims.

The position was created in 2014 when the UK, under prime minister Theresa May, introduced what it claimed was the first law in Europe to address slavery and trafficking in the 21st century.

It was designed to help protect victims, make it easier to prosecute traffickers and hold to account businesses that failed to ensure workers were not being abused, while reaping the profits of exploited labour.

Its limits came to light last month when reports exposed how workers in the cut-price garment trade in the central English city of Leicester were being paid below the statutory minimum wage.

Some of the citys garment factories, which employ 10,000 people, had few measures to protect against the spread of Covid-19.

The biggest loser was cut-price chain Boohoo, which after conducting its own investigation dropped two suppliers and pledged 10m (Dh47.2m/$12.8m) to tackle malpractice by its suppliers.

Its share price fell sharply but is still higher than a year ago.

Until we see a CEO in the courtroom facing the jury, then there will always be excuses, Mr Hyland said.

And of course, some of these companies have very wealthy legal teams.

Mr Hyland has been lobbying for companies to be banned from securing public contracts if their suppliers are found to be tainted by labour abuse.

He highlighted the action taken after two 737 Max planes crashed in 2018 and 2019, leading to a crisis for aircraft maker Boeing.

The whole fleet was grounded, the chief executive was fired and legal action is running into billions of pounds.

That was because of 346 lives, Mr Hyland said. Its estimated that about 22,000 children lose their lives in bad working conditions every year but theres no sanction.

The failure of companies and states to live up to their pledges rankles with Mr Hyland.

His tenure as commissioner included the flight of millions from war and poverty in the Middle East in 2015, which contributed to the exploitation of migrants.

Mr Hyland told the UN Security Council in 2017 that conflict was a major driver of modern slavery around the globe.

Terrorist organisations openly advocated slavery as a tactic of war. ISIS used minority groups for forced labour and sexual exploitation.

Mr Hyland said extremists established slave markets where women and children are sold.

He told the Security Council of meeting a girl, 15, at a reception camp on the Italian island of Lampedusa.

She had fled conscription in her native Eritrea before being held in Libya where she was sexually abused daily for three months.

Then her captors deemed that she had earned enough for a place on an inflatable dinghy across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe.

Halfway across the migrants fired a flare and waited for rescue.

She talked to me about bodies floating in the Mediterranean, Mr Hyland said.

Six months after his address, his message was reinforced with the death of Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi during a failed attempt to reach Europe.

A photograph of his lifeless body lying on a Turkish beach captured headlines around the world.

The Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, declared that humanity has drowned in the Mediterranean Sea.

The French government called for a Europe-wide mobilisation and Irelands prime minister Enda Kenny spoke of a human catastrophe.

Where are these people now? Mr Hyland asked. Where are the leaders?

At the height of the crisis, he travelled to the Greek city of Thessaloniki where he met a Syrian family who had fled war and were living in an aircraft hangar in one of 1,500 tents.

The family was sharing their accommodation with another who had a six-day-old baby.

The father was a civil engineer while his wife was a newly trained doctor, and they had a young child with them.

He was reduced to earning 10 a week from gang masters who took advantage of his stateless situation.

I want to go home, the man told Mr Hyland. I just want to keep my child breathing and my wife breathing, and thats why Im here.

Forced labour brings annual profits of about $150 billion, the International Labour Organisation says, but convictions are shockingly low and efforts to tackle the problem are going backwards in some countries.

Mr Hyland resigned his role in 2018 and now advises governments and the G20 group of nations to try to persuade them to address the issue.

He said there were too many vested interests.

Businesses are saying we're fighting this, but then on the other hand they're profiting from it, Mr Hyland said.

He said he had tried to calculate how much industrialised nations had put into battling the trade and concluded that it was less than 1 per cent of the $150bn.

That compared woefully to the sums ploughed into tackling climate change, the ill-fated war on drugs, and the response to the Black Lives Matter campaign after civil rights protests.

The death of unarmed African American George Floyd at the hands of white Minneapolis police was a moment where every business, no matter what business you were, felt compelled to make some statement and to take some action", Mr Hyland said.

If you're comparing it to Black Lives Matter, if you're comparing it to the environment, we're a long way off of that.

We need to start talking about this for what it is. This is child abuse. These are child soldiers.

"These are children dying down mines. These are men and women who are being exploited.

Mr Hyland gave the case of the Indian domestic worker whose abuse he investigated.

She had on 12 occasions appealed to police and other organisations before her story was taken seriously.

Mr Hyland and his teams investigation led to the successful convictions of three people responsible for her abuse.

We should be convicting more now, he said. We know that is one of the biggest problems that the victims aren't getting a proper response.

"We always talk about listening to victims but nobody is really listening.

Updated: July 28, 2020 12:22 AM

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UK's first anti-slavery commissioner: There will be no change until a CEO is in the dock - The National

Laura Whateley: our slow realisation to the flaws of fast fashion – Big Issue

The scandal of working conditions at a Leicester factory used by clothing giant Boohoo made many people sit up. But we all have a stake in this

Most of the brands that line our high street and internet shopping baskets dont own the factories that make their clothes, author Lauren Bravo points out in her book published in January, How to Break Up with Fast Fashion. As a result they often wash their hands of responsibility for how they are run. We didnt know, comes the response every time some terrible truth is revealed about pay or conditions, she writes.

Fast forward to July and Boohoo has expressed shock at the findings of an undercover report by The Sunday Times alleging a Leicester factory, used to manufacture many of Boohoos garments, pays workers less than half the minimum wage.

In a statement on its corporate site the online retailer, known for its 5 bikinis and ultra-fast turnover of stock (which netted it 4.6bn last year) said: if [the conditions] are as described by the undercover reporter, [they] are totally unacceptable and fall woefully short of any standards acceptable in any workplace.

Meg Lewis, campaigns manager for Labour Behind the Label, which believes no one should live in poverty for the price of a cheap T-shirt, says brands have hidden their supply chains for a long time, distancing themselves from the conditions in which their clothes are made.

Influential Instagrammers denounced Boohoos practices, and its share price plummeted

With evidence of illegal wages and conditions of modern slavery in [Boohoos] supply chain, this should be a big wake-up call for the industry as a whole to commit to transparency.

She believes there needs to be better government regulation of the industry.

But it should also be a wake-up call to us complicit compulsive internet shoppers to hold brands that are squeezing their supply chains to account.

We are increasingly shopping without thinking. In the last 15 years, clothing production has doubled, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, but UK adults wear only 44 per cent of the clothing they own, says WRAP, the Waste and Resources Action Programme.

The way we shop has made it easier to disconnect from how products we buy are made: on our phone, when were bored, via an Instagram link with one eye open. We dont even need to wait for payday. Most fashion brands now offer several buy-now-pay-later options at the checkout. Boohoo has three including Klarna, Europes most valuable fintech start-up last year, worth $5.5bn, which has thrived during lockdown.

The obvious solution is to avoid impulse-buying cheap clothes that were going to chuck away after a couple of wears, behaviour that drives the ultra-fast fashion market. But it is not that simple.

Fast fashion has democratised access to stylish clothes during a time of austerity, and more people are going to be struggling with living costs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. There is also a huge amount of pressure on young women in particular to care about how they look and dress when everything is photographed and documented online.

More expensive doesnt guarantee better treatment of those working in garment factories, anyway.

Luke Smitham, of sustainability consultancy Kumi, says many brands claim they have audited suppliers and factories, but many of the audits are not fit for purpose. Hes visited factory sites that have passed audits but, within minutes of walking through the door, he could tell there are serious issues with the way theyre run.

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Labour Behind the Label does not advocate boycotting companies whose supply chains exploit workers, unless the workers themselves have called for it, warning boycotts lead to workers losing their jobs.

But we should expect transparency and ask difficult questions, publicly. Lewis warns that if something is unrealistically cheap, there is a high possibility of exploitation within the supply chain.

Look at the impact of the scandal on Boohoo so far. Influential Instagrammers denounced its practices, and its share price plummeted. It now has a financial incentive to reconsider its model, as long as we keep up the pressure.

We should also engage more with how we might be inadvertently supporting exploitative business practices with our savings.

Do you know where your pension or Isa is invested? Many of us will own tiny slices of fast fashion companies. As Laura Suter of investment company AJ Bell says, if you are a shareholder in a company you believe is making profit through unethical behaviour you can lobby for change. Investors only need to own one share to be able to attend an AGM and while there they can ask questions of company management and start debate in the room.

Be distrustful of any brand that declares its ethics based on a third-party audit of its suppliers, says Smitham, and support innovative brands.

Rapanui, for example, which sells T-shirts from 12, believes lots of companies cut costs by cutting corners. Instead it keeps costs low with a circular model. All Rapanuis clothes are made to be sent back via freepost if you no longer wear them (with a 5 credit for doing so) and it makes new products from the materials it recovers. This saves money that it invests in things that other companies may consider uneconomical, including more rewarding jobs for those who make its clothes.

The high street is struggling to survive the impact of lockdown and needs our support, but we all have a responsibility to rein in the urge for a next-day delivery dopamine hit, and question where our clothes were made.

Laura Whateley is a journalist and author of Money: A Users Guide

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Laura Whateley: our slow realisation to the flaws of fast fashion - Big Issue

Slavery, Racism and the Church – Catholic Citizens of Illinois

By Paul de Lacvivier, The Remnant, July 22, 2020

I am always surprised to note how often mediocrity is praised as though it were absolute truth. Today it is racism, tomorrow it is democracy, the next day it is eco-theology. It never ends.

On the racism front, the time has come to make clear some historical facts and Catholic common sense about race and slavery. The truth may be surprising to some.

In all of human history, only the Catholic Church teaches unequivocally that there are no longer Greeks or Romans, Jews or Gentiles, men or women in the economy of salvation. It doesnt depend on what you look like or what is stamped on your passportevery human being, without exception, is called to eternal life and can achieve it through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

In all of human history, only the Catholic Church teaches unequivocally that there are no longer Greeks or Romans, Jews or Gentiles, men or women in the economy of salvation. It doesnt depend on what you look like or what is stamped on your passportevery human being, without exception, is called to eternal life and can achieve it through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

The talk about Christs skin color is blasphemous and also theologically nonsensical. God makes no distinction among anyone on the basis of any criterion other than holiness in His Son, the Head of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. This is in the Creed that Catholics recite at every Mass. It is recited by Catholics of every conceivable skin tone in every corner of the world. Christ died for all of us, period. My brothers and sisters in the faith and I are one in the Person of Our Lord.

Another fact we must remember is that, apart from Christian Europe, nearly all civilizations have instituted slavery as a legitimate system of labor provision and social control. There are still slaves in Muslim countries, following a very long tradition of slaving and slave-holding in Islam. The Egyptians enslaved the Hebrews. The Greeks and Romans enslaved virtually everyone they conquered in their endless wars. Native Americans enslaved one another. Sexual slavery is a scourge on every inhabited continent. Historians in China and Japan dont often mention it, but slavery was legally recognized in those places, too. The untouchables of India have been civilizationally enslaved since time immemorial.

The pagans have been, and continue to be, profligate slavers and enslavers. If we are going to judge civilizations for slavery, let us apply the judgment evenly and fairly to all.

Not only did Christendom never legally institute slavery, it also is the only religion to have eradicated it. It took the Church nearly ten centuries, through a cautious apostolate, to have the practice outlawed, but eventually, thank God, the breakthrough was achieved. It is only the West that considers slavery morally repugnant, and this is due entirely to Christianity.

It is only the West that considers slavery morally repugnant, and this is due entirely to Christianity.

What took the Church so long, you might ask? Pagan practices are deeply rooted, and eliminating evil from society is a never-ending task. Also, the Church is not a social justice organization, but a mission to save souls. By civilizing men in the Faith, the Church attained to the ancillary benefit of freeing them from Hell and from the hell they create on Earth by offending against one anothers imago Dei. Only Christianity did this. No other religion was able to render the horrors of slavery unthinkable to an entire civilization. No other religion upended a culture to put the human person, made in Gods image and likeness, at the top of the civilizational hierarchy.

The fight continues today, against abortion and other sins against Gods loving creation, but the Church does not yield to temporary setbacks. Grace is working on fallen humanity through the Person of Jesus Christ, and this will go on until the end of time.

Slavery in the New World was less an export from Christendom than a lapse into the sins of old pagan Europe and a tragic adoption of the ways of the Indians themselves. The Church, weakened by the Protestant heresy at home, was forced to do battle in Europe as well as in European holdings in the Americas and in Africa. People in those places were already selling human beings. Corrupted Christians bought those human beings, a terrible testimony to the fallenness of mankind. The Church strove mightily against sin wherever it arose, whether in the Americas and Africa or in the Lutheran states in Europe.

There is also the fact, which almost no one today speaks of, that the Church has always been more interested in souls than in bodies. The Church wants to save the souls of everyone, regardless of whether he or she is or was master or slave. Unable to eradicate slavery right away, the Church concentrated on persuading masters to allow the Sacraments to be administered to their slaves, and to treat the slaves as human beings, providing them with an education for instance. And of slaves the Church asked that they offer up their sufferings in communion with Jesus Christ, Who alone has the power to overcome the evils of the world, the evil that men do to one another and in their own heart of hearts. The slave can imitate the poor, broken Christ, due to the slaves terrible condition on earth. The fact is that ours is a broken humanity, and we are all born to suffer and die.

The Church went into the world as it found it, and aimed at the core of man, his immortal soul, hoping to win for him eternal life despite the horrors of the fallen state in which we all find ourselves.slavery 1

Slavery is not intrinsically bad, then? The hard truth is that it is not. There is no perfect condition on earth. Of course all prefer to be free. Consider the opposite problem, which is the same: those who run wild, whose freedom enslaves them like bondage of labor never could. Look at the world todaythe devils who cry freedom and who destroy their souls in their endless sinning. Me, I would infinitely rather be a slave, crushed and scratching at the dry ground in forced servitude, and yet holy and offering my life up to God, than a libertine and a criminal, a freedom-worshiping idolater with hatred in my heart and pride before my Creator. What we have today is much worse than slavery. What we have is willingness to sin, enthusiasm for it. This is worse than slavery ever was, because the sinner will die eternally, while the slave may die and be saved. Lets also remember that there are degrees of slavery, and that all of us, in one way or another, are enslaved.

But only faith in Christ allows people to really assume true freedom of the soul. This is shown most by the witness of the martyrs, who gave up everything preferring holiness and God. Many martyrs have been slaves. There has never been a martyred libertine.

Here is the very harsh reality: we are all slaves!

Masters of old were slaves as well. Of their pride, of their superstitions, of their ambitions and desires, of their domination over others. There is no one so enslaved as a slavedriver. No one is so thoroughly roped to his sin.

Slavery is a kind of social order. It is fit for pagans, who know nothing better. Only Christians have been exempted from slavery as a public institution. Why? Because only faith makes people free.

But even this doesnt mean that we have no bounds. On the contrary. Christians demand good boundaries, such as monks and nuns demanding the boundaries of the religious life, or couples demanding heartful boundaries of the marriage, or children who crave the boundaries provided by the family and society. Give anyone unlimited freedom, and he or she will be miserable. It is the boundary that makes us happy.

