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“If we don’t fix this, we will forever be broken.” — Sara Sidner, CNN Journalist, Washington Week Extra, May 28, 2021 [Set timer at 6:18]
America
is broken. Tens of millions of us believe that the best-attended and cleanest election in our history was stolen. Millions more believe in paranoid conspiracy fantasies made up out of whole cloth by anonymous story-tellers on the Internet. We are more divided among ourselves than at any time since our Civil War.
Our nation’s dirty little secret is that it has been broken since its Founding. There have always been deep and searing contradictions between our ideals and our practices, our declared principles and our lived reality. Now, for the second time since our Civil War, the pieces are starting to come apart. Why now?
Once our drive for territorial expansion on a seemingly unlimited “new” continent submerged the deep contradictions of our Founding. In the twentieth century, our drive for continued technological and commercial expansion seems to have served the same purpose. Our ideals and myths, rather than our actual practices, captured our own people’s imagination and the world’s.
Yet today, in the twenty-first century, our expansive drive is slowing down. It’s facing the formidable obstacles of
an overpopulated planet,
oil and gas running out, drought and other climate changes that strongly impact most of our land mass, and the strongest international competition in our history—from China. The brain-drain that fed our pre-eminence for so long is starting to reverse, as highly educated people relocate to China and to Europe, where the Large Hadron Collider sits and the social safety net for the middle class is much stronger.
As we Americans face these challenges, our long-unresolved fundamental contradictions are starting to drag us down. They are corrupting our once-legendary sense of justice, efficiency, effectiveness and self-worth. They are tarnishing our once-strong attraction for our own citizens, foreigners and immigrants alike. The vultures of contradiction between our expressed values—our “exceptionalism”—and our reality are coming home to roost.
Chief among those contradictions is our treatment of Black people. Thomas Jefferson was himself a lifelong slaveholder. He incongruously wrote that “all Men are created equal.” Yet our original Constitution not only
validated slavery; it counted each Black slave as three-fifths of a human being. In its infamous
decision in
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1856), our Supreme Court declared the following as a fundamental principle, eighty years after our Independence: that Black people “had no rights which the white man was bound to respect, and that the negro might justly and lawfully be reduced to slavery for his benefit.”
We Americans fought our bloodiest and most costly war to rid ourselves of slavery. It was our only war fought nearly entirely on our own territory. Our Fifteenth Amendment, one of the three that our Civil War made possible, also abolished discrimination in voting based on “previous condition of servitude.”
Yet the dominant
culture that slavery spawned has persisted for twelve generations of the descendants of slaves, and counting. Throughout all that dismal post-Civil-War history, to the present day, making it hard for Black people to vote has been a key part of that cultural persistence.
The stated justification for slavery was an invented “inferiority” of the darker races. But the
real reason was always much simpler and more practical. When our Founders forged a new nation out of what seemed to them a wilderness, there were no steam engines, let alone internal combustion engines. There was no electricity. The now-quaint wooden windmills that had helped move water in Holland had not become common on our undeveloped continent. So almost everything physical that got done in early America got done with the muscle power of men or beasts.
Beasts were and are stronger, but they are less intelligent and adaptable. And so slavery, as a primary social institution, jumped from ancient Rome to what became the United States.
The US was the first nation in human history to be consciously Founded on lofty abstract principles, rather than on the social evolution of one or more particular ethnic groups. Its principles included democracy, equality, and a healthy aversion to monarchy and aristocracy. Yet slavery, which contradicted all three, was the driving economic force of Europeans’ foothold on this strange, new continent and their westward expansion over it. Northern businessmen, too, participated in slavery by financing it, building and selling the ships that ran slaves, providing machinery for slave industries, and shipping and trading the products of slave labor, including tobacco and cotton.
It was Black slaves’ grinding labor, day upon day, that
gave our key Founders the leisure to think their great thoughts and to build the nation they incongruously styled a “democracy.” Thomas Jefferson was the author of our Declaration of Independence, and James Madison was the so-called “Father of our Constitution.” Both were Southern slaveholders. Not surprisingly, their successors in Southern states have been
assiduous, and mostly successful, in maintaining the undemocratically disproportionate share of national political power that these men had achieved in our Founding documents.
