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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Same Poison, The Solution is a Social Movement [Rise of the New Black Radicals, Chris Hedges]
Published on Monday, April 27, 2015 by Truthdig
Rise of the New Black Radicals by Chris Hedges
Excerpts:
The almost daily murders of young black men and women by police in the United Statesa crisis undiminished by the protests of groups such as Black Lives Matter and by the empty rhetoric of black political eliteshave given birth to a new young black militant.
This militant, rising off the bloody streets of cities such as Ferguson, Mo., understands that the beast is not simply white supremacy, chronic poverty and the many faces of racism but the destructive energy of corporate capitalism. This militant has given up on electoral politics, the courts and legislative reform, loathes the corporate press and rejects established black leaders such as Barack Obama, Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Michael Eric Dyson. This militant believes it is only in the streets and in acts of civil disobedience that change is possible. And given the refusal of the corporate state to address the mounting suffering of the poor and working poor, draconian state repression and indiscriminate use of lethal state violence against unarmed people of color, I think the new black radical is right. It will be a long, hot and violent summer.
The worlds hundreds of millions of disenfranchised youthsin America this group is dominated by the black and brown underclasscome out of the surplus labor created by our system of corporate neofeudalism. These young men and women have been discarded as human refuse and are preyed upon by a legal system that criminalizes poverty. In the United States they constitute the bulk of the 2.3 million human beings locked in jails and prisons. The discontent in Ferguson, Athens, Cairo, Madrid and Ayotzinapa is one discontent. And the emerging revolt, although it comes in many colors, speaks many languages and has many belief systems, is united around a common enemy. Bonds of solidarity and consciousness are swiftly uniting the wretched of the earth against our corporate masters.
Corporate power, which knows what is coming, has put in place sophisticated systems of control that include militarized police, elaborate propaganda campaigns that seek to make us fearful and therefore passive, wholesale surveillance of every citizen and a court system that has stripped legal protection from the poor and any who dissent. The masses are to be kept in bondage. But the masses, especially the young, understand the game. There is a word for what is bubbling up from belowrevolution. It cant begin soon enough.
This militant, rising off the bloody streets of cities such as Ferguson, Mo., understands that the beast is not simply white supremacy, chronic poverty and the many faces of racism but the destructive energy of corporate capitalism. This militant has given up on electoral politics, the courts and legislative reform, loathes the corporate press and rejects established black leaders such as Barack Obama, Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Michael Eric Dyson. This militant believes it is only in the streets and in acts of civil disobedience that change is possible. And given the refusal of the corporate state to address the mounting suffering of the poor and working poor, draconian state repression and indiscriminate use of lethal state violence against unarmed people of color, I think the new black radical is right. It will be a long, hot and violent summer.
The worlds hundreds of millions of disenfranchised youthsin America this group is dominated by the black and brown underclasscome out of the surplus labor created by our system of corporate neofeudalism. These young men and women have been discarded as human refuse and are preyed upon by a legal system that criminalizes poverty. In the United States they constitute the bulk of the 2.3 million human beings locked in jails and prisons. The discontent in Ferguson, Athens, Cairo, Madrid and Ayotzinapa is one discontent. And the emerging revolt, although it comes in many colors, speaks many languages and has many belief systems, is united around a common enemy. Bonds of solidarity and consciousness are swiftly uniting the wretched of the earth against our corporate masters.
Corporate power, which knows what is coming, has put in place sophisticated systems of control that include militarized police, elaborate propaganda campaigns that seek to make us fearful and therefore passive, wholesale surveillance of every citizen and a court system that has stripped legal protection from the poor and any who dissent. The masses are to be kept in bondage. But the masses, especially the young, understand the game. There is a word for what is bubbling up from belowrevolution. It cant begin soon enough.
Just envision a debtors prison being run by a collusion between city officials, police and court judges, who treated our community like an ATM machine, Tyler said. Because thats all they did. Ferguson is in St. Louis County. Its 21,000 people living in 8,100 households. So its a small town. Sixty-seven percent of the residents are African-American. Twenty-two percent live below poverty level. A total of $2.6 million [were paid in fines to city officials, the courts and the police] in 2013. The Ferguson Municipal Court disposed of 24,532 warrants and 12,018 cases. Thats about three warrants per household. One and a half cases for each household. You dont get $321 in fines and fees and three warrants per household from an average crime rate. You get numbers like this from racist bullshit, arrests from jaywalking, and constant low-level harassment involving traffic stops, court appearances, high fines and the threat of jail for failure to pay.