But we are throwing off all this wisdom even as we speak. Our age is apostate, and quickly going to pagan seed. Slavery is coming back into the world because we would have pagan unfreedom rather than Christian freedom in charity and Truth. It is a kind of natural law.

Look at the economy, for example. Wage slavery is not a euphemism, it is a real thing. So is the corruption and petty patronism that are now dominating commercial interactions among people. We are treating each other as objects again, and not as persons created by the Living God.

As for me, as a Catholic, I am proud to say that I am a slave. I am the slave of Jesus Christ, true God and true man. It is precisely because I am slave of Jesus Christ that I am free. That is true freedom, the only freedom worth anything in the end.

Secular freedom is not possible. The fall has undone us. We are weak and we tend toward sin. Our center of gravity is off, and we easily fall again, just as our first parents did. Only the charity of the Faith can restore the natural hierarchies that help us live full and holy lives without the rough aspects that those hierarchies assume in the pagan world.slavery 2

Among the pagans there is justice, to be sure, but no charity or mercy. This is what we are seeing again today. Our modern age denies charity and has therefore abandoned true justice. The result is disorder and chaos. Just turn on your television if you dont believe me. Or, for many, just open your curtains and look outside.

Such disorder cannot last long. A new order is coming. If this order is not nourished by Faith then it will be harsh, as in pagan countries. And if the order is against nature, it will be tyrannical, illegitimate, and also not last long. The cycle of violence and domination will continue, and worsen. There will be some kind of order. But if it is solely of human devising, then it will be an order that exploits and destroyslike slavery.

Lets pray to become everyday more and more the slave of our Lord, to do what He wills for salvation. And lets not forget St. Pauls order, to respect authorities even if they persecute us. But let us also remember that respect towards authorities doesnt mean surrendering to them in mind or spirit. We must always speak the truth, we must never just accept the wrong that we see. If doing this leads to our martyrdom, then let us give thanks to Almighty God and ask him for the Grace to endure what He sends our way, and to testify to the Truth that we might meet Him in the Heaven He created for us.

This article first appeared HERE.

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Slavery, Racism and the Church - Catholic Citizens of Illinois

After Years of Resisting, Snapchat Finally Released its Diversity Report and The Numbers are Telling – Grit Daily

Snap inc., the social media company behind Snapchat, has been facing pressures to release a diversity report and offer transparency of the companys makeup for years now. The companys CEO, Evan Spiegel, informed employees in a meeting this past June that releasing the companys diversity report could perpetuate the belief that Silicon Valley companies arent diverse.

According to The Verge, these comments by Spiegel were prompted by a Mashable report that outlined the claims that Snap is not at all inclusive, and that the popular social media company in fact breeds a racist and sexist environment. The report contained statements from employees that claimed a manager had told them that a story was too black-heavy and requested that some snaps containing Black faces be replaced with people of other races.

Though Spiegel was concerned of his workplaces stats perpetuating stereotypes, the company has finally succumbed to such pressures and decided to release its first diversity report and to no surprise, the numbers are staggering.

The report reveals that out of the 3,195-person company, only 4.1% are identified as Black and African American and only 6.8% are identified as Hispanic/Latinx. The report also reveals that a mere 3.2% of the companys leadership roles are filled by PoCs. Further statistics suggest that white males dominate the companys makeup; as women only account for 32.9% of the workforce.

With the exposure of these stats, Snap has also announced that its setting some goals to raise these numbers; by 2023, Snap is committing to doubling the number of women in tech positions and doubling the number of underrepresented races and ethnic minorities by 2025. Snap aims to reach these goals by executing initiatives, including expanding its mentorship programs and preventing bias through machine learning tools.

Accompanying the diversity report is Snaps 50-page CitizenSnap report, which details the companys work in both social and environmental issues; including their move to provide a robust living wage of $70,000 (to be adjusted based on location) for its employees who work within their Santa Monica headquarters.

But the numbers only solidify what many already assumed; just last month, Snapchat released a filter for Juneteenth, and while Snapchat creators may have thought they were celebrating the US emancipation of slavery, it was doing something quite different. The filter, an augmented reality lens, displayed chains breaking once the user offered up a smilea pretty distasteful way to commemorate the end of slavery. Snap found themselves apologizing, yet again, for another offensive filter.

Hopefully this long-awaited transparency will be Snaps effort to be held accountable by the public and to take greater action in becoming a more inclusive and diverse environment.

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After Years of Resisting, Snapchat Finally Released its Diversity Report and The Numbers are Telling - Grit Daily

Removing monuments is the easy part. We must make America a real democracy – The Guardian

One hundred and fifty-five years after Confederate troops surrendered at Appomattox and Bennett Place, their battle flag has finally come down in Mississippi and their statues are retreating from courthouse squares and university quads. As the children of generations of Black southerners who fought against the lies of the Lost Cause, we celebrate this most recent surrender and look forward to walking down streets that are not shadowed by monuments to men who claimed to own our ancestors. But we cannot understand why these monuments lasted so long without challenging the inequities they were erected to justify. In fact, many who support flags and statues coming down today also advocate voter suppression, attack healthcare and re-segregate our schools. We must attend to both the systems of injustice and the monuments that have justified them if we are to realize liberty and justice for all.

If you examine the bases of statues that are being hauled away, most bear a date between the 1890s and 1920s. These monuments did not rise in defiance of the federal troops who were sent by Congress and Ulysses S Grant to enforce Reconstruction and guarantee political power to the new Black citizens of the south in the 1860s and 1870s. If a statue of Robert E Lee or Jefferson Davis had been proposed during Reconstruction, the very suggestion would have sparked a riot. But after the compromise of 1876, when Rutherford B Hayes agreed to remove federal troops from the south, newly established Black and white political alliances were subjected to the violence of white terrorist organizations and the propaganda of white supremacy campaigns.

As Martin Luther King Jr taught on the steps of the Alabama state house in 1965: To meet this threat, the southern aristocracy began immediately to engineer this development of a segregated society. Black people were driven from public life and blamed for the troubles of a society that had invested its resources in treasonous rebellion against the United States. Jim Crow laws went on the books to offer a legal structure for the caste system that had built plantation wealth with enslaved labor. If it may be said of the slavery era that the white man took the world and gave the Negro Jesus, then it may be said of the Reconstruction era that the southern aristocracy took the world and gave the poor white man Jim Crow, King said. And when his wrinkled stomach cried out for the food that his empty pockets could not provide, he ate Jim Crow, a psychological bird that told him that no matter how bad off he was, at least he was a white man.

George White, the last Black congressman from the south during Reconstruction, finished his term representing North Carolinas second congressional district in 1902. Five years later, the United Daughters of the Confederacy petitioned the University of North Carolina to erect a memorial to alumni who had fought for the Confederacy. With Jim Crow established, their cause was no longer lost. In the Jim Crow south, these veterans and their descendants celebrated the sacrifices their fathers and grandfathers had made to defend white supremacy. Before a cheering crowd of more than 1,000 people who gathered to dedicate their new Confederate Monument, Julian Carr recalled how 100 yards from where we stand, less than 90 days perhaps after my return from Appomattox, I horse-whipped a Negro wench until her skirts hung in shreds, because upon the streets of this quiet village she had publicly insulted and maligned a southern lady, and then rushed for protection to these University buildings where was stationed a garrison of 100 federal soldiers. Like Confederate monuments in almost every southern community, this one was erected to celebrate that no federal authority was willing to challenge white supremacy.

After the Brown v Board of Education decision rendered Jim Crow unconstitutional in 1954, Black and white people in the civil rights movement worked tirelessly to demand federal enforcement of Reconstruction-era promises: Black citizenship, equal protection under the law and the right to vote. As in the moral struggle of the civil war, our parents and their colleagues risked their lives in non-violent struggle to make the promise of America real for all of her citizens. As Coretta Scott King said: Struggle is a never-ending process. Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every generation.

While the gains of the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act and the Fair Housing Act transformed the horizon of possibility for millions of Americans, the Second Reconstructions work of establishing a genuine multiethnic democracy was not completed before calls for law and order, traditional values and a tax revolt rallied a Confederate resistance once again. By uniting white voters in the suburbs, the sun belt, and the south, the Southern Strategy promised white people political power in an increasingly diverse America for the next 50 years.

While the divisive politics of Trumpism may be the last gasp of the Southern Strategy, the question of whether America can do the work of becoming a genuine democracy still remains. Removing monuments to the lie of white supremacy is an important step, but a shared future depends on redistributing power and resources so that every American, no matter their race, income, geography or immigration status, has access to healthcare, public education, affordable housing, a living wage, clean water and a livable planet.

In this moment when millions of Americans are suffering from a triple crisis of poverty, Covid-19 and police brutality, we need more than a conversation about monuments. We need concrete action to address the incredible disparities in death rates among Black, brown and poor people. This pivotal moment for our nation and our world is beckoning us to dismantle injustice and rebuild with love as the foundation. We can build a more just, humane, equitable and peaceful world. But, as King so prophetically admonished us: The hour is late. And the clock of destiny is ticking out. We must act now before it is too late. We must act now, America.

Bishop William J Barber, II is president of Repairers of the Breach and co-chair of the Poor Peoples Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival. He is author of We Are Called to Be a Movement

Dr Bernice A King, the youngest child of Dr Martin Luther King, Jr and Coretta Scott King, is a global thought leader, orator, peace advocate and CEO of the King Center, which was founded by her mother

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Removing monuments is the easy part. We must make America a real democracy - The Guardian

What Brands and Investors Need to Take Away from Fashion’s Enduring Labor, Wage Scandals – The Fashion Law

Boohoo has found itself at the center of a headline-making scandal in connection with allegations that laborers in its supply chain are working in cramped high-density conditions, dominated by extreme temperatures and poor air quality, while being paid well below the national living wage. The allegations, as first revealed by way of an undercover investigation and subsequent report by the Sunday Times, have prompted pushback from British regulators, consumers, and investors, alike, with at least some, including one of its largest shareholders, Standard Life Aberdeen, which has soldtwo thirds of its holdings in the company opting to distance themselves from the burgeoning fast fashion group.

The attention that the Manchester-headquartered company which owns its marquee Boohoo brand, PrettyLittleThing, and Nasty Gal, among other fast fashion players has received as a result of the media report of striking wage and labor violations highlights a larger momentum by corporations and investors that are assessing their supply chains and portfolios for compliance with human rights standards and related risks, according toAkin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLPattorneys Isabel Foster, Chiara Klaui, Jasper Helder, Daniel Lund and Cassandra Padget.

This growing focus, they say, should serve as a reminder to companies and investors about the importance of conducting human rights and modern slavery risk assessments, and proactively dealing with any risks in advance and in the aftermath of investment decisions. To be exact, these efforts should be part of a corporate due diligence and risk mitigation strategy that encompasses wider environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors.

Attention to non-financial ESG elements is proving increasingly compelling as the number of retail and institutional investors that apply [them] to at least a quarter of their portfolios continues to grow, according to Deloitte, with the number of companies adopting responsible investment strategies jumping from 48 percent in 2017 to 75 percent in 2019. However, firms that invest in accordance with ESG integration efforts and thus, evaluate ESG-related risks alongside more traditional measures, are not the only ones that should be cognizant of ESG-related risks.

Companies and investors, alike, should be considering these factors, especially the S in ESG which consists of equality, diversity and inclusion, disciplinary issues, and health and safety concerns in light of enduring wage and labor issues that could give rise to legal obligations that go beyond the immediate companies, themselves, and in some cases, extend to their investors.

Foster, Klaui, Helder, Lund and Padget emphasize the importance of ESG consideration for companies and investors, asserting that the acquisition of assets derived (in whole or in part) from criminal conduct creates risks for acquirers and investors alike under the U.K.s Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, as amended (POCA), noting that even where the criminality threshold under POCA is not met, suspicions of problems or potentially criminal conduct should trigger further internal due diligence and risk assessments.

Looking beyond POCA, which provides law enforcement with the authority to confiscate the revenues generated by criminal activity, including in connection with gross human rights abuses or violations, they state that the U.K. governments and the European Unions commitment to the deterrence of and accountability for human rights abuses is on the rise. This is demonstrated, in part, by the U.K. governments July 2020 implementation of its new Global Human Rights sanctions regime, which is aimed at targeting individuals, as well as corporate entities.

As the Foreign & Commonwealth Office and Hon. Dominic Raab MP asserted earlier this month that the ground-breaking global regime means the UK has new powers to stop those involved in serious human rights abuses and violations from entering the country, channelling money through UK banks, or profiting from our economy.

Just before that, in April 2020, on the heels of the European Commissionsstudy on due diligence requirements through the supply chain, European Union Commissioner for Justice Didier Reynders announced that the Commission will introduce legislation in 2021 to make human rights due diligence mandatory for EU companies. Commissioner Reynders indicated that the anticipated scope of the impending new legislation will encompass the entire supply chain and all corporate-related risks, including human rights, social and environmental ones. At this stage, it is not clear how the potential scope of corporate liability for failure to carry out appropriate due diligence, according to Allens attorneys Rachel Nicolson, Dora Banyasz, Emily Turnbull, and Hamish McAvaney, but it does appear that the EU is moving towards to a general corporate duty to protect human rights.

Significantly, the EU legislation is expected to include provisions forcorporate liability, and is not only expected to apply to companies that are headquartered in the EU but will also likely extend to foreign companies conducting business within the EU.

These developments, among others, indicate that both the U.K. and EU are becoming increasingly serious about implementing ESG legislation that focuses on the role of corporate actors and holds them accountable, perFoster, Klaui, Helder, Lund and Padget, who assert that it is critical from a commercial, legal and reputational standpoint for companies to conduct thorough and regular diligence and monitoring on their supply chains to assess risk, identify possible non-compliance and determine where improvements can be made. This applies not only to goods produced in a corporations own manufacturing sites but also to their counterparties, subcontractors, suppliers and the suppliers of their suppliers, all the way down the supply chain.

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What Brands and Investors Need to Take Away from Fashion's Enduring Labor, Wage Scandals - The Fashion Law

How American racism changed the map of Africa – TheGrio

(Photo: Adobe Stock)

American anti-Blackness is so pervasive that its impacts have devastated communities at home and abroad. The U.S. establishment of the West African nation of Liberia is a case in point.

From the late 18th to early 19th centuries, the U.S. government was obsessed with what it called The Negro Problem. Namely, how to manage the presence of the free population of African Americans, whom it had no desire to integrate into society as equal citizens.

During this period, American leaders wrestled with the contradictions between the ideals of freedom, justice and equality which drove the American Revolution and the capitalist and white supremacist ideals that justified slavery and deemed Black people inferior, undesirable and dangerous.

Read More: Africa is slowly peeling apart as new ocean forms, scientists say

Thomas Jefferson offered a poetic summation of the tensions between slavery and freedom for African Americans when he remarked:

But as it is, we have the wolf by theear, and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and self-preservation in the other.

Jefferson was not alone. His words evoked the fears of many white Americans slaveholders and non-slaveholders alike. To their minds, free Black people were a threat to the balance of society as seekers of revenge for mistreatment; as examples of the agency to those enslaved; as competitors for low wage labor with white counterparts; and for the prospect of racial mixing.

