Sunday, April 24, 2016

Re: [blind-democracy] Harriet Tubman and the Monetization of Black History

William C. Anderson writes, "...Black people were and still are for
sale; Black history is for sale; and Black culture, too, is always for sale."
How very true. And, since Anderson is focused on Harriet Tubman, I
have no grumble in his relating the transition of American Blacks from
Citizens, to Consumers. I simply want to point out to Mister Anderson
that this is a common condition of all Working Class Americans, Black,
White, Brown or any other Color. It's a crime to think of the years
of struggle by working class Americans to gain inclusion in that
statement, "We, The People", only to be side tracked by the pressures
of the American Corporate Capitalists, to come to a place where we are
merely "Consumers". But Capitalism must grow and expand. To do this
Capitalists must continue developing "New, Improved", and innovative
products. And consumers must do their fair share by wanting and
buying such products.
We American Consumers have been conditioned to believe that our
happiness and our success are measured by how many new and improved
gadgets we own. God forbid that we are wearing last years styles or
driving an old model car, or using an archaic common old cell phone.
But just like everything else, Capitalism has us looking outside
ourselves for Life's Rewards.
The concern should not be on whether Harriet Tubman's image be placed
on the twenty dollar bill, or not. The real concern, so far as I am
concerned, is why we pay so little attention in our history books on
Great American Citizens like Harriet Tubman, and instead drool all
over the likes of Andrew Jackson or Queen Elizabeth, or J. Edgar
Hoover, or General Douglas MacArthur. Our history books teach us the
glories of the Capitalists and the War Heroes...as long as they are
ranking officers.
So it is not just a Color issue. It is a Class issue. Working people
need to open their eyes to the fact that our color does not make us
any more or less subject to the contempt of the American Capitalist.
We need to understand that if we are creating wealth for our
Capitalist Masters, it does not matter the color of our skin, or
whether we wear a blue collar or a white one. Men and women, young
and old, we are all in the same struggle. It's time we all got on the
same side.

Carl Jarvis

On 4/23/16, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@optonline.net> wrote:
> Harriet Tubman and the Monetization of Black History
> Thursday, 21 April 2016 00:00 By William C. Anderson, Truthout | Op-Ed
> Harriet Tubman. (Photo: HB Lindsley / Library of Congress)Don't trust the
> corporate media? Neither do we. Make a tax-deductible donation to Truthout
> and support accurate, independent journalism.
> There's a strange irony in printing the image of someone who spent her life
> on the run because she was worth money onto money itself, as a supposed
> honor. This hasn't stopped the US Treasury Department from announcing a
> change replacing Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the face of the $20
> bill. While many people see the change as progressive and indicative of
> respect, others have taken issue with the contradictions therein.
> Capitalism, bolstered by slave labor and steadily craving more chattel,
> showed the US Bill of Rights and the Constitution to be fictional
> documents.
> Now, as Tubman is chosen to grace US currency, we see the latest chapter of
> a never-ending saga of consumption. Black people were and still are for
> sale; Black history is for sale; and Black culture, too, is always for
> sale.
> Andrew Jackson -- whose image will remain on the back of the $20 bill --
> was
> a horrible president, to say the least. He was a man dedicated to murder,
> despair, oppression and genocide. His face, like the faces of many other US
> presidents, haunts onlookers who know what commemorating such a person
> means. Those who gladly welcomed the murder, enslavement and degradation of
> my ancestors as well as others' ancestors stare at us regularly from money,
> statues, state buildings, street names and more. This is a regular fact of
> everyday existence in the United States.
> The canon of capitalism tells us we should respect money more than anything
> and cherish our right to use it freely. Therefore, putting someone's face
> on
> a bill would be seen by many as a great honor. However, money is exactly
> what drives much of the worldwide trauma that capitalism creates.
> Consequently, since Andrew Jackson was a slaver, purveyor of Indigenous
> genocide and ruthless military man, having his face on the $20 bill seemed
> quite appropriate.
