'BUBBA' GOES TO HARLEM

By Mumia Abu-Jamal, M.A.

#496 Column Written 2/13/2001
All Rights Reserved

News Item: Former U.S. President, Bill Clinton, stung  by criticism stemming from the almost $600,000 a year  costs of his offices in mid-town Manhattan, has sought  offices in the city's uptown Harlem district, where  costs are expected to be half the mid-town rate.

Not since the slim, ascetic Muslim Minister, Malcolm  X, strolled Harlem streets, has the chocolate colony  seen such excitement.  This time, an ex-president, one  both loathed and loved, comes to Harlem to establish  his base of operations, and by so doing, has demonstrated the twin, contradictory sides of his political persona.

Former president Clinton has, in his long 8 years at  the helm of the U.S. Ship of State, presided over an  explosion in the crippling prison industrial complex,  the expansion of the U.S. death penalty, and the  related contraction of the constitutional right to  habeas corpus, all of which have had a demonstratively  injurious effect on America's Black population.  In  order to obtain his office, he traded in Black death,  by overseeing the state murder of brain-damaged death  row captive, Ricky Ray Rector; in order to retain his  office, he leapt to betray the Black bourgeoisie, by  the abandonment of high justice dept. candidate, law  professor, Lani Guinier, and former Surgeon General,  Dr. Joycelyn Elders.

That said, Clinton remains a genuinely beloved figure  in Black America, so much so that when he was attacked  by his political adversaries on the right, Blacks felt almost as if they were attacked, and were, by far, the  most vigorous in his defense among American  constituencies. America's perhaps greatest living  writer, Toni Morrison, went just a tad beyond  hyperbole when she affectionately dubbed the Arkansan  "America's first Black president."  

Beyond his almost legendary political skills, there  must be other reasons for this weird political  courtship between African-Americans and Bill Clinton.   It's not his much-vaunted upbringing in poverty, for  despite the conventional wisdom, several U.S.  presidents (for example, Garfield, Andrew Johnson, and  Andrew Jackson) had an impoverished youth.

It seems like it's not so much Clinton, the man, as it  is Clinton, the man who spent his youth on the  periphery of the Civil Rights Movement and adulthood  in the proximity of the largest generation of Black  professionals in U.S. history.

It is therefore a case of interaction, and as Clinton  courted the black bourgies, he studiously ignored the  wretched suffering, imprisonment, scapegoating, and  cop repression against the black poor in the urban  centers.

And the black bourgeoisie, following their own class  interests, joined him in either ignoring or damning  the so-called "black underclass."  For what else was  that so-called Welfare Reform but more war on the  poor?

Now, as the nation's former chief executive takes up digs in Harlem, the bourgies once again preen at their new neighbor, while for the poor, it just means more gentrification, and therefore a harder struggle to afford rapidly rising rents.

It's about time millions of African-Americans learned  who their real friends are.


Text © copyright 2001 by Mumia Abu-Jamal.
All rights reserved.
Reprinted by permission of the author.

Share this page with a friend

International Action Center
39 West 14th Street, Room 206
New York, NY 10011
email:
iacenter@action-mail.org

web: http://www.iacenter.org
CHECK OUT SITE    http://www.mumia2000.org
phone: 212 633-6646
fax:   212 633-2889
To make a tax-deductible donation,
go to   http://www.peoplesrightsfund.org

 

 

The International Action Center
Home      ActionAlerts     Press
Support the International Action Center