The surge of Black resistance to slavery nationally and internationally heightened these fears. The Haitian revolution (1790-1804) overthrowing France sent shockwaves throughout U.S. slaveholding society for its potential to inspire widespread rebellion among the enslaved.

Read More: Caribbean nations selling citizenship to Americans due to tourism decline

This potential became reality as a series of revolts took place in the following decades, including Gabriel Prossers rebellion in Virginia (1800); the German Coast Uprising in Louisiana (1811); Denmark Veseys revolt in South Carolina (1822); and Nat Turners insurrection in Virginia (1831).

These turbulent times galvanized support for an idea that Thomas Jefferson expressed in his Notes on the State of Virginia, and again proposed to him by Virginia Governor James Monroe in 1800 following Prossers rebellion. Believing that free Black people and whites could never peacefully co-exist in America, the proposal called for the deportation and resettlement of African Americans to a colony in West Africa.

In 1816, a group of prominent white Americans convened to establish the American Colonization Society (ACS) which hoped to rid the United States of both slavery and black people. The ACS planned to achieve this by identifying and securing territory in West Africa for the purpose of resettling free African Americans, and those who would become free.

The society was also responsible for garnering political support for the undertaking, and the funding to transport settlers to the new colony, along with the necessary provisions.

The Societys founders, Virginia politician Charles F. Mercer and Reverend Robert Finley director of Princetons Theological Seminary had no problem obtaining political support for the endeavor. From the beginning, ACS membership was comprised of leading figures in American society.

These would include Presidents Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, and Lincoln; Secretaries of State Henry Clay and Daniel Webster; Supreme Court Justice Bushrod Washington; and lawyer and poet Francis Scott Key.

Initial financial support for the ACS was provided by President James Monroe, who facilitated a congressional allocation of $100,000 to the Society in 1819. With cash in hand, the Society still struggled to obtain land in West Africa where the indigenous people in what was then known as the Pepper Coast resisted the American resettlement scheme.

In 1821, the U.S. Navy stepped in to coerce local leaders in West Africa to sell a strip of land to the Society. That same year, several dozen free-born Black settlers were brought to the territory, marking the beginning of a violent and contentious relationship between themselves and the indigenous people of the region. It would be established as the independent Republic of Liberia on July 26, 1847.

While some African Americans embraced the idea of being sent to Africa, under the belief that Black people would never receive just and equitable treatment in the United States the majority rejected the idea claiming the U.S. as the only home they knew. Famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass gave voice to these sentiments when he stated:

Read More: Frederick Douglass statue torn down in New York

Shame upon the guilty wretches that dare propose, and all that countenance such a proposition. We live here have lived here have a right to live here, and mean to live here.

Colonization was ultimately a failed experiment losing economic and political support domestically and resettling little more than 13,000 African-Americans in Liberia.

It laid bare the racist ideologies that would stifle the growth of American democracy and exported them to West Africa where the legacy of American racism led to a history of conflict between the settled and the indigenous populations and a history rooted in repression, inequality, and civil war.

Travis L. Adkinsis a Lecturer of African and Security Studies at the Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, a media contributor on issues of social justice and African Affairs, and the host and creator of theOn Africapodcast. You can find him at@TravisLAdkins on Twitter.

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How American racism changed the map of Africa - TheGrio

Donald Trump Is Writing A Terrifying New Chapter In The History Of Political Repression – HuffPost

In his quest for reelection, President Donald Trump has gone hunting for demons. Federal law enforcement officers entered cities including Portland, Oregon; Chicago; Kansas City, Missouri; and Albuquerque at Trumps direction, clearly meant to gin up clashes and disorder between federal officers and the groups disfavored by his core supporters in pursuit of viral online content.

Trump officials deployed Border Patrol officers to suppress a small group of anarchists in Portland inflicting a federal courthouse with graffiti and minor property damage. When officers started snatching people off the streets in unmarked minivans, it provoked a larger protest reaction and a further increase in federal deployment. Some of those officers are now scheduled to leave Portland at the urging of state and local elected officials who called them an occupying force. The Department of Justice plans to surge federal officers into Black and Latino neighborhoods in Chicago, Kansas City, Albuquerque, Milwaukee, Detroit and Cleveland to provoke scenes of racial conflict. Trump suggested he could send up to 75,000 federal officers into American cities this summer.

These conflicts are the reason Trumps most fervent supporters elected him. These voters, most of them white, wanted him to erase the legacy of the first Black president and wage war against the unfavored groups haunting their minds. With the economy cratering, unemployment skyrocketing and an uncontrolled pandemic sweeping the nation, Trumps last hope for reelection is fomenting disorder and division this time, using the power of the presidency.

White Americans have long defined themselves as threatened by racial, ethnic and political minority groups that they believe often based on conspiracy theories will change their way of life. Americans who think their freedom and right to hold on to power are at risk seek to strike down those they think are coming to take it.

American history is normally seen as a history of freedom rather than suppression, political scientist Michael Rogin wrote in his 1987 book, Ronald Reagan, The Movie, but that American racial history suggests that the suppression of people of color outside the normal political system has supported the freedom of the people within it.

This same logic animates Trumps deployment of federal forces to create scenes of disorder involving racial and political groups disfavored by his supporters the most fervent of whom are the white evangelical Protestants whose own political power and freedoms are tied to the suppression of disfavored groups.

Trump proclaimed as much during his Fourth of July speech in front of the Mount Rushmore monument in South Dakota. There he declared a war on a left-wing cultural revolution, emanating from cities that are run by liberal Democrats, that is, designed to overthrow the American Revolution.

Trumps War is waged in defense without apology, he said, of the traditional American mythological history of a people who pursued our Manifest Destiny across the ocean to create the most just and exceptional nation ever to exist on Earth.

This country will be everything that our citizens have hoped for, for so many years, Trump declared, and that our enemies fear.

Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated PressA demonstrator is pepper-sprayed Wednesday before being arrested at a Black Lives Matter protest at the federal courthouse in Portland, Oregon.

Red Scares And Slave Uprisings

In his Mount Rushmore speech, Trump sings the sweet tune of the traditional American myths of a divinely inspired people who spread onto and beyond a frontier that made them free. Missing in Trumps tale are the many other peoples who were crushed, enslaved, overrun and ethnically cleansed to make that freedom possible.

The Manifest Destiny mythology originated from Jacksonian political writer John OSullivan, who in an 1845 article advocating for annexing Texas from Mexico, declaring it our manifest destiny to overspread the continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly multiplying millions. OSullivans our meant, almost exclusively, Americans of Anglo-Saxon descent.

President Thomas Jefferson invoked such myths in his promise that he would help provide the Anglo-Saxon people room enough to reach a final consolidation when the land would be populated with white Northern European settlers from sea to shining sea.

Historian Frederick Jackson Turner would codify a more progressive vision of Manifest Destiny in his 1893 paper The Significance of the Frontier in American History. The frontiers free land provided a gate of escape from the bondage of the past and a safety valve for domestic pressures that gave birth to a unique American identity and spirit. Turners progressive twist was that this identity was open and available to all peoples of the world, not just Anglo-Saxons.

But the land they wanted to spread into wasnt free. It was occupied by indigenous tribes. American independence, as the Founding Father imagined it, was cramped from the beginning by the mere existence of Indians. To achieve white freedom, Indians had to be removed. And in order to justify it, Americans dehumanized them.

Indians were the first people to stand in American history as emblems of disorder, civilized breakdown, and alien control, Rogin wrote in 1987. Differences between reds and whites made cultural adaptation seem at once dangerous and impossible. The violent conquest of Indians legitimized violence against other alien groups, making coexistence appear to be unnecessary.

Freedom and demonization and repression went hand in hand. And so it was with racialized slavery. The enslavement and subjugation of Blacks gave whites their freedom, which meant in turn that enslaved and freed Blacks posed an internal threat to subvert the political culture by breaking their chains, gaining political power and seeking vengeance. To prevent such a result, those in power suppressed dissent, from whites as well as Blacks, and restricted rights.

Americans often explained their racialized fears of indigenous people and Black Americans through paranoid conspiracies claiming these groups were not only outside of the American national family but also directed by external threats to the nation. Before the Civil War, they claimed indigenous people were directed by the British and that Haiti influenced slave revolts in the U.S. And they used those external conspiracies to justify internal repression.

Illustration: Damon Dahlen/HuffPost; Photos: Getty ImagesAn illustration depicts the 1877 Great Railroad Strike, when soldiers fire on the crowd during a riot at the Halsted Street viaduct in Chicago.

[T]hey have seduced the greater part of the tribes, within our neighborhood, to take up the hatchet against us, Jefferson wrote in 1813 about the hidden British hand behind the Creek War in the Ohio Valley during the War of 1812.

The same was true of the racial demonization and violence directed at other groups, including Mexicans, preceding, during and after the Mexican-American War, and Chinese, Catholic and Jewish immigrants into the early 20th century. These groups were often seen as being directed to undermine the American way of life at the behest of external conspiracies emanating from the Vatican, the Illuminati or the Elders of Zion.

Political repression did not solely target racial or religious minorities. Left-wing working-class uprisings were similarly repressed and demonized as external threats. Movements for economic equality were perceived as threats to the private property rights that underpinned the foundation of American society. And they were perceived as external ideologies smuggled in from French Communism or, later, the Soviet Union.

But originally, working-class movements were seen through the same lens as the lives of Native Americans, whose practice of collective landholding was deemed dangerously subversive to the white settlers way of life.

Working-class revolts were then seen as an extension of the threat of Indian subversion. They were also viewed as providing a potential to unite Black and white working-class interests. In the political chaos and violence of the late 19th century, the demonization of these groups united into one tale of the nations history of political repression.

In 1877, President Rutherford B. Hayes pulled Union troops out of the former Confederate South and sent them West to begin the final fight to wipe out the Plains Indian tribes. The removal of American forces from the South allowed ex-Confederates to violently overthrow the post-Civil War Reconstruction state governments and impose a new system of oppression on freed Blacks. But those troops sent to the West were soon dispatched back east to suppress the Great Railroad Strike of 1877.

When those troops entered Chicago to crush striking workers, the Chicago Tribune referred to it as a Red War, inciting fears of communism.

Trumps War

Freedom continued to be linked to repression through the anti-communist Red Scares of the 20th century. When imperial expansion on the North American continent ended with the closing of the frontier, that frontier soon extended into the Pacific and around the world. America would wage war against external threats to promote the freedoms at home, including consumer freedom now fueled by oil.

Paranoia about external contamination and infiltration colored all of Americas conflicts through the Cold War, the Middle East oil crises and then the war on terrorism. The country would create a vast national security state, both internally and externally focused, to root out this contamination. Anyone could be a threat, whether an opera singer, a Hollywood writer or a civil rights activist. Internal repression followed external demonization.

But with Trump, the direction of American energies externally has come to an end, as historian Greg Grandin notes in his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall. Overseas wars promise no fix or diversion for the countrys internal problems. They are simply endless. The frontier, meanwhile, should be walled at the border.

[T]oday the frontier is closed, the safety valve is shut, Grandin writes in his 2019 book. Whatever metaphor one wants to use, the country has lived past the end of its myth.

And so the country turns inward, bringing its external wars home. Just as the troops fighting the Plains Indians switched to fight striking workers and the national security state targeting Nazi fascists was turned against real and imaginary Communists at home, Trump directs federal officers fighting Americas demons at home and abroad to battle anti-racism protesters on city streets.

Border Patrol officers are redirected from countering what Trump called Mexicos most unwanted people, who are, in many cases, criminals, drug dealers, rapists, to now battle anarchists and protesters in Portland. Riot control officers are redeployed from prisons, the main institution used by America to repress Black people, to the streets of Washington, D.C., during Black Lives Matter protests. And federal agents from the Department of Justice will now be sent to fight crime in Black and Latino neighborhoods.

OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty ImagesDemonstrators participate July 25 in a rally against "Trump's Police State" in Washington, D.C.

Trumps War is suffused with war on terrorism rhetoric. The deployment of officers into cities is a surge. The New York Post labels demonstrators damaging property as insurgents. The Pentagon calls protesters and journalists adversaries. The Department of Homeland Security circulates Baseball cards identifying protesters, as the military did for former ministers and generals in Saddam Husseins government in Iraq and al-Qaeda terrorist leaders.

Trump himself finds domestic property damage to be worse than war. This is worse than Afghanistan, by far, Trump said about the protests in Portland. This is worse than anything anyones ever seen.

Where Trumps War diverges from much of Americas history of repression is where he situates its source. The subversive behavior he aims to repress does not emanate from indigenous people in the forest; it doesnt originate from the USSR; it isnt directed by the pope; there is no anti-American axis of evil. The demons animating Trumps imagination are directed by the Democratic Party.

All run by the same liberal Democrats, Trump said about the cities hes targeting that have seen protests. And, you know what? If Biden got in, that would be true for the country. The whole country would go to hell.

Trump has portrayed former Vice President Joe Biden, his likely Democratic opponent in the November election, as a Trojan horse for progressive Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

Joe Biden would be nothing more than an autopen, a Trojan horse for a radical agenda so radical, so all-encompassing that it would transform this country into something utterly unrecognizable, Vice President Mike Pence said in a July 17 speech in Racine, Wisconsin.

Biden is cast as a white exterior masking the subversive Latinos, Blacks, Muslims and socialist Jews inside.

This is also a tale about the Democratic Party. Biden is an elderly white Catholic of Irish descent who was raised in a blue-collar community. He represents the old Democratic Party, once the home for the interests of the white working class. But the party has shifted and now represents a broad multiracial and multi-religious coalition. The last Democratic presidential candidate to win the white vote was Lyndon Johnson in 1964.

The party is today the political home for large majorities of Blacks, Latinos, Asians, Jews, women (in particular, single women) and the working class. These groups are among those that have been demonized throughout American history as subversive to the American way of life.

And so Trump places the Democratic Party outside of America. It is now a threat to freedom, to the American way of life. It wouldnt be the first time in American history when the frontier collapsed in on itself and directed domestic political opponents against each other.

We now know a bloody civil war resulted from that rift. And who knows what all this may lead to.

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Donald Trump Is Writing A Terrifying New Chapter In The History Of Political Repression - HuffPost

Letter: Democrats are still the party of slavery – Hickory Daily Record

Did you ever wonder why the Democrats (and their armed militias Antifa and BLM) want to erase history? It's because they own the party of slavery, Jim Crowe, segregation, KKK, lynching, poll taxes and literacy tests for voting. Read actual history, not their revisionist version. They remain today the party of oppressing minorities but cleverly disguise it.

Just look at the decay of every big city in America. Inner city neighborhood public schools populated mostly by African Americans are total disasters. Reading and math competency among high schoolers are at fourth grade levels. Yet teachers unions, totally behind the Democrat party, vehemently oppose letting these kids have a choice of schools and a shot at a decent education. (Incidentally, Blacks overwhelmingly support school choice ... their kids do matter.) Crime, especially shootings, is out of control. Gangs and fascist Marxists like Antifa and BLM, are ardent supporters of the Democrat party. They loot, destroy, assault and murder. Democrat mayors call their riotous takeovers the summer of love and do nothing to protect their own law-abiding citizens, their homes or businesses. What's the common denominator among these cities? Democrat rule for decades. How's that working out for the people the Democrats claim to champion?