> If the general consensus were that money is something filthy and that
> capitalism is a crisis, there would be no question about the problems with
> putting Harriet Tubman's face on a piece of money. This is not the case.
> Money is something we need to function societally, something we aspire to
> attain and something we often cherish when we have it. It's money's
> necessity in our everyday lives that will make many view Tubman's presence
> as a respectful representation. Yet, it's the continuous creeping of
> corruption, environmental decimation and ruthless accumulation that argues
> otherwise. The overwhelming wealth inequality, racialized poverty and
> gender
> pay gap that pervade this country expose the "honor" bestowed upon Tubman
> as
> a blatant mistruth.
> In recent years, false notions of progress tend to dominate public
> conversations around "diversity" and "inclusion." From the election of
> sitting President Barack Obama (who will likely be blamed by bigots as if
> he
> single-handedly chose Tubman) to this change of face in currency, these
> symbolic acts become scraps to appease populations hungry for justice.
> Moreover, monuments, commemorations and efforts to represent Black people
> and our history often become engines to build capital. Civil rights tourism
> allows travelers from around the world to visit the places where Black
> people have been killed, enslaved and brutalized while merely trying to
> secure some stability in an economy and social hierarchy that excluded and
> marginalized them. Today, visitors to places like Selma's annual Bloody
> Sunday commemoration can buy civil rights products and attend often
> expensive events to their heart's content, while reflecting on a tragic
> "past." The Martin Luther and Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast this year
> in Selma was $50 general admission and $500 per table. In a recent report
> titled "Still a City of Slaves -- Selma, in the Words of Those Who Live
> There," the Guardian reported:
> In the US, joblessness for African Americans is roughly twice that of
> whites. In Selma, which is 80% African American, joblessness runs even
> higher. In 2010, unemployment in Selma reached 20%; it has since been cut
> in
> half to 10%, but [is] still around twice the national average. Wages in
> Selma (as for African Americans nationally) also badly lag the country,
> with
> the median family income at roughly $25,000 -- half that of the US average.
> There are countless theories offered by academics and politicians about why
> African Americans disproportionately suffer higher joblessness and lower
> wages -- a lack of education, dependence on manual labor, technological
> shifts -- but to many Selma residents those theories are just excuses for
> racism.
> In Memphis, Tennessee, you can go to the very spot where Martin Luther King
> Jr. was murdered and see a monument to him -- as well as to the bank
> sponsors who didn't hesitate to advertise on the property. Memphis, which
> has the highest energy cost burden in the country, has struggled with a
> devastating poverty rate for years, with 30 percent living below the
> poverty
> line. Just over 13 percent of lower-income households' income in Memphis is
> spent on energy.
> The same is true in many other Black historical landmark cities across the
> country. In terms of poverty, the cities that closely follow Memphis for
> most household income spent on energy are Birmingham, Atlanta and New
> Orleans, according to the Pittsburgh Business Times. These are three cities
> that make a lot of money on civil rights tourism, and their rich Black
> histories in general. It's quite distressing that in cities that market
> their history of brutality against Black people to visitors, the
> descendants
> of those very people are disproportionately impoverished and struggling to
> pay their bills. Plus, these Southern states (especially Alabama and
> Louisiana) are filled with wretched prison systems where Black people are
> killed, tortured and brutalized, just as Black people have been here for
> centuries.
> There's no realm of existence where Black people can escape so that our
> bodies aren't taken advantage of on earth. Both sides of the political
> "spectrum" are intent on criminalizing Black communities and subjecting
> them
> to state-sponsored violence, and they often agree on making money off of
> the
> history of anti-Black violence as well. It shouldn't come as a surprise
> that
> a Black liberator is being used for money when many have already been
> making
> money off of our histories of struggle at every turn.
> Now, in the case of Harriet Tubman, she is being made into money. Her face
> will be placed among men who would have sold her, killed her and committed
> other egregious acts of violence against her if they would have had the
> chance. She was a Black woman whose strength seemed endless. She is not
> being honored by being placed on a weakening dollar.
