Comments from the author, Andrew Korybko -
"Let's
get the disclaimer right out of the way -- yes, there were people
rallying in support of actual racist, fascist, and white
supremacist ideologies, and one of their supporters committed an act
of terrorism by ramming his car into a crowd of counter-protesters.
None of this is acceptable and it should all be rightly condemned.
That being said, the prevailing issue isn't as simple as a few
fascist thugs causing trouble, and it's the deeper nuances at play
which deserve to be examined more closely if one is to
comprehensively understand the tense state of affairs in America
today.
...
Without
addressing the core causes of the chaos in Charlottesville, which are
the inconvenient realities of race, the Civil War legacy, and
political radicalization on both ends of the spectrum, to say nothing
of one of the nation's two main parties instrumentalizing the violent
interplay between these three factors, the US will never overcome its
many hateful divisions, and deadly clashes such as those which took
place in Charlottesville yesterday might become as commonplace in the
future as gangland shootings in the inner city are today."
UNDERSTANDING CHARLOTTESVILLE ISN'T AS SIMPLE AS IT SEEMs
13
August, 2017
What
happened in Charlottesville yesterday isn't as black and white as a
bunch of racists attacking anti-fascist counter-protesters.
Let's
get the disclaimer right out of the way -- yes, there were people
rallying in support of actual racist, fascist, and white supremacist
ideologies, and one of their supporters committed an act of terrorism
by ramming his car into a crowd of counter-protesters. None of this
is acceptable and it should all be rightly condemned. That being
said, the prevailing issue isn't as simple as a few fascist thugs
causing trouble, and it's the deeper nuances at play which deserve to
be examined more closely if one is to comprehensively understand the
tense state of affairs in America today.
To
be fair, there was violence committed by the counter-protesters as
well, with "Antifa" and "Black Lives Matter"
leading the charge in this regard, but just as those two aren't fully
representative of everyone who joined in their rally, neither were
the racist, fascist, white supremacists emblematic of the typical
protester on their side either. Both parties, however, feel
existentially threatened by the other, and therein lies the driving
force behind their clashes.
For
all intents and purposes, "Antifa" and "Black Lives
Matter" can be grouped together as representing the Far Left,
while their opponents embody the Far Right. All of the regular folks
caught between these two extremes fall along various places on this
spectrum.
In
order to begin making sense of what happened in Charlottesville this
week, one needs to go back to the trigger event that sparked the
protests in the first place, which is the historical revisionism
taking place in the state as it seeks to dismantle its Confederate
heritage. To be clear, the legacy of slavery is abominable, though
the South was about much more than that, and stamping out historical
reminders of the Civil War is a dystopian disservice to all
Americans.
The
Far Right was mobilized in response to the city of Charlottesville
planning to tear down a statue to Confederate military leader General
Robert E. Lee, and while some participants clearly demonstrated in
support of racist ideologies, others were plainly upset for more
"moderate" reasons dealing mainly with the topic of states'
rights, which the South has come to symbolize ever since the Civil
War.
This
right was abused in the instance of wanting to perpetuate slavery,
but that horrible example shouldn't forever tarnish the general idea
of allowing states to fully practice their sovereign rights as
bestowed in the Constitution. Ever since the end of the Civil War,
the "federal" government has been steamrolling states'
rights in its quest to centralize the country, which has for the most
part been fully carried out over the past century and a half in
demolishing the governing traditions that the US was founded on.
This
is obviously a wider topic to be explored more in depth at another
time, but the point to focus on here is that the states' rights cause
has become more important to the average American lately as the
country continues to wallow in its never-ending Culture Wars. It's
this issue, and not racism or the glorification of slavery, that
attracts a lot of interest in support of preserving Confederate
monuments.
So
as not to be misunderstood, this in no way whitewashes or excuses
racist and other social riffraff who exploit this rallying point in
order to promote their hateful ideologies, as regrettably happened in
some cases on Saturday. However, there's also no tiptoeing around the
fact that so-called "white nationalism" is on the upswing,
and that it openly associates itself with Southern symbols.
About
this movement, it shouldn't be automatically equated with white
supremacy, though sometimes there's no difference - again, it depends
on the individual person who openly advocates in the supposed name of
"white nationalism".
In
and of itself, "white nationalism" is a defensive response
to the hyper-liberal social policies of "affirmative action"
and the welfare state which are perceived by some Caucasians as
unfairly benefiting African-Americans at their expense.
Because
most "white nationalists" have lost touch with the ethnic
identity of their ancestors and largely don't consider themselves as
Polish-, Italian-, Irish-, or other European-Americans anymore but
just as "white Americans" or more simply only "white",
it can be argued that they themselves are ironically an outcome of
the very same liberalism that they despise. This is due to the
"success" that the far-reaching socio-economic
implementation of this ideology has had in stripping them of their
historical traditions and making them an indistinguishable part of a
larger amorphous "white" blob which serves as a counterpart
to what they view to be the similarly indistinguishable "black
and brown" blobs that supposedly pose a threat to their
culture.
Whether
this is an accurate depiction of reality or not is a moot point
because the intent here is on explaining what drives "white
nationalists", not in convincing anyone of either the validity
or ridiculousness of their views. Accordingly, due to the racial
reaction component that inspires "white nationalism", it's
easy to see how this movement overlaps with white supremacy and is
effortlessly exploited by it at times.
The
much-publicized rise of "white nationalism", especially in
the past year when it was inaccurately described by the Mainstream
Media as being the same thing as the so-called "Alt-Right",
produced a strong reaction among the Far Left "Antifa" and
race-centric organizations such as "Black Lives Matter",
which were already growing on their own but acquired an added urgency
in the face of "white nationalism". Symbiotically, "white
nationalism" also fed off of the explosion in popularity and
global attention given to these two interconnected groups, which
further contributed to the inevitability that they'd fatally clash
with one another in the future.