Layer on Democrats' support of open borders. If elected, Biden pledged to enact amnesty for 25,000,000 illegals (aka Democrat voters,) not to mention giving them "free" health care, college tuition, etc. No one can legitimately argue that this would not exacerbate the depression of wages for American citizens and negatively impact low wage unskilled American workers. Democrat strategy: corporations keep their cheap labor, and the American underclass becomes even more dependent on the welfare state rather than being helped to emerge from poverty.

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Letter: Democrats are still the party of slavery - Hickory Daily Record

Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed – Apalachicola Times

This story is part of The Confederate Reckoning, a collaborative project of USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South to examine the legacy of the Confederacy and its influence on systemic racism today.

The white men stand, immortalized in metal and stone, in parks, public squares and the halls of government.

Statues of prominent figures in the Confederacy are a common sight in the South. But the visibility of their monuments often belie the way their lives and legacies are obscured by myth.

Like other symbols of the Confederacy, such memorials have been defended for generations as pieces of Southern heritage, or simply uncontroversial artifacts of history. But for many people, they are ever-present reminders of racial discrimination and violent oppression that has never gone away.

The removal of statues of Confederate leaders as well as those of others who promoted or profited from slavery and racism has become a focal point of calls for a true confrontation with racial inequality in the United States. As part of that conversation,USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South are taking a critical look at several such figures to understand who they were and what they believed.

***

For more than four decades, a bronzesculpture of thebust of Confederate Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest has been featured prominently in the Tennessee state Capitol.

A statue portraying Forrest was one of three removed in Memphis in late 2017 afterthe city found a loopholeto legally take down the monument that residents widely agreed should not stand in a public park.

But as the fate of the Capitol bust hangs in the balance pending a state commission meeting later this year and after years of debate among Black and white lawmakers, and Democratsand Republicans who was Forrest and why is he so controversial more than 150 years after the Civil War?

Among the most notorious parts of Forrest's legacy is his reported involvement leading Confederate soldiers in the West Tennessee Battle of Fort Pillow in April 1864, which has commonly become known as a massacre of surrendered Union troops, many of whom were Black.

Primary documents from a variety of sources refute argumentsmade by some Forrest apologists including some who have raised the possibility during conversations at the legislature about the bronze bust and Forrest's legacy that he was not responsible for the mass killings at Fort Pillow.

"We've been going through these excuses for Bedford Forrest for the longest while, and none of them are holding up under scrutiny," said Richard Blackett, a history professor at Vanderbilt University.

In 1868, Forrest gave an interview with a Cincinnati Commercial reporter that was widely published in newspapers around the country. In the interview, he said the Ku Klux Klan had "no doubt" been a benefit in Tennessee. While he denied being an official member, he said he was part of the organization "in sympathy," and later when Forrest testified before Congress about the KKK he eventually disclosed that he was familiar with rituals and practices.

Repeatedly in the 1868 interview, Forrest tried to suggest that he had more disdain for white Radical Republicans and Northerners trying to infiltrate Southern politics than he did African Americans, but he still remained fiercely opposed at that point to Blacks gaining the right to vote or having equal standing in society.

"I am opposed to it under any and all circumstances," Forrest said.

"And here I want you to understand distinctly I am not an enemy to the negro.We want him here among us; he is the only laboring class we have."

***

Jefferson Davis was a man of many words. He literally wrote volumes during his lifetime and spent the last decade of his life writing about the history of the Confederacyandan in-depth analysis of the Civil War.

But Davis (1808-1889) most notably is known for his role withthe Confederate States of America, of which he was named its first and only president.

Susannah Ural,professor of history and co-director of the Dale Center for the Study of War and Society at the University of Southern Mississippi, said Davis seemed to be a natural choice for president of the Confederacy.

Although he did not support secession, he felt duty-bound to represent his state, which voted to secede, and the new government to which he was appointed president. However, he also believed secession was a right afforded tothe states.

Davis wrote in his book,"The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government," that slavery "was not the cause of the war, but an incident."

In his preface to the bookhe said,"the States had never surrendered their sovereignty," and that states should be allowed to make their own decisions regarding slavery.

Davis saidthe federal government was usurping its authority by forcing unwanted laws on the states, first and foremost the abolition of slavery, which was an integral part of the Southern states' agricultural economy.

"(Slavery is) the primary cause, but it's not the only cause," Ural said. "When you talk about states' rights, when you talk about what powers the federal government should have versus state authority, one of the centralissues to states' rightswas the right to slavery."

However, she said, determining the Civil War happened because of slavery isn't entirely accurate.

"There's never one cause ofa war, and things thatmotivatepeople to fight in a war change over the course of time," she said. "To boil the Civil War down to slavery is problematic, but the bigger problem was that for decades, we just kind of pushed slavery aside and didn't really talk about it."

***

Even in his last days, Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general, had already become a myth a myth that gave a defeated South something to cling to; a means of understanding its defeat.

In 1865, Lee surrendered to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia. His exploits during the war and his canonization by defeated Southerners have rendered him among the most famous losers in military history.

To Emory Thomas, who wrote "Robert E. Lee: A Biography,"published in 1995, historical evidence shows Lee was a man who lived by a strict moral code, a sense of honor and duty; a great soldier and engineer who rose to the challenges he faced.

He was also a slave-owner and a white supremacist. While Lee believed slavery was morally wrong, he did not believe the abolition of it should come through the works of man, but, instead, the will of God.

In an interview, Thomas referenced a famous letter Lee wrote about slavery in 1857. In it, Lee distilled his views as a slave owner on race.

"In this enlightened age, there are few I believe, but what will acknowledge, that slavery as an institution, is a moral & political evil in any Country. It is useless to expatiate on its disadvantages. I think it, however, a greater evil to the white man than to the black race," Lee wrote. "The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, socially & physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instruction as a race, & I hope will prepare & lead them to better things. How long their subjugation may be necessary is known & ordered by a wise Merciful Providence. Their emancipation will sooner result from the mild & melting influence of Christianity, than the storms & tempests of fiery Controversy."

In that letter, and other moments throughout his life, including testimony before Congress after the Civil War, Lee displayed views on race that Thomas described as compatible with social Darwinism a worldview that arose later in the 19th century and early 20th that Western governments, particularly that of the U.S., used to justify colonization, war and imperialism.

In 1862, he wouldfree his father-in-law's slaves, as required by the man's will, a matter of weeks before the Emancipation Proclamation took effect.

"He anticipated social Darwinism In the evolutionary pyramid of human beings, I think he saw white folks like himself at the top. And African Americans somewhere down the ranks, above American Indians whom he really thought were dreadful," Thomas said.

***

Known as the "Boy Hero of the Confederacy," Sam Davis' story was resurrected from obscurity in the late 1800s by journalist Archibald Cunningham, founder of the Confederate Veteran magazine. There are monuments erected in Sam Davis'honor. His boyhood home is on the National Register of Historic Places and operates as a museum.

Barely 21 in 1863, Davis was hanged for his refusal to give Union Army Gen. Grenville Dodge the names of Confederate spies. "I would rather die a thousand deaths than betray a friend," Davis said moments before he was hanged on the Public Square in Pulaski, Tennessee.

Davis wasnt a boy, but a young man whose bravery is immortalized as a symbol of the Confederacy and the Lost Cause, said Brenden Martin, a Middle Tennessee State University history professor. The underpinning of the Lost Cause was that the Confederacy was "right all along" and had a right to secede from the United States.

"All youve got to do is look at the (Confederate) Articles of Secession. The people who brought about the secession (from the United States) made it clear it was about preserving the institution of slavery," Martin said.

Slavery was the backbone of the Southern economy, Martin said.

And the Davisfamily plantation was steeped in that economy.

Data from the American Battlefield Trust notes that Charles and Jane Davis, Sam Davis' parents, originally owned a830-acre plantation located in Smyrna. By 1860, there were 51 enslaved people owned by the Davis family. Sam Davis also had his own slave, named Coleman Davis,who was gifted to him when he was a boy.

***

Anarcha was at least 17 when the doctor started experimenting on her. The year before, she suffered terrible complications during a 72-hour labor that opened a hole between her bladder and vagina and left her incontinent.

The man who held Anarcha in bondage outside Montgomery sent her to Dr. J. Marion Sims sometime in 1845. She was one of at least seven enslaved women sent to Sims by white slaveholders. They had the same condition as Anarcha, known as a vesicovaginal fistula.

Sims wanted to find a way to address it. From 1845 to 1849, the enslaved women became experiments.

By Sims own account, Anarcha underwent 30 operations as Sims tried different approaches to repairing the fistula.

These women could not say no. Neither Sims nor the white men who held them against their will showed interest in their opinions. Deirdre Cooper Owens, a professor of medical history at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and author of "Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology," said if the women protested, they "could get beaten, or they could get ignored."

Anesthesia, Cooper Owens said, was not in wide use at this time.

Despite that, a statue of Sims unveiled in 1939 remains on the grounds of the Alabama Capitol in Montgomery. A bust of Sims also stands in Columbia, South Carolina. New York City officials removed a statue of Sims in Manhattan in 2018.

***

Andrew Johnson considered himselfa champion of the common man but only when those common men were white.

The 17th president of the United Stateswas a common man himself. Born into poverty in 1808, he escaped indentured servitude in North Carolinabefore moving to Greeneville, Tennessee, where he worked as a tailor,owned slaves and launched his political career as a Democrat.

When President Abraham Lincoln died from an assassin's bullet just six weeks after Johnson took office, a fractured countryfound its stubborn new president lacked Lincoln's ability to navigate theend of the Civil War with nuance and sensitivity.

Although Johnson had helped Lincoln end slavery across the land, he nowclashed with the Republican-controlled Congress by planting himself firmly in the way of rights for newly freed slaves. He soon grew widelyunpopular and became the first president ever to be impeached.

Johnson believed in what's called "herrenvolk democracy" the idea that the lowest white man in the social hierarchy should beabove the highest Black man, said Aaron Astor, ahistory professor at Maryville College who researches the Civil War-era South.

In 1860, the year before the Civil War broke out, Johnson said white Southernersfelt so threatened by the prospectof Black freedom that poor men would unite withslave ownersto exterminateslaves rather than see them freed.

***

Albert Pike is a name well-known in Arkansas history as both a Civil War general of Native American troops and a newspaper editor.

Although Pike was known nationally after the Civil War for his involvement with the Freemasons, he gained national attention again on June 19, 2020, when a statue dedicated to him in Washington, D.C.,was toppled by a group of Black Lives Matter demonstrators. The monument to Pike was the only one of a Confederate Civil War general in the District of Columbia.

Pike was a Boston transplant to Arkansas who initially resisted secession, but followed the lead of his fellow Arkansans in fully supporting the Confederacy and even servedas an appointed brigadier general in at least one battle in Arkansas.

By the end of his life, Pike had risen among the highest ranks of the Freemasons.

Before the Civil War, he had moved from the Fort Smith area to Little Rock to pursue a career as a journalist. He eventually became editor and owner of The Advocate where he reported on the Supreme Court of Arkansas.

When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Pike was called up to be a brigadier general over a troop made up of several Native American Tribes. He was cited as being an advocate for Native Americans and the wrongs they suffered at the hands of the white man.

When it came to African Americans, however, Pikes view of slavery was one that claimed it was a "necessary evil." He claimed that slaves would not be able to hold any other job and that they were treated well by their masters. He even admitted to having his own slave for "necessary" work.

***

Gen. Alfred Mouton has become one of Acadianas most polarizing historical figures. His statue, standing on city property in the heart of downtown Lafayette, has been the focus of public outcry, protest and legal battles for decades.

As support is increasing to remove the statue, most of the controversy over Mouton has focused on the fact that he owned Black peopleas slaves and fought for white supremacy during the Deep South's most oppressive era.

While Mouton is hailed by some as a hero from Lafayette's oldest family who fought to defend his hometown from Union forces during the Civil War, the famous son of former Gov. Alexandre Mouton helped wage another civil war here.

Mouton, along with his father, trained the "Vigilante Committee" in Lafayette Parish, a group that would carry out their own form of violent justice against Black residentsthrough whippings, expulsions and lynchings.

From the late 1850s to the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, Mouton-backed vigilantes fought against other groups in Lafayette Parish's own civil war.

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This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed

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Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed - Apalachicola Times

Who owns America What’s it worth? – The Tryon Daily Bulletin – Tryon Daily Bulletin

Betsy Burdett

Conservation Corner

Last months Corner was about sustainable land use, based upon economic principles. I must admit that economic theory is not my strong point, but understanding the basics is important since our entire society seems to be controlled by economics. After reading through John Ikerds article Who Owns America Land Use Planning for Sustainability several times, I think that I can relay the basics to you in a few paragraphs.

The three cornerstones of sustainability are ecological soundness, economic viability and social justice.

Because we live in a capitalist system, economic viability pretty much determines the land use choices that we make. The easiest way for me to understand economic theory as it relates to land use is to use the example of a small parcel of land. Lets pretend that were taking about a small farm. In order for a farm to pay for itself, to make a living for the farmer or landowner, it must make a profit.

For the past 75+ years, fertilizers and additives have been used to increase yields. Farm laborers get paid very little, so smart farmers have been able to make a profit and survive. There is a problem with this, however: commercial fertilizers, fossil fuels, pesticides, and machinery are all finite, non-renewable resources. Therefore, this form of farming is not sustainable, either for a small farm or huge mega-farms. If we can no longer count on fertilizers, etc. to sustain our farms, and we can no longer pay our farm workers a living wage, well need to cultivate more land.

Back in the 1700s, the production problem was solved by using slave labor on huge plantations to harvest cotton. South Carolina at the time was the richest state in the Union. But, slavery conflicted with the sense of social justice, so it was not sustainable. Now we use fertilizers and fossil fuels, yet they violate the 1st requirement for sustainability: ecological soundness. Weve got problems for sure, and they are not easily solved.

Organic farming has made a big impact recently because it is environmentally sustainable, if we can figure out how to make if economically viable. Currently, the average Polk County farm owner is over 55 years old, so the transition to organic farming will depend upon the feasibility of a younger generation taking over at the helm.

As you can guess, there are problems making this transition difficult, the first hurtle being the high cost of land. That gets us right back to the problem of economic viability. Our local land values are skyrocketing through the roof nowadays, making it virtually impossible for young farmers to even begin to try to make a living if they do not already own the land. Organic farming is labor intensive, so the farms tend to be smaller than farms using traditional, mechanical farming techniques. And, if the organic farm is less than 10 tillable acres, that farmland is not eligible for a North Carolinas Present Use Value (PUV) agricultural property tax deferment, so the young farmer may not be able to pay the Polk County land taxes each year.

