Wednesday, May 6, 2015

The Civil Rights Connection

So I’ve got this blog  - see?  A central premise was that I would focus on wealth inequality and the nature of the US plutocracy:  a pretty wide ballpark even at that so I tried to narrow my focus.  For example, there are huge issues of civil rights and oppression that I ignored for the sake of that premise.  Clearly, that is not tenable or even consistent with my intention.  It’s blinders for the hell of it and it makes the discussion kind of parochial.


I’m here to say, as if you didn’t know, that there is a very big connection between civil rights and wealth inequality.  Please consider this somewhat wider premise and let me know what you think.


First, about racism:  Racism can be personal bigotry, learned and acculturated.  But there has been well over 200 years of scholarship and activism that prove - to me, anyway - that racism is encouraged institutionally. By whom?  Who could benefit?  Well, certainly the very wealthy could benefit.  Napoleon used divide-and-conquer. Of course, Marx talked about class warfare.  And John Sayles summed it all up in his film, Matewan.  There is much to be gained by cementing ideas of them versus us.  If you can justify closing opportunities for upward mobility or aid to families, you can keep more for yourself.  All those social services and federal scholarships are expensive; just an invitation for higher taxes on the 1%.  But it’s not only simple greed - you’ve got to protect the top rung.  


Starving social services is easy to justify if you demonize the poor or marginalize minority populations.  It keeps taxes low.  And it keeps a potential population of irate voters stupid and powerless.  


Prisons can be useful as well as lucrative.  School-to-prison pipeline, racial profiling, mandatory sentencing - all play their role in filling the prisons and vindicating racism and class prejudice.  The Koch brothers are heavily invested in prisons.  For-profit prisons are suing states for not keeping the prisons full.


Militarizing the police deepens the impression even more that “we” have to be protected from “them”.  (Who is “we”?  Who is “them”?)  Militarizing the police implicitly indoctrinates the police. Militarizing the police makes them the firm ally that the oligarchs will need if push comes to shove.   Militarizing the police is the 180-degree opposite of community policing.


Racism is no doubt deeply satisfying to racists.  It is also profoundly useful to the oligarchy.   Racism is real and it’s a crucial diversion.


The only political rights are those protected by law.  The anchor of law in this country is the Constitution - the same one that (originally) protected slavery.  That’s why, as long as you live in the United States, you love the Constitution.  For what it’s worth, discrimination is against the law (thank you, 14th amendment).  For what it’s worth, any interventions that limit your free speech, your blogging, your peaceably marching and protesting, your demands for an accounting from your government,  Etcetera! … are against the law (thank you, 1st Amendment).  For what it’s worth, any activity that restricts your participation in voting is against the law (14th, 15th Amendment, Voting Rights Act and more than one named Civil Rights Act - thank you very much).  


Feeling oppressed?  Don’t be fooled.  Don’t be distracted.  Use the tools available, imperfect though they may be.


Other diversions and distortions threaten these civil rights.  Religious claims justify bigotry on the basis of the 1st Amendment.  Corporations now have civil rights which is very troubling because of their power to buy public opinion and the state legislatures.


Corporations and big, big money can stifle free inquiry and dissent. They can privatize the public schools.  They can co-opt or buy higher education.  They can bust unions. They can dismantle institutions of government that protect you.

There is work to be done.  To paraphrase Pope Paul VI, if you want freedom, work for justice.

2 comments:

  1. And while we like to give thanks for the 13th Amendment ending slavery, it also specifically made slavery legal--for "punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted". I don't think it's coincidence that our black and brown neighbors bear the brunt of mass incarceration.

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