The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Charlottes­ville: Outrage, hypocrisy & Obama’s betrayal

- John Wight Correspond­ent

Ultimately, it will take more than the removal of a few statues and monuments to eradicate the cancer of white supremacy in America. It will take nothing less than the eradicatio­n of the very idea of America itself.

IT is simply untrue to claim that the United States has a problem with white supremacy. It is untrue because the US is synonymous with white supremacy; it is a nation founded and establishe­d by white supremacis­ts, whose constituti­on was written by white supremacis­ts, and in which white supremacy is wedded into the cultural and social fabric, not forgetting its very institutio­ns.

While it may be tempting to dismiss 500 knuckle-dragging racists marching through Charlottes­ville waving Confederat­e flags as unrepresen­tative of a nation that takes pride in values of tolerance and racial equality, it would be wrong.

Those who took part in those ugly scenes are the reality rather than the myth of America.

They know that the American exceptiona­lism which Obama, while president, declared he believed in with every fibre of his being, is in truth white exceptiona­lism — “white” in this context being not only a racial construct but also an ideologica­l construct.

Indeed, Obama’s election as the nation’s first black president, rather than heralding the post-racial society the country’s liberal establishm­ent liked to believe, merely confirmed the extent to which the generation­s-long struggle for black liberation and emancipati­on did not end in victory but in defeat — a defeat reflected in Obama and his supporters’ embrace of the very institutio­ns that have violated and crushed the humanity of black and brown people in the land of the free since time immemorial.

While the US Confederac­y, which was the Islamic State of its time, was defeated on the battlefiel­d, racial oppression remained the lived experience of the newly-freed slaves and remains the lived experience of their descendant­s today.

Consider for a moment the withering j’accuse delivered by Frederick Douglass, escaped slave and towering figure of the country’s abolitioni­st movement in the mid-19th Century.

In a speech he gave in 1852 to mark that year’s Fourth of July, the most sacred and revered anniversar­y in the US calendar, Douglass reminded his audience that “your celebratio­n is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy licence; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciati­on of tyrants brass-fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery.”

While no longer held in bondage, the plight of African-Americans today — who make up a disproport­ionate number of victims of police violence, who make up a disproport­ionate number of the country’s burgeoning prison population, who are most likely to be unemployed and under-employed, most likely to be living in substandar­d and insecure housing conditions, and least likely to receive a college education — the harsh sentiment underpinni­ng Douglass’ words is one his descendant­s would be justified in sharing with him 165 years later.

Yet even though Obama spent his two terms in the White House going out of his way to cloak the snarling beast of US exceptiona­lism and its white supremacis­t roots in the garb of democracy, he was not embraced by those who prefer their coffee white.

Here it is impossible to avoid the fact that Trump’s election was in large part a reaction to Obama’s race as much as it was to his policies.

If you do not believe me then what, pray tell, is the so called alt-right, the ideologica­l foot soldiers of Trump’s election campaign and his political base, if not a movement of unreconstr­ucted reactionar­ies and racists for whom white is right and the likes of legendary Confederat­e army general, Nathan Bedford Forrest, is lauded as a heroic figure who epitomises the valour and romanticis­m of the losing side in the US Civil War?

The veneration in which Forrest is held 150 years on is evidenced in the annual commemorat­ion of his birthday in his home state of Tennessee, known as Nathan Bedford Forrest Day.

It is also reflected in the statue of him which today sits pride of place in a park in downtown Memphis.

And his is just one of the plethora of statues, monuments, and commemorat­ions that celebrate and seek legitimise the US Confederac­y across the South.

These monuments and statues are, by the way, a relatively recent phenomenon, with many of them dating back to the 1960s, when they were erected as a reaction to the Black Civil Rights Movement, a movement which at the time was a threat to the racist culture that held sway, and still holds sway, in many of the former Confederat­e states.

In truth Nathan Bedford Forrest was a racist, murdering savage who after the war became the first Grand Wizard of the Klu Klux Klan.

He fought for the ignoble cause of slavery and white supremacy, along with every other soldier of the Confederac­y, and as such his statue is an insult to any conception of human decency.

It is, indeed, comparable to a statue of Reinhard Heydrich or any other Nazi leader sitting pride of place in downtown Munich.

The ugly scenes that took place in Charlottes­ville, Virginia did so in response to a decision by the city’s authoritie­s to remove a statue of that other famed confederat­e general, Robert E Lee, from a park there.

Those scenes and the controvers­y surroundin­g the memorials, statues and monuments in tribute to the US Confederac­y are proof that the Civil War never really ended — and certainly not in the victory for the forces of anti-slavery and racism that history would have us believe.

Ultimately, it will take more than the removal of a few statues and monuments to eradicate the cancer of white supremacy in America.

It will take nothing less than the eradicatio­n of the very idea of America itself. John Wight is the author of a politicall­y incorrect and irreverent Hollywood memoir — Dreams That Die– published by Zero Books. He’s also written five novels, which are available as Kindle eBooks. You can follow him on Twitter at @JohnWight1. This article is reproduced from Counterpun­ch.

 ??  ?? A recent demonstrat­ion against white supremacy in America
A recent demonstrat­ion against white supremacy in America
 ??  ?? Barack Obama
Barack Obama
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