Please take time to look back at Wed., July 29th edition of the Tryon Daily Bulletin, at the article on page 4 Polk in top 5, Polk ranks 5th in state for the most value for their property. Note that all the other counties in the Top 10 are mountain counties. All of these counties have lots of land and low populations. What pays for most of our county services? Property taxes. How does that work? Property values are assessed according to highest and best use, and that is based solely on economic viability. The higher land prices get, the more tax dollars are brought in to pay for community services.

Let me give you an example of how sometimes works. A seven acre parcel of farmland that is eligible for a PUV agricultural tax deferment has a taxable value of approx. $6,055. If that same seven acre piece of land is not eligible for an agricultural deferment, the property tax value is $115,000. That equals a 95% difference for the property tax bill. Even though the abovementioned seven acres has been used to raise cattle for the past 90+ years, it is not eligible for a PUV deferment because it is less than 10 acres, the state minimum for eligible farmland. The owner of this seven acres was smart enough to encumber his farm with an agricultural conservation easement, which lawfully restricts its use to agriculture only and thus legally restricts the propertys highest and best use value.

Yes, by taxing so much of our rural land according to potential development value we have great schools. Thats because we have so much open land to tax and so few people to serve. This is not sustainable. Think of sustainability (visually) as a box, with ecological soundness, economic viability, and social justice just being the three dimensions of a box: height, width, and length.

Our box is collapsing, slowly but surely, unless we work together to make some changes.

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Who owns America What's it worth? - The Tryon Daily Bulletin - Tryon Daily Bulletin

Stuart Wilson is running against the status quo personified in his House District 19 run – Uprise RI

The more I watched what was happening with Rep McNamara and the rest of the leadership in the General Assembly, the more convinced I became that I could do a better job. I want to serve my community, and I believe many in my district are ready for a new voice.

Stuart Wilson is challenging incumbent Joseph McNamara for his House District 19 seat in the Democratic primary on September 8. McNamara has represented the district for a quarter of a century and hasnt had a primary challenger in well over a decade. McNamara is a close ally of Rhode Island Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, chairs the House Health, Education and Welfare Committee, and is the chair of the Rhode Island Democratic Party. McNamara is Rhode Islands political status quo personified.

Wilson grew up in Rhode Island, and has worked in education throughout the state, teaching with organizations like Providence CityArts!, The Gamm Theater in Pawtucket, Ella Risk Elementary School in Central Falls, and others. One of the drivers of his decision to run was seeing the challenges facing schools across the state and in Warwick specifically, and understanding that the work being done currently by the states legislature hasnt been sufficient to meet and solve those challenges. Wilson married to Nicky Mariani and has two children.

UpriseRI conducted the following interview by email.

UpriseRI: What made you decide to run for State Representative in House District 19?

Stuart Wilson: Ive had ideas for education in the state during my career as a teacher and artist. Ive always been interested in what I can do to make life better for people. In 2018, I was very disappointed that my supposedly Democratic State Rep endorsed a Trump supporter over an incumbent Democrat in the Democratic primary. Shes a strong progressive woman and the kind of representative we need more than ever. The more I watched what was happening with Rep McNamara and the rest of the leadership in the General Assembly, the more convinced I became that I could do a better job. I want to serve my community, and I believe many in my district are ready for a new voice.

Funding for our reporting relies entirely on the generosity of readers like you. Our independence allows us to write stories that hold RI state and local government officials accountable. All of our stories are free and available to everyone. But your support is essential to keeping Steve and Will on the beat, covering the costs of reporting many stories in a single day. If you are able to, please support Uprise RI. Every contribution, big or small is so valuable to us. You provide the motivation and financial support to keep doing what we do. Thank you.

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UpriseRI: Do you think the Rhode Island General Assembly has been serving the people of your District?

Wilson: No. When schools are failing in Warwick and Climate Change is directly threatening our coast? I dont believe theyre being served. There are lots of working class families in the district; I talk to them every day. They dont make a living wage and the General Assembly refuses to make a plan to get them there.

UpriseRI: Your opponent is an incumbent Democrat, a committee chair with close ties to Speaker Mattiello and House leadership, and he chairs the Rhode Island Democratic Party. How has he not been serving his constituents?

Wilson: He takes money directly from both the Speaker and House Majority Leader Joseph Shekarchi. Its almost impossible to separate McNamara from the leadership. Hes happy to talk about money he brought in for a local playground, but thats not enough.

UpriseRI: What issues are motivating you? What are you hearing from people as you go door to door, or however outreach is done during this pandemic?

Wilson: Education remains as important to me as ever, and I hear about it far more than anything else as I talk to people. (I do go door-to-door with a mask, sanitizer, and three big steps back after I knock on a door.) People have no idea what school is going to be like when it reopens. Theres a lot of very valid concerns on all sides of the issue of reopening versus distance learning.

Im disappointed that we havent been prioritizing schools more. It motivates me to work on education long term because I see the current crisis related to pre-existing issues. I want to do a better job of pooling resources and knowledge at the state level. I would like to see more funding from the state to eliminate disparities in education throughout the state. Schools need money to run safely and the state needs to ensure that schools in low-income areas are safe.Im also interested in workers rights and protections. The pandemic has revealed holes in the social safety net. We need to fill the holes.

UpriseRI: In addition to the crisis of COVID, Rhode Island is facing a reckoning with our history of racism and slavery, as well as an economic crisis, a housing crisis and an unemployment crisis. Its a big job right now. What are your instincts as to what should be done in the short term and the medium term?

Wilson: Its a big job and it needs big, new ideas. Right now were spending far too much money treating the symptoms instead of the causes. Long-standing racist institutions need to be rebuilt. We need to reinvest money on direct support for low-income communities and minority communities. Providing housing for the homeless isnt just the right thing to do; it saves money. We should have cooling centers for anyone who needs them. We need more affordable housing throughout the state. We need to be asking, who will be building that housing? Who will be renovating an empty building into a cooling center? (Thats an idea from a neighbor by the way thanks, Gary) Who will we send when a social worker would be more appropriate in a situation than a police officer? Rhode Islanders need jobs. Solving these problems arent mutually exclusive goals. Many of these ideas would help all Rhode Islanders, but we need to always be looking for ways to ensure minority voices are specifically being heard. In the medium term lets definitely elect some more BIPOC!

UpriseRI: Let me ask about particular subject areas. Where do you stand, and what are your ideas on the Environment:

Wilson: We need a state-wide Green New Deal. Emphasizing jobs in sustainable energy. I happen to edit a chemistry magazine. Climate Change is very real and we need to be mobilizing immediately.

UpriseRI: Health Care

Wilson: All Rhode Islanders should have access to affordable healthcare. Expanded Medicaid has helped many people here, but the state needs to fill in the gaps.

UpriseRI: Reproductive Rights

Wilson: I firmly support a womans right to choose. I was incredibly proud and grateful for the work of the women that pushed to establish Roe v Wade protections as law in the state.

UpriseRI: LGBTQ rights

Wilson: Yes! Like with abortion rights, I think we should ensure that these are encoded into state law as a backstop against any homophobic or transphobic laws made in Washington.

UpriseRI: Policing

Wilson: Lets completely overhaul the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights to start. We need much more civilian oversight so we can actually get rid of bad cops. We should also be reallocating money spent on militarized police departments towards mental health service and other, more effective methods to actually serve our communities.

UpriseRI: Guns

Wilson: Ive been named a Candidate of Distinction by Moms Demand Action, which Im very proud of. We need an assault weapons ban and strong background checks. Guns need to be taken away from domestic abusers.

UpriseRI: Housing

We need more homeless shelters, but also publicly-funded long-term affordable housing.

UpriseRI: Education

Wilson: Ive taught throughout the state. Ive seen the disparities first hand, and Ive also seen a lot of great ideas that arent being shared. The state should be addressing the funding disparity better. We need to do a better job of working between districts as well. For example, teachers should be able to take a job in another district without losing their tenure, seniority and other benefits.

UpriseRI: What other areas do you feel need attention?

Wilson: I have no idea why we cant make sure every kid in this state has a healthy breakfast and lunch. Hungry kids cant learn. Its shameful.

UpriseRI: Is there anything I should have asked that I didnt, or anything else you want to say?

Wilson: We have our own one percent in Rhode island. Lets raise the income tax on those making a half million a year to 9%.

Originally posted here:

Stuart Wilson is running against the status quo personified in his House District 19 run - Uprise RI

Politico-Cultural Racism in America is Consuming its Social Fabric and Decaying its Progressive Ethos – The New Leam

The rage, desperation, and determination which continue to bring tens of thousands of Americans to the streets in protest against racism and injustice hopefully will be just the beginning. They are sick and tired of systemic racism against Black people, of bigotry at the top, crude discrimination, police brutality, a prejudiced criminal justice system, economic disparity, and societys robbing black people of experiencing real freedom and equality. Hypocritically, white people blame the victims of racism for their own plight, claiming that Black people would do better in life if they were only willing to work harder.

We are now reaping the harvest of the seeds of racism and discriminationthe devaluation of black life. The whole socio-economic and cultural system is lopsided, as it lacks the fundamentals of justice and equality. The pandemic provided the wakeup call that pointed out the ugly tradition of subjugation of the Black community, which sadly did not stop with the end of slavery, but continued in the wanton indifference to their pain and agony, our uncanny negligence, and our failure to understand what they are really experiencing.

The fact that Black people were slaves, and the carefully cultivated myth that slaves were always obedient and happily served their white masters, left an indelible imprint on white people that has lasted generations. They maintain that African Americans were born to servitude and hence they do not qualify for equal treatment, equal opportunity, and equal status.

Films such as D.W. Griffiths immensely influential Birth of a Nation (1915), which helped to reestablish the Ku Klux Klan, also reinforced the racist stereotype that Black men are unintelligent and an inherent danger to the white communityspecifically white women. When on May 25 (the same day George Floyd was killed) a white woman, Amy Cooper, called the cops on a Black man, Christian Cooper, who was birdwatching in Central Park, she was tapping into the long history of that racist trope. To put it plainly, Black lives are simply not valued the way white lives are, as white people consciously or subconsciously view Black man as both sub- and supra-human, threatening, and expendable.

Thus, due to this entrenched prejudice, any activity, however innocent, in which a Black man is engaged in invites suspicion, alarm, and often puts the life of Black men in danger such as 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, who was shot and killed by white residents of the suburban Georgia neighbourhood he was jogging in. The mayor of Minneapolis bluntly said Being black in America should not be a death sentence. Racism, to be sure, is so ingrained it flows in the veins of many Americans without notice.

The insidious, learned biases pitting white against Black Americans directly leads to the treating of Black Americans as second-class citizens and suppression by white Americansa necessary ingredient that satisfies their ego and elevates their self-worth. Although the majority of white Americans may not be white supremacists, they certainly hold onto their privileges in all walks of life as they view their relation with Black people (and other people of colour) as a zero-sum game, as if a Black mans gain invariably chips away at a white mans privileges.

The Concept of Wanton discrimination

Racial prejudice in America takes a heavy toll on African Americans, which translates to discrimination in all walks of life, including education, job opportunities, professional advancements, and medical treatment, especially maternal health. Black workers receive 22 percent less in salary than whites with the same education and experience; Black women receive even less34.2 percent. According to a University of Chicago/Duke 2016 study, when factoring in all African American and white men (inclusive of those incarcerated or otherwise out of the workforce), the racial wage gap is the same as it was in the 1950s. Even where racial discrimination should not occur, in medical treatment, when Black patients access medical care, doctors regularly prescribe fewer pain medications and believe Black patients feel less pain than white patients, even among veterans seeking care.Whereas Black men have served in the military and fought and died alongside white soldiers in every war since the Revolutionary War (when 5,000-8,000 Black soldiers fought against the British), they had to face the revulsion of discrimination and segregation while still serving in the military, hardly recognized for acts of bravery. Indeed, until 1948after the end of WWIIthe US military was entirely segregated. While the top brass of the military, who are mostly white, like to claim that military institutions are colorblind, the reality is that racism and discrimination remain extensive problems even in the U.S. military.

Although police brutality against Black men in particular, which instigated the current protests, is a known phenomenon, police killings of Black men continue unabated. It can and has taken different forms historically including harassment and intimidation, assault and battery, torture and murder, and even complicity with the KKK. Often, police officers approach any situation connected to a Black man with apprehension and fear. White police officers see threats where they do not exist; they are too quick to draw and as quick to fire to kill.

Here are just a few glaring examples: a Black man taking a nap in a car in a parking lot was shot dead. Another pulled over in a traffic stop was shot and killed in front of his girlfriend and her daughter. A Black man sitting in his home eating ice cream was shot dead by his neighbour, an off-duty white police officer. A Black woman playing video games with her nephew was shot and killed through her window. A Black woman (and EMT) sleeping in her home was shot eight times when officers entered her apartment executing a no-knock warrant.It is rare for a prosecutor to decide to charge a police officer, especially because they often know each other and have developed close working relationships. Even Internal Affairs divisions of police departments, which ostensibly exist to investigate and report misconduct among officers, have widely conducted sub-standard investigations and failed to identify problem officers who commit wanton abuse.This cultural pattern enables police officers like Derek Chauvin, Daniel Pantaleo, and Nathan Woodyard to commit the heinous crime of slowly squeezing the life out of George Floyd (MN), Eric Garner (NY), and Elijah McClain (CO). As troubling is the fact that police officers have been known to give false testimony in court, whether to avoid punishment for their own criminal and/or unconstitutional actions, to ensure a conviction, or for other reasons.

Although the US judiciary is considered to be just and impartial, in most court hearings race is present albeit it is not spelled out. It is as though Black men inherently have no equal rights and to this day, 230 years since the constitution was written, injustices still exist in both federal and state courts.Blacks are incarcerated at more than five times the rate of whiteswhile they are 13 percent of the total US population, they constitute 40 percent of the total male prison population. The mass incarceration of African Americans in this country has created what sociologist Becky Pettit, citing the novelist Ralph Ellison, calls invisible menthe millions of black men in the American penal system. Prison inmates are not included in most data-collecting national surveys, so these men are effectively invisible to social institutions, lawmakers, and most social science research. It is almost as if they do not exist, they do not count; their reality is ignored, neglected, and brushed aside.

A staggering 75 percent of young Black men will be imprisoned at some point in their lives. These statistics can only begin to convey the enormity of the injustice that is being compounded day after day. Pettits book reveals that penal expansion has generated a class of citizens systematically excluded from accounts of the American populace. This exclusion raises doubt about the validity of even the most basic social facts and questions the utility of the data gathered for the design and evaluation of public policy and the data commonly used in social science research. As a consequence, we have lost sight of the full range of the American experience.

Economic disparity between white and Black Americans is glaring, and reverberates through generations of Black families. Economic exclusion is the source of inequality. It is caused by a confluence of factors, beginning with nearly 250 years of chattel slavery (during which Black families were torn apart, let alone able to accumulate wealth), to sharecropping and unrestrained lynchings, to 90 years of Jim Crow laws, to redlining neighbourhoods on demographic lines. All of these factors are manifested today in hiring decisions, property valuation, mortgage applications, interest charges, and even how credit scores are tabulated. The average white familys net worth is more than ten times greater than a Black family. Economic disparity, to be sure, is the mother of all evil in the lives of Black people.

