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Thread: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

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    Default Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Food for thought:

    Sat 22 Oct 2022 18.05 EDT
    America is built on a racist social contract. It’s time to tear it up and start anew.
    By Steve Phillips


    From the civil war to the January 2021 insurrection, the white nationalist response to democratic defeat has been to attempt to destroy US institutions and our national agreements. We shouldn’t tolerate this.

    The current social contract in America is not an expression of our deepest values, greatest hopes and highest ideals. Quite the contrary, it is the result of a centuries-long series of compromises with white supremacists.

    In his original draft of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson included a forceful denunciation of slavery and the slave trade, condemning the “execrable commerce” as “cruel war against human nature itself”. The leaders of the states engaged in the buying and selling of Black bodies balked at the offending passage, and Jefferson explained the decision to compromise, writing, “The clause … was struck out in complaisance to South Carolina & Georgia who had never attempted to restrain the importation of slaves, and who on the contrary still wished to continue it. Our northern brethren also I believe felt a little tender under those censures; for tho’ their people have very few slaves themselves yet they had been pretty considerable carriers of them to others.”

    The Constitution itself, the governing document seeking to “establish justice” and “secure the blessings of liberty”, is replete with compromises with white supremacists’ demands that the nascent nation codify the inferior status of Black people. The “Fugitive Slave Clause” – Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 of the Constitution – made it illegal for anyone to interfere with slave owners who were tracking “drapetomaniacs” fleeing slavery.

    And, of course, there was Article I, Section 2, Clause 3, which contains the quintessential compromise on how to enumerate the country’s Black population, resulting in the decision to count individual human beings – the Black human beings – as three-fifths of a whole person.

    The whites-first mindset about citizenship and immigration policy that still roils American politics to this day is not even really the result of compromise. It is in essence a complete capitulation to the concept that America is and should primarily be a white country. The 1790 Naturalization Act – one of the country’s very first laws – declared that to be a citizen one had to be a “free white person.” That belief was sufficiently uncontroversial that no compromise was necessary, and the provision was quickly adopted.

    In a unanimous opinion in the 1922 Ozawa v United States case, the supreme court ruled firmly and unapologetically that US law restricted citizenship to white people because “the words ‘white person’ means a Caucasian”, and Ozawa “is clearly of a race which is not Caucasian, and therefore belongs entirely outside the zone” of citizenship. The racial restriction was official law until 1952, and standard practice until adoption of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act. This centuries-long, whites-first framework for immigration policy was most recently articulated by Donald John Trump – the man for whom 74 million Americans voted in 2020 – when he asked in 2018, “Why are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?”

    The sweeping social programs of the New Deal were the result of compromises with Confederate congressmen working to preserve white power. In a Congress that prized seniority, many of the most senior and influential members came from the states that barred Black folks from voting. In his book When Affirmative Action Was White, Ira Katznelson breaks down how “the South used its legislative powers to transfer its priorities about race to Washington. Its leaders imposed them, with little resistance, on New Deal policies.”

    Social Security is perhaps the signature policy of the New Deal era, but in deference to white Southerners, the program explicitly excluded farmworkers and domestic workers. As Katznelson explains, “These groups – constituting more than 60 percent of the black labor force in the 1930s and nearly 75 percent of those who were employed in the South – were excluded from the legislation that created modern unions, from laws that set minimum wages and regulated the hours of work, and from Social Security until the 1950s.”

    Even the cornerstone of democracy – the right to vote – remains to this day the result of a creaky compromise with white nationalists. Most constitutional rights don’t require regular legislation to be renewed. There are no Freedom of Speech or Right to Privacy or Right to Bear Arms acts. We don’t revisit those fundamental rights every 10 or 20 years. When it comes to the fifteenth amendment, however, the right to vote has necessitated further legislation to guarantee enforcement, and the opposition has been so intractable and longstanding that the Voting Rights Act has to be regularly renewed by Congress, necessitating negotiation and compromise with those who fear the power-shifting implications of letting everyone of all races actually cast ballots.

    Even after extracting a cavalcade of compromises over the centuries, Confederates have consistently demonstrated that they do not feel obligated to honor any agreements or democratic institutions if those agreements or institutions fail to adequately protect whiteness. From the civil war itself to the January 2021 insurrection, the white nationalist response to democratic defeat has been to attempt to destroy American institutions and shred our national agreements.

    In contract law, a contract becomes null and void if one party did not enter into it in good faith, or if one party breaches the agreement and walks away from its mutual commitments. Given the clear bad faith and contempt for any allegiance to the common good, why do we have to cling to the old frameworks?

    The answer is we don’t. We do not have to stifle our dreams and surrender our principles. We can now craft a new, fundamentally different social contract.

    Steve Phillips is the founder of Democracy in Color and a Guardian US columnist. This is an extract from his latest book, How We Win the Civil War: Securing a Multiracial Democracy and Ending White Supremacy for Good (New Press, October 2022)

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    Chip (October 24th, 2022), Gabby84 (February 26th, 2023)

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Saw the piece– good one.

