Segregationists Never Went Away: We Just Call Them “small-government Conservatives” Now

Black freedom & opportunity in America has always required the very federal intervention the right wants to destroy

Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly (Credit: Reuters/Micah Walter/AP/Douglas C. Pizac)
Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Bill O’Reilly (Credit: Reuters/​Micah Walter/​AP/​Douglas C. Pizac)

The con­tin­u­ing decline of pub­lic sec­tor jobs at local, state, and fed­er­al lev­els is hav­ing an abysmal eco­nom­ic impact on African Americans, for whom steady, sta­ble gov­ern­ment employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties have pro­vid­ed a sure path into the mid­dle class. The New York Times report­ed yes­ter­day that “rough­ly one in five black adults works for the gov­ern­ment, teach­ing school, deliv­er­ing mail, dri­ving bus­es, pro­cess­ing crim­i­nal jus­tice and man­ag­ing large staffs.” Because Black peo­ple hold a dis­pro­por­tion­ate num­ber of gov­ern­ment jobs, cut­backs that affect every­one hit Black com­mu­ni­ties even hard­er. In many ways that goes with­out say­ing. When America sneezes, Black America gets the flu. But I want to sug­gest that some­thing even more sin­is­ter ani­mates this swift piv­ot in the coun­try away from an invest­ment in pub­lic goods and ser­vices. It is not sim­ply that Black peo­ple are vic­tims of a num­bers game. Rather, there has been a whole­sale P.R. cam­paign on the part of those on the right to asso­ciate all pub­lic goods and ser­vices, from pub­lic schools to pub­lic assis­tance, with the bod­ies of unde­serv­ing peo­ple of col­or, par­tic­u­lar­ly Blacks and Latinos.

Any dis­cus­sion of wel­fare or pub­lic assis­tance in this coun­try is rife with dog whis­tles from the right toward the low­er ele­ments of their base, who in Pavlovian fash­ion, respond to code words about wel­fare and pub­lic assis­tance by con­jur­ing images of the unde­serv­ing Black and Brown poor. In his new book “How Propaganda Works,” Yale philoso­pher Jason Stanley argues that while a “lib­er­al demo­c­ra­t­ic cul­ture… does not tol­er­ate explic­it degra­da­tion of its cit­i­zens,” there are “appar­ent­ly inno­cent words that have the fea­ture of slurs, name­ly that when­ev­er the words occur in a sen­tence, they con­vey the prob­lem­at­ic con­tent. The word wel­fare …con­veys a prob­lem­at­ic social mean­ing.” I am sug­gest­ing that the word “pub­lic” in our polit­i­cal dis­course is becom­ing just such a tool of polit­i­cal pro­pa­gan­da as well.

While we don’t explic­it­ly degrade pub­lic insti­tu­tions, those insti­tu­tions are, in prac­tice, seen as less valu­able, wor­thy, rig­or­ous, and pres­ti­gious. In places as dis­parate as New York City and Tuscaloosa, Alabama, the prob­lem of severe seg­re­ga­tion in pub­lic schools has been well-doc­u­ment­ed. When eco­nom­ic means per­mit, white fam­i­lies tend not to edu­cate their chil­dren in racial­ly diverse schools. Public schools are viewed as caul­drons of poor learn­ing and social dys­func­tion; and white peo­ple, when­ev­er pos­si­ble, exer­cise the pre­rog­a­tive to keep their chil­dren out of these envi­ron­ments. That seems rea­son­able, but it is unrea­son­able to except that oth­er people’s chil­dren should have to learn in these kinds of envi­ron­ments either. The cur­rent cir­cus that is the edu­ca­tion reform debate in this coun­try demon­strates a point that Stanley makes: “The usurpa­tion of lib­er­al demo­c­ra­t­ic lan­guage to dis­guise an anti­de­mo­c­ra­t­ic man­age­r­i­al soci­ety is at the basis of the American pub­lic school sys­tem as it was restruc­tured between 1910 and 1920.” In oth­er words, we have a pub­licly stat­ed belief in the impor­tance of good pub­lic edu­ca­tion to our democ­ra­cy, but this masks a vari­ety of ways in which pub­lic schools become tools of social con­trol; and, in this moment in par­tic­u­lar, that per­pet­u­ates the cre­ation of a Black and Brown underclass.

The tough real­i­ty about inte­gra­tion is white bod­ies are teth­ered to eco­nom­ic resources. Schools that have large pop­u­la­tions of white chil­dren are not fail­ing schools. When white gen­tri­fiers move into urban areas, they seem­ing­ly bring nice restau­rants, bet­ter polic­ing, and bet­ter schools with them. The nar­ra­tive attached to Black bod­ies is the oppo­site. The pres­ence of Black bod­ies are seen as a drain on resources, par­tic­u­lar­ly since the pres­ence of Black peo­ple in neigh­bor­hoods tends to make those neigh­bor­hoods less desir­able, dri­ving down prop­er­ty val­ues. One recent expose about racist hous­ing prac­tices in Brooklyn demon­strat­ed that white peo­ple rou­tine­ly ask not to live in places with too many Black people.