A poor Black man cannot pay for decent housing, cannot pay for health care, and cannot afford to send his kids to higher education, which directly impacts his social standing and professional competency. Thus, he has to settle for menial jobs, low wages, and little or no prospect of ever climbing out of the vicious cycle. The saddest thing of all is that he is blamed for his own dilemma, as if the conditions and lack of opportunities in which he lives has nothing to do with his sorry state of affairs.

During the past four years, racism in America has been on the rise and in no small measure Trump, the Racist-in-Chief, has made race a campaign issue from the very start. He began his political campaign by branding Hispanics as rapists; in his presidency he banned Muslims from entering the US, cruelly separated children from their parents at the borders, described white supremacists in Charlottesville as very fine people, and celebrated this 4th of July by defending Confederate statues.Trumps racism against Blacks in particular is nothing new. It was there in 1973 when Trump Management Inc. was sued by the Department of Justice for housing discrimination against African-American renters. We could see it in 1989, when he took out a full-page advertisement in four New York City newspapers calling for the reinstatement of the death penalty over the Central Park Five, who were wrongfully convicted and sent to prison. Trump refuses to apologize for that, even though, as Innocence Project founder Barry Scheck said, by calling for the reinstitution of the death penalty, it contributed to an atmosphere that deprived these men of a fair trial. He also refused to apologize for his persistent perpetuation of the birther lie that Obama was not born in the US.

Trumps Independence Day speech at Mount Rushmore was laden with racially divisive and partisan rhetoric, but that makes no difference to many conservative Republican leaders and his misguided supporters who follow him blindly. They wrap themselves with the flag as a sign of American patriotism, when in fact their patriotism is defined by their racism and intolerance of people of color.

Although some Republican leaders disagree with him on race, they are fearful of his anger to say anything publicly, lest they risk losing their power or position. Sadly, their silence suggests consent, which only reinforces Trumps racism. With Trump, as with much of the country, racism is deeply ingrained, something he refuses to admit.

Although racism did not start when Trump came to power as it is imbued into Americas history and culture and it will not end with his departure from office, his overt racism brought to focus racism in America. The persistent protests reveal the deep sense of frustration with a president who fans the flame of racism, who sees the country as his own enterprise, who does whatever he wants to serve his own interests. He is cruel, cunning, and careless about the pain and suffering of Black America; he cannot count on their political support and hence completely rejects their outcry.

Unlike any other protests in the past against racism, this years protests have had a greater impact in part due to the spread of the coronavirus and its disproportionate impact on Black people, who are being infected and dying at higher rates than whites. That, and in conjunction with a presidential election, provides a rare opportunity to start a process of mitigating racism in earnest. What will be necessary, however, is for the protests to persist through Election Day in the hopes that the Racist-in-Chief will be ousted. Only then we stand a better chance that a new day will dawn and a new administration will commit to relentlessly addressing the plight of Black people for the sake of all Americans, especially because the day when America will have a majority of people of color is fast approaching.

Although there are scores of measures that must be taken and many years and huge financial resources to make a discernible change for the better in the life of Black Americans, we have no choice but to start, regardless of how insurmountable the obstacles and the culture of resistance to change. It will take the collective efforts, determination, and consistency of local, state, and federal authorities to begin this process if we ever want to reach a modicum of equality.

The work to change the culture of innate racism in America will be long and hard, but we must not shy away from it. As a small start, the immediate focus should be on educating students about Black history, changing the police culture and training, investing in housing in black neighborhoods, offering educational support for young Black boys and girls starting at elementary age, up to providing free education for them to attend college or professional schools, and providing job opportunities and equal pay to give them the chance to climb up over time the social ladder.

The continuing demonstrations throughout the country suggest not only the obviousthat Black lives matterbut that racism is consuming America from within, that injustice affects the perpetrators just as much as the victims, that enough is enough.

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a professor of international relations at the Center for Global Affairs at New York University.

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Politico-Cultural Racism in America is Consuming its Social Fabric and Decaying its Progressive Ethos - The New Leam

Capitalism Rears Its Ugly Truth, Again – LA Progressive

On the Battle of Ideas: Responding to the New World of COVID-19, Economic Crisis, and Anti-Racist Uprisings

That process goes hand-in-hand with working out a new type of organization, one the world is crying out for but no one has developed, not even ourselves. However, we have at least posed the question.

The abject failure of almost all governments around the world to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic is above all a crisis of capitalism, with the chaotic response of Trumps America its most repellent phenomenal form. But too narrow a focus on Trump obscures how this abject failure illustrates the essential nature of capitalism, its normal macabre workings, which are now revealed more openly. Capitalisms quest for limitless value creation and profit has itself been compared to a virus afflicting humanity. This is because capitalism puts everything else aside, exists for the moment, and destroys even the possibility of the reproduction of its own means of production including its labor force in the long run. This is the underlying explanation for the lack of medical supplies, of tests, of masks, let alone a real public health infrastructure ready to save humanity from the pandemics that are becoming more and more frequent.

From its earliest days, the capitalist system has been beset by chaotic production relations. In one sense, this leads to a total instability in workers lives, as they are thrown from overwork during boom times into mass unemployment during those crises that are endemic to the system. Even physical survival is always in question, as the unemployed can actually face starvation. As Karl Marx and Frederick Engels intone in the Communist Manifesto (1848) in an attack on the industrial bourgeoisie, the main wing of the ruling class under capitalism: It is unfit to rule because it is incompetent to assure an existence to its slave within his slavery (Marx and Engels, Collected Works [MECW] 6: 495). This is a unique feature of capitalism, even compared to earlier forms of class society. In these precapitalist class societies, tiny minorities already dominated the working people and extracted from them a surplus product, which kept the ruling class wealthy and underpinned a state to protect them. But at the same time, some precapitalist societies tried to allow the working people a minimum material existence, despite the low development of the productive forces at the time.

As Rosa Luxemburg noted more than a century ago with regard to British rule in India, imperialism under capitalism is unique in that it actually drains society dry, failing even to put enough of its profits into preserving its very means of exploitation:

Finally, the specifically capitalist method of colonization finds expression in the following striking circumstance. The British were the first conquerors of India to show a gross indifference toward the works of civilization that formed its public utilities and economic infrastructure. Arabs, Afghans and Mongols alike had initiated and maintained magnificent works of canalization, they provided the country a network of roads, built bridges across rivers and sunk wells. The Company that ruled India until 1858 (the East India Company R.L.) did not make one spring accessible, did not sink a single well, nor build a bridge for the benefit of the Indians. (Accumulation of Capital, Verso edition: 270)

While wages and living conditions then and now might be better in Western Europe or North America than in India, the basic framework is the same, that of capitalist exploitation, even to the point of draining life itself from the working people. And under capitalist slavery, Black people were literally worked to death, which led Marx to write that, even compared to Roman times, slavery reached its most hateful form in a situation of capitalist production (MECW30: 197).

If slavery was the most brutal form of exploitation under capitalism, in Capital Marx also writes of the slow death of the working class in industrialized Britain. He compares the rule of capital to the domination of a Juggernaut, a vehicle that crushes spectators beneath it in a religious festival, in what amounts to a human sacrifice:

Within the capitalist system all methods for raising the social productiveness of labour are brought into effect at the cost of the individual laborer; that all means for the development of production undergo a dialectical inversion so that they become means of domination and exploitation of the producers; they distort the worker into a fragment of a human being [Teilmenschen], they degrade him to the level of an appendage of a machine, subject him during the labour process to a despotism the more hateful for its meanness; they transform his life-time into working-time, and drag his wife and child beneath the wheels of the Juggernaut of capital. (Capital, Fowkes trans.: 799)

How true that rings at a time when US workers mainly superexploited Latinx immigrants are being forced back to work in meatpacking plants that are rife with COVID-19. Not only that. White rightwing mobs also applaud, guns in hand, the idea of going back to work, literally calling for human sacrifices on the altar of capital, all in order to get the economy moving again.

At best, most radical analysis stops here, at exposing the underlying essence of capitalism, but it is important to go beyond essence to subject, to the possibility of revolutionary change. It is so hard to imagine an alternative to capitalism that it is sometimes helpful, as Marx also does in Capital, to refer to other forms of production (169). But here I would like to go beyond the text of Capital to one of Marxs very last writings, the Ethnological Notebooks. In these 1880-82 notes on a variety of non-European societies, he records a description of an Indigenous communist society in the Americas that operates exactly the opposite of capitalism, producing a surplus product that is not surplus value and that is geared not to the reproduction of capital or the riches of a ruling class, but rather to the security and reproduction of life:

Rev. Sam. Gorman, missionary with the Laguna Pueblo Indians, in address to the Historical Society of New Mexico says: The right of property belongs to the female part of the family, and descends in that line from mother to daughter. Their land is held in common, but after a person cultivates a lot he has personal claim to it, which he can sell to one of the community Their women, generally, have control of the granary, are more provident than their Spanish neighbors about the future. Ordinarily they try to have a years provision on hand. It is only when two years of scarcity succeed each other, that Pueblos, as a community, suffer hunger. (118)

Note that in this communistic Indigenous society women retain significant social power, not only over the land, but also over the social reproduction of food. As a result, this technologically underdeveloped society was more provident than its Spanish neighbors, let alone 21st century capitalism, which cant even prepare for the epidemics its own scientists predict.

Similarly, in the Critique of the Gotha Program, Marx theorizes a first phase of communism, where workers would not receive the full proceeds of their labor because of the need for common funds to sustain the community:

He receives a certificate from society that he has furnished such-and-such an amount of labor (after deducting his labor for the common funds); and with this certificate, he draws from the societal supply of means of consumption as much as the same amount of labor cost.

This is from our new translation (by Karel Ludenhoff and me), which I am proud to report will appear as a book with PM Press next year, with Peter Hudiss introduction. That modern kind of communism Marx was theorizing would also, as in his description of the achievements of the Paris Commune of 1871, get rid of the standing army and the police, the physical force elements of the old Government (Civil War in France, MECW 22: 331).

Marx also suggests that more traditional and more modern kinds of communist organization of social life here mentioning the longstanding communism of the Russian village community and the kind of modern communism he theorized in Critique of the Gotha Program and that the Western European proletariat yearned for could link up as part of a revolutionary process. This is seen in his last published writing, the preface to the 1882 Russian edition of the Communist Manifesto: If the Russian Revolution becomes the signal for a proletarian revolution in the West, so that both complement each other, the present Russian common ownership of land may serve as the starting point for a communist development (Shanin, ed., Late Marx and the Russian Road: 139). That, ultimately, is the solution to the kind of social crisis brought on by COVID-19.

As discussed above, the COVID-19 pandemic is a capitalist crisis because capitalism is a form of society that does very little to secure the lives and health of the working people in its ruthless, limitless, and utterly impersonal drive for value creation.

But the pandemic is a capitalist crisis in a second sense. The actual destruction of human existence as a possibility is a product of the third and hopefully final stage of global capitalism, state-capitalism, which followed the competitive and then the monopoly stage, with the latter self-destructing during the Great Depression of the 1930s. First, we have seen how the Great Depression and the transformation into opposite of the Russian revolution created the basis for two forms of totalitarian state-capitalism, Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, each of which killed tens of millions of people in their concentration camps, mainly workers and peasants. Hitlers death camps gave the world a new, horrific word to describe his eliminationist anti-Semitism, genocide. That genocide has repeated itself, most tragically in Rwanda, Central Africa in the 1990s. Second, we have seen how state-capitalism here in the form of the somewhat progressive Roosevelt administration during World War 2 created the nuclear weapons that still threaten the existence of most forms of life on the planet. Third, we have seen how, as levels of ecological destruction escalate, state-capitalism threatens utterly to destroy human and many other forms of life on the planet.

To these we can now add a fourth form of state-capitalisms death grip on humanity, global pandemics that threaten human existence. As shown by science journalist Sonia Shah in her in her 2016 book, Pandemic, more frequent, more virulent, and more deadly epidemics have been predicted by scientists for decades. Modern state-capitalism destroys the habitat of many animals, bringing them and the diseases they carry into closer contact with humans. Modern state-capitalism also engages in the capture, trade, and global transport of a wide variety of exotic animals, bringing all kinds of species into close contact with each other and with human beings for the first time, allowing diseases to spring from species to species, acquiring greater virulence. At a more general level, modern state-capitalism is the most globalized form of capitalism ever, thus facilitating its wide and rapid spread. While each of these forms of destruction threaten to wipe out much of humanity, they also have a class and racist basis, in that the poorest and most oppressed are the most vulnerable.

The pandemic is a crisis of capitalism in a third major sense, in that it has touched off the greatest economic downturn since the 1930s. Capitalist ideologues of all stripes are working feverishly to perpetuate the fiction that the current economic crisis is only temporary (rightwingers), or that it will be more permanent (liberals and progressives), but that in either case the it is caused by COVID-19. This is a remarkably narrow notion of causality. For example, while the Minneapolis uprising was sparked by the racist police murder of George Floyd, even the liberal mayor referred in his speech both to longstanding issues of brutality and racism in the police department and to 400 years of slavery and oppression of Black people in the USA.

Another statistic that counts better those discouraged workers is the civilian labor force participation rate, i.e., the percentage of adults employed or actively seeking work. It has steadily declined over the past two decades in the USA. In April 2000 it stood at 67.3% of the working age population, but plunged to 64.6% by September 2013, in the wake of the Great Recession. Had the U.S. recovered from that recession in the way it was touted by Trump and the media, the labor force participation rate would have gone back up toward 2000 levels by 2020. It did not. Instead, on the eve of the pandemic in February 2020 it had actually declined slightly from 2013, to 63.4%, another clear indication of economic stagnation in the midst of supposed nearly full employment. Now, of course, it is in free fall. (US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, June 4, 2020). Thus, the economic crisis touched off by the pandemic and based in part on longterm economic stagnation is just that, a real economic crisis from which no quick recovery can be expected. As our Call also states, In a word, stagnation rules the day. This did not result from the coronavirus; that was instead its proximate cause. Capitalism has been producing a lot of rotten fruit that was just waiting to fall.

Thus, the current situation of pandemic and economic collapse is the product of capitalist social relations in three major ways: (1) It reveals capitalisms pursuit of surplus value at any cost, with a reckless disregard for the safety of the working people it exploits, rather than just the failings of neoliberalism. (2) Global pandemics like COVID-19 will occur more frequently under the most advanced form of capitalism, state-capitalism, which has also produced genocide, nuclear weapons, and unprecedented ecological destruction. (3) The pandemic was only the immediate cause of the economic depression, in a world economy already ripe for a crisis even deeper than the Great Recession of 2008.

(An earlier version of this section was published in my June 12 article, Notes on the Black Lives Matter Uprising in Historical and Global Context, International Marxist-Humanist(June 12) )

Where does all this leave those striving for a world free of impoverishment and exploitation, of alienation and dehumanization, and of war, racism, sexism, heterosexism and environmental destruction? In one sense, we have been reeling over the past few months, locked down at home or forced to work in dangerous situations. During the lockdown, the world economy plummeted, throwing billions out of work. In India, low-wage workers have faced starvation. Some three billion people around the world lack access to water for the kind of handwashing public health officials deem necessary to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Even in one of the richest cities in the world, Geneva, Switzerland, people lined up for a mile to receive a food donation toward the end of May.

