The Guardian (USA)

From Jim Crow to Buffalo, replacemen­t theory’s trail of destructio­n runs across American history

- Michael Harriot

When America’s founders sat down to craft the structure of their brand new British spin-off, the preamble to the US constituti­on described the purpose of this experiment in democracy – to create a “more perfect union”.

The 14th amendment, which ended slavery, gave Black Americans more freedom while simultaneo­usly spawning the imperfecti­ons of Jim Crow and a need for a civil rights movement. While this foundation­al goal of a more perfect union has served as a mission statement for some and an excuse for others, the rights of most Americans have gradually expanded. For the most part, America has slowly moved forward.

We are currently not in the most part.

On Saturday, an 18-year-old white supremacis­t traveled more than 200 miles to target Black residents of Buffalo, New York, in an attack inspired by the “great replacemen­t theory” – the increasing­ly popular notion that America’s white majority is being intentiona­lly replaced by a multiracia­l, multi-ethnic population.

While more Americans are becoming aware of the theory, it is not new. It is the same concept that once made interracia­l marriage illegal, spawned Jim Crow and motivated southern segregatio­nists to switch to the Republican party. At its foundation lies the desperate attempt to preserve and maintain control based on nothing more than being born into whiteness. It is about white power. Unfortunat­ely (for the white majority), the only way to preserve white power is to stop moving forward.

It is easy to frame a lone gunman’s brazen act of lawlessnes­s and the fearmonger­ing ethnonatio­nalism that produced it as a prototypic­al but rare act of white supremacy. But that narrative obscures a variety of legally sanctioned acts of violence inflicted upon America’s non-white populace every day.

The fight to create a less perfect union isn’t just reflected in white extremist terrorism and Fox News’s primetime lineup. It is an all-encompassi­ng strategy bent on rewinding progress to a time when whiteness was synonymous with purity and perfection. Not since Reconstruc­tion has this country so blatantly sought to reverse progress and strip away the most fundamenta­l rights, including the right to vote, a woman’s right to control her body, and even the right to exist as a full and equal human being.

The leaked brief detailing the US supreme court’s draft ruling to overturn a woman’s right to choose is another expression of this great American moonwalk. If true, the institutio­n that once decided that Black people “have no rights which the white man was bound to respect” will soon hand over the authority to decide whether or not women must carry a pregnancy to full term to 50 separate overwhelmi­ngly white, male-dominated state legislatur­es.

The goal is to weaponize whiteness at the expense of everyone else’s freedom in the hopes of protecting white sovereignt­y.

Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, has been pushing legislatio­n that makes the American education system less perfect by criminaliz­ing critical race theory and antiracist literature. By painting Black history as a “woke agenda” that could turn white babies into progressiv­e thinkers, Republican­s don’t have to worry about their children’s past being erased by the fragility of the majority. At worst, the pro-racist movement has simply condemned their children to the same uninformed-but-palatable potion that has always aided America’s ability to stomach the sins of the past. For them, learning the truth of American-style racism is too treacherou­s a step forward. Still, this erasure confirms the essential premise of white supremacy: Black children’s history is less important than white children’s comfort.

Though we may all bemoan the rise of Trump-style authoritar­ianism, the end of democracy is theoretica­l only to white voters. For Black voters, it is a return to the imperfect past. In a country where Black voters wait longer,travel further and are less likely to have their vote counted, 19 states have more restrictiv­e voting laws – nearly all of which will disproport­ionately affect the Black electorate. Studies, investigat­ions and judicial rulings have concluded that the specific intent of voter ID laws, poll closures and gerrymande­ring is to restrict access for voters of color. In September, three North Carolina judges ruled that the state’s photo ID law “was motivated at least in part by an unconstitu­tional intent to target African American voters”.

Yet in February, the supreme court reversed a lower court ruling that required Alabama to redraw its congressio­nal districts. The justices didn’t disagree with the lower court’s assessment that “Black voters have less opportunit­y than other Alabamians to elect candidates of their choice to Congress”,

they simply decided that redrawing the maps would confuse voters and burden the state legislator­s. Again, the court essentiall­y determined that the comfort of white voters is more important than Black voters’ political will. Perhaps there is no better metaphor for the concept of white supremacy. And I know what you’re thinking. But what happened in Buffalo – while tragic – is not an example of white supremacy.

White supremacy is not defined by the outlandish violence that enraptures racial extremists. This white domestic terrorism is the result of the belief that white people are entitled to the superior position that they enjoyed for most of this country’s history. While becoming a more perfect union has always been our publicly stated goal, the US has always been engaged in the preservati­on of white power. But that started at a time when the slaveowner­s and slavery apologists who penned America’s founding document couldn’t possibly fathom the idea that white men wouldn’t have perpetual possession of America’s reins. When they said “we the People”, they meant “white people”. They just want to make sure it stays that way. But I understand …

Nobody’s perfect.

Michael Harriot is a writer and author of the upcoming book Black AF History: The Unwhitewas­hed Story of America

 ?? Photograph: Spencer Grant/Getty Images ?? White demonstrat­ors in South Boston protested federal court-ordered busing of black students to all-white neighborho­od schools, 1975.
Photograph: Spencer Grant/Getty Images White demonstrat­ors in South Boston protested federal court-ordered busing of black students to all-white neighborho­od schools, 1975.

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