Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
This file is created to help you engage in the method of fugitivity. This would require you to not
only advocate fugitivity, movement, elusiveness, freedom, but to also perform fugitive
knowledge in debate.
A general 1NC is included and does not look like most 1ncs that you may be used to because the
performance of the 1nc has to be consistent with the Tremblay McGraw evidence that speaks to
the power of playing with language and the parallels between the freedom generated by black
linguistic practices and the physical freedom experienced by those that had once been enslaved.
The key to winning with this method isnt a huge impact debate but in reading, re-reading, and
then reading the method cards again. A negative ballot can be achieved by winning a single link
to the affirmative (whether it be the state or micro political) and leveraging that link argument to
justify why black people need alternative routes to accessing freedom that dont leave them
exposed/require them to be fully known or understood by those that can oppress them.
There is no heavy AT: Perm section because method debates are about what you DID in the
debate , not about what you want to happen. You shouldnt be using this file until you understand
where perms came from and why they may not apply to method debates.
You should be explaining why your performance is valuable and your method evidence is
where you should be leaning on. Additional aff doesnt get method arguments are helpful and
can be in any part of the block.
The 1NC should be read separately from the Link Debate in the first speech. If you are going to
read links in the first speech I suggest reading those on the Solvency Flow to leave your judges
room to flow the case debate.
The better your solvency take outs against the affirmative, the more attractive your method will
look to a judge.
A floating PIC is also a pretty good option that you may want to take the next few weeks
learning how to work into your wheelhouse.
Re(member) , read. Because shade came from reading.
1NC Fugitivity
Lauryn Hill, Motives and Thoughts
Rotating bodies, confusion of sound
Negative imagery, holding us down
Social delusion, clearly constructed
Human condition, morals corrupted
Trapped in reaction, lawlessness, war
Dissatisfaction from bowels to core
Devil's technology, strategy for
Human mythologies, urban folklore
Sick of psychology, counterfeit cure
Wicked theology, robbing the poor
Scheme demonology mislead the pure
Strictly strategically studying war
Light shown in darkness, image exposed
Few can see through the new emperor's clothes
Lustful this hustle turn humans to hoes
When the blind lead the blind, just more trouble and woes
It's the mind that they chose
Its designed to stay closed
Standard of jokers, court jester a logic
Sick looking cosmics, from schoolyards to college
Primitive man with civilized knowledge
On a trip north
I caught a cold and blew
My nose giving oil to the Arab world
I am so hip even my errors are correct
I sailed west to reach east and had to round off
The earth as I went
The hair from my head thinned and gold was laid
Across three continents
I am so perfect so divine so ethereal so surreal
I cannot be comprehended except by my permission
I mean...I...can fly
Like a bird in the sky
Our poetics exist as part of a legacy gone missing, a strategy that both utilizes
enclosure and run, that is here but is not here, that is there but is not there. The
fugitive is not simply imagined or demanded but in the use of language and its
constant re-reading and re-use.
Tremblay McGraw 10
Robin Tremblay-McGraw @University of California, Santa Cruz Enclosure and Run: The
Fugitive Recyclopedia of Harryette Mullens Writing MELUS Volume 35, No.2 Summer 2010.
Pp 71-94 (Article) Oxford University Press [E.Smith]
Harryette Mullen has published five books of original poetryTree Tall Woman (1981),
Trimmings (1991), S*PeRM**K*T (1992), Muse & Drudge (1995), and Sleeping with the
Dictionary (2002). Additionally, she has published two books which reissue her earlier works:
Blues Baby: Early Poems (2002), which reprints Tree Tall Woman and also includes a previously
unpublished collection; and Recyclopedia: Trimmings, S*PeRM**K*T, and Muse & Drudge
(2006). Mullen self-consciously inherits and intervenes in what Kathy Lou Schultz calls the
legacy gone missing of avant-garde practice by African-American women poets (n.
pag.). Mullen is actively engaged in recovering this legacy through her creative, scholarly,
and editorial work.1 Poised in the dialectic of what I call enclosure (identity, history, and
the archive, but also, racism, exclusion, and limitation) and run (mobility, flight, escape,
critique, ongoing poesis, and revision), Mullens work plies the tensions between these
disparate but mutually dependent poles. From the negotiation of this tension , Mullen
produces a formal strategy predicated on the communal participation of others and
distinctive among innovative poetsthe recyclopedia. Mullens writing creates texts that
remain open to ambiguity, diffi culty, and difference. Her writing engages in political and
social criticism with particular attention to race, gender, and the discourse of the
commodity, while it delights in the pleasures of an infi nite linguistic jouissance. Many of the
critics who have written about Mullens work, including Elisabeth A. Frost, Juliana Spahr, Allison Cummings, and Deborah
Mix, foreground its complex mixtery of disparate sources and infl uences, illustrating its rich and critical interrogation and reframing of literary
history. Importantly, each critic also emphasizes Mullens attention to communal reading practices and several situate Mullens work as a
negotiation between multiple discourses and infl uences, including Black Arts, Steinian modernism, and Language writing. Mix locates Mullens
work in Trimmings and S*PeRM**K*T in relation to Gertrude Stein but demonstrates how Mullens subversion of convention . . . is both more
complicated [than Steins] (in its inclusion of race in the welter of discourses of femininity and sexuality) and more communitarian (in its
recognition of the individuals tangled in these linguistic webs (71). Frost demonstrates Mullens rare (among recent avant-garde poets)
revamping of the lyric and argues 72 that Mullen constructs lyric otherwiseas an experiment in collective reading and an assertion of the
complexities of community, language, and poetic voice (466). While
discourses and runs with and recycles them; she invites the reader to participate in this
educative process of conservation and production, enclosure and fugitive run. Her work
articulates a need for a more equitable ecology, one of acknowledgment and memory,
conservation and reuse; she and we as readers are caught up in her recyclopedia, an
ongoing poetics of reuse that benefi ts from the multiple perspectives of a heterogeneous
community. The concept of the fugitive in Mullens work is connected equally to the history
of the United States, the global slave trade, historical strategies of escape for enslaved
blacks, and formal methods for escaping and reinventing genre and poetic method.
Furthermore, the fugitive is both critical and generative and intimately linked to Mullens
concept of the recyclopedia. Mullens formal strategies explicitly reference the history of
the fugitive slave laws. In an interview with Cynthia Hogue, Mullen delineates the
connection of the fugitive to her own work: I wanted the poem to have that quality of quick
movement from one thing to another, from one subject or thought to another, from one
mood or emotion to another. Partly because I wanted things to be in fl ux, a state of fl ux, a
state of change. If you stand still too long, they will put chains on you, so you want to keep
moving. This is one of the things that is most fascinating to me about the slave narratives I
was studying while I was writing my dissertation. The true freedom in the slave narrative is
at the point of deciding to escape and the journey north . . . the freedom that people
experience is actually when they are on the road, in fl ight. (par. 25)\ Mullen links the
structure of her poetry to the fl ight of the fugitive slave and then connects these movements of
fugitivity with freedom. Interestingly, Mullen simultaneously problematizes the effi cacy of such
movement and the resultant freedom gained when she further locates the moment of true
freedom . . . at the point of [the slaves] deciding to escape and . . . journey. This quote suggests
that freedom is elusive, momentary, and a state of mind; it is discursive rather than related
to the location of the body. Such a freedom is utopian and fugitive. The diffi culties of fl ight
and the frequency of slaves being returned to owners as mandated by the Fugitive Slave
Act made the journey north dangerous, exhausting, and subject to failure. Furthermore, in
the literature of passing Mullen surveys in her article Optic White: Blackness and the
Production of Whiteness, which explores how whites repress and suppress miscegenation and argues that the racial
category of white is predicated on the black, she notes that in texts such as Harriet Jacobss Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl,
Death is better than slavery. This is a recurring refrain in Jacobss and other slave narratives, [that] acquires an ironic signifi
cance when Benjamin [Jacobss lightskinned uncle] dies as a slave, vanishing into the white race in his third and fi nal escape
(82). For some, freedom means leaving ones family and community, effectively dying in
order to take up a new life as a free person or as a black who passes for white. Historically,
fl ight is a means of escape, but not an unproblematic or uncomplicated means. Flight and
travel (voluntary or not) undertaken by slaves, refugees, exiles, or nomads does not always
erase histories but rather sometimes produces a palimpsestic and productive layering. In
her doctoral dissertation, Mullen writes about Olaudah Equiano, the son of an African king who
was taken into slavery and wrote from England in the eighteenth century. Discussing how
captivity disrupts his life, so that this African child fails to be ritually initiated [via scarifi
cation] as an adult member of his tribe, Mullen notes that in Equianos own discursive
production: the displaced African is no blank page, as his reconstruction of early memories goes to show.
He is more like a palimpsest, or like the protean form of this Narrative. . . . In the pages of Equianos prolifi c
narrative, the black body retains its relation to a place of origin, but never acquires a fi xed signifi cation; instead
layers of meaning accumulate as the character of the narrator evolves through a series of travels and adventures.
