Selective listeners heard “you’re
accusing me of Klu-Klux-Klan-level racism.” But “white privilege,” compared to
“white supremacy,” has the ring of a garden party to which I somehow deserved an
invitation. “White supremacy,” enforced by the police and structures too long
set in cultural concrete, is closer to the truth. The events of the past two
weeks, especially so many young whites demonstrating alongside blacks in the
streets, have made it easier for whites to acknowledge the depth of the
injustice in which they play an integral part.
We
humans are selective listeners. We hear what we want to hear, because it “fits”
our mindset. When Donald Trump hears “defund the police,” he thinks “anarchy,
chaos, abandonment of law and order.” When the millions of American protestors
hear the same phrase, it means “the militarization of the police only brought
out their worst tendencies. Reform is a failure. Time to reconceive the police,
and put far more funds into social services that meet human needs directly.”
A pervasive paradigm never dies a
painless death—in this moment the real deaths of far too many black people.
While we’re on the subject of defunding an overmilitarized police corrupted,
perhaps from the beginning, by invulnerable power, structural racism, a code of
conspiratorial secrecy, and resistance to reform, let’s also remember just how
big a paradigm shift we are undergoing in our historical moment—bigger even
than racism. Because in this shift, everything is connected.
When Mr.
Trump hears “Green New Deal,” he thinks “radical socialism,” where Ocasio-Cortez
thinks “new job opportunities and a more sustainable living system; what’s not
to like?” Pushed out of the headlines by the pandemic and the police lynching
of Mr. Floyd, international challenges like climate change do not abate.
When
Donald Trump hears “full spectrum dominance” or “we have more nukes than any
other country,” he hears that the “strength” of supremacy enforces law and
order internationally as well as domestically. A growing number of the rest of
us hear foreboding elements of weakness, decay, misappropriation of limited
resources, double standards, and possible nuclear catastrophe.
It isn’t just the police that are
overmilitarized; it’s the military itself. Not just in the United States, but
the United States is a case in point. The Lockheed F-35 Strike Fighter is
expected to cost a trillion dollars over its sixty year lifespan. The plan to
renew our nuclear arsenal over ten years will cost us taxpayers 1.6 trillion—leaving
aside our futile and unnecessary wars, including the racist one in Vietnam and
our indecisive long-running campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Imagine the
trillions expended upon bloated military programs and stupid wars that end up
diminishing our security repurposed to give everyone in our nation authentic
equality of opportunity, equal access to health care, equally well-funded
schools.
We, and not just in the U.S. but also
in other autocracies like Brazil or Hungary or Russia or China or Iran or
Myanmar, are invited to rethink the age-old question of fundamental
relationship between the state and the individual citizen. Is the purpose of
the state to control, or is it to support human dignity and equal opportunity
and clean air and water?
The U.S. Declaration of Independence says that citizens will
create an ideal society and government by “laying its foundation on such
principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their safety and happiness.”
The people in the streets
yearning for something new and hopeful, not only in the U.S. but all around the
world, including Hong Kong, don’t want to be controlled by an intrusive state;
they want to be free from the state unless it is repurposed to more effectively
champion their needs and rights.
Nuclear weapons, like our over-armed police, are also the
expression of a brutal, dysfunctional, obsolete attempt at supremacy and
control. Defund and reconceive the police. Defund subsidies for fossil fuels
and support alternative energy systems. Defund and reconceive international security
by forging new arms agreements which lift the anxiety of being annihilated off
our necks. “I can’t
breathe” has more than one meaning.
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