Okay, I was going to keep my mouth shout, but if the list is going to
tackle this topic, then I really think it's time to get real and move past
BS symbolic politics to look at the real systemic reasons why racist
outcomes persist in the United States.

In the United States, we have just undergone 40 of neoliberal austerity
which has been imposed on the poor and working class. Unions have been
destroyed, while safety nets that provided access to housing, healthcare,
and education for the poor have been dismantled in a systemic fashion. This
has been a period in which extremely wealthy elites have amassed insane
amounts of wealth, while working folks have consistently been impoverished.
Deindustrialization has eliminated most of the good paying jobs from the
Rust Belt. And in Detroit, musicians have suffered the dual blow of Motown
leaving, and the music industry itself collapsing, making it very difficult
for skilled working musicians to find enough work to live on.

Of course, because of the racist colonial history of the United States, and
espeically the legacy of racist chattel slavery, historically exploited
minority communities have been disproportionately impacted and impoverished
by neoliberal austerity. Furthermore, many elite capitalists have continued
the tradition of weaponizing and encouraging white racism and prejudice
against minorities, for the purpose of dividing the working class along
race lines. This is mostly done not for ideological reasons, but for the
simple reason that it keeps wages low and profits up. Transferring jobs to
countries where it is easier to exploit workers, and then stoking fears
about immigrants, servers a similar purpose. Expanding (racist)
incarceration and exploiting prison labor also plays a role in this.

My point is this: creating complex musical works, and writing sophisticated
books, are cultural activities that very few poor and working class people
can afford to engage in. The nurses taking care of me at Detroit Receiving
Hospital after I got a head injury from a car accident, or the people
serving me coffee at a gas station or diner, do not have the privilege and
luxury of writing books on techno. And on top of that, a lot of black folks
simply aren't very interested in techno; they prefer other kinds of music.
The biggest audience for this music is in Europe, and the audience is
mostly white.

So if you want a world where there are more black musicians, artists, and
writers can do their thing, you have to recognize that this can only happen
on the basis of providing for people's basic material needs, and
recognizing their basic human rights: the right to not be murdered or
unjustly harassed and imprisoned by the police, as well as the right to
housing, food, education, healthcare, and a decent paying job. While it's
certainly important to be aware of implicit racism and obstacles that black
DJ's or writers might face compared to white peers, and to fight against
all expressions of racism, it's INSANE to be primarily fixated only on
cultural questions such as the number of black DJ's, when black folks are
being killed by COVID-19 at a far higher rate than whites, and when 40% of
people in the US making under $40,000 a year have lost their jobs.

You can't demand cultural change without ALSO demanding that we change the
material basis that culture rests on! It's completely hypocritical. People
need housing and food before they can write books. Even Jesus fed people
before he preached to them. And don't forget--the Black Panthers, MLK Jr,
and Malcom X before his death were all talking about the connection between
racism and capitalism. For having the audacity to combine antiracist
struggle with the struggle for basic human rights and economic justice, *they
were murdered*.

Of course, I'm just a random white dude who has been homeless and had to
drop out of college to work because I couldn't afford it; however, you
don't have to take my word for it: *go read the work of great black
intellectuals, such as Cornel West, Adolph Reed Jr, and Angela Davis*.

Peace out,
~David Powers



On Thu, Jun 25, 2020 at 9:27 AM kent williams <[email protected]>
wrote:

> In that vein, here is an essay written by Ashleigh Lauryn, a Detroit DJ.
> It has to do with the controversy about N*na Kr*viz posting pictures of
> herself with cornrows, and Kr*viz tone-deaf reaction to criticism.
>
> But more than that it is a beautifully written essay.
> https://undergroundandblack.com/2019/10/29/keeping-it-real/
>

Reply via email to