Calendar will be sent separately.  A rare essay by Adolph
Reed merits singular focus, let alone on this key subject.
His analysis is deep and contentious and hopefully, you'll
need time to argue or agree with him.  I believe he's right
on the mark, and offering a paradigm for understanding
the complex, often concealed politics in our country - the
only rational way to deal with and change things.
Ed

The Real Divide

By Adolph L. Reed Jr.

THE PROGRESSIVE
November 2005  pp. 27-32

NEW ORLEANS IS MY HOMETOWN, and most of my family
members live there. Right now, they're mainly strewn
across south Louisiana and Mississippi, staying with
other relatives, with no idea when they'll be able to
return even to assess the damage, much less to salvage
and reconstruct their lives. So we're all in a kind of
limbo, or suspended animation.

By the time this article appears, something like a
final death toll from the horror in New Orleans will be
known, and there will be dollar figures in the
incomprehensible billions assigned to the total damage.
We will have been told repeatedly and in definitive
tones by gushing talking heads where New Orleans and
Katrina in general rank on the all-time list of
American catastrophes-none of which, of course, conveys
any real sense of what has occurred and its impact on
the city and its people.

Everyone who reads The Progressive will know that the
horror that has occurred in New Orleans was entirely
preventable. For years, the New Orleans Times-Picayune
annually had punctuated the hurricane season's arrival
with detailed articles warning that the levee system
needed shoring up and quite possibly would not survive
a category 4 or strong category 3 storm. As many
readers know, similar articles in major newspapers and
magazines around the country at one time or another had
reported on the city's precarious situation and
described how much of it could be inundated in case of
a storm-induced levee breach. Many will know also that
in 2001 the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
listed a major hurricane in New Orleans as one of the
three most likely disasters in the United States.

Most readers, therefore, will also know that when
George W. Bush offered as an explanation for his
continuing inaction nearly three days after the city
began filling with water that no one could have
anticipated that the levee would break, he was a lying
sack of shit.

But he was worse than that. He was an active agent in
bringing this catastrophe about. Most Progressive
readers' will know already that the Bush Administration
last year slashed funding for the levee project, in
part to feed the war on Iraq. The cuts brought work on
the project nearly to a standstill. The city of New
Orleans, the state of Louisiana, even the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers had all emphasized the imminent
danger. Their entreaties fell on deaf ears; in fact,
the Administration scuttled a Corps of Engineers study
of how to protect the city. And this is not even to
consider how Bush's wetlands policy made New Orleans
more vulnerable by speeding erosion.

Bush finally proclaimed that he takes responsibility.
Well, Mable and Salvatore Mangano, operators of St.
Rita's nursing home in St. Bernard Parish, were
indicted for negligent homicide because thirty-four
people died in their facility after the Manganos failed
to evacuate them. Bush also should be indicted.

Self-important nincompoop Michael Brown, the abominable
former FEMA director and failed horse show lawyer,
should be in the dock with him, as should Michael
Chertoff, the Homeland Security secretary. They should
spend the rest of their lives in jail.

Of course, that won't happen.  That's not the way
things work in the United States.

Bush, after all, was already a mass murderer in Iraq,
to the tune of perhaps 100,000 Iraqi civilians and more
than 1,900 American soldiers. But it's considered over
the top or politically irresponsible to say so plainly.

In any official investigation of Katrina, impeachment
for Bush and criminal trials for him, Brown, and
Chertoff will never surface as a consideration. The
investigation will no doubt focus in flamboyant
meticulousness on who knew what when. There will be
much back and forth about which agency or branch of
government was responsible for which actions or
inactions. The federal government's unconscionable
delay in response will be explained as an unfortunate
circumstance, a concatenation of mistakes and
miscommunications, and perhaps some incompetence. Maybe
Brown will become a symbolic fall guy. Not that he'll
do any time, as he probably will follow his predecessor
at FEMA and former college buddy Joseph Allbaugh into a
lucrative lobbying/consulting career.

I seriously doubt there will be any consideration of
the role that the Bush Administration's systematic
hostility to government's functions played in bringing
about this catastrophe in the first place. That's
largely because Democratic liberals for the last
twenty-five years have aided and abetted the right in
shrinking and privatizing public functions. As Paul
Krugman noted in The New York Times and Michael Parenti
pointed out in Z, the travesty in New Orleans is the
expression of the right's essential contempt for any
public institutions, for the idea of the public.

