The Decline of the Civil-Rights Establishment. By Shelby Steele.
The Decline of the Civil-Rights Establishment. By Shelby Steele. Wall Street Journal, July 21, 2013. Also here.
Black leaders weren’t so much outraged at
injustice as they were by the disregard of their own authority.
Shelby Steele: Zimmerman Verdict Demonstrates How the Civil-Rights Establishment Has Lost Its Juice. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, July 22, 2013.
Steele:
The
verdict that declared George Zimmerman not guilty of murdering Trayvon Martin
was a traumatic event for America's civil-rights establishment, and for many
black elites across the media, government and academia. When you have grown
used to American institutions being so intimidated by the prospect of black
wrath that they invent mushy ideas like “diversity” and “inclusiveness” simply
to escape that wrath, then the crisp reading of the law that the Zimmerman jury
displayed comes as a shock.
On
television in recent weeks you could see black leaders from every background
congealing into a chorus of umbrage and complaint. But they weren’t so much
outraged at a horrible injustice as they were affronted by the disregard of
their own authority. The jury effectively said to them, “You won’t call the
tune here. We will work within the law.”
Today’s
black leadership pretty much lives off the fumes of moral authority that linger
from its glory days in the 1950s and ’60s. The Zimmerman verdict lets us see
this and feel a little embarrassed for them. Consider the pathos of a
leadership that once transformed the nation now lusting for the conviction of
the contrite and mortified George Zimmerman, as if a stint in prison for him
would somehow assure more peace and security for black teenagers everywhere.
This, despite the fact that nearly one black teenager a day is shot dead on the
South Side of Chicago—to name only one city—by another black teenager.
This
would not be the first time that a movement begun in profound moral clarity,
and that achieved greatness, waned away into a parody of itself—not because it
was wrong but because it was successful. Today’s civil-rights leaders have
missed the obvious: The success of their forbearers in achieving social
transformation denied to them the heroism that was inescapable for a Martin
Luther King Jr. or a James Farmer or a Nelson Mandela. Jesse Jackson and Al
Sharpton cannot write a timeless letter to us from a Birmingham jail or walk,
as John Lewis did in 1965, across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., into
a maelstrom of police dogs and billy clubs. That America is no longer here
(which is not to say that every trace of it is gone).
The
Revs. Jackson and Sharpton have been consigned to a hard fate: They can never
be more than redundancies, echoes of the great men they emulate because America
has changed. Hard to be a King or Mandela today when your monstrous enemy is no
more than the cherubic George Zimmerman.
Why did
the civil-rights leadership use its greatly depleted moral authority to support
Trayvon Martin? This young man was, after all, no Rosa Parks—a figure of
indisputable human dignity set upon by the rank evil of white supremacy.
Trayvon threw the first punch and then continued pummeling the much smaller
Zimmerman. Yes, Trayvon was a kid, but he was also something of a menace. The
larger tragedy is that his death will come to very little. There was no
important principle or coherent protest implied in that first nose-breaking
punch. It was just dumb bravado, a tough-guy punch.
The
civil-rights leadership rallied to Trayvon’s cause (and not to the cause of
those hundreds of black kids slain in America’s inner cities this very year) to
keep alive a certain cultural “truth” that is the sole source of the leadership’s
dwindling power. Put bluntly, this leadership rather easily tolerates black
kids killing other black kids. But it cannot abide a white person (and Mr.
Zimmerman, with his Hispanic background, was pushed into a white identity by
the media over his objections) getting away with killing a black person without
undermining the leadership’s very reason for being.
The
purpose of today’s civil-rights establishment is not to seek justice, but to
seek power for blacks in American life based on the presumption that they are
still, in a thousand subtle ways, victimized by white racism. This idea of
victimization is an example of what I call a “poetic truth.” Like poetic
license, it bends the actual truth in order to put forward a larger and more
essential truth—one that, of course, serves one’s cause. Poetic truths succeed
by casting themselves as perfectly obvious: “America is a racist nation”; “the
immigration debate is driven by racism”; “Zimmerman racially stereotyped
Trayvon.” And we say, “Yes, of course,” lest we seem to be racist. Poetic
truths work by moral intimidation, not reason.
In the
Zimmerman/Martin case the civil-rights establishment is fighting for the poetic
truth that white animus toward blacks is still such that a black
teenager—Skittles and ice tea in hand—can be shot dead simply for walking home.
But actually this establishment is fighting to maintain its authority to wield
poetic truth—the authority to tell the larger society how it must think about
blacks, how it must respond to them, what it owes them and, then, to brook no
argument.
The
Zimmerman/Martin tragedy has been explosive because it triggered a fight over
authority. Who gets to say what things mean—the supporters of George Zimmerman,
who say he acted in self-defense, or the civil-rights establishment that says
he profiled and murdered a black child? Here we are. And where is the authority
to resolve this? The six-person Florida jury, looking carefully at the
evidence, decided that Mr. Zimmerman pulled the trigger in self-defense and not
in a fury of racial hatred.
And
here, precisely at the point of this verdict, is where all of America begins to
see this hollowed-out civil-rights establishment slip into pathos. Almost
everyone saw this verdict coming. It is impossible to see how this jury could
have applied the actual law to this body of evidence and come up with a
different conclusion. The civil-rights establishment's mistake was to get ahead
of itself, to be seduced by its own poetic truth even when there was no
evidence to support it. And even now its leaders call for a Justice Department
investigation, and they long for civil lawsuits to be filed—hoping against hope
that some leaf of actual racial victimization will be turned over for all to
see. This is how a once-great social movement looks when it becomes infested
with obsolescence.
One
wants to scream at all those outraged at the Zimmerman verdict: Where is your
outrage over the collapse of the black family? Today’s civil-rights leaders
swat at mosquitoes like Zimmerman when they have gorillas on their back.
Seventy-three percent of all black children are born without fathers married to
their mothers. And you want to bring the nation to a standstill over George
Zimmerman?
There
are vast career opportunities, money and political power to be gleaned from the
specter of Mr. Zimmerman as a racial profiler/murderer; but there is only hard
and selfless work to be done in tackling an illegitimacy rate that threatens to
consign blacks to something like permanent inferiority. If there is anything
good to be drawn from the Zimmerman/Martin tragedy, it is only the further
revelation of the corruption and irrelevance of today’s civil-rights
leadership.