(Gender 59) According to Mullen, for Equiano retrospectively this disruption of cultural
continuity is fi gured as a divine providence that intervenes to open up a new identity and
destinya destiny constructed out of the individuals unique interaction with chance and
continually changing environments rather than a predetermined fate or fi xed identity
(60). For some individuals fl ight and cultural disruption will enable strategic redefi
nitions or recycling and make possible an identity open to change and resignifi cation; fl
ight can create a kind of open archive always sedimented and palimpsestic so that past
traces are not erased but available and recontextualized, refi gured and thus open to the
future. Individuals and texts constructed out of fugitive fl ight from the law or those that
travel across multiple cultural communities constitute the recyclopedias of disparate
experiences, ideologies, and discourses. In the recyclopedia, fugitive fl ight rewrites identity
by enabling a return to and reappropriation of the past. The neologism recyclopedia in the title of
Mullens collection of three of her previous books is a combination of recycle and encyclopedia. Recycle references reuse,
suggesting to use again in the original form, and the taking of intractable used or waste material and making it suitable for
something new. Pedia recalls encyclopedia and its Greek root, paideia, meaning education. Mullens neologism clearly
articulates a project that is both process and product. It entails a cyclical reuse of given materials and a process that takes dirty,
contaminated, and worthless waste materials and turns them into something newly usable. Mullens recyclopedia suggests that
the continual reuse of materials, even those that construct blacks as dirty, contaminated, and worthless, can serve to identify an
original use (the racist construction of blacks as waste, for example); her writing enables the critical recycling of problematic
materials to produce something new, something with different or oppositional value for writer, reader, history, and the future.
Mullens recyclopedia constructs fugitive movement as a means of escape from arrest and
as a productive process of remembering and rewriting. Mullen includes in her recyclopedia
many diverse materials, yet she is particularly attentive to bringing to the surface the
unarticulated, marginalized, nearly lost, and invisible as well as the used or waste
material. Mullens recyclopedia enables the sort of activity described by David Scott that
opens up vast possibilities not just of memory but of countermemory; the moral idiom and
semiotic registers of remembering against the grain of the history of New World black
deracination, subjection, and exclusion (vi). Such a process entails both identifying and
preserving histories and experiences elided and prohibited from offi cial discourses and
simultaneously exposing such discourses bad faith. Rather than placing them under lock
and key in order to solidify, arrest, and exclude racist and sexist discourses, Mullen
remakes the encyclopediathe discourse and its attendant pedagogiesthrough her
recycling of its alphabets, grammars, metaphors, and other tropes. In the process, these
discursive tigations reveal the often unmarked and unnamed structurings of various internecine
ideologies.
2NC Fugitivity
The Role of the Ballot is the deconstruct white supremacist
territoriality
Rodriguez 2009 [Dylan Rodriguez, University of California, Riverside, The Terms of Engagement: Warfare, White Locality, and AbolitionCritical Sociology, Volume 36,
Issue 1, 2009]
rights, from human rights, from international alliances and friendships, from national
liberation, from the particular (for example, black female, Native American male) and the
general (human being). Nevertheless, social movements such as the civil rights-black power movement
in the United States have always demanded peace with justice, with liberation, and with social and economic
reconstruction and cultural freedom at home and abroad. The integration of our past and our present
holocausts and our struggle to define our own lives and have our basic needs met are at the core of the
inseparable struggles for world peace and social betterment. The Achilles heel of the organized peace movement in this country has always
been its whiteness. In this multi-racial and racist society, no allwhite movement can have the strength to bring about basic changes. It is axiomatic that basic changes do not occur in any society unless the people who are oppressed
move to make them occur. In our society it is people of color who are the most oppressed. Indeed our entire history teaches us that when people of color have organized and struggled-most especially, because of their particular history,
Black people-have moved in a more humane direction as a society, toward a better life for all people.1 Western man's whiteness, imagination, enlightened science, and movements toward peace have developed from a culture and
history mobilized against women of color . The political advancements of white men have grown directly from the devastation and holocaust of people of color and our lands . This technological and material progress has
been in direct proportion to the undevelopment of women of color. Yet the dayto- day survival, political struggles, and rising up of women of color, especially black women in the United States, reveal both complex resistance to holocaust and
undevelopment and often conflicted responses to the military and war. The
is, of great and widespread destruction, usually by fire . The world as we knew and created it was destroyed in a continual scorched earth policy of the white man. The
experience of Jews and other Europeans under the Nazis can teach us the value of understanding the totality of destructive intent, the extensiveness of torture, and the demonical apparatus of war
aimed at the human spirit. A Jewish father pushed his daughter from the lines of certain death at Auschwitz and said, "You will be a remembrance-You tell the story. You survive." She lived. He
died. Many have criticized the Jews for forcing non-Jews to remember the 6 million Jews who died under the Nazis and for etching the names Auschwitz and Buchenwald, Terezin and Warsaw in
s women of color, we, too, are "remembrances" of all the holocausts against the people of the world. We
must remember the names of concentration camps such as Jesus, Justice, Brotherhood, and
our minds. Yet a
Integrity, ships that carried millions of African men, women, and children chained and
brutalized across the ocean to the "New World." We must remember the Arawaks, the Taino, the Chickasaw, the
Choctaw, the Narragansett, the Montauk, the Delaware, and the other Native American names of thousands of U.S.
towns that stand for tribes of people who are no more. We must remember the holocausts visited against the
Hawaiians, the aboriginal peoples of Australia, the Pacific Island peoples, and the women and children of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. We must remember the slaughter of men and women at Sharpeville, the children of Soweto,
and the men of Attica. We must never, ever, forget the children disfigured, the men maimed, and the
women broken in our holocausts-we must remember the names, the numbers, the faces, and the stories and
teach them to our children and our children's children so the world can never forget our suffering and our
courage. Whereas the particularity of the Jewish holocaust under the Nazis is over, our
holocausts continue. We are the madres locos (crazy mothers) in the Argentinian square silently
demanding news of our missing kin from the fascists who rule. We are the children of El Salvador
who see our mothers and fathers shot in front of our eyes. We are the Palestinian and
Lebanese women and children overrun by Israeli, Lebanese, and U.S. soldiers. We are the
women and children of the bantustans and refugee camps and the prisoners of Robbin Island. We
are the starving in the Sahel, the poor in Brazil, the sterilized in Puerto Rico. We are the brothers
and sisters of Grenada who carry the seeds of the New Jewel Movement in our hearts, not daring to speak of it with our
lipsyet. Our holocaust is South Africa ruled by men who loved Adolf Hitler, who have developed the Nazi techniques of terror to more sophisticated levels. Passes replace the Nazi badges and stars. Skin color is the ultimate badge of
persecution. Forced removals of women, children, and the elderly-the "useless appendages of South Africa"-into barren, arid bantustans without resources for survival have replaced the need for concentration camps. Black sexsegregated barracks and cells attached to work sites achieve two objectives: The work camps destroy black family and community life, a presumed source of resistance, and attempt to create human automatons whose purpose is to
serve the South African state's drive toward wealth and hegemony. Like other fascist regimes, South Africa disallows any democratic rights to black people; they are denied the right to vote, to dissent, to peaceful assembly, to free
speech, and to political representation. The regime has all the typical Nazi-like political apparatus: house arrests of dissenters such as Winnie Mandela; prison murder of protestors such as Stephen Biko; penal colonies such as Robbin
Island. Black people, especially children, are routinely arrested without cause, detained without limits, and confronted with the economic and social disparities of a nation built around racial separation. Legally and economically,
South African apartheid is structural and institutionalized racial war. The Organization of African Unity's regional intergovernmental meeting in 1984 in Tanzania was called to review and appraise the achievements of the United
Nations Decade for Women. The meeting considered South Africa's racist apartheid regime a peace issue. The "regime is an affront to the dignity of all Africans on the continent and a stark reminder of the absence of equality and
peace, representing the worst form of institutionalized oppression and strife." Pacifists such as Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi who have used nonviolent resistance charged that those who used violence to obtain justice
were just as evil as their oppressors. Yet all successful revolutionary movements have used organized violence. This is especially true of national liberation movements that have obtained state power and reorganized the institutions of
their nations for the benefit of the people. If men and women in South Africa do not use organized violence, they could remain in the permanent violent state of the slave. Could it be that pacifism and nonviolence cannot become a
way of life for the oppressed? Are they only tactics with specific and limited use for protecting people from further violence? For most people in the developing communities and the developing world consistent nonviolence is a
luxury; it presumes that those who have and use nonviolent weapons will refrain from using them long enough for nonviolent resisters to win political battles. To survive, peoples in developing countries must use a varied repertoire of
issues, tactics, and approaches. Sometimes arms are needed to defeat apartheid and defend freedom in South Africa; sometimes nonviolent demonstrations for justice are the appropriate strategy for protesting the shooting of black
similar in these words though the sound is produced differently one with a single o and the
other with a diphthong, ou. Materialswords, letters, images, short and long vowel soundsand
temporalities can be shuffl ed and reordered like cards in a deck or the (now) old-fashioned
catalog cards in a library. Time as constructed in this quatrain is malleable, elastic, and nonlinear.
There is a constant recombinatory shuffl ing between past and present, a disordering of
temporality and geography. Flight and fugitivity enable escape and a way back to the
motherland, even if that return is fi gurative, ephemeral, and occurring in the present
moment (in the present tense) of the quatrain while it also refers to a fugitive moment of
quasi-freedom for slaves on Sundays in nineteenth-century New Orleans. Furthermore, the
poem, written in the late twentieth century, does not attest to literal contemporary
experience but inscribes such historical facts and experiences and makes evident their
resonances in the palimpsestic present. These returns to the past constitute the archive, the
shuffl ed playing or catalog cards that turn up in different combinations and in different hands.
AT: PERM
The permutation turns the politics of inclusion into appropriation that fails to question the core of
the scholarship of the 1AC. This results in the reproduction of oppression because it valorizes the
original hegemonic structure.
