http://johnhalle.com/outragesandinterludes/?p=741
Adolph Reed on Sanders, Coates and Reparations
January 25, 2016 <http://johnhalle.com/outragesandinterludes/?p=741>
john.halle <http://johnhalle.com/outragesandinterludes/?author=1> Leave a
comment <http://johnhalle.com/outragesandinterludes/?p=741#respond>

Interview segment from Doug Henwood <http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com>‘s
Behind the News, 1/21/16. Audio link here
<http://shout.lbo-talk.org/lbo/RadioArchive/2016/16_01_21.mp3>.

(Lightly edited for clarity.)

DH: We’ve got Ta-Nehisi Coates citing
<http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/01/bernie-sanders-reparations/424602/>
the call for reparations and finding Sanders guilty of hostility towards
reparations. What do you think of his critique?

AR: I read the thing in The Atlantic and it’s so utterly empty and beside
the point, I can’t even characterize it.

You can go down Sanders’s platform issue by issue and ask, “so how is this
not a black issue?” How is a $15 minimum wage not a black issue. How is
massive public works employment not a black issue. How is free public
college higher education not a black issue. The criminal justice stuff and
all the rest of it. So one head scratching aspect of this is what do people
like Coates imagine is to be gained by calling the redistribution program
racial and calling it “reparations”?

The charitable or benign interpretation of what he and others imagine the
power of this rhetoric to be, that there is something cathartic about it
like Black Power. I’m thinking for instance of “say Black Lives Matter” or
“say Sandra Bland’s name”. Like the demand to call it reparations doesn’t
seem to make any sense whatsoever. It doesn’t add anything to a call for
redistribution if anything, it could undercut them. Since there’s nothing
(less) solidaristic than demanding a designer type program that will
redistribute only to one’s own group and claim that that group, especially
at time when times are getting tougher and economic insecurity is deepening
for everybody, seems like its guaranteed not to get off the ground and
seems almost like a police action.

DH: I’m not Tanehisi Coates but I imagine he and others favoring
reparations would respond by saying that its meant to address wounds that
were specifically racial in their origin.

AR: The logic fails on its own terms. If you grant for the sake of argument
that the injuries were highly and explicitly racialized, it does not follow
from that that the remedy needs to be of the same coin. And I have not seen
Coates or others who make that assertion actually argue for it-i.e. give a
concrete and pragmatic explanation of how (the remedy is supposed to) work.
That is to say, what the response, or atonement, I suppose, for past harms
would look like and what they imagine the response would actually be.

Coates makes this stuff as he goes along: by his own account, he read
Baldwin and wanted to write like Baldwin and his editor would check him and
say “Look, you’re writing these passages which don’t mean anything
whatsoever” since he was so focussed on wanting to write like Baldwin
absent having anything in particular to say.

So the first question for me has always been how can you imagine putting
together a political alliance that would be capable of prevailing on this
issue. And what you get in response is a lot of “What black people deserve”
because of the harms that have been done to them. I just think it’s
fundamentally unserious politically.

But I’ll say this and I’ll say this as a Sanders supporter-I’ll come clean
on that. The idea that Bernie Sanders becomes the target of race-line
activists now, and not Hillary Clinton, is just beyond me and it smells. It
smells to high heaven.

You might say, well, she’s not the one who pushed through NAFTA or signed
the omnibus crime bill, or ended the federal government’s commitment to
direct provision of income support or housing that her husband did. But she
supported all that stuff then. My mind is blown by the understanding of
politics that undergirds this perspective that people like Coates and proud
TFA <http://dianeravitch.net/category/teach-for-america-tfa/> alum Deray
McKesson <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeRay_Mckesson> and holy roller Marissa
Johnson
<http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/marissa-johnson-a-generation-of-activists-who-believe-in-disruption/>
and all those others embrace. It’s fundamentally anti-left. The only thing
you can say is that this is a class program. That this is a program that
expresses and connects with the interests, or the world view, if not
interests-although they do come together-of an aspiring or upwardly mobile
stratum of the black and other colored PMC (professional managerial class)
that scoffs and sneers at programs of material redistribution.

When I was working in the GI movement, when people like that would come
into the meeting, I’d just ask them “So which branch of military
intelligence are you assigned to?”

DH: This sort of stuff plays very well to guilty white liberals doesn’t it.

AR: Yeah, well, a friend, whom I won’t out, observed to me a while ago that
one of the things that really irks him (and he’s a professor) about Coates
is the way that white liberals gush over him and my informant said that it
reminds him of the way that upper middle class liberals fawn over the
maid’s son who has gone to college and “made something of himself”.

DH: That’s pretty harsh.

AR: Yeah, but there’s a lot to it because, it comes back to this question:
why should anyone pay any attention to anything this guy says?

DH: Well he has a “literary writing style” that appeals to certain
populations.

AR: Right. I understand that and that it’s absolutely divorced from content
except for this funny sort of fake Candide like thing of “I’m just
astounded that white people read me.” It just all feels tawdry and evasive
and cheap.

I’ve heard some people argue that it strengthens the case for affirmative
action but I think it does the opposite, since reparations is really
affirmative action on steroids. I can imagine going to talk to a long
displaced steel worker in Western Pennsylvania whose fretting now about
further increase in economic insecurity around the fracking stuff. And
you’re going to explain to him or her that because of slavery they’ve got
to be on the giving end of some transfer payments that will go to
recompense blacks for harms done in the past.

