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Author Topic: Bombed Levees and Bleeding Hearts  (Read 9679 times)
Rootsie
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« on: September 10, 2005, 02:25:40 AM »

This is part of an e-mail I received yesterday:

"My heart is aching so this morning....man, the privilege of deciding what to let into meditations...you know to everyone who has been asking me about how family is doing in new orleans, I have been saying fine, they got out. In the back of my mind everytime I have said this I thought of the ones I knew couldn't and the ones I wouldn't let my thoughts go too deep into...the ones that I know wouldn't....my slackness and feeling like I don't know what to do....to do my part....even in my despair I am chastising myself because all I have offered is my bleeding heart....so much the undercurrent of the mentality of our culture."

Sigh.  It seems like all any of us well-intentioned white folks have to offer is our bleeding hearts. The internet is awash with white outrage at the actions of this government, but I have a queasy knowledge that it’s all sound and fury, signifying  nothing.  Remember who told that tale? That’s right, an idiot, and that’s what we are.

Seeking desperately to differentiate ourselves from those other white people, writing about our black friends, demonstrating all kinds of concern…the facts remain.  Our bleeding hearts are of no use to anybody, as my friend well knows.  We can’t get it together to reign in this government. We still get to decide whether we let the suffering of the people ‘down there’ impinge on our meditations.  We still get all the goodies associated with our privilege. Up here in Vermont there are toll boards in front of businesses announcing how much money they’ve collected for the Red Cross.

Whites giving money to whites to help blacks: yup that’s going to work…The NPR affiliate raised $89,000 in two hours. “This is astonishing!” the announcer marveled. Astonishing what white guilt will do, inspired by images people thought belonged only to the nightmare past, when they literally used blacks for sandbags to plug up the levees. Now it’s feared that rotting black corpses will plug the pumps.

We know that our government would never let this catastrophe happen to mostly-white people, but most are not prepared to hear the truth.

We have received an eye-witness report of explosions at the 17th St. Canal, and of a ‘bone dry’ neighborhood inundated with 10 feet of water in a matter of minutes after. Water spurting up through the sewers. The lucky ones were plucked by helicopter off their roofs. This was done to save the already-evacuated white neighborhoods and the vacant city center.

Female reporter: "Is it true that the levees were blown up on purpose?"
 White House Press Spokesman: "This is not the time or the place for questions like that!"

 -Press Conference with Ex-President George Bush Sr. and Ex-President Bill Clinton,  MSNBC Morning Show, September 5, 2005

Raw transcript of comments by NOLA evacuee : "The 17th street levee was bombed by the Army Corps of Engineers to save the more valuable real estate in the city... to keep the French Quarter protected, the ninth ward was sacrificed... people are afraid to speak out... everyone who was near there heard the bombings... they bombed seven times. That’s why they didn’t fix the levees... 20 feet of water. Gators. People dying in water. They let the parishes go, not the city center. Tourist trap was saved over human life.
     Report from the Houston Astrodome  http://www.ciaobella.org

So, in this gush of bleeding heart ‘humanitarian’ sentiment, are we willing to subject our delicate nervous systems to more appropriate feelings? The righteous indignation of the morally bankrupt rings hollow.  Can whites get out of the way and allow blacks to lead us?

I remember a Simpsons episode where the sign outside the Springfield Methodist Church announced next Sunday’s sermon: “The Miracle of Shame.” Well,  shame is such an unpleasant thing it can inspire people to make really big changes really fast.  I’m not hopeful that this will be the case for many whites, but it surely is the appropriate thing to be feeling now. There is only one way out, and it’s the way most whites are most unwilling to take.

For the short term, at least do some research and give money and supplies  to black groups who are doing hurricane relief instead of giving money to the Red Cross.
There is a list here:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/09/1764840.php
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starshyne
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« Reply #1 on: September 11, 2005, 11:04:07 PM »