Dhaliwal 96
[Amarpal K. Dhaliwal, Doctoral candidate in the ethnic studies department at the University of California at Berkley,
where she teaches courses in Asian American and Womens studies, Radical Democracy: identity, Citizenship, and
the State ( Can the Subaltern Vote), 1996, pg. 43-44] soap
Asking How will radical democracy deal with colonial legacies in ways that non-radical democracy does not, I will critique this
presumed alternative for its embeddedness in modernist principles about difference, identity, subjectivity, opposition, and, most
notably, inclusion. Pushing inclusion, advocates of radical democracy generally see the problem as one of implementation and
realization of the ideals of modern democracies rather than the ideals and structures themselves. Chantal Mouffe, in fact, believes
that radical democracy is the only viable alternative for the Left today, and that it consists in trying to extend the principles of
equality and liberty to an increasing number of social relations. This belief an inclusionary impulse that needs to be problematized
the privileging of inclusion politics does not account for the ways that inclusion can still oppress or fail to
alter structures of domination. The inability of radical democratic inclusion politics to deal with
because
inclusion retaining peripheralization is a key limitation, especially given that, in many liberal democratic
societies, many subordinated groups have been included by being accorded certain formal rights like the right to
vote. If inclusionary attempts often reaffirm a hegemonic core to which the margins are added without any
significant destabilization of that core or continue to valorize the very center that is problematic to begin with, it is
clear that the motivation to include needs questioning. The governing assumptions or conceptual logic
guiding gestures to include must be integrated to grapple with oppression in the form of
appropriation, [and]commodification, fetishization, and exoticization, to name a few. Liberal discourses
and their encouragement of inclusion politics do not adequately theorize oppressive inclusion and tend to
interpret inclusion as a sign of fairness and equality. This interpretation misses how the other( ed) can be
include to actually craft a hegemonic self. Liberal discourses that presume to want to make everyone a self
(through inclusion) ignore that the liberal self always needs and is often manufactured in opposition to the
other(ed) (the excluded)
AT: PERM
The Perm is Strategic whiteness---It shifts to absorb and discredit alternative
epistemologies that challenge the framework through which they validate
knowledge..
COLLINS 90
Patricia Hill Collins Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment (1990) Routledge: New York and
London.
Alternative knowledge claims in and of themselves are rarely threatening to conventional knowledge. Such
claims are routinely ignored, discredited, or simply absorbed and marginalized in existing
paradigms, Much more threatening is the challenge that alternative epistemologies offer to the basic process used by
the powerful to legitimate their knowledge claims. If the epistemology used to validate knowledge comes into
question, then all prior knowledge claims validated under the dominant model become suspect. An alternative epistemology
challenges all certified knowledge and opens up the question of whether what has been
taken to be true can stand the test of alternative ways of validating truth. The existence of a selfdefined Black womens standpoint using an Afrocentric feminist epistemology calls into question the content of
what currently passes as truth and simultaneously challenges the process of arriving at the
truth.
.
Link Debate
Constitution Link
The Constitution is part of the problem--- it protects the dream of equal rights and the result of
continued slavery in the United States.
Farley 05
Anthony P. Farley [Associate Professor, @ Boston College Law School. J.D., Harvard Law
School] Perfecting Slavery Boston College Law School Faculty Papers 1-27-2005 [E. Smith]
In 1995, Missouri v. Jenkins ended the saga.79 With Missouri v. Jenkins we find the tradition of all the dead generations weighs
like a nightmare on the brains of the living.80 Missouri v. Jenkins returns us to white-over-black, a place we never left; it is a
perfect map of the undiscovered country. As Dylan puts it, [t]hat long black cloud is coming down.81 The slave argues
for equal rights. The slave gives his product to the law. The slave fashions a prayer for
relief from white-over-black and gives it to the law. Robert Morris was the second black
lawyer in the United States. He was admitted to the practice of law in Suffolk County,
Massachusetts in 1847. The following year he was enlisted by Benjamin Roberts and fiveyear old Sarah Roberts in her effort to attain an education free of the colorline.82 The
Boston School Committee separated school children into black and white and assigned each to
separate schools. Morris argued that separation destroys equality and lost at trial. Morris
then enlisted white abolitionist Charles Sumner to argue the case on appeal to the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts. The two filed their appeal together. Sumner used Morriss
argument and lost. The slaves product, equal rights, was filled with white-over-black and
then returned as separate but equal.83 Separate or together, equal or unequal, all of it is
white-over-black in a system that is white-over-black. The empty vessels of law are filled
with the lived relations that we attempt to disavow. The empty vessels of law are filled with
white-over-black. The label on the vessel may say whatever it says but its sum and
substance will be white-over-black as surely as the Triangle Trade that gave the whites of New
England the leisure for all their town meetings followed the molasses-to-rum-toslaves formula.
In Plessy, the majority and the dissent agreed about white-over-black. Justice Harlan,
dissenting, argued that the white race would forever remain the dominant race in this
country . . . if it . . . holds fast to principles of constitutional liberty. Harlans dissent became
Brown I and II. Fifty years after Brown, we see that the white race is the dominant race in
this country . . . in prestige, in achievements, in education, in wealth and in power. Fifty
years after Brown, there is no reason to doubt the truth of Justice Harlans statement that
the great heritage and the principles of constitutional liberty would allow the the
white race to continue to be the dominant race in this country for all time.84
Equality of right, the thought-product of the slave, like any commodity, gives us an
uncanny reflection of the lived relations that we disavow. Equality of right could not be
thought except from the position of the slave, the one who suffers. The slave would not
suffer if it were not the slave. The slave attempts to escape through fantasies of right and
equality and dreams a system of equal rights into being. The slave does the dreamwork
needed to make life look like death and death look like life. The slave dreams of all the
equations that are needed to balance the systems every crisis. The slave builds the law
rooms of the many mansions of the house of law. The slave, in other words, is itself the
author of Justice Harlans great heritage and principles of constitutional liberty.85 The
slave forges its own chains through its juridical strivings. The slave builds the home for the future good will of the master.86 That
is what its dream of equality of right amounts to, a home for the future good will of the master. If the master of the future might
be good then the crisis of servile insurrection can be deferred again and again and again. But the master cannot be anything other
than the master, just as the slave cannot be anything but the slave. There is a colorline or there is not. Without the dreamwork of
the slave, the many crises of the system of white-over-black blossom in revolution. The flames are wooed from their buds and
continue to unfold until the entire plantation system is gone. The servile insurrection continues until it brings down the system of
marks, the system of property, and the system of law. Slaves are trained to not think this way. Slaves are trained to be objects.
Slavery is death.
accounts of whipping, rape, mutilation, and suicide assault the barrier of indifference, for the
abhorrence and indignity roused by these scenes of terror, which range from the mockery of the coffle to the dismemberment and
incineration of a slave boy, give rise to a shared sentience between those formerly indifferent and those suffering . So intent
and determined is Rankin to establish that slaves possess the same nature and feelings as himself, and thereby establish the
common humanity of all men on the basis of this extended suffering, that he literally narrates an imagined scenario
in which he, along with his wife and child, is enslaved. The horrible scenes of cruelty that were presented to [his] mind as a
consequence of this imagining aroused the highest pitch of indignant feeling. In addition, this scenario enables Rankin to speak
not only for but literally in the place of the enslaved. By believing himself to be and by phantasmically becoming
the enslaved, he creates the scenariofor shared feelings: My flighty imagination added much to the tumult of passion by persuading
me, for the moment, that I myself was a slave, and with my wife and children placed under the reign of terror. 1 began in reality tofeel for myself,
my wife, and my children the thoughts of being whipped at the pleasure of a morose and capricious master, aroused the strongest feelings of
resentment; but when I fancied the cruel lash was approaching my wife and children, and my imagination depicted in lively colors, their tears,
their shrieks, and bloody stripes, every indignant principle of my bloody nature was excited to the highest degree. (56) The nature of the feelings
aroused here is rather complicated. While this flight of imagination enables a vicarious firsthand experience of the lash ,
excoriates the pleasure experienced by the master in this brutal exercise of power, and unleashes Rankin's fiery indignation and resentment, the
phantasmic vehicle of this identification is complicated, unsettling, and disturbing . Although Rankin s fantasy
culminates in indignant outcries against the institution of slavery and, clearly, the purpose of this identification is to highlight
the crimes of slavery, this flight of imagination and slipping into the captives body unlatches a Pandora s box and,
surprisingly, what comes to the fore is the difficulty and slipperiness of empathy. Properly speaking, empathy is a
projection of oneself into another in order to better understand the other or the projection of one s own personality
into an object, with the attribution to the object of ones own emotions. 4 Yet empathy in important respects confounds
Rankin s efforts to identify with the enslaved because in making the Olives suffering his own, Rankin begins to feel for
himself rather than for those whom this exercise in imagination presumably is designed to reach . Moreover, by
exploiting the vulnerability of the captive body as a vessel for the uses, thoughts, and feelings of others, the
humanity extended to the slave inadvertently confirms the expectations and desires definitive of the relations of
chattel slavery. In other words, the case of Rankins empathic identification is as much due to his good intentions and
heartfelt opposition to slavery as to the fungibility of the captive body. By making the suffering of others his own,
has Rankin ameliorated indifference or only confirmed the difficulty of understanding the suffering of the enslaved?