> Black people have been through incredibly distressing times, and if we know
> anything, it's that we cannot always depend on money. When times have
> gotten
> rough for Black people, we've always depended on our self-determination for
> our freedom. It's this realization that leads me to ask: Why put a value on
> a people, a history and a culture that's absolutely priceless?
> Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission.
> WILLIAM C. ANDERSON
> William C. Anderson is a freelance writer. Follow him on Twitter:
> @Williamcson.
> RELATED STORIES
> Archaeologist, Black Feminist Unearths Contributions of African Diaspora,
> Everyday People
> By Max Eternity, Truthout | Interview
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> By Adam Hudson, Truthout | News Analysis
> Flag Controversies and Race Politics in a Civil War Town
> By Graham Stinnett, Truthout | News Analysis
> ________________________________________
> Show Comments
> Hide Comments
> <a href="http://truthout.disqus.com/?url=ref">View the discussion
> thread.</a>
> Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
> Harriet Tubman and the Monetization of Black History
> Thursday, 21 April 2016 00:00 By William C. Anderson, Truthout | Op-Ed
> . font size Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. Error! Hyperlink
> reference not valid.Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. Error! Hyperlink
> reference not valid.
> . Harriet Tubman. (Photo: HB Lindsley / Library of Congress)Don't
> trust the corporate media? Neither do we. Make a tax-deductible donation to
> Truthout and support accurate, independent journalism.
> . There's a strange irony in printing the image of someone who spent
> her life on the run because she was worth money onto money itself, as a
> supposed honor. This hasn't stopped the US Treasury Department from
> announcing a change replacing Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the
> face
> of the $20 bill. While many people see the change as progressive and
> indicative of respect, others have taken issue with the contradictions
> therein. Capitalism, bolstered by slave labor and steadily craving more
> chattel, showed the US Bill of Rights and the Constitution to be fictional
> documents.
> Now, as Tubman is chosen to grace US currency, we see the latest chapter of
> a never-ending saga of consumption. Black people were and still are for
> sale; Black history is for sale; and Black culture, too, is always for
> sale.
> Andrew Jackson -- whose image will remain on the back of the $20 bill --
> was
> a horrible president, to say the least. He was a man dedicated to murder,
> despair, oppression and genocide. His face, like the faces of many other US
> presidents, haunts onlookers who know what commemorating such a person
> means. Those who gladly welcomed the murder, enslavement and degradation of
> my ancestors as well as others' ancestors stare at us regularly from money,
> statues, state buildings, street names and more. This is a regular fact of
> everyday existence in the United States.
> The canon of capitalism tells us we should respect money more than anything
> and cherish our right to use it freely. Therefore, putting someone's face
> on
> a bill would be seen by many as a great honor. However, money is exactly
> what drives much of the worldwide trauma that capitalism creates.
> Consequently, since Andrew Jackson was a slaver, purveyor of Indigenous
> genocide and ruthless military man, having his face on the $20 bill seemed
> quite appropriate.
> If the general consensus were that money is something filthy and that
> capitalism is a crisis, there would be no question about the problems with
> putting Harriet Tubman's face on a piece of money. This is not the case.
> Money is something we need to function societally, something we aspire to
> attain and something we often cherish when we have it. It's money's
> necessity in our everyday lives that will make many view Tubman's presence
> as a respectful representation. Yet, it's the continuous creeping of
> corruption, environmental decimation and ruthless accumulation that argues
> otherwise. The overwhelming wealth inequality, racialized poverty and
> gender
> pay gap that pervade this country expose the "honor" bestowed upon Tubman
> as
> a blatant mistruth.
> In recent years, false notions of progress tend to dominate public
> conversations around "diversity" and "inclusion." From the election of
> sitting President Barack Obama (who will likely be blamed by bigots as if
> he
> single-handedly chose Tubman) to this change of face in currency, these
> symbolic acts become scraps to appease populations hungry for justice.
