The quantum aether was listening and responded in its own sublimely subliminal way. Just now kicking the dopamine can with Cobb about Roberts and the issue I believe his nomination underscores - when what should waft into my inbox but this sweet little tidbit from the Black Commentator.
Mass Incarceration and the Black Elite
Text of the audio inside;
When Black Commentator Associate Editor Bruce Dixon wrote his recent Cover Story, “The Ten Worst Places to be Black,” some people in Wisconsin and Iowa got very upset. In terms of the disparity in the rates of incarceration between Blacks and whites, Wisconsin and Iowa were number one and number two. Number three was the prison hell called Texas, but Wisconsin and Iowa’s racial imprisonment disparity was more than twice as large as even Texas. Therefore, Wisconsin and Iowa were placed at the top of our Ten Worst Places to be Black. Milwaukee seems to tattoo prison numbers on Black baby boys, at birth.
Dixon also pointed out that Milwaukee has the highest child poverty rate of any big city in the country. There is, of course, a connection. It’s very difficult to build two-parent families when such huge numbers of would-be marriage partners are in prison. The effects cascade throughout Black society, destroying the very fabric of African American life.
However, there is an historical current in Black politics that is more embarrassed than outraged at mass Black incarceration. Thus, we witnessed a long NAACP boycott of the state of South Carolina, because it refused to remove the confederate flag from the Capital Building – but then the NAACP stages its national convention in Milwaukee. The NAACP rewarded – with millions of convention dollars – the city with the highest Black incarceration and child poverty rates. Somebody’s got their priorities very, very wrong. These are the same people who care more about getting relatively small numbers of Blacks in prestigious universities, than punishing the localities that place far higher numbers of young Blacks in prison. They care more about getting contracts for a few more Black business people, than in destroying the savage, thirty-year old public policy of criminalizing whole Black neighborhoods.
I’m reminded of a petition sent to the white administration of New Orleans by an elite organization of Blacks, back in the 1880s. These community leaders were upset that Black women city jail inmates were set to work cleaning up the streets. Their concern was not for the well-being of the female inmates, many of whom had been sentenced for prostitution, and some of whom were probably glad to get out of the dungeons and into the open air.
No, the Black elite were upset that the sight of these unfortunate women on New Orleans boulevards made the “colored race” look bad. They were embarrassed. A century and a quarter later, much of the African American elite is exhibiting the same political behavior. Why else would they reward a city that treats its Black citizens as badly as Milwaukee. For Radio BC, I’m Glen Ford.
Posted by at August 5, 2005 04:39 PM | TrackBackAnd did that improve the state of the neighborhood?
Posted by: animeg3282 at August 5, 2005 07:50 PMDon't know. Don't care. Ain't looked back since.
Posted by: Cobb at August 5, 2005 08:38 PMIn book 1 of Milton's Paradise Lost;
The Archangel proclaims "It is better to rule in hell than to serve in heaven."
After reading both books, is there more evidence to support that this is a statement of his satisfaction with the role that he has been assumed, or is it a result of bitterness at being cast from heaven?
Bear in mind, that as the oil runs out, heaven and hell will become indistinguishably contiguous...,
I used to live in a criminalized black neighborhood. So I moved.
Posted by: Cobb at August 5, 2005 06:55 PM