Street
skirmishes between the Far Left and Far Right have become frequent
events ever since Trump's election, and many ordinary Americans on
the milder range of the political spectrum have been caught in
between them. This simmering situation contributed to the feeling of
unease that each camp experienced towards the other and it served to
radically polarize some of their members.
The
latest result of this boiling tension was the clashes in
Charlottesville and an ideological Far Right extremist committing a
vehicular terrorist attack against his political opponents. Now that
one woman has died, a state of emergency has been declared, and
global attention is riveted on this issue, the US is forced to
confront the three related issues that it wishes it could forever
ignore: race, the Civil War legacy, and political radicalization on
both ends of the spectrum.
"Two
wrongs don't make a right", as the aphorism goes, and
individuals should take responsibility for their own actions and be
held accountable for them as well, but there's no avoiding that the
Far Left ("Antifa" and "Black Lives Matter") has
been a much more visibly destructive force in the US over the past
couple of years than the Far Right, but it's only that the Far Right
is being singled out right now because of the "political
correctness" dealing with the trifecta of topics mentioned above
(race, the Civil War legacy, and political radicalization of the Far
Left and Far Right).
This
doesn't take away any of the blame that racists deserve, nor should
it downplay yesterday's terrorist attack, but it also means that the
Far Right isn't the only guilty party here, and that it will continue
to be fueled by the rise of the Far Left and the open double
standards exhibited towards them by the Mainstream Media and
sometimes even the local police forces. About the last point, this
relates to how some law enforcement representatives feel more
comfortable using force to disperse the Far Right nowadays than they
do when it comes to the Far Left because of the "Ferguson
Effect".
The
core of the problem today is that "moderates" on both the
left and the right are reluctant to publicly disown the extremists on
"their side", and this is contributing to the further
polarization of the US as each rival camp begins assuming that their
opponents all embody the same extreme ideological characteristics of
their most publicized representatives, who are more often than not
political radicals. Moreover, the Far Left and the Far Right are both
being exploited for domestic political purposes as well, and it's the
instrumentalization of these forces by certain actors which
represents one of the most dire threats to the US today.
It's
become fashionable to assume that Trump associates with fascist
forces and gives them "dog whistles" through various
statements and actions, but the truth is that Trump has condemned
racists, fascists, and white supremacists in the harshest ways
possible on multiple occasions. Trump isn't bolstered by the Far
Right, he's threatened by it, and it's disadvantageous to his image
that some of their members don his "Make America Great Again"
campaign gear when staging their rallies.
No
matter how many times Trump denounces these groups and their
misappropriation of his symbols, it won't stop the so-called
"opposition" (the Democrats and their civil society
henchmen of the Far Left) from claiming the opposite. In addition,
it's ironic that only Trump is forced to disown one of the two
extreme political movements in the US, while no similar pressure is
ever put on his opponents to do so when it comes to the other.
The
Democrats are not controlling the Far Right, but they perversely gain
from over-hyping its rise and all things related to it because it
fits their politicized narrative that Trump is a "fascist
dictator" and white supremacist groups are his "brown
shirt" thugs. It also galvanizes the opposition and feeds into
the symbiotic rise of the Far Left, providing more foot soldiers for
the Democrats in destabilizing domestic affairs and disrupting the
implementation of Trump's agenda for the homeland.
Nevertheless,
the Mainstream Media depiction of events has focused solely on the
openly racist, fascist, and white supremacist elements that were
protesting in support of General Robert E. Lee's statue, implying
through images of them wearing "Make America Great Again"
hats and some commentators' "analyses" that they're part of
the "Alt-Right" that Trump is somehow associated with the
repulsive events that recently took place, or at the very least
should take responsibility for supposedly "encouraging"
them with "dog whistles" over the last two years.
Nowhere
in the general public discourse is there a serious discussion taking
place about how Trump has nothing to do with this, nor about the
relationship between the political "opposition" (the
Democrats), the Far Left ("Antifa" and "Black Lives
Matter"), and partisan "NGOs" (the Soros Foundation).
Also lost in the overall coverage is the states' rights cause that
Southern symbols represent for the "moderate" majority of
protesters, as well as the socio-economic conditions that gave rise
to the reactive ideology of "white nationalism".
Instead,
it's much more convenient to focus on the racist, fascist, and white
supremacist fringes of the sometimes interconnected states' rights,
anti-"affirmative action", and anti-globalization movements
because it fits into a preexisting Mainstream Media narrative which
is more easily digestible for the casual information consumer and
beneficially works out in the favor of the political "opposition".
This highly irresponsible approach to understanding the
Charlottesville events is very dangerous because it ignores the
interrelationship between the Far Right and the Far Left, and it also
downplays legitimate grievances that both sides' majority-"moderate"
supporters claim.
Without
addressing the core causes of the chaos in Charlottesville, which are
the inconvenient realities of race, the Civil War legacy, and
political radicalization on both ends of the spectrum, to say nothing
of one of the nation's two main parties instrumentalizing the violent
interplay between these three factors, the US will never overcome its
many hateful divisions, and deadly clashes such as those which took
place in Charlottesville yesterday might become as commonplace in the
future as gangland shootings in the inner city are today.
________
DISCLAIMER:
The author writes for this publication in a private capacity which is
unrepresentative of anyone or any organization except for his own
personal views. Nothing written by the author should ever be
conflated with the editorial views or official positions of any other
media outlet or institution.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.