To the extent that our Civil Rights-era nar­ra­tions of the racial divide per­sist, it seems that nei­ther Black peo­ple nor white peo­ple ever invest­ed ful­ly in the idea of inte­gra­tion. Black com­mu­ni­ties in some respects fared bet­ter under seg­re­ga­tion, because there were Black-owned busi­ness, stu­dents taught by Black teach­ers who believed in their inher­ent capa­bil­i­ty to learn, and more class inte­gra­tion with­in Black neigh­bor­hoods. Still, this was an inher­ent­ly lim­it­ed uni­verse for many Black peo­ple. Thus, they aspired to white insti­tu­tions and to racial inte­gra­tion in some ways as a means of access to a fair­er redis­tri­b­u­tion of resources. Separate, Civil Rights era activists con­clud­ed, was inher­ent­ly unequal.

Meanwhile, white peo­ple both then and now nev­er ful­ly bought into the idea of racial inte­gra­tion either. Beyond sen­ti­ment and rhetoric, we have only to look at the idea of racial inte­gra­tion in prac­tice. If school­ing, hous­ing, and wor­ship prac­tices in the 21st cen­tu­ry are any indi­ca­tor, we are as seg­re­gat­ed as ever, and that has every­thing to do with a con­tin­u­ing prac­tice among white Americans to seg­re­gate where they live, raise fam­i­lies and send their chil­dren to school. While many young white gen­tri­fiers tell them­selves they are chas­ing cul­ture and diver­si­ty, in many ways, they are sim­ply re-seg­re­gat­ing neigh­bor­hoods, by shift­ing the col­or of who lives there from Brown to white. What gen­tri­fiers seem not to have fig­ured out is that they are being eat­en alive by their own sys­tem, because their white bod­ies dri­ve up prop­er­ty val­ues and then price them out of the very neigh­bor­hoods they want to live in.

Moreover, white peo­ple con­tin­ue to sug­gest that it is Black peo­ple who are self-seg­re­gat­ing. They ask, “Why are all the Black kids sit­ting togeth­er in the cafe­te­ria?” Or as one severe­ly mis­guid­ed senior pro­fes­sor at Duke University recent­ly sug­gest­ed, Black people’s choice of eth­nic names is evi­dence of a lack of desire to ful­ly inte­grate or assim­i­late into the main­stream of American society.

I am point­ing to these prac­tices in this larg­er argu­ment about the way the notion of “pub­lic” has become a tool of pro­pa­gan­da in order to sug­gest a cou­ple of things: One, racial­ized prac­tices and racism still occur even when there is no iden­ti­fi­able racial dis­course being deployed. And, two, these exam­ples sug­gests that racial­ized bod­ies are teth­ered to mate­r­i­al resources. So when the right argues that we pri­va­tize each and every facet of American life, this is at base about an attempt to seg­re­gate resources. But it is not account­ed for by a pure­ly Marxist analy­sis, which would sug­gest that this was about class and not race. In this coun­try, our class struc­ture is teth­ered to a racial­ized hier­ar­chy, in which Black peo­ple in par­tic­u­lar exist as a per­pet­u­al underclass.

A hall­mark of American democ­ra­cy has been an invest­ment in a robust form of pub­lic life, good pub­lic schools, suf­fi­cient pub­lic ser­vices, active par­tic­i­pa­tion in our democ­ra­cy. But we are a coun­try where a sig­nif­i­cant seg­ment of our cit­i­zen­ry has always been per­fect­ly will­ing to erode long-held demo­c­ra­t­ic prin­ci­ples in ser­vice of main­tain­ing a racial hier­ar­chy. The Civil War is only the most extreme example.

As those on the right belly­ache about the cul­tures of pover­ty that cause Black folks to rely too heav­i­ly on gov­ern­ment, no one ever seems to admit that there has nev­er been any pos­si­bil­i­ty of Black free­dom or equal oppor­tu­ni­ty in this coun­try with­out strong fed­er­al gov­ern­ment inter­ven­tion. Black peo­ple have a long his­to­ry of work­ing in gov­ern­ment because the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment was the first place to call for mass deseg­re­ga­tion of employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties. In fact, the first March on Washington Movement, begun in 1941 by Pullman Porter A. Philip Randolph, was designed to force Franklin D. Roosevelt to deseg­re­gate fed­er­al employ­ment in all fed­er­al agen­cies and among those who had fed­er­al con­tracts. In 1942, FDR oblig­ed Randolph rather than risk a march on Washington, by cre­at­ing the Fair Employment Practice Committee (FEPC).

Combatting racial seg­re­ga­tion, and the racial­ized seg­re­ga­tion of resources, has only hap­pened in this coun­try with strong fed­er­al inter­ven­tion. So when the right con­tin­ues to weak­en fed­er­al gov­ern­ment on all mat­ters relat­ed to the social safe­ty net, they delib­er­ate­ly roll­back the path­ways by which African Americans have pro­cured access to mid­dle class.

In 2013, the medi­an net wealth for a white fam­i­ly was $142,000. The medi­an net wealth for a Black fam­i­ly was $11,000. Black fam­i­lies have lost more than half their col­lec­tive net wealth since 2008. As we are con­tin­u­al­ly con­front­ed with the stark and con­tin­u­ing real­i­ty of a rapid­ly dis­ap­pear­ing Black mid­dle class, while politi­cians con­tin­ue to speak in “effi­cient” terms about the need to shrink gov­ern­ment, it’s hard not to con­clude that this was the goal all along.
Story orig­i­nat­ed here: Segregationists nev­er went away: We just call them “small-gov­ern­ment con­ser­v­a­tives” now