With the election of Barack Obama, it has been argued that
not only will the social state be renewed in the spirit and
legacy of the New Deal, but that the punishing racial state and
its vast complex of disciplinary institutions will, if not come
to an end, at least be significantly reformed.[1] From
this perspective, Obama's presidency not only represents a
post-racial victory, but also signals a new space of post-racial
harmony. In assessing the Obama victory, Time Magazine columnist
Joe Klein wrote, "It is a place where the primacy of racial
identity - and this includes the old Jesse Jackson version of
black racial identity - has been replaced by the celebration of
pluralism, of cross-racial synergy."[2] Obama
won the 2008 election because he was able to mobilize 95 percent
of African-Americans, two-thirds of all Latinos and a large
proportion of young people under the age of 30. At the same
time, what is generally forgotten in the exuberance of this
assessment is that the majority of white Americans voted for the
John McCain-Sarah Palin ticket. While "post-racial" may mean
less overt racism, the idea that we have moved into a
post-racial period in American history is not merely premature -
it is an act of willful denial and ignorance. Paul Ortiz puts it
well in his comments on the myth of post-racialism:
The idea that we've moved to a post-racial period in
American social history is undermined by an avalanche of
recent events. Hurricane Katrina. The US Supreme Court's
dismantling of Brown vs. Board of Education and the
resegregation of American schools. The Clash of
Civilizations thesis that promotes the idea of a War against
Islam. The backlash facing immigrant workers. A grotesque
prison industrial complex. [Moreover] ... [w]hile Americans
were being robbed blind and primed for yet another bailout
of the banks and investment sectors, they were treated to
new evidence from Fox News and poverty experts that the
great moral threats facing the nation were greedy union
workers, black single mothers, Latino gang bangers and
illegal immigrants.[3]
Missing from the exuberant claims that Americans are now
living in a post-racial society is the historical legacy of a
neoconservative revolution, officially launched in 1980 with the
election of Ronald Reagan, and its ensuing racialist attacks on
the welfare "Queens"; Bill Clinton's cheerful compliance in
signing bills that expanded the punishing industries; and George
W. Bush's "willingness to make punishment his preferred response
to social problems."[4] In
the last 30 years, we have witnessed the emergence of policies
that have amplified the power of the racial state and expanded
its mechanisms of punishment and mass incarceration, the
consequences of which are deeply racist - even as the state and
its legal apparatuses insist on their own race neutrality.
The politics of racism has hardly disappeared from the
landscape of American culture and the institutions that support
it. Poor minority kids now find themselves on a fast tack
extending from school to juvenile courts to prison. And the
number of poor and minority kids, now aptly called the
"recession generation" by Dr. Irwin Redlener, president of New
York City's Children's Health fund, has increased from 13
million before the economic meltdown to an expected 17 million
by the end of the year. And who are these kids? These are the
kids marginalized by race and class, who are largely seen either
as a drain on the economy or stand in the way of market
freedoms, free trade, consumerism and the whitewashed fantasies
of a cleansed, Disneyfied social order. These are kids who, not
only have to fend for themselves in the face of life's
tragedies, but are also supposed to do it without being seen by
the dominant society. Excommunicated from the sphere of human
concern, they have been rendered invisible, utterly disposable,
and heir to that army of socially homeless that allegedly no
longer existed in colorblind America. Most of them, if not
homeless, live in dilapidated housing, attend schools that are
underfunded and literally falling apart, receive food stamps and
eat mostly junk food when they can get it. They are the major
targets of gun violence, lack decent health care and they often
find themselves in hospital emergency rooms. These are the kids
who experience daily, whether on the street or in school,
draconian discipline policies that endlessly criminalize every
aspect of their behavior and increasingly banish them from the
very institutions such as schools that remain their last chance
for getting a fair shake in life. It gets worse. For instance, a
full 60 percent of black high school dropouts, by the time they
reach their mid-thirties, will be prisoners or ex-cons and the
drop out rate is as high as 65 percent in some cities.[5] This
apartheid-based system of incarceration bodes especially ill for
young black males. According to Paul Street:
It is worth noting that half of the nation's black male
high-school dropouts will be incarcerated - moving, often
enough, from quasi-carceral lock-down high schools to the
real "lock down" thing - at some point in their lives. These
dropouts are over represented among the one in three African
American males aged sixteen- to twenty-years old who are
under one form of supervision by the US criminal justice
system: parole, probation, jail, or prison.[6]
As the toll in human suffering increases daily, Obama and
his Wall Street advisers bail out the banks and the rich just as
crucial social services for children are being cut back,
unemployment is soaring into record numbers and more and more
youth of color are disappearing into an abysmal pit of poverty,
despair and hopelessness. Raised in a blood-drenched culture of
violence mediated by an economic Darwinism that harbors a rabid
disdain for the common good, poor minority kids appear to be
completely off the radar of public concern and government
compassion. And Obama, for all of his soaring poetic imagery of
unity and justice, falls flat on his face by allowing his
Secretary of Education Arnie Duncan to offer up reform policies
that amount to nothing more than another version of Bush's No
Child Left Behind with its anti-union ideology and obsessive
investment in measurement and accountability schemes that strips
any talk of educational reform of any viability while turning
schools into nothing more than testing factories - policies that
disproportionately punish brown and black youth. These racially
exclusionary set of policies and institutions have become
especially cruel since the beginning of the neoconservative
revolution in the 1980s, and are not poised to disappear soon
under the presidency of Barack Obama - in fact, given the
current economic crisis, they may even get worse.