Going back to Reagan, they've exhibited a thug's
approach to government. Remember how Reagan opened up
the Department of Housing and Urban Development to
wanton and rapacious plunder by cronies? They've made a
regular practice of appointing agency and department
heads who were on record as enemies of the departments
and their functions, with a mandate to gut them.
Parking utterly unqualified hacks and cronies in five
of the eight senior-most posts in FEMA shows how
flagrant and unmitigated their contempt for public
responsibility actually is.

The fact that Bush, Brown, and Chertoff sat on their
hands for three days after word that the levee had
burst was probably not the result of active malice.
Their basic view of the world prevents them from
recognizing the people who were imperiled on the Gulf
Coast as forms of life equivalent to their own.

Bush said as much when he could notice only Trent
Lott's fine old house as a casualty of the storm and
reassured us all that he'd be sitting on Lott's great
porch again soon, when the only image of New Orleans he
could muster was a nostalgic, loutish frat boy's.

And they genuinely do not believe that government can
or should play an active role in protecting the general
public in any way, other than by funding the police or
invading another country.

The Democrats' critique of the Bush Administration will
be wonkish and abstruse. They will cast as a problem of
inadequate management what is fundamentally the product
of a combined commitment to vicious, reactionary
ideologies and plunder. They will give us at best a
replay of their lame attempt at health care reform,
which from the outset defined single-payer--the only
adequate option, and the only one with any support-as
"off the table," primarily because of their commitments
to the insurance industry and fear of seeming too
different from the Republicans.

Or it'll be another version of welfare reform, which
sacrificed federal income support for the indigent to
show the right that they want to reward only those who
"play by the rules."

Or another version of opposing the war by pledging to
send more troops and claiming to be more competent at
fighting it.

Worse, the major civil rights, women's, environmental,
and other progressive advocacy groups tail along behind
and seem incapable of pushing beyond the limits of the
Democrats' "me too, but not so much" relation to the
right.

And neither wing of the labor movement-original recipe
or extra crispy-has come near probing at the roots of
the catastrophe in New Orleans in the last two decades
of bipartisan neoliberal policy. While both admirably
mobilized humanitarian aid, the AFL-CIO's initial
statement was pro forma and tepid in its criticism of
the Bush administration. Change to Win's was small-
minded and opportunistic; it called on everyone to
contribute to the Red Cross and Salvation Army and
demanded that the rebuilding effort not suspend worker
protections. This is especially sad because the labor
movement is the one vehicle we have for reaching and
crafting the broad base of working people who must be
the foundation of any political movement that can hope
to turn this tide. And it's failing miserably.

Race in this context becomes a cheap and safely
predictable alternative to pressing a substantive
critique of the sources of this horror in New Orleans
and its likely outcomes. Granted, the images projected
from the Superdome, the convention center, overpasses,
and rooftops seemed to cry out a stark statement of
racial inequality. But that's partly because in the
contemporary U.S., race is the most familiar language
of inequality or injustice. It's what we see partly
because it's what we're accustomed to seeing, what we
look for. As I argued in The Nation, class-as income,
wealth, and access to material resources, including a
safety net of social connections-was certainly a better
predictor than race of who evacuated the city before
the hurricane, who was able to survive the storm
itself, who was warehoused in the Superdome or
convention center or stuck without food and water on
the parched overpasses, who is marooned in shelters in
Houston or elsewhere, and whose interests will be
factored into the reconstruction of the city, who will
be able to return.

New Orleans is a predominantly black city, and it is a
largely poor city. The black population is
disproportionately poor, and the poor population is
disproportionately black. It is not surprising that
those who were stranded and forgotten, probably those
who died, were conspicuously black and poor. None of
that, however, means that race-or even racism -is
adequate as an explanation of those patterns of
inequality. And race is especially useless as a basis
on which to craft a politics that can effectively
pursue social justice.

Before the "yes, buts" begin, I am not claiming that
systemic inequalities in the United States are not
significantly racialized. The evidence of racial
disparities is far too great for any sane or honest
person to deny, and they largely emerge from a history
of discrimination and racial injustice. Nor am I saying
that we should overlook that fact in the interest of
some idealized nonracial or post-racial politics.

Let me be blunter than I've ever been in print about
what I am saying: As a political strategy, exposing
racism is wrongheaded and at best an utter waste of
time. It is the political equivalent of an appendix: a
useless vestige of an earlier evolutionary moment
that's usually innocuous but can flare up and become
harmful.

There are two reasons for this judgment.

