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Opinions of Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Columnist: Cameron Duodu

Oh, what a horrible week!

Opinion Opinion

Is it really possible that the country that has twice voted for a Black President – in the person of Barack Obama – can still harbour in its ranks, White people who are so ravaged by hatred for Black people that they can walk into a church, sit quietly with the congregation for over an hour, and then stand up calmly to shoot nine of them dead – in cold blood?

It is precisely such a thing that happened in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 17, 2015, when a 21-year-old Whiteman called Dylann Roof, committed an act of murder so wanton in nature that neither America nor the world can quite get its head round it.

A photograph posted on a website with a racist manifesto showed Roof brandishing a “Confederate Flag” that US racists have adopted as a banner for their wish for the “resumption” of the American Civil War, in which the country's “South” fought against the “North” over whether the horrendous system of enslaving Black people should be allowed to continue.

For Black people, the “Confederate Flag” conjures up ghastly images of lynchings and other inhuman practices that were part and parcel of slavery.

But despite the fact that the US Constitution says that “All men are created equal”, White American politicians are so pusillanimous that they have allowed one Southern state -- South Carolina -- to fly the ignominious flag over a public building. The Governor now says the flag will be taken down. But it has done its work already, in as far as it has inspired someone to murder nine human beings he did not even know.

Although the brutal nature of Roof's crime is acknowledged by the US media, reaction to the crime has shown once again that American society is ridden to the hilt with hypocrisy over race issues.

For instance, whilst telecasting a discussion of the murder on Meet The Press on June 21, 2015, NBC TV managed to insert a clip in which a Blackman who was in prison for murder tearfully confessed his regret at having pulled a trigger to take the life of a fellow human being. Now, what was the relevance of that to a heinous mowing down of nine Black people by a Whiteman?

It was as if they were standing the story on its head and blaming Black murderers for what had happened at Charleston! Are NBC TV producers so asinine and insensitive that they couldn't see the insulting fallacy in what they were doing? It was as if Marshall MacLuhan (“The Medium Is The Message”) had never existed, and that if you are talking about guns and murder, any clip would do!

Now, NBC TV is one of the most respected national networks in the US. So if they behaved in this way, just imagine what the lunatic-fringe networks (such as Fox) would have been doing with the story.

Even worse, the Director of the FBI, James Comey managed to to specify, publicly, that Roof's crime was not what the Bureau would classify as “terrorism” or a “terrorist act”. At a press conference in Baltimore on June 20, 2015, Comey said the FBI was currently investigating whether or not Roof committed a “hate crime”, but not “terrorism.” “Terrorism”, according to Comey, “ is [an] act of violence done or threatens to (sic) in order to try to influence a public body or citizenry, so it’s more of a political act and again, based on what I know, so more (sic) I don’t see it as a political act.”

I beg Comey's pardon? if a guy who brandishes the “Confederate Flag” and espouses a racist manifesto is not carrying out a “political act”, then what is a “political act”? I am afraid Comey's comment would have played into the way America's power structure routinely characterises racist crimes.

If Roof had been a Muslim who posted pictures of himself wielding an al-Qaeda flag on a website, the FBI would have been on to him before he could shoot anyone. The FBI might even have set him up for arrest and prosecution by mounting a “sting operation” on him (as it has done with several other Muslim “terrorist suspects” in the past.)

But racist violence? That's low on the priority list of the FBI, hence the pervasive continuation of White police “turkey shoots” of Black people, that have become the “new normal”. These crimes have hitherto not merited the full intervention of the FBI as a national emergency that must be ruthlessly uprooted by Federal law enforcement.

Indeed, White police murderers of Blacks must know, before they commit their murders, that White State Prosecutors in many States would not prosecute them vigorously; or that even if they did, few White-majority juries and White judges would find them guilty of the most serious crime with which they could be charged – first-degree murder. The absence of deterrence equals the multiplication of crime, doesn't it?

Maybe I am being harsh, but I noticed that although President Obama displayed the right body language, and also said the right things in his first comment on the Charleston murders, he did not wear a black tie during his TV appearance in which he spoke on the murders.

Was it because -- as some have asserted -- he wants to keep affirming the notion that his is a “race-less” presidency? Such a posture, if it really exists, would remind one of the Lord Kitchener calypso song: "If you're not white, you can say that Black!"

I was also appalled by the way the media extracted from the relatives of the dead, who were still in deep shock over losing their beloved ones, statements to the effect that they “forgave” Roof for his hideous crime.

Pour encourager les autres? a French speaker might ask (meaning: forgive him so that others might be encouraged to do the same thing? How inane.)

Another thing – and this goes back to the point I made earlier about the NBC TV clip about shootings in general – discussion of crimes like that at Charleston must differentiate the subject from the general debate about gun control, lest such crimes become accepted as an immutable aspect of American “culture”. We do know that the National Rifle Association (NRA) and the gun lobby are not going to vanish overnight, but The difference between gun murder in general and racist murders is that many of the Blacks who are killed by policemen are the victims of racists who are – anyhow – legitimately permitted to wear guns as part of their job of protecting the public, but who abuse that legitimacy, in order to carry out criminal turkey shoots of Black people.

To equate the gratuitous murder of Blacks by such racist White policemen with those of ordinary murderers – both Black and White – who are able to lay hands on guns easily because of lax gun laws -- is to codify, a priori, a legal sleight of hand which exonerates the murderous White policemen in advance.

All citizens, alike, look to these policemen for protection, by dint of the fact that law enforcement officers are paid with everyone's taxes. And such an exoneration in advance is not only unconstitutional in the US but also patently puts the lives of Black people at risk every second of every minute of every hour of every day.

That's why to conflate the two issues in a facile manner is -- arguably -- to encourage White police murder of Blacks. The two crimes both end in loss of life, but they are different social phenomena that must be separated in order that the one -- a general disease -- may not be used to lessen the uniqueness of the other, which is a specific crime in every sense of the word.