1/ A few thoughts re: the increasingly accepted (and somewhat obvious) wisdom that "if the people who stormed the capitol had been Black they'd have been beaten or shot." This is true, so far as it goes, but too simple, in a way that MINIMIZES the power of whiteness in America...
2/ Don't misunderstand, I'm glad whenever white folks begin to see this kind of thing, and we all start somewhere. But there are at least 3 levels at which leaving it with the above argument minimizes the issue of systemic white supremacy (not just privilege)...
3/ First, to say "if they'd been black they'd have been beaten or shot," ignores a key element of white supremacy: the mentality of white entitlement, which led them to think they could do what they did w/o consequence in the first place...
4/ Put another way, Black folks doing this wouldn't have been shot bc Black folks would have KNOWN they couldn't have done this shit. And Black folks wouldn't have felt the level of entitlement to just try and overthrow the damned government like that...
5/ And that's deep when you think about the fact that there are plenty of times Black folks would have LOVED to overthrow the government and stage a coup for Black lives and freedom and democracy for all. All the way from the beginning of the country...
6/ But only white folk carry that mentality of entitlement that leads us to say, "let's just set off the revolution now...surely everything will be fine..." Black folks know even peaceful protest is met with violence (100s of videos over the summer show it), let alone this shit..
7/ So that's the first way in which white supremacy is implicated in the differential treatment: at the level of having something like this to respond to as cops in the 1st place...But there are two more levels...
8/ Second, to say 'if they'd been Black they'd have been beaten or shot,' ignores that if a group of Black people had been ADVERTISING a pending coup for a month, the Capitol steps would have been covered w/Capitol cops, DC police, National Guard, DHS, BOP, etc...
9/ None of the Black folk would have been shot bc none would have been able to get near the building. Law enforcement would have responded en masse. And this reveals an important truth about the SYSTEM of law enforcement, rather than just individual cop biases...
10/ The system of law enforcement simply does not see white people as a threat, even when those white people are literally threatening to overthrow the existing political and legal order from which those cops derive their power. Ask yourself, WHY?
11/ I mean, cops are the ultimate example of the system, right? So trying to overthrow that, you would THINK, would be seen by law enforcement as a threat to them. Ah, but it wasn't, at least not the way it would have been with Black folk who were advertising a coup. Again, why?
12/ Simple: Law enforcement as an institution does not exist, functionally, to serve "the system" in some generic sense (i.e., to protect its component parts like Congress, from harm). Rather, it functions to serve the existing social and cultural order (and economic order)...
13/ Which means you police Black people more harshly when they protest and whites less so (even when they attempt a coup), because the former are trying to alter the existing order and the latter are fighting to preserve it from the Black and brown folks seeking to change it...
14/ So when white folks threaten a coup to defend the existing order of white male domination symbolized by Trump (which they see threatened by his defeat and the Black and brown folks they associate with Democrats and liberals), of course cops don't mass to stop them...
15/ Law enforcement has always been about protecting the dominant group from subordinate groups. They would mass for Black protesters bc those protesters would likely be taking aim at the hierarchy, not defending it. For whites, cop culture says that defending Trumpism is fine...
16/ This is an important realization: it puts the problem on the system of policing, not individual biases that can be "trained away" or something. Law enforcement has NEVER been about protecting and serving all equally, and this shows where their institutional sympathies lie..
17/ That is the second element of white supremacy: the alignment of institutional power with the maintenance of white (and male) hegemony. Which is also why BLACK cops can't treat white people the way cops (of all colors) treat Black people: it would upend the system...
18/ That's why we got to see that sickening video of that Qanon terrorist chasing that Black cop up the steps. Because the Black cop -- the CAPITOL COP -- was powerless in that moment. His job, whether he knows it or not, is to defend white domination, NOT THE CAPITOL...
19/ And now the 3rd piece: to say 'if they'd been black they'd have been beaten or shot' ignores that if they'd been white but storming the capitol as allies, fighting for Black lives, reparations, the end of capitalism, or any significant left goal they'd have been brutalized...
20/ Bc THAT would have been a rebellion to challenge the race/class order. The reason Black folk are more likely to be brutalized in that scenario is bc Black folk are more likely fighting for justice and democracy, while whites are more likely fighting against it...