Can the white witness of the spectacle of suffering affirm the materiality of black sentience only by feeling for
himself? Does this not only exacerbate the idea that black sentience is inconceivable and unimaginable but, in the very ease of possessing the
abased and enslaved body, ultimately elide an understanding and acknowledgment of the slaves pain? Beyond evidence of slavery s crime, what
does this exposure of the suffering body of the bondsman yield? Does this not reinforce the thingly quality of the captive by reducing the body
to evidence in the very effort to establish the humanity of the enslaved? Does it not reproduce the hyperembodiness of the powerless? The
purpose of these inquiries is not to cast doubt on Rankin s motives for recounting these events but to consider the precariousness of empathy and
the thin line between witness and spectator. In the fantasy of being beaten, Rankin must substitute himself and his wife and children for the black
captive in order that this pain be perceived and experienced. So, in fact, Rankin becomes a proxy and the others pain is acknowledged to the
degree that it can be imagined, yet by virtue of this substitution the object of identification threatens to disappear. In order to convince the reader
of the horrors of slavery, Rankin must volunteer himself and his family for abasement. Put differently the effort to counteract the
commonplace callousness to black suffering requires that the white body be positioned in the place of the black
body in order to make this suffering visible and intelligible. Yet if this violence can become palpable and indignation
can be fully aroused only through the masochistic fantasy, then it becomes clear that empathy is double-edged, for in
making the others suffering one s own, this suffering is occluded by the others obliteration. Given the litany of horrors
that fill Rankins pages, this recourse tofantasy reveals an anxiety about making the slave s suffering legible. This anxiety is historically
determined by the denial of black sentience, the slaves status as object of property, the predicament of witnessing given the legal status of blacks,
and the repression of counterdiscourses on the peculiar institution." Therefore, Rankin must supplant the black captive in order to give
expression to black suffering, and as a consequence, the dilemma the denial of black sentience and the obscurity of suffering is not
attenuated but instantiated. The ambivalent character of empathy more exactly, the repressive effects of empathy as Jonathan Boyarin notes,
can be located in the obliteration of otherness or the facile intimacy that enables identification with the other only as we feel ourselves into
those we imagine as ourselves. And as a consequence, empathy fails to expand the space of the other but merely places the self in its stead.5
This is not to suggest that empathy can be discarded or that Rankin s desire to exist in the place of the other can be dismissed as a narcissistic
exercise but rather to highlight the dangers of a too-easy intimacy, the consideration of the self that occurs at the expense of the slave s suffering,
and the violence of identification.6 As well, we need ask why the site of suffering so readily lends itself to inviting
identification. Why is pain the conduit of identification? This question may seem to beg the obvious, given the violent domination
and dishonor constitutive of enslavement, the acclaimed transformative capacities of pain in sentimental culture, the prevalence of public displays
of suffering inclusive of the pageantry of the trade, the spectacle of punishment, circulating reports of slavery s horrors, the runaway success of
Unde Tom's Cabin, and the passage through the bloodstained gate, which was a convention of the slave narrative, all of which contributed to
the idea / t hat the feelings and consciousness of the enslaved were most available at this site. However, what I am trying to suggest is
that if the scene of beating readily lends itself to an identification with the enslaved, it does so at the risk of fixing
and naturalizing this condition of pained embodiment and, in complete defiance of Rankins good intention,
increases the difficulty of beholding black suffering since the endeavor to bring pain close exploits the spectacle of
the body in pain and oddly confirms the spectral character of suffering and the inability to witness the captive s
pain. If, on one hand, pain extends humanity to the dispossessed and the ability to sustain suffering leads to
transcendence, on the other, the spectral and spectacular character of this suffering, or, in other words, the shocking
and ghostly presence of pain, effaces and restricts black sentience.
Economy Link
Neoliberalism and economic growth is fundamentally racedthe idea that trade is a
level playing field perpetuates colorblind visions that make race invisible
Ward Univ. of Illinois @ Urbana-Champaign, 07 Robert Anthony-; Neoliberal Silences,
Race, & The Hope of CRT; A paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Research
Association; April Draft; http://www.urban.illinois.edu/apa-pw/APA07/Neoliberal
%20Silences_Robert%20Ward.pdf
Neoliberalism fosters an economic theory of democracy. The idea is that democracy is commodified at the price of political liberalism,
subordinating the state to the market. Highlighting the parallel between economic and political markets. Neoliberal policy in the development of charter schools does not
create an equal playing field, in contrast, by undoing the memory of past discrimination, and unseating our historical consciousness of institutional discrimination it seeks to
overlook civic values in the interest of developing commercial interests. The need through actualizing the academic function of education to place individuals in the division of labor
and integrate them into the workforce (distributive and economic functions of education) takes precedent for charters and is disconnected from concepts of
ingrained in Americas racial consciousness, in whiteness, and in the new lefts attempts to position
class over the legacy of racialization in America. Market ideology is the triumph of capital over
politics as well as morality. It is the triumph of economic logic over all other domains of human existence,
and therefore represents the end of history (Giroux 2004). The promotion of a new relationship between government and knowledge: the development
of new forms of social accounting and expertise (via technological advances) to promote notions of government at a distance. The notion of educational reform for equal educational opportunity finds little material
import and is purely ideological at best. Major criticism levied on both reform movements since the mid 1950s and research such as the landmarks studies of the Coleman Report and the work of Jencks, and Bowles and
Gintis are extensive in scope. Of particular interest are that reforms and research to this end were all results based with a primary focus on individualism, competition, and meritocracy. Also, the ideological stance of
equal educational opportunity concentrates too heavily on site based reform, choosing to view schools as autonomous instead of as closely tied to the wider society of racial segregation mechanisms, the labor market,
little consideration in reform language considers the question of what education is and seeks to accomplish,
besides being viewed as purely functional (Burbules & Sherman 1979). This is to say that without reform addressing past
and the state itself. Finally, the too
discrimination by way of race and class then reform initiatives are not only still inequitable and unequal but
still in fact discriminatory. Particularly through reform initiatives using market ideology, but also in discussions of educational
equity in general, too little attention is paid to the fact that American public education depends heavily on local property taxes, and
inequalities in tax revenues among school districts produce inequalities in educational resources, facilities, programs, and opportunities
(Walters, 2001, 44). Whereas the federal response is for local and state governance to turn to market ideology to solve the questions of
equal educational opportunities, particularly in urban districts, what ends up occurring is that the market ideology
approach to education veils how racial histories accrue political, economic, and cultural weight to the power of
Economy Link
Globalization reinforces racial divisions between nations.
Brien and Leichenko, 2000 (Karen - Center for International Climate and Environmental
Research At the U of Oslo, and Robin - Department of Geography and Center for Urban Policy
Research, Rutgers University, "Double exposure: assessing the impacts of climate change within
the context of economic globalization," Global Environmental Change Volume 10, Issue 3,
October 2000, Pages 221232)
Despite a widespread perception that globalization is a unifying and all-encompassing force, these processes
have (heretofore) been highly uneven across all geographic scales. In fact, it has been argued that globalization
accentuates, rather than erodes, national and regional differences (Mittelman, 1994). Processes of globalization have
been uneven among major regions of the world, characterized by an increasing proportion of trade and resource flows taking place both
within and between between three major economic regions, including North America (US, Canada and Mexico), the European
Union and East and Southeast Asia (led by Japan). These three regions, often referred as the Triad, accounted for
76% of world output and 71% of world trade in 1980 (Dicken, 1997). By 1994, the Triad accounted for 87% of world merchandise
output and 80% of world merchandise exports (Dicken, 1997). Increased concentration of global economic
activity among the Triad has meant that large regions outside the Triad, particularly Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, have
become increasing marginalized vis a vis the global economy (Castells, 1996; Mittelman, 1994). Examination of the global
distribution of foreign direct investment among low and middle income countries aptly illustrates these regional differences (Table 2). More than 10% of the
world population currently lives in Sub-Saharan Africa, yet this region receives only 1% of total world foreign direct investment (World Bank, 1998).
Similarly, South Asia contains 22% of the world population, but receives only 1.1% of world foreign direct investment (World Bank, 1998).
Globalization processes are also uneven among regions within countries (Hirst and Thompson, 1996). Within China,
for example, coastal regions have been increasingly integrated into the global economy, while more remote areas
of the country remain largely untouched by globalization. As a result, globalization is exacerbating existing patterns
of uneven development within China. Even within an advanced country such as the United States, the impacts of
globalization have been highly uneven. Studies of international trade involvement of US cities and regions by Markusen et al.
(1991),Hayward and Erickson (1995) and Noponen et al. (1997), for example, find substantial variability in the level of involvement in international trade
and in the relative contribution of international trade to regional economic growth. As with climate change, the
Legalism Link
Anthony P. Farley [Associate Professor, @ Boston College Law School. J.D., Harvard Law
School] Perfecting Slavery Boston College Law School Faculty Papers 1-27-2005 [E. Smith]
Slavery is with us still. We are haunted by slavery. We are animated by slavery.
White-over-black is slavery and segregation and neosegregation and every situation
in which the distribution of material or spiritual goods follows the colorline. The
movement from slavery to segregation to neosegregation to whatever form of whiteover-black it is that may come with post-modernity or after is not toward freedom.
The movement from slavery to segregation to neosegregation is the movement of
slavery perfecting itself. White-over-black is neosegregation. White-over-black is
segregation. White-over-black is slavery. All of it is white-over-black, only white-overblack, and that continually. The story of progress up from slavery is a lie, the longest
lie. The story of progress up from slavery is told juridically in the form of the rule of
law. Slavery is the rule of law. And slavery is death. The slave perfects itself as a
slave when it bows down before its master of its own free will. That is the moment in
which the slave accomplishes the impossible reconciliation of its freedom with its
unfreedom by willing itself unfree.3 When exactly does this perfection of slavery take
place? The slave bows down before its master when it prays for legal relief, when it prays
for equal rights, and while it cultivates the field of law hoping for an answer. The slaves
free choice, the slaves leap of faith, can only be taken under conditions of legal
equality. Only after emancipation and legal equality, only after rights, can the slave
perfect itself as a slave. Bourgeois legality is the condition wherein equals are said to
enter the commons of reason4 or the kingdom of ends5 or the New England town
meeting of the soul to discuss universalizable principles, to discuss equality and freedom.