> Moreover, monuments, commemorations and efforts to represent Black people
> and our history often become engines to build capital. Civil rights tourism
> allows travelers from around the world to visit the places where Black
> people have been killed, enslaved and brutalized while merely trying to
> secure some stability in an economy and social hierarchy that excluded and
> marginalized them. Today, visitors to places like Selma's annual Bloody
> Sunday commemoration can buy civil rights products and attend often
> expensive events to their heart's content, while reflecting on a tragic
> "past." The Martin Luther and Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast this year
> in Selma was $50 general admission and $500 per table. In a recent report
> titled "Still a City of Slaves -- Selma, in the Words of Those Who Live
> There," the Guardian reported:
> In the US, joblessness for African Americans is roughly twice that of
> whites. In Selma, which is 80% African American, joblessness runs even
> higher. In 2010, unemployment in Selma reached 20%; it has since been cut
> in
> half to 10%, but [is] still around twice the national average. Wages in
> Selma (as for African Americans nationally) also badly lag the country,
> with
> the median family income at roughly $25,000 -- half that of the US average.
> There are countless theories offered by academics and politicians about why
> African Americans disproportionately suffer higher joblessness and lower
> wages -- a lack of education, dependence on manual labor, technological
> shifts -- but to many Selma residents those theories are just excuses for
> racism.
> In Memphis, Tennessee, you can go to the very spot where Martin Luther King
> Jr. was murdered and see a monument to him -- as well as to the bank
> sponsors who didn't hesitate to advertise on the property. Memphis, which
> has the highest energy cost burden in the country, has struggled with a
> devastating poverty rate for years, with 30 percent living below the
> poverty
> line. Just over 13 percent of lower-income households' income in Memphis is
> spent on energy.
> The same is true in many other Black historical landmark cities across the
> country. In terms of poverty, the cities that closely follow Memphis for
> most household income spent on energy are Birmingham, Atlanta and New
> Orleans, according to the Pittsburgh Business Times. These are three cities
> that make a lot of money on civil rights tourism, and their rich Black
> histories in general. It's quite distressing that in cities that market
> their history of brutality against Black people to visitors, the
> descendants
> of those very people are disproportionately impoverished and struggling to
> pay their bills. Plus, these Southern states (especially Alabama and
> Louisiana) are filled with wretched prison systems where Black people are
> killed, tortured and brutalized, just as Black people have been here for
> centuries.
> There's no realm of existence where Black people can escape so that our
> bodies aren't taken advantage of on earth. Both sides of the political
> "spectrum" are intent on criminalizing Black communities and subjecting
> them
> to state-sponsored violence, and they often agree on making money off of
> the
> history of anti-Black violence as well. It shouldn't come as a surprise
> that
> a Black liberator is being used for money when many have already been
> making
> money off of our histories of struggle at every turn.
> Now, in the case of Harriet Tubman, she is being made into money. Her face
> will be placed among men who would have sold her, killed her and committed
> other egregious acts of violence against her if they would have had the
> chance. She was a Black woman whose strength seemed endless. She is not
> being honored by being placed on a weakening dollar.
> Black people have been through incredibly distressing times, and if we know
> anything, it's that we cannot always depend on money. When times have
> gotten
> rough for Black people, we've always depended on our self-determination for
> our freedom. It's this realization that leads me to ask: Why put a value on
> a people, a history and a culture that's absolutely priceless?
> Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission.
> William C. Anderson
> William C. Anderson is a freelance writer. Follow him on Twitter:
> @Williamcson.
> Related Stories
> Archaeologist, Black Feminist Unearths Contributions of African Diaspora,
> Everyday People
> By Max Eternity, Truthout | InterviewAny National "Conversation About Race"
> Must Include Black Radical Tradition
> By Adam Hudson, Truthout | News AnalysisFlag Controversies and Race
> Politics
> in a Civil War Town
> By Graham Stinnett, Truthout | News Analysis
>
> Show Comments
>
>
>

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