In short, the discourse of the post-racial state ignores how
political and economic institutions, with their circuits of
repression and disposability and their technologies of
punishment, connect and condemn the fate of many impoverished
youth of color in the inner cities to persisting structures of
racism that "serve to keep [them] in a state of inferiority and
oppression."[7] Not
surprisingly, under such circumstances, individual suffering no
longer registers a social concern as all notions of injustice
are assumed to be the outcome of personal failings or deficits.
Signs of the pathologizing of both marginalized youth and the
crucial safety nets that have provided them some hope of justice
in the past can be found everywhere from the racist screeds
coming out of right-wing talk radio to the mainstream media that
seems to believe that the culture of black and brown youth is
synonymous with the culture of crime. Poverty is now imagined to
be a problem of individual character. Racism is now understood
as merely an act of individual discrimination (if not
discretion), and homelessness is reduced to a choice made by
lazy people.
Unfortunately, missing from the discourse of those who are
arguing for the kind of progressive change the Obama
administration should deliver is any mention of the race-based
crises facing youth and the terrible toll it has taken on
generations of poor black and brown kids. Bringing this crisis
to the forefront of the political and social agenda is crucial,
particularly since Obama, in a number of speeches prior to
assuming the presidency, refused to adopt the demonizing
rhetoric often used by politicians when talking about youth.
Instead, he pointedly called upon the American people to reclaim
young people as an important symbol of the future and democracy
itself:
[C]ome together and say, "Not this time." This time we want
to talk about the crumbling schools that are stealing the
future of black children and white children and Asian
children and Hispanic children and Native American children.
This time we want to reject the cynicism that tells us that
these kids can't learn; that those kids who don't look like
us are somebody else's problem. The children of America are
not those kids, they are our kids.[8]
But if Barack Obama's call to address the crucial problems
facing young people in this country is to be taken seriously,
the political, economic and institutional conditions that both
legitimate and sustain a shameful attack on poor minority youth
have to be made visible, open to challenge and transformed. This
can only happen by refusing the race-based somnambulism and
social amnesia that coincide with the pretense of post-racial
politics and society, especially when the matter concerns young
people of color. To reclaim poor minority youth as part of a
democratic vision and a crucial symbol of the future requires
more than hope and a civics lesson: It necessitates transforming
the workings of racist power arrangements both in and out of the
government along with the market-driven institutions and values
that have enabled the rise of a predatory corporate state and a
punishing state that have produced a polity that governs through
the logic of finance capital, consumerism, crime, disposability
and a growing imprisonment binge.