Much is made of these meetings, these struggles for law, these festivals of the universal.
Commons, kingdom, town meeting, there are many mansions in the house of law, but the
law does not forget its father, as Maria Grahn-Farley observes: The law of slavery has
not been forgotten by the law of segregation; the law of segregation has not been
forgotten by the law of neosegregation. The law guarding the gates of slavery,
segregation, and neosegregation has not forgotten its origin; it remembers its father
and its grandfather before that. It knows what master it serves; it knows what color
to count.6 To wake from slavery is to see that everything must go, every law
Requests for equality and freedom will always fail. Why? Because the fact of need
itself means that the request will fail. The request for equality and freedom, for rights,
will fail whether the request is granted or denied. The request is produced through an
injury.8 The initial injury is the marking of bodies for lessless respect, less land,
less freedom, less education, less. The mark must be made on the flesh because that
is where we start from. Childhood is where we begin and, under conditions of hierarchy, that childhood is already
marked. The mark organizes, orients, and differentiates our otherwise common flesh. The mark is race, the mark is gender, the mark is
class, the mark is. The mark is all there is to the reality of those essencesrace, gender, class, and so onthat are said to precede
existence. The mark is a system.9 Property and law follow the mark. And so it goes. There is a pleasure in hierarchy. We begin with an
education in our hierarchies. We begin with childhood and childhood begins with education. To be exact, education begins our
childhood. We are called by race, by gender, by class, and so on.
Hegemony/Modeling Link
Their Modeling advantage is based on the exportation of a violent anxiety and fear of raced
bodies
Rodriguez 07 [Dylan, PhD in Ethnic Studies Program of the University of California Berkeley and Associate Proffessor of Ethnic
Studies at University of California Riverside, American Globality And the US Prison regime: State Violence And White Supremacy from Abu
Ghraib to Stockton to bagong diwa, Ateneo de Manila University, 2007, Kritika Kultura 9 (2007): 022-048]
To consider the US prison as a global practice of dominance, we might begin with the now-indelible photo exhibition of captive brown
men manipulated, expired, and rendered bare in the tombs of the uS-commandeered Abu Ghraib prison: here, I am concerned less with the
idiosyncrasies of the carceral spectacle (who did what, administrative responsibilities, tedium of military corruption and incompetence, etc.) than
I am with its inscription of the where in which the worst of uS prison/state violence incurs. As the bodies of tortured prisoners in this
somewhere else, that is, beyond and outside the formal national domain of the United States, have become the hypervisible and accessible raw material for a global critique of the US statewith Abu Ghraib often serving as the signifier for a
generalized mobilization of sentiment against the American occupationthe intimate and proximate bodies of those locally and
intimately imprisoned within the localities of the United States constantly threaten to disappear from the political
and moral registers of US civil society, its resident uS establishment left, and perhaps most if not all elements of the global
establishment left, which includes NGOs, political parties, and sectarian organizations. I contend in this essay that a new theoretical
framing is required to critically address (and correct) the artificial delineation of the statecraft of Abu Ghraib prison, and other
US formed and/or mediated carceral sites across the global landscape, as somehow unique and exceptional to places outside
the US proper. In other words, a genealogy and social theory of US state violence specific to the regime of the prison needs to be
delicately situated within the ensemble of institutional relations, political intercourses, and historical conjunctures that
precede, produce, and sustain places like the Abu Ghraib prison, and can therefore only be adequately articulated as a genealogy
and theory of the allegedly domestic US prison regimes globality (I will clarify my use of this concept in the next part of this
introduction). Further, in offering this initial attempt at such a framing, I am suggesting a genealogy of US state violence that can
more sufficiently conceptualize the logical continuities and material articulations between a) the ongoing projects of domestic
warfare organic to the white supremacist US racial state, and b) the array of global (or extra-domestic) technologies of
violence that form the premises of possibility for those social formations and hegemonies integral to the
contemporary moment of US global dominance. In this sense, I am amplifying the capacity of the US prison to inaugurate
technologies of power that exceed its nominal relegation to the domain of the criminal- juridical. Consider imprisonment, then,
as a practice of social ordering and geopolitical power, rather than as a self-contained or foreclosed jurisprudential practice: therein, it is possible
to reconceptualize the significance of the Abu Ghraib spectacle as only one signification of a regime of dominance that is neither (simply) local
nor (erratically) exceptional, but is simultaneously mobilized, proliferating, and global. The overarching concern animating this essay revolves
around the peculiarity of US global dominance in the historical present: that is, given the geopolitical dispersals, and dislocations, as
formed social relations generated by US hegemonies across sites and historical contexts, what
modalities of rule and statecraft give form and coherence to the (sapatial-temporal) transitions,
(institutional-discursive) rearticulations, and (apparent) novelties of War on Terror neoliberalism? Put
well as the differently
differently, what
technologies and institutionalities thread between forms of state and state-sanctioned dominance that
are nominally autonomous of the US state, but are no less implicated in the global reach of US state formation?
If there is no justice, there can be no peace. But in the American South it seems
white folks suddenly believe that decorum and charm are a proper response to
unspeakable acts of violence and unconscionable injustice . The day before a jury
delivered an acquittal in the murder trial of George Zimmerman , Seminole County
Sherif Don Eslinger and Sanford Police Chief Cecil Smith gave a national press
conference to appeal for a peaceful reaction to the verdict regardless of its
outcome. Eslinger, who is white, said, We will not tolerate anyone who uses this verdict
as an excuse to violate the law. The veiled threat of an aggressive police response to
imaginary civil unrest belies the very logic that led to Trayvon Martins death to begin
with. For, you see, African-Americans are never protected or served by the law
enforcement apparatus yet they are always subject to its military might. Sanford
police coyly tolerated the actual killing of an unarmed black child, but yet refuse to tolerate any anger expressed for the acquittal of his murderer.
This is the new Jim Crow realized. It bears reminding that it was Sanfords police who first allowed Zimmerman to walk away uncharged his gun in
tote. The story of self-defense seemed logical to them given the brown body lying on the ground. It was their decision not to investigate the case as a
crime that led to public outcry, rallies and marches. It is only because of their total failure to do their jobs that the world now knows the name and face of
Trayvon Martin. The complete incompetence (or indifference) of Sanford police is why certain evidence that could have more easily convicted
Zimmerman was inadmissible at trial the most glaring example being their failure to perform a toxicology test on Zimmerman the night he shot
Martin. Had they done so, it would have revealed whether he was under the influence of either illegal substances, alcohol or the two prescriptions drugs
he had admittedly been taking Temazepan and Adderall the side effects of which include hallucinations, insomnia and aggressive behavior.
Instead, Sanford police let Zimmerman walk away, quietly into the night, as he did again yesterday. But the same police now threaten a quick and
to blindly ignore the need for equal treatment and equal justice. It is this warped mentality that led George Zimmerman to murder an
unarmed child, feel no remorse and say it was Gods plan. Human
The
paradox of being implicitly excluded from the guarantee of life, liberty and pursuit
of happiness has been reiterated and reinforced by public policy and social
malaise for centuries. President Barack Obama is not immune as hes become
the target of incessant white rage: race-baiting attacks, prejudice and bias even
prior to his election. The Republican Party and its neo-Confederate Tea Party wing has been committed to invalidating his political
but by the very people charged with adjudicating justice on behalf of his senseless death. For African-Americans this is not new.
and legislative legacy as much as the Zimmerman jury invalidated the civil rights of Trayvon. The disparate precedent set, therefore, becomes all the
more insulting when were told to simply shut up and bear it. Melissa Harris-Perry, on her eponymous MSNBC show, explained this weekend that race
riots is a biased term that dismisses the underlying calls for justice, which are often the primary purpose for protests by black and brown people. She
highlighted the key fact that in Americas history the worst race riots featured violent attacks perpetrated by whites against blacks: The Tulsa race riot
average citizens alike and the Zimmerman verdict will only serve to solidify that concept and embolden like-minded
vigilantes to behave recklessly and act with impunity against the lives, bodies and souls of black folks. AfricanAmerican civil rights leaders, politicians and religious authorities have all echoed the call for calm in the wake of the
verdict. But what is most confounding is the fact that a black male who chooses to riot is as likely to be met with
violent and deadly force as if he were walking quietly home with Skittles and iced tea in-hand. This is the ultimate
tragedy that Zimmermans trial has unleashed in the so-called post-racial age.
dictates that when Whites interests converge with Blacks need for
equality, the ensuing false generosity given on the part of Whites is
often disproportionate to the gains received by the Black
community, as was the case with the integration of MLB. Our goal is to provide a new
perspective on MLBs integration and stimulate critical thought by providing a more holistic viewpoint,
extending beyond the oversimplified notions of racial progress, equity, and equality that permeate the
greater dialogue and discourse on the subject. By introducing Bells principle as a potential governing
theme of MLBs integration, we hope that readers will begin to question the seemingly altruistic
notions of equity and equality on behalf of Branch Rickey and MLB in their efforts to integrate
Americas national pastime. As suggested by Effa Manley (1948) in the quotation at the beginning of this article, it is important to
critically reflect on the motives behind White power brokers decision to integrate Americas pastime. The purpose of this article is not to provide an allencompassing historical review of the Black communitys involvement with the game of baseball (for details, see Lanctot, 2004; Lomax, 2003), nor is it to
provide readers with an in-depth examination of MLBs integration as a component of a larger context (e.g., post World War II American sport and society;
for details, see Lanctot, 2004; Miller & Wiggins, 2004). Although we are both keenly aware of the significance of both the aforementioned topics, our
intention is to focus on three things: the NLs, MLBs integration, and the interest convergence principle. Therefore, this article has two guiding purposes.