I haven’ posted on here in awhile. I at one time posted on here as isisrastafari. I am the friend whose part of the email Rootsie spoke of in the article above.
What I was trying to say was slightly different then what I feel was relayed, related, and elaborated on. I was speaking of the ones I know couldn’t wouldn’t leave…..because they live and die for justice and rights. We whites simply haven’t gotten it together for that…I think that we do have the capacity for righteous indignation…..but it only rings morally true and real when it is met out with real action…talk is over…the story repeats and repeats…bleeding hearts is the speeches we make of our shame, our lecturing to others about privilege…and not implanting real reform in our daily lives, it is a process of evaluating  & holding accountability in what we do on a daily basis…Yes like Rootsie said, sending monies to black led orgs. is a start, but if not done in a way of reflecting on how one lives one’s everyday life it becomes illegitimate and a vanity fair. Living a lifestyle that supplies the demand for genocide…..taking from one hand and repaying it to another…..it is time we stop being a spoke of advancement for this machine…..and actually become Part of the damn rock that sends it careening into pieces. When I was writing about the ones I know couldn’t and wouldn’t get out…..I was speaking of people who live the life….not just talk…but justice staking no matter the cost it is these ones who will turn the tables! This is the slackness I was speaking of…we whites have yet to pick up on that, make the necessary sacrifices in our daily lives, if we really truly feel justice is the way and of such great worth….then we will design our lives as so. The ones I know couldn’t wouldn’t leave, live exactly this…..they have a base together….and from there operate on any word of injustice in their neighborhood….live simply, raise money, put it where its required….intentionally taking jobs in the center of the court madness to reverse the judgments. I am personally in a point of transition in reflecting and reacting to being white and privileged and thus my responsibility…..more than just writing letters about it or dotting my name on the bottom of a check….but seeing that is also about a life shift in priorities and establishing a solid foundation to act from….the process of doing so not coming soon enough, the open wound now festering with flies magnified, leaving me feeling slack and inept…because I am white and directly benefit….What we see in New Orleans is nothing new it has been going on, call it Napoleons ghost. In a certain extent we need to unplug…..not just give all what we have to level of having just what we need….need can mean a lot and many different things to different people….but we also have to trim off our obsessive excesses….Many whites still take the I am poor too stance, generally even though we may feel we are poor, we have no idea what it means to be really poor and really non-privileged….well privilege tells us we get job preference for one and for two spending habits can tell us we are all not that poor…..yes some of us have our own distaste for the industry the government the control but still we have a responsibility to overturn it….a job should be to build a base of funding, a stepping stone (make the dough and get out) or to put one in a situation to tear up court papers or rewrite the accountant books….a way to infiltrate. There is a balance to be struck. Have you heard the racist media debate over whether news photographs and video should be shot of the dead….what a question!!? The families don’t know what has happened to their missing family members…the horrid thought of finding them dead by watching tv or looking through the paper….our macabre society. Not too much different than the pictures of the KKK lynchings. Well this is just it....us whites can easily jump into the bandwagon of the gruesome, the horridity. Stating our privilege and compliance and yet not full engaging action. That is what our words have become….death.
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« Reply #2 on: September 12, 2005, 03:44:59 PM »

yes, yes, and yes

I think it is impossible for the unrighteous to express righteous indignation
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starshyne
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« Reply #3 on: September 12, 2005, 04:54:49 PM »

http://kingqueen360.com/
These queens are local community activists and street vendors in New Orleans, notorious for their ice cream truck. I have not been able to make contact with them as of yet. I know their cd can still be purchased here though.
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ziontrinity
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Tracey
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« Reply #4 on: September 12, 2005, 05:37:07 PM »

As long as "status quo" prevails the majority of whites will do nothing more than rant and rave about the times -  then go about business as usual. The heavily conditioned mindset is stuck at an impass, totally blinded and insulated from true 'righteous indignation' by material comfort/attachments.  Nothing short of economic fallout, natural disasters, and impending war on these hallowed shores will seemingly shake the mental attitudes from this priviledged position - with the exception of the voice for reason, which stirs up the deep and compells one to question the status quo - and their place in it.

I'm not sure I'm following the point about the kings and queens ice truck/cd thing. Are you saying that you "now" feel inspired to do something similar given the scenario in New Orleans? Is that not exactly what is being referred to as "white guilt?" Please clarify - just trying to understand your reference point.
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« Reply #5 on: September 12, 2005, 09:53:00 PM »

So very true what you say.....there is also such a thing as working within our place in it...and that is what I am trying to focus on....not only questioning and talking but in how we live our lives....I don't have the answers but I know it must be done...through my stumblings I learn....but this not something new to me....or it is not just "now" that I feel inspired to do something. I was providing a link for putting money directly into the hands of a black grassroots community group I have first hand knowledge of.....of which who are now displaced because of what has happened there. They were an established business and hub of community organization.  My suggestion of this group is in the same vein of what Rootsie put forward in the indy links, providing alternative options than such orgs as the red cross. What I was speaking of was, yes we should financially support black-led orgs......but at the same time take action on what we demand, cut our excesses...and find a way to make our daily life occcupation work towards justice.
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« Reply #6 on: September 13, 2005, 03:05:23 PM »


The Fears of White People
by Robert Jensen
   
September 08, 2005
 
It may seem self-indulgent to talk about the fears of white people in a white-supremacist society. After all, what do white people really have to be afraid of in a world structured on white privilege? It may be self-indulgent, but it's critical to understand because these fears are part of what keeps many white people from confronting ourselves and the system.
 
