THE BRIDGE: Class and Classism

By Darryl James


Lately, I have been hearing derisive talk about impoverished Blacks that is hateful, elitist and downright classist. I can not call the comments racist, because ironically, they are coming from other Blacks.
Yes, there are difficulties among the poor blacks in America and there has been a moral and political disconnect but it is elitist and classist to pretend that any of these issues are solely the issues of the poor and Black.
Those who wish to rail against the poor without activism are no different from armchair quarterbacks who criticize football games on their fat lazy behinds, without ever having stepped onto the gridiron.
Armchair activists view themselves as socially active because they support programs targeted at our best and brightest even as they ignore the second best and the not as bright.
Any of us can point to the problems. What I would like to hear discussed are the reasons why the working class and underclass have worsened, because at that point we can begin to identify solutions.
For example, Blacks once enjoyed jobs that were easily obtained with very little education. Those jobs were adequate to support a family, even if on the verge of poverty. Changes in the economy have erased many blue-collar jobs, and today¹s minimum wage jobs are barely enough to raise an individual. Add that to the growing difficulty in obtaining higher education, and young Black men find themselves on the path to prison more often than on the path to success. Many of the females left are raising children alone.
Simple realities of this nation¹s legacy of racism are still in place, even as people choose to place blame on the heirs of racism. Blacks are still the last to be hired and the first to be fired. The glass ceiling is still in place for those on the rise and there are sadly too many of us circling the financial drain, including the very poor as well as some of the so-called middle class.
Bill Cosby¹s rage against the poor Black machine outlines symptoms of an illness. Part of the illness is abandonment by the so-called middle class, as well as civic and social organizations and the church.
Entities such as the NAACP and the National Urban League are like Black unicorns to the community. Ask many of today¹s poor and they have no idea where to find these organizations or what they actually do.
Some of our "benevolent" organizations, including Black fraternities and sororities are more concerned with promulgating their own legacy than providing community service to those in greatest need.
For example, what of those who have "C" or "D" average grades? Where are the programs designed to streamline them into colleges or trade schools? Where are the elitist classists to give them choices when the Armed Forces recruiters or the drug dealers or the gangsters come a-knockin¹? Where were the elitists in the 1990¹s when urban schools began to fall apart and programs designed to give poor people choices evaporated?
I know where they were.
Absent.
But they will show up to a rubber-chicken dinner all bathed and greased to honor those in the community who are already equipped with skills to make their way to the top of the heap.
Integration opened the floodgates for our best and brightest to flee our communities. Black entrepreneurs closed or abandoned businesses and so-called middle class families evaporated from the Œhood as dreams of "movin¹ on up" were pursued vigorously.
Currently, the most impoverished of Blacks huddle in ghettos filled with the unemployed and the underemployed. A strong disconnect between they and the rest of Black society is growing each day, along with a strong distrust. Yet, many so-called "progressive" Blacks now rail against impoverished Blacks without attempting to understand their conditions.
It took the Black church well into the 1990¹s to begin to address community redevelopment. Sadly, for many churches, this means little more than erecting huge structures the homeless would be bounced out of if security catches them seeking shelter.
In many cities, the poor of color are left without intrinsic government assistance and without assistance from other Blacks, sending them into a whirlpool of devastation from which there is little sanctuary. Crime is now the basic economy.
Before Cosby and other elitists decide that today¹s poor are defective, let them be mindful that they are made of the same material as the impoverished Blacks they disparage. They are made of the same stuff but came through different conditions.
That is all that makes us different.
The issue is class and classism. Those who are well-off criticize the poor for behavior that is hardly endemic to poverty.
Dr. Cosby should know. It is still a mystery whether Autumn Jackson is Cosby¹s child, but no mystery that he was sending her mother support money and reportedly sleeping with her. And hey-be man-be, did-be you-be think-be we-be forgot-be Fat-be Albert-be? There was clearly a language problem.
Sean "Puffy" Combs has been pushing abject materialism for years and Russell Simmons is famous for calling other Blacks "Nigga." And, oh yes, the gaudy wheels that spin around were made famous by Latrel Sprewell. Materialism works from the top down, not the bottom up.
Fifty years ago, the Supreme Court¹s ruling in Brown v. Board of Education stated that separating Blacks based on race, brings on feelings of "inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be undone."
The oppression of a people leaves emotional scars, which run deep into the self-esteem of the oppressed, grows within the community and perpetuates itself as efficiently as folk tales, songs and disease. It can only get worse with other Blacks now dogging us out.
While the sons and daughters of former slaves rail against their own brothers and sisters who are poor and of "questionable moral standards," the worst of us are getting worse.
We don¹t need anyone to pontificate on how bad things are, because as bad as the situation is, the badness is overly apparent. What we need now is action.
Unfortunately, many of the people weighing in are selfish, elitists who deep down inside must hate themselves and manifest that hatred in the hypercriticism of poor Blacks. They will criticize, but take little, if any action.
These people are classists. And they have no class.

Darryl James is a syndicated columnist and the author of "Bridging The Black Gender Gap," which is also the basis of his lectures and seminars. James was awarded the 2004 Non-fiction Award for his book on the Los Angeles Riots at the Seventh Annual Black History Month Book Fair and Conference in Chicago. He can be reached at djames@TheBlackGenderGap.com.


Do you have a response or comment on this commentary? Click Here


Darryl James launched the only Black owned rap music publication, Rap Sheet in 1992. He is the author of "Bridging The Black Gender Gap," which is also the basis of a national seminar series. James was awarded the 2004 Non-fiction Award for his book on the Los Angeles Riots at the Seventh Annual Black History Month Book Fair and Conference in Chicago. He can be reached at djames@TheBlackGenderGap.com.