Nonetheless, working people and youth have fought back in major ways during COVID-19 and the economic crisis. From the beginning, workers resisted attempts by capital and the state to keep production going, endangering their very lives. Here, the Italian workers, with their long militant tradition, led the way, with mass strike actions. In March, according to a report from CGIL, the main union federation,

From the Dalmine steel mills of Bergamo to those of Brescia, from the Fiat-Chrysler plants of Pomigliano in Naples to the Ilva steel plant in Genoa, from the Electrolux factory of Susegana in Treviso to many small and medium-sized companies in Veneto and Emilia Romagna, from the Amazon warehouses in the provinces of Piacenza and Rieti, to the poultry and meat processing companies in the Po Valley, there were thousands of striking workers who came out into the squares and streets, strictly at a safe distance of one meter apart from each other, as prescribed by the government decree. (Leopoldo Tartaglia, Dispatch from Italy: Class Struggle in the Time of Coronavirus,Labor Notes, March 20, 2020)

This forced the state and capital to concede, leading to better safety measures and for workers to be paid during safety-related work stoppages.

These measures, aimed at unionized workers, did not affect the most precarious and marginalized workers, many of them immigrants. It was from this kind of milieu in the USA, the oppressed Black communities of Houston and Minneapolis, that George Floyd, murdered by four Minneapolis police, emerged. Like so many Black working class women and men, Floyd was semi-unemployed due to COVID-19 at the time that police choked him to death in slow motion, in broad daylight as witnesses from the Black community looked on and pleaded for mercy. Floyds unconcscionable death has been seen as a form of lynching, but it also recalls the torture and executions carried out for centuries inside US slave plantations, where the audience was other enslaved people, and the purpose was to create dread by making an example of someone.

As many have also pointed out, the strangulation of George Floyd needs to be seen in the context of 400 years of slavery and the obdurate objective structures of racial oppression in the USA, from outright slavery, to Jim Crow, to todays mass incarceration. The poison of racism oozes through the sectors of employment, housing, education, healthcare, and policing, among others. Racialized capitalism in the US actually began under British colonialism as part of their widely-used policy of divide and rule, from Ireland, to the Indian subcontinent, to Virginia. That strategy favored one sector of the populace against another, in order to prevent class unity against the rulers. In seventeenth-century Virginia, this meant arming poor but formally free whites and giving them police power over all Black people, the vast majority of them enslaved, in order to prevent another outbreak uniting white and Black labor, as had occurred in Bacons rebellion in 1676. Todays police forces originate in part in the white militias that received rewards for capturing fugitive slaves.

But the racial history of the USA needs to be understood subjectively as much as objectively, in short, dialectically, if we are fully to grasp the current juncture. For todays rebellion on the streets can also trace itself to that uprising in early Virginia. In this sense, US history needs to be grasped as one of constant revolt and resistance in the face of racial and capitalist oppression. Here, one could mention (1) the slave revolts led by Denmark Vesey (1822) and Nat Turner (1831), (2) the whole period of Abolitionism, Civil War, and Reconstruction from the 1830s to the 1870s, (3) the southern rural Black Populists and their white allies in the 1890s, (4) the massive and socially progressive Black nationalist Garvey Movement after World War 1, (5) the mass interracial labor and Civil Rights movements of the 1930s, (6) the Civil Rights and Black liberation movements of the 1950s throughout the 1970s, and (7) the current period exemplified by the Sanders campaign against economic inequality and the development of Black Lives Matter, which preceded even the 2016 Sanders campaign, into a mass movement this spring that has drawn hundreds of thousands into the streets.

Today, as with the greatest of those previous movements, the Black masses have taken a vanguard role, but a wider movement has emerged involving youth of all races. As so many times before, the rulers and their representatives have tried to distinguish between good protestors and illegal, violent, and outside ones. Thus, after the mass rebellion against police brutality in 1965 in the Black ghetto of Watts, Los Angeles, some tried to blame Cuban agents, but even the official McCone Commission led by a former head of the CIA could find none. Similarly, todays far-right Trump administration blames leftwing agitators from the Antifa movement, although they can show no concrete examples. What is true is that hundreds of thousands came onto the streets all across the country under the slogan Black Lives Matter, that a police station was burned to the ground in Minneapolis, and that luxury shops in the Los Angeles area were attacked by protestors who scrawled slogans like eat the rich on walls. After over a week of rebellious actions across the land, all four Minneapolis police murderers were finally arrested, but this came after no less than 13,000 protestors had been detained.

The protests deepened and persisted in a way not seen since the 1960s. The Black Lives Matter Uprising has already developed into a nodal point, with facts on the ground demanding that any serious revolutionary analysis take these events as its starting point, as the beginning of a new revolutionary era with global dimensions.

Demonstrators were cruelly gassed and clubbed near the White House by direct presidential command, in order for Trump to show toughness at a photo op after it had been reported he was cowering in the basement. Even Trumps threat to use the regular army on the streets did not deter the demonstrators, but it did cause dissension within the military leadership, especially after it was reported that officials had used the term dominating the battle space. As even retired General Martin Dempsey noted in protest, the law and military tradition restrict the use of such tactics to foreign enemies. But it is equally true that two decades of endless war abroad, of occupation and torture of civilians in Iraq and elsewhere, is blowing back into the USA itself, with police forces that are militarized as never before. Another form of blowback can be seen in how Minneapolis police have received training from the US-funded occupation police force of one of the most reactionary powers in the world, Netanyahus Israel, where chokeholds and other physical pressure, i.e., torture, of Palestinian detainees is totally legal. These facts show that moves in the USA toward an authoritarian state are not limited to the Trump administration, but can also be found in liberal Minneapolis. It also underlines the need to amend our Statement of Principles in the Constitution, to include this stronger language in support of Palestine: We have always opposed Israels oppressive policies against the Palestinians and strongly support their right to an independent and territorially viable state. At the same time, we oppose all forms of anti-Semitism and support the Jewish peoples right to self-determination.

Less noticed but also extremely significant has been the resurgence of the youth movement in Hong Kong against Chinese government attempts to extinguish all democratic rights in that semi-autonomous city. As the threat of COVID-19 lifted a bit, the youth of Hong Kong were the first anywhere in the world to reassert their pre-COVID movement on a truly mass scale. Inside China, quieter dissent exists amid deepening repression, especially in Wuhan, where the regime covered up the full extent of COVID-19 for weeks, thus extending the suffering in China and the world. On June 4, the 31st anniversary of the crushing of the China-wide student and worker uprising of 1989, tens of thousands of Hong Kong youth gathered for the annual commemoration, despite the event having been banned due to COVID-19. Thwarted by popular protest in their attempts to get a series of repressive measures through the Hong Kong legislature, Chinas top leader, Xi Jinping, has decided to act directly, an extremely ominous turn. It should also be noted that the Hong Kong protests have never been only about political issues, as residents also face a precipitous increase in economic inequality, as investment capital from the rest of China has led to skyrocketing rents and other forms of heightened capitalist oppression. For its part, while some governments have issued verbal protests, unelected global capital is solidly backing Xis repressive measures, with all due cynicism: There will be some unhappy people for some time, said John L. Thornton, a former president of Goldman Sachs who has close ties with the Chinese regime, But the drum rolls, the dogs bark and the caravan moves on. Thats the political judgment (quoted in Alexandra Stevenson and Vivian Wang, Why China May Call the Worlds Bluff on Hong Kong, New York Times, June 4, 2020). Thorntons racist comparison of the Chinese people to dogs should also be noted.

This year marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of V.I. Lenin, one of historys most important Marxists. Despite some serious flaws the elitist vanguard party to lead and the single-party state he and Trotsky established after the revolution Lenin propagated to the world the notion that without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement. This was of course in the spirit of Marx himself, who completed Capital at the height of one of his most active periods of engagement with the workers movement, that of the First International. But what does it mean to develop revolutionary theory today in the wake of the myriad crises and opportunities facing us in the year 2020?

Writing in the wake of the 1960s, our founder Raya Dunayevskaya wrote of the need for revolutionaries to become philosophers of revolution. Posed at such a general level, many diverse socialists and radicals would agree. But once one looks deeper, key differences with Marxist-Humanism become clearer. In Philosophy and Revolution (1973), Dunayevskaya writes of two pitfalls to avoid, here debating about the African Revolutions of the 1960s, not with reformists, but genuine revolutionaries:

We must, however, beware of falling into traps set by mechanical materialists as well as voluntarists, by ideologues rooted in other civilizations as well as free-lancers. Although they call themselves Marxists, the vulgar materialists attribute an iron mold to economic laws: they must be sucked into the world market. The seeming opposite of vulgar materialists, the voluntarists Maoists or individualists, Existentialists or anarchists have one thing in common with those who are overwhelmed by economic laws: they believe they can order the workers to make one day equal twenty years. (pp. 218-19)

What Dunayevskaya is critiquing here are the two dominant forms of Marxist socialism of the twentieth century.

What does this mean for today, especially for those like us who talk of race, class, and revolution? The vulgar materialists, found among both Russian Stalinists and Western European social democrats, tended toward class and economic reductionism, which under Stalinism became tied to the interests of the Soviet Union as the supposed representative of the revolutionary class at a global level. This was the ultimate form of class reductionism, where the interests of the class were themselves reduced to those of the USSR. This led to the infamous example of the Popular Front during the Second World War, when the global Communist Parties basically dropped their anti-racist demands for what they called anti-fascist unity. Thus, when African Americans sought to march on Washington in 1943 to end segregation in the U.S. military, the Stalinist US Communist Party denounced it as a divisive weakening of the anti-fascist effort. (See our co-founder Charles Denbys Indignant Heart: A Black Workers Journal; Ralph Ellisons classic novel, Invisible Man, captures this period in fictionalized form.) Even in South Africa, nothing was supposed to be done against the white rulers. Since the Stalinists had long advocated Black liberation alongside the liberation of labor and had gained significant Black support, this betrayal struck deep, playing no small part in the disillusionment with all forms of Marxism after World War 2.

If the vulgar and rationalist materialism of the Stalinists and social democrats usually meant asking Blacks to wait for economic or political conditions to mature, the Maoist split from Stalinism was more voluntaristic and sometimes even irrationalist, stressing the revolutionary will, that U.S. imperialism was a paper tiger, etc. This stress on daring to struggle attracted many youths from the 1960s, including those around the Black Panther Party and the League of Revolutionary Black Workers in Detroit. Mao attacked the USSR as in league with U.S. imperialism, and noted how the French Communist Party had helped save the states effort to blunt the near-revolution of 1968 by channeling it into reformist electoral politics. This also gained him intellectual followers like Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, and Michel Foucault. But Maoist opposition to this kind of reformism, and to Russias often opportunistic aid to Third World liberation movements, led to a politics that placed opposition to Russia over everything, including Black liberation. In so doing, Maos China cruelly betrayed African revolutionaries, especially in Southern Africa in the 1970s. For example, since Russia was giving some support to the main African liberation movement in Angola, China actually aligned itself with rightwing Angolan forces opposing that movement. These forces were in fact allied with apartheid South Africa, which sent in troops to aid them. In a surprise move that exposed and thwarted this betrayal, Russia flew tens of thousands of Cuban troops to Angola at the invitation of the new liberationist government. They drove the South African racists back home. This led to another great disillusionment with Marxism on the part of Black people, especially the many who had leaned toward Maoism in that period and had been sympathetic to groups like the Panthers or the League. This was felt in intellectual circles as well, as many Black intellectuals moved away from Marxism.

Today, little of this heritage appears before us directly, although there are exceptions like Angela Daviss wrong-headed signature on a petition supporting the Iranian regime during the protests last fall. There is also a small resurgence of Maoism among todays youthful revolutionaries. More generally, the philosophical legacies of Stalinism and Maoism whether in class reductionism or in the voluntaristic politics of the revolutionary will can be found in many political movements and tendencies of today, as seen in some forms of democratic socialism, of anarchism, or of Antifa.

If we can recognize these problems and if we can instead espouse and continue to develop Marxist-Humanism, where does that leave us as an organization? Surely, we dont want to be simply critics and gadflies and we want to the best of our abilities to participate in, learn from, and help give positive direction to movements for human liberation. To be sure, we can offer these movements a deeper and more humanist theoretical perspective than most of them can develop spontaneously.

But what about ourselves as IMHO, our structure and our practice of our Marxist-Humanist principles? Does membership mean merely intellectual adherence to Marxist-Humanist principles and then working inside other movements as individuals? If so, then our organization could take the form of study groups or study circles that might have some vague or indirect influence on the wider movement. That could preserve and develop Marxist-Humanist ideas somewhat, but would it be a real organization?

Here, Lenin can assist us, via Dunayevskaya, who appreciated Lenins concept of organizational membership as not just adhering to principles or paying your dues, but active participation in a group involving more than intellectuals in a study group. As Dunayevskaya writes in Marxism and Freedom (1958), much of Lenins 1902 book What Is to Be Done? was derived from Karl Kautskys notion that Marxist intellectuals were the real leaders of the working class, which could not arrive at socialist consciousness without them. Dunayevskaya meant this as a critique of Lenin. This is the elitist core of vanguardism and it needs to be critiqued strongly by us, as it has been.

But Dunayevskaya adds, crucially,

There was an element in Lenins theory on organization which was not borrowed from the German Social Democracy, which was specifically Leninist the conception of what constitutes membership in a Russian Marxist group. Indeed, the definition did not merely rest on a phrase that only he is a member who puts himself under the discipline of the local organization. The disciplining by the local was so crucial to Lenins conception that it held primacy over verbal adherence to Marxist theory, propagandizing Marxist views, and holding a membership card. (Marxism and Freedom: 180).

And that local, at least in Dunayevskayas eyes, would if possible be comprised of working people, not just intellectuals and students, would be citywide, etc.

This point bears on our efforts to become a real organization that is not based solely on theoretical discussions, as important as they are. Im not suggesting that we go back to Lenins model, or even that of News and Letters Committees and its locals during Dunayevskayas lifetime, as we have a wider, international organization now. But the valid point Lenin makes should not be lost because of this. It is also elucidated in his 1904 critique of the circle spirit. In addition, it bears on our ongoing critique of CLR James and others who advocated decentralized forms of organization in place of the vanguard party, but thought that the Marxist group should simply support and record the creativity of the mass movements, or theorize from the sidelines. What was lacking here was an organization that would truly link theory to practice, something the world needs more than ever today.

As Dunayevskaya put it at the end of her life, in an addition to Rosa Luxemburg, Womens Liberation, and Marxs Philosophy of Revolution:

This is the further challenge to the form of organization which we have worked out as the committee-form rather than the party-to-lead. But, though committee-form and party-to-lead are opposites, they are not absolute opposites. At the point when the theoretic-form reaches philosophy, the challenge demands that we synthesize not only the new relations of theory to practice, and all the forces of revolution, but philosophys suffering, patience and labor of the negative, i.e., experiencing absolute negativity. (xxxvii)

Thus, we seek to transcend/sublate (Aufheben) this duality between vanguardism and more decentralized forms of organization. This, comrades, is one of many issues we need to grasp if we are to really develop as an organization rooted in the philosophy and principles of Marxist-Humanism. Doing so is not separate from developing ourselves theoretically, both individually and collectively, or from participating in, learning from, and grasping what is truly new in movements like the BLM Uprising. Rather, that process goes hand-in-hand with working out a new type of organization, one the world is crying out for but no one has developed, not even ourselves. However, we have at least posed the question.