First, we use critical race theorist Derrick Bells (1980) interest convergence principle as a conceptual framework to critically examine and better
understand the integration of MLB. The second focus is to begin to build a foundation for a new, more critical paradigm to examine the integration of MLB.
In the sections to follow, we attempt to do a few things. First, we provide a brief overview of critical race theory (CRT) and more specifically elaborate on
the interest convergence principle as a central tenet of CRT. Second, we discuss applications of the interest convergence principle in American sport and
society. Third, we quickly highlight the history of the NLs, their players, their financial viability, and the social impact they had on the Black community.
Fourth, we interrogate the process of integration and discuss its subsequent aftermath. Finally, we conclude with a concise summary of the interest
convergence principles influence on the integration of MLB and the impact it had on the NLs, and we offer suggestions for future research directions. CRT
is a form of scholarship that is rooted in the mission and struggles of the civil rights movement (Taylor, 1998). It originated in the 1970s from the work of
legal scholars (particularly Derrick Bell) who were disenchanted with the stalled progress of traditional civil rights litigation to produce meaningful racial
reform (Taylor, 1998). CRT is not an abstract set of ideas or rules (Taylor, 1998), and there are some defining principles that most scholars embrace. The
first is that racism is a normal fixture and occurrence in American society that is reproduced through routine and extraordinary, traditions, and experiences
that critically affect the quality of life and opportunities of racial groups (Brown, 2003). The embedded nature and permanence of racism are reflected in
Americas many social systems and institutions, including sport. Second, Whiteness has been deemed a property interest (Harris, 1993) or valuable
commodity resulting from the historical social construction of race and the role the legal system played in reifying conceptions of race (see Haney-Lopez,
1996). In this regard, being White has major privileges because Whiteness is the optimal status criterion or standard on which all other racial groups are
judged and evaluated in American society. Third, CRT offers a critique of liberalism by exposing the limitations of civil rights law. Scholars have suggested
that laws designed to address racial inequality are often undermined before they can be fully implemented (Crenshaw, 1988). As it relates to African
Americans and sport, Davis (1999) asserted, Because of the subtle nature of aversive racism, traditional antidiscrimination laws are of dubious value in
ameliorating its adverse impact on African Americans in sports (p. 2). Fourth, CRT rejects the notion that racism is outdated and argues against ideas
such as objectivity, color blindness, and meritocracy, which have been advanced by many people in society (including Whites and racially
underrepresented groups). Instead, scholars argue that this is a camouflage for the power, privileges, and advantages Whites have gained throughout
American history (Tate, 1997). Fifth, counter-storytelling is an important tenet of CRT because it can be used (particularly by subordinated groups) to
combat the pervasiveness of the privileged discourses of the majority (DeCuir & Dixson, 2004). The narratives and stories of subordinated groups, and
others who work on their behalf, have potential to counter the taken-for-granted assumptions of the status quo and cast doubt on the master narratives
widely espoused in society and sport. Sixth, and most relevant to our purpose in this article, the interest convergence principlewhich posits that Whites
will tolerate or support the advancement of the racially underrepresented particularly when it promotes their own self-interestis an integral part of CRT
and the arguments made above. This tenet of CRT focuses on how racial equality and equity will be promoted and pursued when they converge with the
interests, needs, expectations, and ideologies of Whites (Milner, 2008). According to Milner (2008), Inherent in the tensions of convergence between
whites and others are matters of self and systematic interests and a loss-gain binary (p. 333). In terms of self-interests and systematic interests, it can be
Related to this point, the loss-gain binary suggests that Whites desire to negotiate and make
difficult decisions in providing more equitable policies and practices might mean that they lose something of great importance to them, including
their power, privilege, esteem, social status, linguistic status and their ability to reproduce these benefits and interests to their children and future
generations. (p. 334) This could be problematic for some Whites, because the idea of Whites losing something and people of color gaining something
could cause the property value of Whiteness to depreciate (Milner, 2008). In the next section, we provide a bit more insight into the history and origins of
the interest convergence principle and specifically discuss how it has been used to critically analyze issues within the context of American sport. Bells
(1980) interest convergence principle was created in response to esteemed lawyer and law professor Herbert Weschlers harsh and nagging criticism of
the decision (p. 519) rendered in the landmark 1954 Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, the groundbreaking ruling that officially
desegregated public schools in America. Weschler was mainly concerned with the principles involved in making a decision such as the one rendered in
Brown and believed that the principle of interest in the case was not discrimination but the right to associate with whomever one pleases (Bell, 1980). Bell
quoted Weschler as saying, If the freedom of association is denied by segregation, integration forces an association upon those for whom it is unpleasant
or repugnant (p. 521). On the other hand, Bell believed that the decision in Brown to break with the courts long-held position on these issues
[segregation] cannot be understood without some consideration of the decisions value to whites, not simply those concerned about the immortality of
racial inequality, but also those whites in policymaking positions able to see the economic and political advances at home and abroad that would follow
abandonment of segregation. (p. 524) This quotation embraces the essence of the principle of interest convergence. Since the interest convergence
principles initial application by Bell (1980), it has most often been used in reference to the holding rendered in Brown and/or what factors compelled that
decision (Balkin, 2004; Dudziak, 2004; Forman, 2007; Gaines, 2004; Gerken, 2007; Lobel, 2007; Powers, 2007; Rogers & Oakes, 2005). Bells interest
convergence principle has also been used to examine and explain phenomena in fields outside of law, such as economics (Rubin, 1996), education
(Ladsen-Billings & Tate, 1995; Perea, 2004; Shiu, 2006; Snipes & Waters, 2005; Taylor, 1999), and womens studies (Crenshaw, 1995; Wing, 1996). In some
cases, it has even been used to examine phenomena beyond the dichotomy of Black versus White (Castagno & Lee, 2007; Delgado, 2006; Shiu, 2006), as
schedule a competition against an opponent with an American Indian mascot, unless said
team is a traditional rival or a conference member (p. 6). Castagno and Lee believed that
the interest convergence principle is demonstrated in the traditional rival/conference
member component of the policy, insofar as the institution clearly recognizes and honors
the interests of the Native community on campus by refusing to schedule games with some
teams who have Native mascots, but the institution is even more protective of its own
interests by still scheduling games with teams with whom they have long standing
commitments. (p. 7) Bells (1980) principle is appropriately applied here because the
although universities
and their athletic departments reap the lucrative benefits of Black
players labor on the field, many of the athletes themselves leave
the universities without a true education and no careers in
professional sports. Hence, although integration provided these
young Black student-athletes with more opportunities to attend
college, the majority of the benefit is realized by the universities
and their athletic departments (overwhelmingly operated by elite
Whites; Lapchick, 2008), while Black studentathletes generate the majority of the monetary and intangible rewards (e.g.,
unlikely (p. 60). Therefore, Bells (1980) principle is applicable here because,
prestige, notoriety, media coverage) for the colleges or universities as a result of their athletic prowess (for empirical support, see
Singer, 2009). The interest convergence principle has been applied to American college sport and also provides a useful lens to
critically analyze professional sport, more specifically the integration of MLB. In the sections to follow, we attempt to address this.
However, before MLBs integration can be properly scrutinized, we need to provide a brief historical, social, and economic review of
the NLs. Because the face of MLBs integration (Jackie Roosevelt Robinson) was a former NL sensation, it is both relevant and
necessary to inspect the stand-alone entity that was the NLs and the role it played in the Black community.
food campaigns and many of those involved in direct marketing prioritize supporting farmers,
although to date there has been little discussion of other food-system workers. This is in keeping
with American agrarianism, which upholds a belief in the moral and economic primacy of
farming over other occupations and ways of producing (Fink, 1992). The greater emphasis on
farmers than on food-system workers in the local food movement inadvertently gives less
attention to ethnic minorities simply because few farms are owned by nonwhites. Taken
together, Latinos and AfricanAmericans own only 3% of farms in the USA and only 1.5% of farmland (US Department of
Agriculture, 2009). In contrast, most hired farm labourers, not currently prioritized in most food-system
localization efforts, are ethnic minorities. Workers and owners in the food system have interests
that are not necessarily consonant. In the local food movement there is a sense that, because people live together in a
locality and encounter each other, they will make better, more equitable decisions that prioritize the common good. While this is a
beautiful vision, localities contain within them wide demographic ranges and social
relationships of power and privilege embedded within the place itself. At both global and local
scales, those who benefitand those who do notare arranged along already familiar lines of class, ethnicity and gender. Given
the disparate material and cultural conditions within localities , local food actors must be wary of the assumption
that people within a community will necessarily have the same understandings or interests by
dint of the fact that they share the same geographic place or are involved in the food system
(Allen, 2004). Working toward social equity in local food systems requires questioning an assumption of shared interests among
all members of the community when there are often substantially different material interests and power allocations. In some
cases, highlighting social justice issues can alienate others in the food system working on different priorities. For example, local
food policy councils are illustrative of deliberate efforts to practice food democracy at a local level. However, these efforts have
had challenges in addressing the diverse interests of their members, at times due to social justice issues. In an early study of local
food policy councils, for instance, Dahlberg (1994) found that the formation of food policy councils failed where there was more
emphasis on hunger than on other food system issues. We can learn from the efforts in Toronto, Canada, where strong leadership
and commitment to justice have led to the creation of a food policy for the city that prioritizes food justice, establishing the right
of all residents to adequate, nutritious food and promoting food production and distribution systems that are grounded in equity
(Toronto Food Policy, 2010). Toronto is also an example of a community in which people from many regions and cultures share a
particular place and are developing socially inclusive creative food economies (Donald and Blay-Palmer, 2006). Anderson
(2008) differentiates local- and community-based food systems. For her, community-based refers to residents having control over
and making decisions about their food system, while local means physical geographic dimensions.
