BY JESSE
JACKSON
June 23, 2015
June 23, 2015
The savage act of racial
terrorism at “Mother Emanuel,” the Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston, S.C.,
has been met with extraordinary expressions of faith in that community. On
Thursday, the victims’ relatives offered the terrorist their forgiveness. On
Sunday, Mother Emanuel’s doors opened for regular services. Hatred and violence
would not break the congregation’s spirit.
The murderer, Dylann Roof, said his intent was to trigger a race war. He
spat on and burned the American flag but waved the Confederate flag. Naturally,
this has revived the demand that the Confederate flag be taken down at the South
Carolina state capitol. The flag is a symbol. It stands for secession, sedition,
slavery, segregation and suppression of rights. That it flies at the state
capitol expresses the failure to address racial division. Germany does not fly a
Nazi flag. South Africa does not fly the flag of apartheid.
The flag is a symbol, but the agenda of the flag is very real. The flag
agenda is to preserve states’ rights over constitutional rights, racial divide
over liberty and justice for all. The flag agenda demands that states, not the
federal government, establish rules around voting. When the Supreme Court’s
conservative gang of five disemboweled the Voting Rights Act, a flood of
measures designed to make voting harder for minorities, the poor and the elderly
ensued.
The flag agenda asserts states’ rights over national reform. The Supreme
Court’s conservative justices decided that states could refuse the expansion of
Medicaid that was part of health care reform. Only one state of the former
confederacy then accepted billions from the federal government that would expand
health care for their citizens, boost their economy and aid their
hospitals.
The flag agenda sustains our systemic system of criminal injustice, where
African Americans are more likely to be stopped, more likely to be charged, more
likely to be detained, more likely to be jailed and — as we have seen again and
again — more likely to be at risk from the police that are supposed to protect
them.
The flag agenda suppresses the right of workers to organize, the right to a
living wage, a safe workplace, a healthy environment. The flag agenda
impoverishes poor white workers by pitting them against poor black
workers.
Today everyone is outraged at the killings, but there is not the same
outrage that African Americans have the highest rates of infant mortality,
unemployment, imprisonment, segregated housing and home foreclosures, segregated
and underfunded public schools, poverty, heart disease, liver disease, diabetes,
mental health issues, HIV/AIDS, denial of access to capital and more. The flag
is a symbol, but the flag agenda is this institutionalized state of
terror.
There was an urgency to identify and arrest Roof before he hurt anyone
else, but there is not the same urgency to identify and arrest the current
economic and political conditions — the institutional racism and structural
injustices — before another generation is lost.
The flag should come down. It is deeply offensive that politicians who
aspire to lead this nation as president are too cowardly to call for its
removal, hiding behind states’ rights, the poisonous doctrine that is the heart
of the flag agenda.
But putting the flag in a museum is not enough. Dylann Roof is 21 years
old. He was not alive when Rhodesia existed or South Africa was under apartheid.
He was taught his hatreds; he wasn’t born with them. His hatreds found deadly
expression, but so too do the institutionalized injustices that are not limited
to South Carolina.
Racism requires a remedy. We need a White House conference on racial
justice and urban policy to offer a vision and a policy to deal with our
structural injustice. Remove the flag, of course. But we need the president and
the Congress to challenge the flag agenda.
No comments:
Post a Comment