One is that the language of race and racism is too
imprecise to describe effectively even how patterns of
injustice and inequality are racialized in a post-Jim
Crow world. "Racism" can cover everything from
individual prejudice and bigotry, unself-conscious
perception of racial stereotypes, concerted group
action to exclude or subordinate, or the results of
ostensibly neutral market forces.

It can be a one-word description and explanation of
patterns of unequal distribution of income and wealth,
services and opportunities, police brutality, a
stockbroker's inability to get a cab, neighborhood
dislocation and gentrification, poverty, unfair
criticism of black or Latino athletes, or being denied
admission to a boutique.

Because the category is so porous, it doesn't really
explain anything. Indeed, it is an alternative to
explanation.

Exposing racism apparently makes those who do it feel
good about themselves. Doing so is cathartic, though
safely so, in the same way that proclaiming one's
patriotism is in other circles.

It is a summary, concluding judgment rather than a
preliminary to a concrete argument. It doesn't allow
for politically significant distinctions; in fact, as a
strategy, exposing racism requires subordinating the
discrete features of a political situation to the
overarching goal of asserting the persistence and power
of racism as an abstraction.

This leads to the second reason for my harsh judgment.
Many liberals gravitate to the language of racism not
simply because it makes them feel righteous but also
because it doesn't carry any political warrant beyond
exhorting people not to be racist. In fact, it often is
exactly the opposite of a call to action. Such
formulations as "racism is our national disease" or
similar pieties imply that racism is a natural
condition. Further, it implies that most whites
inevitably and immutably oppose blacks and therefore
can't be expected to align with them around common
political goals.

This view dovetails nicely with Democrats' contention
that the only way to win elections is to reject a
social justice agenda that is stigmatized by
association with blacks and appeal to an upper-income
white constituency concerned exclusively with issues
like abortion rights and the deficit.

Upper-status liberals are more likely to have
relatively secure, rewarding jobs, access to health
care, adequate housing, and prospects for providing for
the kids' education, and are much less likely to be in
danger of seeing their nineteen-year-old go off to
Iraq. They tend, therefore, to have a higher threshold
of tolerance for political compromises in the name of
electing this year's sorry pro-corporate Democrat.
Acknowledging racism-and, of course, being pro-
choice-is one of the few ways many of them can
distinguish themselves from their Republican co-workers
and relatives.

As the appendix analogy suggests, insistence on
understanding inequality in racial terms is a vestige
of an earlier political style. The race line persists
partly out of habit and partly because it connects with
the material interests of those who would be race
relations technicians. In this sense, race is not an
alternative to class. The tendency to insist on the
primacy of race itself stems from a class perspective.

For roughly a generation it seemed reasonable to expect
that defining inequalities in racial terms would
provoke some, albeit inadequate, remedial response from
the federal government. But that's no longer the case;
nor has it been for quite some time. That approach
presumed a federal government that was concerned at
least not to appear racially unjust. Such a government
no longer exists.

A key marker of the right's victory in national
politics is that the discussion of race now largely
serves as a way to reinforce a message to whites that
the public sector is there merely to help some
combination of black, poor, and loser. Liberals have
legitimized this perspective through their own racial
bad faith. For many whites, the discussion of race also
reinforces the idea that cutting public spending is
justifiably aimed at weaning a lazy black underclass
off the dole or-in the supposedly benign, liberal
Democratic version-teaching them "personal
responsibility."

New Orleans is instructive. The right has a built-in
counter to the racism charge by mobilizing all the
scurrilous racial stereotypes that it has propagated to
justify attacks on social protection and government
responsibility all along. Only those who already are
inclined to believe that racism is the source of
inequality accept that charge. For others, nasty
victim-blaming narratives abound to explain away
obvious racial disparities.

What we must do, to pursue justice for displaced,
impoverished New Orleanians as well as for the society
as a whole, is to emphasize that their plight is a more
extreme, condensed version of the precarious position
of millions of Americans today, as more and more lose
health care, bankruptcy protection, secure employment,
affordable housing, civil liberties, and access to
education. And their plight will be the future of many,
many more people in this country once the bipartisan
neoliberal consensus reduces government to a tool of
corporations and the investor class alone.     •

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Adolph L. Reed Jr. is professor of political science at
the University of Pennsylvania and a member of the
interim national council of the Labor Party.

portside (the left side in nautical parlance) is a news,
discussion and debate service of the Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. It aims to
provide varied material of interest to people on the
left.

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