Kevin AndersonThe International Marxist-Humanist

Kevin B. Andersons authored books include Marx at the Margins: On Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Non-Western Societies and Lenin, Hegel, and Western Marxism. Among his edited books are The Power of Negativity by Raya Dunayevskaya (with Peter Hudis), Karl Marx (with Bertell Ollman), The Rosa Luxemburg Reader (with P. Hudis), and The Dunayevskaya-Marcuse-Fromm Correspondence (with Russell Rockwell).

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Capitalism Rears Its Ugly Truth, Again - LA Progressive

WAGE SLAVERY – THE WAGE WAR

Wage slavery refers to a situation where a workers livelihood depends on wages, especially when the dependence is total and immediate.It is a pejorative term used to draw an analogy between slavery and wage labor by focusing on similarities between owning and renting a person. The termwage slavery has been used to criticize economic exploitation and social stratification, with the former seen primarily as unequal bargaining power between labor and capital (particularly when workers are paid comparatively low wages, e.g. in sweatshops),and the latter as a lack of workers self-management, fulfilling job choices and leisure in an economy.The criticism of social stratification covers a wider range of employment choices bound by the pressures of a hierarchical society to perform otherwise unfulfilling work that deprives humans of their species characternot only under threat of starvation or poverty, but also of social stigma and status diminution. The view that working for wages is akin to slavery dates back to the ancient world.

In 1763, the French journalist Simon Linguet published a description of wage slavery:

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WAGE SLAVERY - THE WAGE WAR

150000 dead of coronavirus in U.S.: What monument will they have? – People’s World

A woman passes a fence outside Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery adorned with tributes to victims of COVID-19, May 28, 2020, in New York. The memorial is part of the Naming the Lost project which attempts to humanize the victims who are often just listed as statistics. The wall features banners that say "Naming the Lost" in six languages: English, Spanish, Mandarin, Arabic, Hebrew, and Bengali. What kind of permanent memorial will we build to those lost to the Trump administration's criminal incompetence? | Mark Lennihan / A

We can barely begin to count the multiple overlapping crises in our country right now. You know them all, and doubtlessly youre dealing with some or all of them in your own life. Its a struggle not to feel overwhelmed.

One crisis has to do with epic death, grief, and memory. How many are dying nowboth from COVID-19 and from natural causeswho receive but a short graveside eulogy with only the most immediate family present, if that? Spouses, siblings, children and grandchildren, workmates, and social friendsmost of them must stay home without offering a comforting embrace or shedding a tear together with the other bereaved. Maybe theyll gather on Zoom to share a treasured memory or anecdote and raise a glass.

We have a collective grief to deal with in our land, yet from our highest tribunes all we hear is, This will be over sooner than you know it, nothing to see here, lets get back to work.

A brief experiment with reconciliation

An analogy could be made to the American Civil War, in which over half a million of our people were killed either on the battlefield or in makeshift medical tents and hospitals. Our brief experiment with Reconstruction, a national effort toward a just reconciliation, attempted to make those sacrifices count for something: Freedom, representation, compensation, forty acres.

Much of the Reconstruction program was never enacted. It did not last long, thanks in large part to the pro-Southern impeached but not convicted President Andrew Johnson, who proclaimed, Its over, folks. Too much wanton democracy going on here, time to get back to what were best at. Sharecropping, tenant farming, wage and debt slavery, no voting rights, separate and not equal, lynching, Ku Klux Klan, terrorism, apartheid American-style.

The country did not have enough time or sufficient unified will to properly heal and bind up her wounds, to repair, restore, renew our family, our democracy. Our grief did not go deep enough. So we moved on as a nation, and forgot, and soon some people appropriated our grief.

They built monuments. Not to memorialize the Middle Passage, nor the human auction block, nor the parents separated from their children, the cotton plantation laborers who built a strong economy both South and North, the chain gangs, the forced illiteracy, the false prophets who taught the religion of slavery.

No, their memorials lifted up the trimly uniformed generals on their poised horses, the noble slaveowner patriarchs, the wise legislators of division and contempt, the gallant officers of a traitorous Confederacy, all in the name of tradition, heroism, sacrifice, pride, womanhood, honor. Let all who pass this sanctified place know: This is the new, eternal order of the land. Grieving time is over: Back to your hoes and your kitchen aprons. And to the good ole boys they said, We know life aint always easy, but hey, ya aint Black, right?

And they still tried killing us by the hundreds and thousands and millions. In state penitentiaries, in the mines, sweatshops, factories and fields, in imperial wars, in poverty and disease, all the while our school children pledged unqualified allegiance to all that star-spangled liberty and justice in this bountiful, brave land of the free for all.

Our teachers didnt tell us the whole story, our historians entombed the truths that stared out at them from the sources they studied, our preachers roared that God himself separated the races. Perhaps our poets probed deeper with their emotional paeans, odes, and laments, but they lacked the political power to transcend the catharsis of the valley of death and lead us to new, glorious mountaintop heights.

Monuments of the future

We ride the metaphorical train of life, and one after the other hear the conductor announce the cities we pull into. We watch as signposts announce the names of cities and towns and counties, places we know in our bones we will never pass through again in this life.

It was only a few miles back, around Memorial Day, that our nation marked the tragic milestone of 100,000 dead from the COVID-19 pandemic. Two, three, five, fifty, five hundred, five thousand, ten thousand. How did we get to one hundred thousand in only four months time?

And we know the number was higher, too, with uncounted deaths unattributed to COVID but that surely were. We know, too, how skewed the numbers are, not only toward older people, but toward African Americans, Latinx, and other people of color. Poorer living standards, poorer healthcare, poorer prevention, what else could we expect?

As its so often said, one death is a tragedy, a thousand is a statistic. But each one of those deaths meant something very special to families, neighbors, co-workers, and communities. We cannot erect a monument in the public square to every one of them, but can we sanctify a statistic? Perhaps the Europeans have a handle on this enormity when they place stones in the sidewalk, and plaques on buildings. In this home lived a Jewish family, the Goldbergers, Heinrich, Ida, Sophie, Karl, and Paul, whom the Nazis deported in 1942 to Auschwitz. All perished there, date unknown.

We do have some of that here, with our Holocaust memorials and museums. And we also have several Civil Rights museums and historical sites, as well as the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, otherwise referred to as the National Lynching Memorial, in Montgomery, Alabama.

How will we remember our tens of thousands, now turning into hundreds of thousands, succumbed to a fatal disease that could have been contained with prompt, dedicated, compassionate, science-led policies, but instead was allowed to extrapolate in some modern macabre version of the medieval Dance of Death? It didnt have to be, as our epidemiologists warned us. But in this land of the free for all, it was every man, woman, and child for themselves: Good luck, and God bless. I take no responsibility.

A new milestone

So now we have arrived at a new milestone. One hundred fifty thousand Americans dead. Not from a virus, but from ignorance, neglect, arrogance, superstition, pride, greed, racism, individualism, power-hunger, and willful malevolence.

How do we memorialize these statistics? Do we go back to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall of 58,000+ names, dead, sacrificed on some altar or otherbut we are never told whose altar? Did you support that war? Oppose it? No matter, the names are all here for you to meditate upon as you see fit. No controversy, please, especially not in our nations capital!

That cant work for our eventual coronavirus monuments. We commemorate here the [five hundred thousand? five million?] people in the United States who lost their lives to a terrible worldwide pandemic (2019-20??). May their loved ones find comfort, and the souls of the departed rest in everlasting peace.

No! There must be some accountability, some justice, truth and reconciliation, even some names named! How about something like this?

We memorialize here the [x number of] people in the United States who lost their lives in a terrible worldwide pandemic (2019-20??), the largest number of victims by far of any country on Earth. As U.S. citizens, we take personal and collective responsibility for our inability or unwillingness at the time to recognize the incompetence and heartlessness of the Donald Trump administration to humanely, rationall,y and scientifically coordinate an effective response to this fatal disease. The loyal Trump supporters in the Senate had the opportunity to rid the country of this vain and prideful tyrant, who remains to this day a shameful blot on our history, but opted not to when they had the opportunity in his February 2020 impeachment trial. Although the American people voted Trump out of office in the November 2020 presidential election, and also elected a Democratic Senate, we erect this monument in our public square now as a reminder and safeguard forever of our duty and honor as citizens to never again allow such abuse to happen. May all who stand here in the generations to come remember that democracy depends on active participation and righteous resistance to malfeasance. May we never forget the hard lesson we endured in that deadly hour, and may this monument forever serve to honor those sacred dead the Trump administration sacrificed in the name of greed and power.

A little wordy, maybe; it would require a ton of bronze for that plaque. But thats the spirit of it: We cannot just assume this pandemic is the new normal. Its not, and it must never be.

On Memorial Day weekend, we listed the names of whole cities of 100,000 that would have been wiped off the map if COVID-19 had been concentrated in one place.

Since that time, weve now also surpassed my own birthplace, New Haven, Conn. (a rounded 130,000), and a number of state capitals. I hope the legislators who gather in those Capitol buildings and statehouses take note: Hartford, Conn. (124,000), Lansing, Mich. (115,000), Springfield, Ill. (117,000), Columbia, S.C. (134,000), and Boise, Ida. (146,000). Theyd all have been swept up in a rapture of disease.

On the track to 150,000, weve now also lost McAllen, Mesquite, and Killeen, Tex.; Dayton, Ohio; Fullerton, Orange, Valencia, Torrance, Pomona, and Pasadena, Calif.; Syracuse, Borough Park, Astoria, and East Hampton, N.Y.; Savannah, Ga.; Bridgeport, Conn.; Naperville, Rockford, and Joliet, Ill.; Paterson, N.J.; Clarksville, Tenn.; Hollywood, Fla.; Kansas City, Kan.; Alexandria, Va.; and Springfield, Mass.

As for the next state capital to disappear, Eugene, Ore., is on the death watch, with its 160,000 residents.

Newspapers during the Vietnam War used to published running numbers of dead and wounded as a daily reminder of the human cost of that ill-advised criminal adventure. Naturally, they barely ever mentioned how many times that numbermany millions of Vietnamese, Laotians, and Cambodianswho were killed, maimed, and poisoned by U.S. attacks.

This is one of our ways of never forgetting our shamefully unnecessary human losses, and to what? To another altar of insanitythe Trump presidency.

Sadly, it must be said: Our dead can never rest in peace until new heights of justice flourish throughout the land. May the day come soon!

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150000 dead of coronavirus in U.S.: What monument will they have? - People's World

55 years since the Watts rebellion, how far have we traveled? – Los Angeles Times

In the summer of 1965, my birthday cake was stuck at a bakery across town. My mother couldnt get to it because Watts was on fire, which sent surrounding cities, like ours in the South Bay, into lockdown.

No way could she have known when she placed the order for my fifth birthday that a white highway patrol officer would soon pull over a young Black man for reckless driving and, in the ensuing chaos, arrest him, his brother and his mother. It was a sequence of events that played poorly in a community already bristling at overcrowded housing, low-wage jobs and routine incidents of police brutality.

In those six days of rebellion which some might call a fed-up-rising residents clashed not only with police but also the National Guard. In the end, 34 people lay dead, more than 1,000 had been injured, and tens of millions of dollars in property was gutted.

That smoke lingers, and the people periodically erupt in outrage, as when officers were acquitted in 1992 following the brutal beating of Rodney King, or when George Floyd died after a cop knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while he lay face down and handcuffed.

As the New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow wrote recently, The lulls you experience between explosive revolts of the oppressed should never be mistaken as harmony. They should be taken as rest breaks.

In the summers of the 1960s and early 1970s, my family could only hope for the best when driving while Black from Los Angeles to New York every other year. We went to reconnect with our East Coast kin.

To guide us, my mother ordered TripTiks from the American Automobile Assn., small, spiral-bound books that outlined the best path. My sense is that my parents asked for directions that expressly avoided the South, out of concern that we might get pulled over by racist highway patrolmen during the turbulent civil rights era.

In a time before major interstate highways, we connected to Route 66 and kept it moving along two-lane highways dotted with bad diners and dimly lighted motels. To pass the time, my mother read my father and me novels, such as The Grapes of Wrath. The AAA TripTiks highlighted points of interest along the way, such as Native communities or petroglyphs, but we flew by them all to make good time.

Once we were safely in New York, our people descended on us in my grandmothers Harlem kitchen. Over the next couple of weeks, we visited family around the tri-state area and in New Castle, Del., and binged on a buffet of delights at Coney Island.

Only on the way back did we slow down to sightsee. We might cruise the pulse of Chicagos Michigan Avenue or down a two-laner through Davenport, Iowa, stalks of corn swaying as if to the tune of for amber waves of grain.

We wound our way up the Black Hills of South Dakota to regard the 60-foot faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln blast-sculpted into granite. We strolled around charming Coeur dAlene, Idaho, and heard the church bells peel at noon.

When we entered a restaurant, hotel or curio shop, I secretly watched to see how people received us as a Black family. I cant remember coming across anyone who was unwelcoming.

At the same time, these were the same years when a president, a presidential hopeful John and Robert Kennedy along with three civil rights leaders, Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, were assassinated.

The tranquil beauty of the United States passing by my window over those summers seemed out of sync with our countrys history of violent bloodshed. I began to perceive the image of America as a glossy brochure for a house, where the best features are well-lighted and captured with a wide lens while flaws, such as lead water, termites and a roof about to cave, were cropped out.

Of all the places we toured, Mt. Rushmore made the deepest impression. At the time, I was ignorant that it was built on stolen Indigenous land by a sculptor with ties to the Ku Klux Klan. I just remember gazing up at those carved faces, particularly Lincolns, farthest to the right, and noting that the pinch in his brow barely hinted at the pressure he faced watching the U.S. become engulfed in a civil war over slavery.

Though Lincoln tried to warn us that a house divided against itself cannot stand, our country has yet to mend its cracked foundation. Too many continue to hold the American brochure aloft, while stubbornly refusing to address the pressing repairs needed to fix the racism, inequality and police brutality.

Recently, I heard a NPR interview with the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist, Martin Luther King Jr.s old church in Atlanta. He said that the current moment is not about burning ourselves out trying to squash all racial hate.

I just want to make sure that our city and our state and our country is not too busy to love, he said. And justice is what love looks like in public.

As the 55th anniversary of those fateful, fiery days in Watts approaches, theres no AAA TripTik we can follow to show us a way forward. But I think James Baldwin sagely pointed toward the North Star when he observed: Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.

Pamela K. Johnson is a writer and filmmaker based in Los Angeles. @pamelasez

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55 years since the Watts rebellion, how far have we traveled? - Los Angeles Times