Hegemony/Modeling Link
Defenses of hegemony is just rhetoric that rely upon a flawed Eurocentric
misconception of reality
Kaplan, 03 (Amy, President of American Studies Association @ Pennsylvania University, Violent
Belongings and the Question of Empire Today Presidential Address to the American Studies Association,
muse)
This is also a narrative about race. The images of an unruly world, of anarchy and chaos, of failed
modernity, recycle stereotypes of racial inferiority from earlier colonial discourses about races who are
incapable of governing themselves, Kiplings lesser breeds without the law, or Roosevelts
loosening ties of civilized society, in his corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. In his much-noted
article in the New York Times Magazine entitled The American Empire, Michael Ignatieff
appended the subtitle The Burden but insisted that Americas empire is not like empires of
times past, built on colonies, conquest and the white mans burden.12 Denial and exceptionalism
are apparently alive and well. In American studies we need to go beyond simply exposing the
racism of empire and examine the dynamics by which Arabs and the religion of Islam are
becoming racialized through the interplay of templates of U.S. racial codes and colonial
Orientalism. These narratives of the origins of the current empirethat is, the neoconservative and
the liberal interventionisthave much in common. They take American exceptionalism to new heights: its
paradoxical claim to uniqueness and universality at the same time. They share a teleological narrative of
inevitability, that America is the apotheosis of history, the embodiment of universal values of human
rights, liberalism, and democracy, the indispensable nation, in Madeleine Albrights words. In
this logic, the United States claims the authority to make sovereign judgments on what is right
and what is wrong for everyone else and to exempt itself with an absolutely clear conscience
from all the rules that it proclaims and applies to others.13 Absolutely protective of its own
sovereignty, it upholds a doctrine of limited sovereignty for others and thus deems the entire
world a potential site of intervention. Universalism thus can be made manifest only through the threat
and use of violence. If in these narratives imperial power is deemed the solution to a broken world, then
they preempt any counternarratives that claim U.S. imperial actions, past and present, may have
something to do with the worlds problems. According to this logic, resistance to empire can never
be opposition to the imposition of foreign rule; rather, resistance means irrational opposition to modernity
and universal human values.
Rodriguez 07 [Dylan, PhD in Ethnic Studies Program of the University of California Berkeley and Associate Proffessor of Ethnic
Studies at University of California Riverside, American Globality And the US Prison regime: State Violence And White Supremacy from Abu
Ghraib to Stockton to bagong diwa, Ateneo de Manila University, 2007, Kritika Kultura 9 (2007): 022-048]
In fact, the
notion of American globality I have begun discussing here already exceeds negri and Hardts formulation to the extent that it
is a global racial formation, and more pointedly a global mobilization of a white supremacist social formation (read: a
united States of America formed by the social-economic geographies of racial chattel slavery and their recodification through the post-13th Amendment innovation of
other technologies of criminalization and imprisonment). The US prison regimes production
itself both reflects and accelerates the experience of society as an incomplete project, as
something to be made. As a formation of violence that self-perpetuates a peculiar social project through the
discursive structures of warfare, the US prison regime composes an acute formation of racial and white supremacist
violence, and thus houses the capacity for mobilization of an epochal (and peculiar) white supremacist global logic. This contention should not be confused with
the sometimes parochial (if not politically chauvinistic) proposition that American state and state-sanctioned regimes of bodily violence and human immobilization are
somehow self-contained domestic productions that are exceptional to the united States of America, and that other global sites simply import, imitate, or reenact
these institutionalizations of power. In fact, I am suggesting the opposite: the US
is not possible to conceptualize and critically address the emergence and global proliferation of
the (uS/global) prison industrial complex outside a fundamental understanding of what are literally its technical and
technological premises: namely, its complex organization and creative production of racist and white supremacist
bodily violence. It is only in this context, I would say, that we can examine the problem of how the Prison is a modality (and not just a
reified product or outcome) of American statecraft in the current political moment. It is only a theoretical foregrounding of the white supremacist
state and social formation of the united States that will allow us to understand the uS prison regime as an American globality that materializes as
it prototypes state violence and for that matter, state power itself through a specific institutional site.
To
breach the subjective effects of settler colonialism, colonized peoples must eschew the
politics of mutual recognition and instead develop knowledge of self through struggle.**[to
physically destroy the regimesee earlier in card] Thus, Coulthard eschews negotiation with the
settler state and calls instead for confronting colonial authorities through an Indigenous political
resurgence in which increased militancy plays a central role.
and retelling narratives of pain is troubling, both for its voyeurism and for its consumptive implacability. Imagining
itself to be a voice, and in some disciplinary iterations, the voice of the colonised (Simpson, 2007, p. 67,
emphasis in the original) is not just a rare historical occurrence in anthropology and related fields. We observe
that much of the work of the academy is to reproduce stories of oppression in its own voice .
At first, this may read as an intolerant condemnation of the academy, one that refuses to forgive past blunders and
see how things have changed in recent decades. However, it is our view that while many individual scholars have
cho- sen to pursue other lines of inquiry than the pain narratives typical of their disciplines, novice researchers
emerge from doctoral programs eager to launch pain-based inquiry projects because they believe that such
approaches embody what it means to do social science. The collection of pain narratives and the
theories of change that champion the value of such narratives are so prevalent in the social
sciences that one might surmise that they are indeed what the academy is about. In her
observation of how much of social science research is concerned with providing recognition to the presumed
voiceless, a recognition that is enamored with knowing through pain. Further, this passage describes the ways in
which the researchers voice is constituted by, legitimated by, animated by the voices on the margins. The
The costs of a politics of recognition that is rooted in naming pain have been critiqued by recent decolonizing and
feminist scholars (Hartman, 1997, 2007; Tuck, 2009). In Scenes of Subjection, Sadiya Hartman ( 1997)
slave emerges as a legal person only when seen as criminal or a violated body in need of
limited forms of protection (p. 55). Recognition humanizes the slave, but is predicated
upon her or his abjection. You are in pain, therefore you are. [T]he recognition of humanity
require[s] the event of excessive violence, cruelty beyond the limits of the socially tolerable,
in order to acknowledge and protect the slaves person (p. 55). Furthermore, Hartman
describes how slave-as-victim as human accordingly establishes slave-as-agent as criminal.
Applying Hartmans analysis, we note how the agency of Margaret Garner or
The
rationale for conducting social science research that collects pain narratives seems
to be self-evident for many scholars, but when looked at more closely, the
rationales may be unconsidered, and some- what flimsy. Like a maritime
archaeological site, such rationales might be best examined in situ, for fear of deterioration
if extracted. Why do researchers collect pain narratives? Why does the
does not politically or materially benefit for being more engrossing). In settler colonial logic,
pain is more compelling than privilege, scars more enthralling than the body unmarked by
to document the problems faced by communities, and often in doing so, recircu- late
common tropes of dysfunction, abuse, and neglect.
Space Link
The STEM fields and NASA are steeped in anti-black racism. Specifically, black women are
marginalized by a decades of marginalization of black culture and women.
Obiomon et.al 7
Obiomon et. al 2007 [Pamela Holland Obiomon, Ph.D., Prairie View A&M University, Virginia
Cook Tickles, Ph.D., Aerospace Engineer, NASA, Adrienne Holland Wowo, M.S., Manager,
UPS, Shirley Holland-Hunt, M.B.A., Manager, NASA]Advancement of Women of Color in
Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Disciplines Faculty Resource
Network .November 16-17, 2007 Johnson C. Smith
University.https://www.nyu.edu/frn/publications/advancing.women/Adv.%20Women%20in
%20Stem%20Tickles.html [E.Smith]
To promote career advancement of women scientists and engineers at all levels, the task of
identifying and eliminating institutional/organizational barriers, biases, and structures that
impede women is critical. Stereotyping is a barrier that is present in every environment. A
stereotype is a belief that all members of a specific group share certain traits or characteristics.
Stereotypes are learned from parents, culture, media portrayals etc. The effect of stereotyping is
prejudice and the behavior is discriminatory. Studies have indicated that everyone holds
stereotypes (Fazio, Jackson, Dunton & Williams,1995), (Diehl & Jonas, 1991). Internal
stereotyping may not be harmful, but becomes a problem when used to prejudge peoples
competence and ability and result in the development of unfair and incorrect expectations.
gender have a negative impact on the work experiences and career advancement of African American
women (Coombs 2003, Bell & Nkomo, 2001). African Americans feel like they are outsiders. Cultural
differences at social gatherings make individuals feel out of place. They are often isolated in the work
environment. Without mentors they must learn to succeed from the main stream of organizational life.
