libcom | For the purposes of this analysis, the most salient aspects of the
black community in the segregated south lie within a management
dimension. Externally, the black population was managed by means of
codified subordination, reinforced by customary dehumanization and the
omnipresent spectre of terror. The abominable details of this system are
well known.[24] Furthermore,
blacks were systematically excluded from formal participation in public
life. By extracting tax revenues without returning public services or
allowing blacks to participate in public policy formation, the local
political system intensified the normal exploitation in the work place.
Public administration of the black community was carried out by whites.
The daily indignity of the apartheid-like social organization was both a
product of this political-administrative disenfranchisement as well as a
motor of its reproduction. Thus, the abstract ideal of freedom spawned
within the Civil Rights movement addressed primarily this issue.
Despite the black population's alienation from public policy-making,
an internal stratum existed which performed notable, but limited, social
management functions. This elite stratum was comprised mainly of
low-level state functionaries, merchants and "professionals" servicing
black markets, and the clergy. While it failed to escape the general
subordination, this indigenous elite usually succeeded by virtue of its
comparatively secure living standard and informal relations with
significant whites, in avoiding the extremes of racial oppression. The
importance of this stratum was that it stabilized and coordinated the
adjustment of the black population to social policy imperatives
formulated outside the black community.
Insofar as black public functionaries had assimilated bureaucratic
rationality, the domination of fellow blacks was carried out in "doing
one's job." For parts of the black elite such as the clergy, the
ministerial practice of "easing community tensions" has always meant
accommodation of black life to the existing forms of domination.
Similarly, the independent merchants and professionals owed their
relatively comfortable position within the black community to the
special, captive markets created by segregation. Moreover, in the role
of "responsible Negro spokesmen," this sector was able to elicit
considerable politesse, if not solicitousness, from "enlightened"
members of the white elite. Interracial "cooperation" on policy matters
was thus smoothly accomplished, and the "public interest" seemed to be
met simply because opposition to white ruling group initiatives had been
effectively neutralized. The activating factor in this management
relation was a notion of "Negro leadership" (later "black" or even
"Black") that was generated outside the black community. A bitter
observation made from time to time by the radical fringe of the movement
was that the social category "leaders" seemed only to apply to the
black community. No "white leaders" were assumed to represent a singular
white population. But certain blacks were declared opinion-makers and
carriers of the interests of an anonymous black population. These
"leaders" legitimated their role through their ability to win occasional
favors from powerful whites and through the status positions they
already occupied in the black community.[25]
...
Given the racial barrier, social mobility for the black elite was
limited, relative to its white counterpart. Because of de facto
proscription of black tenure in most professions, few possibilities
existed for advancement. At the same tune, the number of people seeking
to become members of the elite had increased beyond what a segregated
society could accommodate as a result of population growth and rising
college attendance. In addition, upward mobility was being defined by
the larger national culture in a way that further weakened the
capability of the black elite to integrate its youth. Where ideology
demanded nuclear physics and corporate management, black upward mobility
rested with mortuary service and the Elks Lodge! The disjunction
between ideals and possibilities delegitimized the elite's claim to
brokerage and spokesmanship. With its role in question, the entrenched
black elite was no longer able to effectively perform its internal
management function and lost any authority with its "recruits" and the
black community in general. As a result, a social space was cleared
within which dissatisfaction with segregation could thrive as systematic
opposition.
From this social management perspective, the sources of the "Freedom
Movement" are identifiable within and on the periphery of its indigenous
elite stratum. As soon as black opposition spilled beyond the
boundaries of the black community, however, the internal management
perspective became inadequate to understand further developments in the
Civil Rights movement. When opposition to segregation became political
rebellion, black protest required a response from white ruling elites.
That response reflected the congruence of the interests of blacks and of
corporate elites in reconstructing southern society and helped define
the logic of all subsequent black political activity. Both sets of
interests shared an interest in rationalizing race relations in the
South. The Civil Rights movement brought the two sets together.[29]
9 comments:
I would think that, with relation to suicide, impulsivity has to be up there. My understanding is that something like 94% of people prevented from committing suicide never try it again. It is perhaps the one area where gun control would work.