The first, and perhaps most crucial, fear is that of facing the fact that some of what we white people have is unearned. It's a truism that we don't really make it on our own; we all have plenty of help to achieve whatever we achieve. That means that some of what we have is the product of the work of others, distributed unevenly across society, over which we may have little or no control individually. No matter how hard we work or how smart we are, we all know -- when we are honest with ourselves -- that we did not get where we are by merit alone. And many white people are afraid of that fact.
 
A second fear is crasser: White people's fear of losing what we have -- literally the fear of losing things we own if at some point the economic, political, and social systems in which we live become more just and equitable. That fear is not completely irrational; if white privilege -- along with the other kinds of privilege many of us have living in the middle class and above in an imperialist country that dominates much of the rest of the world -- were to evaporate, the distribution of resources in the United States and in the world would change, and that would be a good thing. We would have less. That redistribution of wealth would be fairer and more just. But in a world in which people have become used to affluence and material comfort, that possibility can be scary.
 
A third fear involves a slightly different scenario -- a world in which non-white people might someday gain the kind of power over whites that whites have long monopolized. One hears this constantly in the conversation about immigration, the lingering fear that somehow "they" (meaning not just Mexican-Americans and Latinos more generally, but any non-white immigrants) are going to keep moving to this country and at some point become the majority demographically. Even though whites likely can maintain a disproportionate share of wealth, those numbers will eventually translate into political, economic, and cultural power. And then what? Many whites fear that the result won't be a system that is more just, but a system in which white people become the minority and could be treated as whites have long treated non-whites. This is perhaps the deepest fear that lives in the heart of whiteness. It is not really a fear of non-white people. It's a fear of the depravity that lives in our own hearts: Are non-white people capable of doing to us the barbaric things we have done to them?
 
A final fear has probably always haunted white people but has become more powerful since the society has formally rejected overt racism: The fear of being seen, and seen-through, by non-white people. Virtually every white person I know, including white people fighting for racial justice and including myself, carries some level of racism in our minds and hearts and bodies. In our heads, we can pretend to eliminate it, but most of us know it is there. And because we are all supposed to be appropriately anti-racist, we carry that lingering racism with a new kind of fear: What if non-white people look at us and can see it? What if they can see through us? What if they can look past our anti-racist vocabulary and sense that we still don't really know how to treat them as equals? What if they know about us what we don't dare know about ourselves? What if they can see what we can't even voice?
 
I work in a large university with a stated commitment to racial justice. All of my faculty colleagues, even the most reactionary, have a stated commitment to racial justice. And yet the fear is palpable.
 
It is a fear I have struggled with, and I remember the first time I ever articulated that fear in public. I was on a panel with several other professors at the University of Texas discussing race and politics in the O.J. Simpson case. Next to me was an African American professor. I was talking about media; he was talking about the culture's treatment of the sexuality of black men. As we talked, I paid attention to what was happening in me as I sat next to him. I felt uneasy. I had no reason to be uncomfortable around him, but I wasn't completely comfortable. During the question-and-answer period -- I don't remember what question sparked my comment -- I turned to him and said something like, "It's important to talk about what really goes on between black and white people in this country. For instance, why am I feeling afraid of you? I know I have no reason to be afraid, but I am. Why is that?"
 
My reaction wasn't a crude physical fear, not some remnant of being taught that black men are dangerous (though I have had such reactions to black men on the street in certain circumstances). Instead, I think it was that fear of being seen through by non-white people, especially when we are talking about race. In that particular moment, for a white academic on an O.J. panel, my fear was of being exposed as a fraud or some kind of closet racist. Even if I thought I knew what I was talking about and was being appropriately anti-racist in my analysis, I was afraid that some lingering trace of racism would show through, and that my black colleague would identify it for all in the room to see. After I publicly recognized the fear, I think I started to let go of some of it. Like anything, it's a struggle. I can see ways in which I have made progress. I can see that in many situations I speak more freely and honestly as I let go of the fear. I make mistakes, but as I become less terrified of making mistakes I find that I can trust my instincts more and be more open to critique when my instincts are wrong.

This essay is excerpted from The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege (City Lights, September 2005).  More information at: http://www.citylights.com/CLpub4th.html#4499
Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin. He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=30&ItemID=8698
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three_sixty
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« Reply #7 on: September 13, 2005, 04:06:02 PM »

* I think at the SAME time that we are addressing these issues of Race we are also keeping in check our OWN tendencies towards ELITISM(which is perhaps also a product of white privilege) - where we create this illusion that there are those who "get it" and those who "don't" and those who we deem "don't get it" we look down our noses at.

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Tracey
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« Reply #8 on: September 14, 2005, 01:11:39 PM »

Quote
there is also such a thing as working within our place in it....not only questioning and talking but in how we live our lives

Indeed - much to examine and work through there.

Jensen puts a similar issue on the table - after all the anti-racist rhetoric said and done - what are we actually seen for?  Do our beliefs truly align with how we live our lives?

Good points.

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