The marriage of economic Darwinism and the racialized
punishing state is on full display not merely in the rising rate
of incarceration for black and brown people in the United
States, but also in places like East Carroll Parish in Louisiana
where inmates provide cheap or free labor at barbecues,
funerals, service stations, and a host of other sites. According
to Adam Nossiter, "the men of orange are everywhere" and people
living in this Louisiana county "say they could not get by
without their inmates, who make up more than 10 percent of its
population and most of its labor force. They are dirt-cheap,
sometimes free, always compliant, ever-ready and
disposable....You just call up the sheriff, and presto, inmates
are headed your way. 'They bring me warm bodies, 10 warm bodies
in the morning,' said Grady Brown, owner of the Panola Pepper
Corporation. 'They do anything you ask them to do....' 'You call
them up, they drop them off, and they pick them up in the
afternoon,' said Paul Chapple, owner of a service station."[9] Nossiter
claims that the system is jokingly referred to by many people
who use it as "rent a convict" and is, to say the least, an "odd
vestige of the abusive-convict-lease system that began in the
South around Reconstruction."[10] This
is not merely an eccentric snapshot of small town racism, it is
also an image of what kind of future poor minority youth might
inhabit.
Treating prisoners as commodities to be bought and sold like
expendable goods suggests the degree to which the punishing
state has divested itself of any moral responsibility with
regard to those human beings who, in the logic of free-market
fundamentalism, are considered either as commodities or as waste
products, and this is true especially of young people. At the
same time, as racism has been relegated to an anachronistic
vestige of the past, especially in light of Barack Obama's
election to the presidency, the workings of the punishing state
are whitewashed and removed from the racialized violence that
deeply influences and constrains the lives of so many young
people. Consequently, the American public becomes increasingly
indifferent to the ways in which the practices of a
market-driven society - market deregulation, privatization, the
hollowing out of the social state and the disparaging of the
public good - wage a devastating assault on African-American and
Latino communities, young people and, increasingly, immigrants
and other people of color, who are relegated to the borders of
American normalcy. Alarmingly, the punishing state, when coupled
with the growing disappearance of newspapers and other crucial
public spheres, not only produces vast amounts of inequality,
suffering and racism, but also propagates collective amnesia,
cynicism and moral indifference.
Under this insufferable climate of increased repression and
unabated exploitation, young people and communities of color
become the new casualties in an ongoing war against justice,
freedom, social citizenship and democracy. While Obama speaks
eloquently about the need to develop public polices that stress
social investment rather than enriching the coffers of the rich,
he has not produced adequate policies, especially in education,
for whom poor and minority youth will no longer be viewed as
either criminals or simply disposable. Instead of testing
schemes, young people need structurally sound schools, smaller
class sizes, high quality teachers, social programs that address
the conditions that disable students from learning and a
Marshall Plan committed to providing free education, health
care, full employment through public works and a promise that
the government is willing to invest as much time, money and
resources in their future as it has invested so willingly in the
past in the military-industrial complex and its expanding
discourse of militarism. How much longer can a nation ignore
those youth who lack the resources and opportunities that were
available, in a partial and incomplete way, to previous
generations? And what does it mean when a nation becomes frozen
ethically and imaginatively in providing its youth with a future
of hope and opportunity?
* * *
[1] For
a brilliant analysis of the racist state, see David Theo
Goldberg, "The Racial State" (Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2001).
[2] Joe
Klein, "Obama's Victory Ushers in a New America," Time.com
(November 5, 2008). Online:http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1856649,00.html.
[3] Paul
Ortiz, "On the Shoulders of Giants: Senator Obama and the Future
of American Politics," Truthout.org (November 25, 2008). Online:http://www.truthout.org/112508R?print.
[4] Jonathan
Simon, "Governing Through Crime: How the War on Crime
Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear"
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), p. 59.
[5] Jason
DeParle, "The American Prison Nightmare," New York Review of
Books, Vol. LIV, No. 6 (April 12, 2007), p. 33.
[6] Paul
Street, "Segregated Schools: Educational Apartheid in Post-Civil
Rights America" (New York: Routledge, 2005), p. 82.
[7] Angela
Y. Davis, "Abolition Democracy: Beyond Empire, Prisons, and
Torture" (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2005), p. 98.
[8] From
a transcript entitled "Barack Obama's Speech on Race," New York
Times (March 18, 2008). Online:http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/18/us/politics/18text-obama.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=%22Barack%20Obama's%20Speech%20on%20Race%22&st=cse.
[9] Adam
Nossiter, "With Jobs to Do, Louisiana Parish Turns to Inmates,"
New York Times (July 5, 2006). Online:http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/05/us/05prisoners.html.
[10] Nossiter,
"With Jobs to Do, Louisiana Parish Turns to Inmates."