Today, descendants of slaves number a bit more than one-eighth of our population. Of course the relative density of their population varies from place to place. But if you lined up all Americans in a single, very long queue, every eighth one of us, on average, would bear the scars of slavery.
When ancient Roman generals wanted to curb an unruly tribe in their territories, they practiced the “discipline” of “decimation.” They would line up the citizens of a town or village, or the soldiers of a defeated army, and kill every
tenth person, just to teach the survivors a lesson. What does it do to a so-called “democratic” society when it systematically oppresses one out of every
eight, and has done so for its entire history? We Americans are in the process of finding out.
I don’t like the phrase “systemic
racism.” It’s not entirely accurate. The adjective “systemic” is right on the money. For our entire history, systemic and systematic oppression of Black people has been a key part of our national culture, customs and law, as well as a driver of our national economic development. But the noun “racism” implies a touch of animus or purpose, even hate.
That’s not, I think, where we are today. Sure, we have open white supremacists, the Proud Boys, the Ku Klux Klan (which still exists) and a number of other openly racist groups. Then there are the many white people who think—for no particular reason except vast ignorance of history and current events—that Black people have long enjoyed equal treatment and, in modern times, even some undeserved preferences.
Yet groups holding these odd views seem to be a minority of us today, even all taken together. Certainly after the prolonged, videotaped police-murder of George Floyd, and the conviction of his murderer, most of us have some dim idea of how grossly stacked our social, legal and cultural deck is and has been against Black people.
So our main problem isn’t
conscious hate or racism, although unconscious bias and stereotyping are endemic among us. It’s the system.
We have a national system that grew organically out of slavery, brutality, white terrorism, the Ku Klux Klan, the Night Riders, massive lynching, the destruction of whole Black communities (like the “Black Wall Street” in Tulsa), voter suppression, and discrimination in housing, education, location, banking, voting and employment, which persists today.
At its best our system has been characterized by neglect of Black people and their plight at every turn. From Abraham Lincoln’s assassination and the
failure to pass the second Freedman’s Act after the Civil War, through the end of Reconstruction and the recent
ghastly Supreme Court decision in Shelby County v. Holder [search linked source for “second most”], to the demise of affirmative action in the present day, we have never made a serious, sustained effort, as a nation, to fix that rigged system. We have always tried bits and pieces and then backslid.
And what can we say about the victims? Sure, there were slave rebellions and militant movements like the Black Panthers in the sixties. When Black people have turned violent, they have met with overwhelming force from the majority, and often disproportionately violent reprisals. So our Black people, by and large, have put their faith in our expressed ideals and in the hope of making them real. They have been true, steadfast believers in democracy and justice despite all the evidence of deficiencies in their practice.
As I outlined in an
earlier essay [search for first instance of “African-Americans”], I don’t know any large group that, as a whole, has put more faith and trust in our democratic ideals than our Black people. Maybe it’s all they had and all they’ve now got. But as a group, they’ve put as much trust in our Constitution and our egalitarian ideals as they’ve done in the Black Church that has sustained their hope through dismal days. In this sense, our Black people, as a group, may be the most intensely loyal Americans.
So we have this gigantic national problem. We treat one out of eight of us miserably, even though the mistreated may be the ones most persistently loyal to our ideals. We’ve done this throughout our entire history.
Whether or not really “racism” today, the problem is systemic, systematic and deeply entrenched in our customs, law and culture. Yet we, a people renowned for practical problem solving, have steadfastly neglected to solve this problem thoroughly and effectively. For almost two and a half centuries after the Civil War, we’ve failed to fix America.
Not only does this festering problem divide us and hold us back at home. It also impairs our allure abroad. How can we distinguish ourselves from the Chinese, who consciously and deliberately mistreat their Uighur and Tibetan minorities, with the goal of submerging them utterly, expunging their unique cultures, and assimilating them into the Han Chinese majority? How can we refute the Chinese claim that, on this vital question of human rights and equality, we Americans are hypocrites?