As went black folks, so went America. Sectional economic conquest of the south by American elites in the 20th century was effected in large measure through the machinery of the civil rights movement. Pacification of black political rebellion laid the foundation for the Cathedral apparatus through which one-dimensional governance of the full-spectrum of potentially politically oppositional demographies was achieved. Can't quite tell which pieces of this multi-faceted puzzle were engineered, and which pieces were emergent from processes which once set in motion resulted in clear and repeatable results. http://subrealism.blogspot.com/2014/01/sectionalism.html
Audio quality in that video was so totally unintelligible it was worthless, BD bagged it after the first couple minutes....
lol, windows XP is end of life and no longer supported by microsoft and internet explorer 8.0 is two versions back. I'm guessing you're running these crusty critters on an old Gateway P1 or P2 with less than a gig of RAM. With that kind of setup, I'm surprised you can see or hear much of anything.
In light of Obama's crushing of Occupy, the philosophical triumph of neoliberalism, and the systematic destruction of communitarian-based cultural institutions since 1980 (even bowling leagues and chess clubs are now seen as potentially subversive), I'm curious as to whether Reed still sees any value in traditional class-based political organization. Are there any seeds of a contemporary political strategy here, or does the class-based, anti-capitalist Left in the U.S. just have to wait until the identitarian Left burns itself out?
I'm about 2/3's of the way through that most recent paper of Reed's you linked the other day, i.e., Reed as movie reviewer. (still deeply disappointed with that) - but anyway - neoliberalism (status-seeking/conspicuous consumption/dopamine hegemony) as a method of human livestock management has wholly overwhelmed organic communities. Now that available net energy, production, commerce, and consumption are all in decline at a pace and to an extent where the contraction will be strongly and fairly uniformly felt across the 99% - a strong opportunity to reintroduce communities of competence as the basis for meaning and fulfillment apart from dopamine hegemony has opened up.
Couple that with the serotoninergic tidal wave eminent in marijuana legalization and there's no telling what kind of previously unrealized possibilities will develop.
Marijuana legalization is a BFD, no doubt about that.
Do you ever wonder if the level of development of performance enhancing drugs has reached a plateau where the supreme who have access no longer need concern themselves with the mind and performance altering effects of natural and more familiar entheogens a la Limitless?
[quote]With its role in question, the entrenched black elite was no longer able to effectively perform its internal management function and lost any authority with its "recruits" and the black community in general.[/quote]
THIS IS NOT AN ACCURATE REPRESENTATION OF FACT.
The "Black Community 'Human Resource Development Institutions'" were contaminated - made into POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS to support Progressive Political Opportunism.
IT DIDN'T MATTER that they were not able to serve as INTERNAL AUTHORITY. They succeeded in shifting the Americanized Negro's DEVELOPMENT HOPES into GOVERNMENT and then upon taking over all of the seats of power of local governments - they retained their power by NATIONALIZING the "Social Justice Struggle".
YOU DON'T NEED TO retain the INTERNAL AUTHORITY. THEY CONTROL THE MEDIA that the Black community consumes.
As long as they stand up two key forces - there is nothing else needed in the distopia:
1) Show how the ENEMY HAS RACIALLY OFFENDED you and compel the Americanized Negro to seek revenge - thus he will YIELD his TIME AND FOCUS that should have been focused upon internal governance - into the national political arena - just as the Embedded Confidence Men were contracted to do and the White Right-Wing was hoping that they'd do.
2) Compel the Americanized Negro to DISARM from protecting his own permanent interests - asking those who he gave his harvest to with tepid returns: "Where Is The Money That We Gave To You For Our Development". By making a TEAM BRANDING for the "Americanized Negro" - he won't be prone to ask such a question, lest his "settlement" and punitive payment bankrupt "the team", leaving it unable to fight the right-wing enemy.
BEFORE we get to a discussion of AUTHORITY - we MUST stop the Negro from assuming that the White man is the "PERFECT 100%". There is a problem with "Non-White White Supremacy" and through this the Negro leaders get to eschew their AUTHORITY and the accountability that comes with it.
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