For an example, she went on, I got pulled over. I turned a left [illegally] and my car was searched. I was met with three different officers, two detectives. I got a traffic ticket. I had a ticket because I didnt have my license on me. So I had a ticket for not having my license, and then I got a ticket from turning the wrong way. I did not go to court because I was out of town. However, I called them and told them I will not appear to court and my lawyer would handle it from there. I got a letter in the mail that said failure to appear to court, and they have a warrant out for my arrest. Theyre threatening to take my license and suspend it because I didnt appear to court. So these are just the things that had happened in St. Louis right now. You can get a ticket from walking across the street, or a ticket from not cutting your grass, and then youre stuck in this system that they put us in, that is oppressed, and keeps us oppressed.
I was arrested when I was pregnant, I was 37 weeks and I was arrested in St. Charles County by four white officers, she said. They took me into custody when I had this big-ass stomach. And Im like, Im pregnant. I had a traffic ticket for parking in the wrong meter. And they wrote me a ticket and I never paid it, so they took me. I had a warrant out for my arrest. I sat in jail, pregnant, had my baby a week early because I was stressed out and crying my eyes out in jail.
No person should have to go through this, T-Dubb-O said, whether its in America, Palestine, Mexico, Brazil, Canada. Nobody should have to go through this. You look at a bunch of young people [in Ferguson], their age ranges anywhere from 12 to 28 or 29, that went against the most powerful military force in this world. Thats pretty much what happened. Thats not whats explained, but thats what it was. It was tanks on every corner, our phones tapped, they follow us. Every day we was out there we thought we were gonna die. At one point in time they said they were gonna kill us. Were not shooting rubber bullets tonight, were shooting live ammunition. And these are the things that you dont see on the news. It was just because we was tired of being treated as less than people. Just for opportunity to be able to walk the streets and live and breath and do what everybody else does. And thats pretty much what we was fighting for. I mean, the level of oppression, its kind of hard to fathom, and believe that its actually true in America, especially the middle of America. But its real, where you have people that are judged off the neighborhoods they come from and the color of their skin and theyre denied certain opportunities.
For an example, she went on, I got pulled over. I turned a left [illegally] and my car was searched. I was met with three different officers, two detectives. I got a traffic ticket. I had a ticket because I didnt have my license on me. So I had a ticket for not having my license, and then I got a ticket from turning the wrong way. I did not go to court because I was out of town. However, I called them and told them I will not appear to court and my lawyer would handle it from there. I got a letter in the mail that said failure to appear to court, and they have a warrant out for my arrest. Theyre threatening to take my license and suspend it because I didnt appear to court. So these are just the things that had happened in St. Louis right now. You can get a ticket from walking across the street, or a ticket from not cutting your grass, and then youre stuck in this system that they put us in, that is oppressed, and keeps us oppressed.
I was arrested when I was pregnant, I was 37 weeks and I was arrested in St. Charles County by four white officers, she said. They took me into custody when I had this big-ass stomach. And Im like, Im pregnant. I had a traffic ticket for parking in the wrong meter. And they wrote me a ticket and I never paid it, so they took me. I had a warrant out for my arrest. I sat in jail, pregnant, had my baby a week early because I was stressed out and crying my eyes out in jail.
No person should have to go through this, T-Dubb-O said, whether its in America, Palestine, Mexico, Brazil, Canada. Nobody should have to go through this. You look at a bunch of young people [in Ferguson], their age ranges anywhere from 12 to 28 or 29, that went against the most powerful military force in this world. Thats pretty much what happened. Thats not whats explained, but thats what it was. It was tanks on every corner, our phones tapped, they follow us. Every day we was out there we thought we were gonna die. At one point in time they said they were gonna kill us. Were not shooting rubber bullets tonight, were shooting live ammunition. And these are the things that you dont see on the news. It was just because we was tired of being treated as less than people. Just for opportunity to be able to walk the streets and live and breath and do what everybody else does. And thats pretty much what we was fighting for. I mean, the level of oppression, its kind of hard to fathom, and believe that its actually true in America, especially the middle of America. But its real, where you have people that are judged off the neighborhoods they come from and the color of their skin and theyre denied certain opportunities.
I dont see them pulling back, he said of the state and its security forces. They have no problem killing people. They have no problem shooting gas at babies, pregnant people, old people. They dont have an issue with it. And our politicians are just standing around with their arms folded.
As long as the powers that be are in control, the oppression isnt going to go anywhere, he said. Its really going to take people to unite worldwide, not just in America, not just in St. Louis, not just in one particular city or state. Its gonna have to be people identifying their struggles with each other worldwide, internationally, and say enough is enough. Thats the only way oppression will ever leave.
As long as the powers that be are in control, the oppression isnt going to go anywhere, he said. Its really going to take people to unite worldwide, not just in America, not just in St. Louis, not just in one particular city or state. Its gonna have to be people identifying their struggles with each other worldwide, internationally, and say enough is enough. Thats the only way oppression will ever leave.
Full Text:
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/04/27/rise-new-black-radicals
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The Same Poison, The Solution is a Social Movement [Rise of the New Black Radicals, Chris Hedges] (Original Post)
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