Again, some of this stuff really feels like a moral panic and the moral
panic aspect of it, it seems to me, converges on the class perspective. And
the career aspirations. Don’t forget that. And that leads us where we are.

DH: Coates and lots of his supporters would say that what you are arguing
is for a class based politics that’s blind to the injuries of race and the
enduring damage of racism. What do you say to that?

AR: I say that their race first politics *is* a class politics. It’s not an
alternative to class politics it’s a politics of a different class. It’s
not a working class politics, it’s an aspiring PMC politics that’s hinged
in material terms ultimately on race relations administration as a career
path. There’s a multi-billion dollar diversity industry now-it might be
interesting to have Ken Warren on and talk about that since he did a three
year tour as a Deputy Provost for Diversity at the University of Chicago
and made deep penetrations behind the lines of the corporate diversity
industry.

DH: One of the points you made in your Progressive
<http://educationright.tripod.com/id266.htm> piece back in 2002 was that
whenever universal class based politics rears its head, the reparations
call pops up. One doesn’t want to get too conspiratorial about this but
what were you thinking of?

AR: I was out of the country for a while back then and hadn’t paid much
attention and the reparations thing had blown way up while I was away-there
were conferences all over C-Span-Ron Karenga, Kimberly Crenshaw and Charles
Ogletree. Because it’s the kind of thing that lawyers dine on. I was
bemused-I couldn’t figure out what was going on. When (James) Foreman and
the Black Manifesto
<http://www.nybooks.com/articles/1969/07/10/black-manifesto/> group raised
the reparations issue back in the 60s, it was connected with something like
the freedom budget and what Whitney Young had described as a Marshall Plan
for the ghetto, so in that sense reparations were a hook which expressed
Forman’s cleverness and engagement with the soap box nationalists up in
Harlem who had been talking about that stuff for a long time.

It seemed to me that clearly was a response or an alternative to the
possibility that a more universally, class based redistributive agenda
would gain currency. Part of the problem, and I think this is a big chunk
of the appeal of reparations since 1965 and into the 1970s, is that it
appeals to people whose political commitments is to maintain the centrality
of a racial interpretation of every form of inequality or injustice that
affects black people. So the commitment is to a race politics. And so the
race politics could be challenged by what they imagine to be post-racial
politics (which nobody other than them has ever talked about, anyway) and
by a class politics.

What the race discourse does is it forces a racial interpretation onto any
manifestation of inequality or injustice to be associated with black people
on the receiving end. So in that sense, the demands aren’t even that
important. The discussion of the program isn’t even that important. The
real objective is to maintain the dominance of the racialist interpretive
frame of reference and that goes back to my contention that this is a class
program because part of the material foundation of the class has been,
since the class began to take shape at the end of the 19th century, a claim
to be representatives of the aspirations of and of the voice of black
people writ large.

DH: And not to get too conspiratorial about this, but it seems like people
like Fred Hampton and Martin Luther King, people who talk about non racial
analyses of capitalism and cross racial alliances against it end up dead.
And people like Karenga and Assante end up doing pretty well for
themselves. Is that just an accident or should I be concerned about this?

AR: Well, I’m not sure about Assante but we know that Karenga knew his way
to the offices of the authorities and their phone numbers. And it’s easy to
throw around charges of his being an agent because he acts like an
agent-and we all know where that leads. But having said all that, that
strain of nationalist-I sometimes think of it as a Duvalierist politics-has
always been capable of making alliances with the most dangerous and
reprehensible elements of the opposition: Garvey and the Klan, Elijah
Muhammed and the Klan, Floyd McKissick
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floyd_McKissick> and Roy Innis
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Innis> and other Black Power
nationalists who created Black Americans for a Responsible Two Party
<https://theintercept.com/2015/08/17/core-went-leading-civil-rights-movement-protesting-support-police-exxonmobil/>
system, or as the rest of us called it “Negros for Nixon.

And they all gave the same line: all white people are racist. It’s foolish
to try to make distinctions among them based on principle and on politics,
we have to be pragmatic and align ourselves with whichever ones of them are
going to do something for black people and that formulation of course is an
instantiation of the famous slippage between first person singular and
plural that’s a characteristic of nationalist ideologies no matter where
you find them.

DH: I remember an old slogan “Black and White Unite and Fight”: a pretty
good guideline to political action?

AR: Look it doesn’t need to be Kumbaya. It’s practical-if you assume that
the interests and the structures which generate inequality, dispossession
and misery are not amenable to the petitions to the enlightened ruling
class from one section of the oppressed, then the only way we’re going to
be able to make anyone’s life better is to change the terms of political
debate. And we can only do that on the basis of common experience and the
most broadly shared experience is that of those who work for a living or
are expected to work for a living. And I don’t see how we can get to any
sort of a better world going through any other route. And we certainly
can’t do it by hanging out, like McKesson and John Legend (in his own mind)
with the Broad Foundation and Bruce Rauner
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Rauner> and TFA and people like that.
There’s a sense in that these people are the black shock troops for
neoliberalism.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to