    Here are two photos from a series that reflect in a satirical way on the issue:






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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    And, consider the whole thanksgiving myth!

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    I also read recently that Judge Jackson had to correct the idea being floated in the courtroom of the SC that the US Constitution was meant to be race-blind. Oh my golly. Talk about revisionism! The only "blindness" being highlighted in that circumstance is the willful ignorance of the people in the room making that suggestion and/or accepting that suggestion.
    Last edited by TSherbs; October 28th, 2022 at 06:53 AM.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America


  7. The Following User Says Thank You to Chuck Naill For This Useful Post:

    TSherbs (October 28th, 2022)

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    yes, when I read the book White Trash, by Nancy Isenberg, I had the blinders lifted from my eyes about what the leaders (and movers and shakers) of America actually felt and wanted concerning race and class and "democracy" and the fruits of the blessings of America. I highly recommend it for more on this topic (but more about class and nationality than about race).

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    American history is full of these examples. Anyone remember growing up believing the Pilgrims had the first Thanksgiving meal with the Indians?

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    Gabby84 (February 26th, 2023)

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Justice Jackson has been earning my respect quickly:
    https://www.instagram.com/p/CkZQ1APh...d=YmMyMTA2M2Y=

    (Instagram link to a PBS News hour post)
    Last edited by TSherbs; October 31st, 2022 at 07:11 PM.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Well, here's another white misunderstanding and
    overreacting to a poll and then suggesting racial separation:

    https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/25/busin...ade/index.html

    He should stick to comics and art where his genius lies. And he is a genius.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    That Dilbert strip never appealed to me, perhaps because I've never been an office-bound drone.

    As I recall, dneal is a big fan.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Quote Originally Posted by TSherbs View Post
    Well, here's another white misunderstanding and
    overreacting to a poll and then suggesting racial separation:

    https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/25/busin...ade/index.html

    He should stick to comics and art where his genius lies. And he is a genius.
    What has he taught you that causes you to think of him as a genius?

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Quote Originally Posted by Chuck Naill View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by TSherbs View Post
    Well, here's another white misunderstanding and
    overreacting to a poll and then suggesting racial separation:

    https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/25/busin...ade/index.html

    He should stick to comics and art where his genius lies. And he is a genius.
    What has he taught you that causes you to think of him as a genius?
    What?

    He is a brilliant cartoonist. He can make a tie look like a dick and get it in national newspapers.

    "taught me"? Chuck, Beethoven hasn't "taught me" anything, either. Yet the 9th is one of the most glorious achievements of mankind.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    For sure, he can make himself look like a dick and get his strip dropped from national newspapers.

    Not sure I'd rank Dilbert with Beethoven, but de gustibus non disputandum est.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    touche, Chip

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Another "quirky" genius speaking beyond his bailiwick and revealing his ignorance:

    https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/26/elon...s-asians-.html

    or he is simply trolling

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    I think these folks are willing to say words in public that others have too much sense to try. Maybe their fame gives them a sense of entitlement or protection. I don't see this as intelligent. Their intelligence is knowing the market for their products, same with composers and evidently politicians. When they depart from what made them intelligent, we are disturbed by what they think.

    For example, MTG knows what some want to hear. Is she a genius? She sure has power with McCarthy and gets media attention.

    We all know about the 9th symphony and have been told it is a masterpiece. I accept it as a masterpiece, but if I were to be asked why, I'd just say I enjoy listening. Those that actually understand can relate what it is that makes him unique. This was behind me asking what makes the cartoonist a genius and is consistent with the linked source on Musk, "espousing his views without providing evidence on Sunday".
    “He has shown you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    You asked what the comic strip "taught" me. Bela Fleck doesn't teach me anything. But he is a genius.

    Beethoven wrote the 9th while totally deaf. We don't need to say anything else.

    Of course I'm not comparing Adams to Fleck or Beethoven. I'm making a point about genius and the idea of being "taught" something. I think that genius is rarely didactic. Didacticism kills genius.

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    Default Re: Race and the Democratic Social Contract in America

    Quote Originally Posted by TSherbs View Post
    You asked what the comic strip "taught" me. Bela Fleck doesn't teach me anything. But he is a genius.

    Beethoven wrote the 9th while totally deaf. We don't need to say anything else.

    Of course I'm not comparing Adams to Fleck or Beethoven. I'm making a point about genius and the idea of being "taught" something. I think that genius is rarely didactic. Didacticism kills genius.
    He pretty much initiated melodic banjo finger style vs the Scruggs style. His compositions have allowed an otherwise BG type instrument to be employed for other genres. What he teaches is how an instrument can be broadened in use and we don't have to follow the usual paths for success, or to think outside the box.

    Beethoven's compositions were not genius because he was deaf. What he teaches us is fortitude.

    A Fleck and Beethoven would be a more appropriate comparison. If I remember Fleck does not read music.
    “He has shown you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8

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