As if all
this were not enough, we have another similar strike against us. We keep some eleven million Hispanic serfs among us as undocumented workers. They have no human rights in practice, whatever they may have on paper. Why? With a mere phone call to ICE, whether by an employer or a personal enemy, they can be “deported” to countries that they left decades ago, or in some cases have never known. Without
some sort of legal status, even if only temporary, they cannot begin to organize to assert whatever human and labor rights they may have on paper. Their employers or their enemies can thwart their every effort simply by having their organizers and ringleaders deported.
So how do we fix this? The problem is not probable solutions: many sensible ones have been proposed.
We can give descendants of slaves
reparations, to help bring many or most of them up to the standards of living and education they might have had had they and their ancestors not been subject to systematic oppression and discrimination for four centuries. We can break the filibuster and pass the For the People Act, to strengthen voting rights and reduce the influence of money and oligarchs in politics. We can re-institute affirmative action in education, housing and employment, in order to let the slow accretion of “normal” and equal treatment have its eventual effect. We can, as part of “infrastructure” building, pay special attention to the education, housing and employment of Black people and Hispanic serfs, and their community-building, in order to build the type of infrastructure that will let honest hard work earn its just rewards. We can do more of what President Biden appears to be doing—improving the prospects of victims of unfair treatment by policies favoring working and poor people generally, on the theory that a rising tide raises all boats.
Best of all, we could try all these things at once. Then, as time goes on, we could focus on the solutions that seem to be having the best effects. What we
can’t do is continue to neglect the problems that, for centuries, have lain at the root of our national decline and are the sources of our deep divisions today. If left to ooze free, the poisonous soup from this centuries-old fount of oppression will ultimately destroy us.
I don’t mean to equate the oppression of Black people for four centuries and that of our eleven million Hispanic serfs, mostly in recent decades. The former is the central problem of our national history; the latter is more recent and far less severe. The Hispanic-serf problem is important mainly because it confirms a national trend away from democracy and toward ongoing exploitation of minorities. If continued, it could lead us toward a kind of twenty-first-century feudalism, socially reminiscent of the Middle Ages but with better living standards and technology of oppression.
While hardly easy to implement, the fixes we must try are conceptually obvious. If we want to have the kind of democratic, egalitarian society of which our Founders dreamed (but never came close to implementing), we must start to work systematically toward it. The first step is to chip away at our foundations of systemic unfairness and oppression.
All the things that make fixing America so hard in general—our malapportioned Senate, the Electoral College, the filibuster, gerrymandering, and voter suppression—are direct results of our slaveholder-Founders striving to preserve their oppressive but lucrative (for them) economic system. Maybe if we reduce the current systematic unfairness of our society and culture, our society will come to resemble the real democracy of which they hypocritically dreamed. Then maybe, from a more democratic base, we can begin to reform it more systematically.
What is crystal clear is that, if we don’t at least try hard, our democracy, our economic equality and our civil culture will continue to devolve. The gross, systematic inequality that now oppresses one out of eight of us was the ultimate source of our undemocratic governmental structure and of many of our discontents. If we don’t fix it, it will likely be our undoing.
One other thing is important to understand. As much as GOP demagogues try to make it seem so, this is not just a people problem. It’s not a matter of fault or blame. It’s not a question of who’s really a “racist.” Its not a matter of white people being accused of hating when they don’t. It’s not really about people who want to wish away four centuries of ongoing oppression being “canceled.”
It’s just a broken system. It’s a system badly designed at the outset and in some ways,
such as the filibuster, getting worse with age. If we Americans are still doers and fixers, we can fix it.
To fix it, we must begin with the legacies and consequences of our original sin of slavery. Slavery and its long shadow are the ultimate reasons we have so much minority rule and so much division among us. To bring back majority rule and heal our deep divisions, we must enfranchise and uplift the people whose ancestors’ enslavement and whose ongoing oppression have made our nation a “democracy” like no other. Only with
their help, their hope, their enthusiasm and their legendary patience can we demolish our historical contradictions and realize the promise of our Founders’ then-hypocritical but eternally compelling ideals.
We are all in this together, Black, white, brown, yellow and red. We can fix our system and better resemble the shining city on a hill. Or, like ancient Rome, we can decay further into oligarchy and empire, adding force to China’s argument that no mighty and real democracy can last.
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