21/ And cops are not about justice or democracy and never have been...Exactly the opposite. And THAT, right there, is the biggest lesson of all. If you learn nothing else from this, learn that. If you teach nothing else, teach that.
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It's not the MAGA mob's whiteness alone that explains why they weren't shot, beaten or arrested en masse. It's bc their rage seeks to reinforce the SYSTEM of whiteness, which they see threatened by Trump's defeat. If they were leftists or antiracists, they'd have been brutalized.
The bigger issue is the way law enforcement responds to people based on whether they are fighting to upend traditional hierarchy and injustice or reinforce and maintain it. If it's the latter, no problem. The former, all bets are off.
This means, typically, that Black and brown folks -- more likely to be protesting existing hierarchy and systems of domination -- will get the brunt of the abuse not merely for being Black and brown but for fighting white supremacy...
1/ What angers right-wing whites about @ReverendWarnock is what angered them about Jeremiah Wright. They can't comprehend the black prophetic tradition. Their Christianity is abt atoning for personal sin. For black folk it's also about atonement for collective sin like racism...
2/ The Black tradition sees Exodus not as a story about ancient Israelites alone, but as a story fully representative of their own search for the promised land -- a search ongoing and NOT fulfilled yet. For white conservatives, America is already the "shining city on a hill..."
3/ The Black tradition allows for an understanding of the cross and the lynching tree as symbolic synonyms (and even quite literal ones) (see James Cone), and to see America's sins as being judged by God...
1/ Wanting M4A is righteous & correct. Forcing the vote bc 'people are dying & can't wait' is empty rhetoric bc every rational person knows it won't pass. Doesn't mean forcing the vote is wrong but supporting it as if it will stop even 1 person from dying is grossly dishonest...
2/ The only other arguments I hear are essentially: a) this way we can figure out which Dems to primary (i.e., the ones who won't support M4A) and b) "we've tried it the patient way and it hasn't worked, so fuck it!" Let's look at these in reverse order...
3/ The "we've tried it your way" argument is vapid bullshit. First, the people saying that rarely have tried anything. They scream on Twitter & YouTube. They aren't organizers. They haven't run for office to try it that way. They're just pissed (rightly) and think rage = change..
1/ Trumpism is not about ideas. It’s a politic of grievance, which grafts policy onto disaffection as an afterthought. This is why we can’t defeat it with policy proposals or logical appeals to supposed self interest. Trumpers aren’t motivated by these things, but by rage alone..
2/ This is the most fascist thing about Trumpism: its lack of coherent ideology. That vacuum is what makes it possible for a fascistic cult of personality to thrive, and the notion of an autocrat motivated by grudges and the desire to dominate for domination’s sake to flourish...
3/ It’s not even necessarily a conscious fascist politic but a fascism that derives from the base’s “nothing matters” mentality...the idea that owning the libs, making liberals cry, or hurting one’s perceived race, ethnic, religious, gender and sexual enemies is everything...
1/ Some people on the left have this magical thinking problem when it comes to why our ideas don't often carry the day within the Dem Party. We act like it's all "big Pharma money" etc. And yes, that money is corrupting. But it's not magic...
2/ If a Rep knew the majority of THEIR constituents (not Dem voters from other parts of the country but THEIR constituents) supported more left policies *and would actually show up & vote against them if they didn't vote for those policies* they would vote for them, obviously.
3/ A major goal of a Rep is to keep being one, so no one would go against the wishes of the majority of their constituents just to get contributions, if that would cost them the job. But it WON'T. Either bc the folks who could punish them don't bother to vote, or, more likely...
THREAD: The loss of 1 in 1k Americans (including about 175k white ones) due to COVID & the pandemic's economic devastation are both the collateral damage of anti-Black and brown racism. Sound hyperbolic? It's not, and it's easily proved. Please follow along...
2/ On the one hand, sure, the Administration's nonchalance in the face of the virus is the initial cause of the devastation. And that had been evident since January. But that was actually starting to shift a bit by late March, right up to April 7. What happened then?...
3/ As @Thom_Hartmann has noted, that day the NYT & WaPo (among others) reported that the disproportionate death toll of COVID was among Black & brown folks. THAT NIGHT, Tucker Carlson (who had actually been taking C19 seriously) changed his tune. A few days later so did Trump...