There is a limited supply of these mentors because in the past educators have failed to nurture and
mentor young black women (Jordan, 2006). In this regard, African American women are doubly
disadvantaged. Tokenism represents another impediment for African American women in STEM
occupations. A token is a member of a group that is included in a larger group through policy or
practice to desegregate. Tokenism begins when a lone African American becomes part of an
organization or is placed in an area where they are underrepresented or only one of a kind. Research
by Karter, 1997 on stressful environmental factors reveal that under-representation leads to high
visibility and sets into place a variety of negative perceptions of persons labeled as tokens. When
African Americans are perceived as tokens by majority group employees their behavior and
job performance, whether good or bad, are magnified, distorted and overly scrutinized . In
many cases increased pressure to perform leads to choking under pressure (Steele and
Aronson, 1995). Performance decreases (Saenz, 1994) because token members get the attention, not
their work. Repeated poor performance leads to devaluing of ability. To overcome their perceived
incompetence, they experience increased pressure to perform, yet high level performance may not
necessarily lead to comparable rewards and the same level of recognition given to whites. African
American women are very conscious of their double minority standard. According to the Glass Ceiling
Commission, the psychological effects of being treated as a token take a heavy toll on the emotional
and psychic energy of African Americans. They find themselves isolated with colleagues who do not
want to work with them and have few outlets to express their frustrations and disappointments. Long
and Scott describe a triple penalty for women scientists (a) barriers in STEM field, (b)
perceived discrimination (limited aspirations), and (c) discrimination in opportunities and
rewards. Makobella and Green speak of a tri-consciousness of lived experiences (a) as an
African American woman, (b) as a women in a male dominated field, and (c) the inequities
in the African American community.Barriers for women, particularly African American
women in STEM fields, are real. Although these limitations exist, there are also solutions that may
diminish the effect these barriers have on the career advancement of African American women in
STEM occupations. These solutions are not a one size fit all, as STEM work cultures are unique and
dependent upon several factors. Alternatively, these solutions provide ideas on how to penetrate these
barriers and should be uniquely tailored to cultivate a paradigm that empowers the African American
woman to improve opportunities for advancement in the STEM workplace.
Terrorism Link
Representations of savage terrorists cannot be separated by historical racism
critiquing faulty assumptions is key to eliminate racist mythologies.
Sharp, 7 [2007, Patrick B. Sharp, Chair, Department of Liberal Studies California State
University, Los Angeles, Ph. D. in English University of California, Santa Barbara, M.A. in
English University of California, Santa Barbara, B.A. in English (High Honors) University of
California, Santa Barbara, American Association of Colleges and Universities Institute on HighImpact Practices and Student Success, University of Vermont, University of Oklahoma Press :
Norman, Savage Perils: Racial Frontiers and Nuclear Apocalypse in American Culture pdf]
This history provides the necessary context for understanding President Bushs rhetoric about the war on
terror. Bush did not create the image of the terrorist: in the 1970s, the concept of the terrorist emerged as the modern
manifestation of the savage in American political rhetoric. Like savages, terrorists were described as cruel,
irrational, darkskinned primitives bent on destroying the civilized world. Since the Iran hostage crisis of
19791980, the U.S. government has used a parade of nonwhite terrorists and dictators to whip up support for its
policies. It has used the images of Ayatollah Khomeini, Muammar Khadafi, Saddam Hussein, Osama Bin Laden, and Kim Jong Il to
reinforce the sense that white American civilization is under siege by nonwhite savages. As President Bushs
repeated comments underscore, the threat that terrorists will get control of high technology remains the biggest fear
in the war on terror. According to the U.S. government, only increased military expenditures and continuous warfare can contain
the terrorist threat to American civilization. President Bushs war on terror is only the latest installment in an ongoing
fictional saga that has been at the heart of American identity since the beginning of the republic.
Understanding this saga is essential if we want to eliminate such racist mythologies from American life.
Terrorism Link
American policies are one of the largest causes of terrorism
Marable, 01 [November 20th, Manning- Prof of History and Political Science @ Columbia U
Director of the Institute for Research in African American Studies; Z SPACE; online publication,
November 20; www.zcommunications.org/the-failure-of-u-s-foreign-policies-by-manningmarable.pdf]
The bombing campaign against the people of Afghanistan will be described in history as the "U.S. against the
Third World." The launching of military strikes against peasants does nothing to suppress terrorism, and only
erodes American credibility in Muslim nations around the world. The question, "Why Do They Hate Us?,"
can only be answered from the vantage point of the Third World's widespread poverty, hunger and economic
exploitation. The United States government cannot engage in effective multilateral actions to suppress
terrorism, because its behavior illustrates its complete contempt for international cooperation. The United States
owed $582 million in back dues to the United Nations, and it paid up only when the September 11 attacks jeopardized its national
security.
Republican conservatives demand that the United States should be exempt from the jurisdiction of an International Criminal Court, a permanent tribunal now being established at The Hague, Netherlands. For the 2001 World Conference Against Racism, the U.S. government authorized the allocation of a paltry $250,000, compared to over $10 million provided to
For three decades, the U.S. refused to ratify the 1965 United Nations Convention on the Elimination of Racism. Is it any wonder that much of the Third World questions our motives? The carpet-bombing of the Taliban seems to Third World
observers to have less to do with the suppression of terrorism, and more with securing future petroleum production rights in central Asia. The U.S. media and opinion makers repeatedly have gone out of their way to twist facts and to distort the political realities of the Middle
East, by insisting that the Osama bin Laden group's murderous assaults had nothing to do with Israel's policies towards the Palestinians . Nobody else in the world, with the possible exception of the Israelis, really believes that. Even Britain, Bush's staunchest ally, links Israel's
conference organizers by the Ford Foundation.
intransigence towards negotiations and human rights violations as having contributed to the environment for Arab terrorist retaliation. In late September, during his visit to Jerusalem, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw stated that frustration over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict might create an excuse for terrorism. Straw explained: "there is never any excuse for
Millions of moderate and progressive Muslims who sincerely denounce terrorism are nevertheless frustrated by the United States's extensive clientage
relationship with Israel, financed by more than $3 billion in annual subsidies. They want to know why the U.S. allowed the Israelis to move over 200,000 Jewish settlersone half of them after the signing of the 1993 peace agreement -- to relocate in occupied Palestine. It is no exaggeration in saying that for most of the world's one billion Muslims
terrorism. At the same time, there is an obvious need to understand the environment in which terrorism breeds."
that Israel is as anathema to them, as the apartheid regime of South Africa was for black people. How does terrorist Osama bin Laden gain loyal followers from northern Nigeria to Indonesia? Perhaps it has something to do with America's massive presence -- in fact, its military-industrial occupation -- of Saudi Arabia. The Washington Post recently revealed that in
the past two decades, U.S. construction companies and arms suppliers have made over $50 billion in Saudi Arabia. Today,
over thirty thousand U.S. citizens are employed by Saudi corporations, or by joint Saudi-U.S. corporate partnerships . Just months ago, Exxon Mobil, the world's
Can Americans who are not Muslims truly comprehend how morally offensive this overwhelming U.S. occupying presence in their holy land
largest corporation, reached an agreement with the Saudi government to develop gas projects worth between $20 to $26 billion.
deaths of thousands of children -- that help to create the very conditions for extremist violence to flourish.
There is a direct linkage between the terrible events of September 11 and the politics represented by the
United Nations World Conference Against Racism held in Durban, South Africa, only days prior to the terrorist
attacks. The U.S. government in Durban opposed the definition of slavery as "a crime against humanity." It
refused to acknowledge the historic and contemporary effects of colonialism, racial segregation and apartheid
on the underdevelopment and oppression of the non-European world. It polemically manipulated the charge of antiSemitism to evade discussions concerning the right of self-determination for the Palestinian people. world's subaltern masses
represented at Durban sought to advance a new global discussion about the political economy of racism -- and the
United States insulted the entire international community. Should we therefore be surprised that Palestinian children
celebrate in the streets of their occupied territories when they see televised images of our largest buildings being destroyed? Should we
be shocked that hundreds of protest marches in opposition to the U.S. bombing of Afghanistan are being held throughout the world?
The majority of dark humanity is saying to the United States that racism and militarism are not the solutions
to the world's major problems. Transnational capitalism and the repressive neoliberal policies of structural adjustment represent a
dead end for the developing world. We can only end the threat of terrorism by addressing constructively the routine
violence of poverty, hunger and exploitation which characterizes the daily existence of several billion people
on this planet. Racism is, in the final analysis only another form of violence. To stop the violence of
terrorism, we must stop the violence of racism and class inequality. To struggle for peace, to find new paths
toward reconciliation across the boundaries of religion, culture and color, is the only way to protect our cities,
our country and ourselves from the violence of terrorism. Because without justice, there can be no peace.
Impact Debate
researchers discovered that the more closely police officers unconsciously associated black
youths with apes, the more likely they were to have used force against black children
throughout the course of their careers.21 The recognition that implicit racial biases can
cause racially disparate effects, even in the absence of conscious bias, is becoming
increasingly commonplace in mainstream discussions of police violence.22 This science
demonstrates that even when people are acting in identical ways, implicit racial bias places black citizens more at risk of mistaken judgments of danger and
criminality. As a result, they are more likely to be shot, more likely to be dehumanized, and more likely to be seen as deserving of an officers use of force.23 While
significant attention has been paid to implicit anti-black racial bias, a sister concept, implicit white favoritism, has received almost no attention in the legal literature. I
am only aware of one law review article on the subject.24 In that article, Professors Robert Smith, Justin Levinson, and Zo Robinson explain that implicit white
favoritism is the automatic association of positive stereotypes and attitudes with members of a favored group, leading to preferential treatment for persons of that
group. In the context of the American criminal justice system, implicit favoritism is white favoritism.25 While the concept of implicit white favoritism is new, critical
race scholars have long identified white supremacy as a central building block of racial subordination.26 Now, social psychological evidence provides
Extinction Impact
Isolation of racially oppressed groups leads to extinction.
MARABLE Director of the Institute for Research in African American Studies
1984
Manning-Professor of History @ Columbia University; Speaking Truth to Power: Essays on Race, Resistance and
Radicalism; p. 198-199.
Black Americans also comprehend that peace is not the absence of conflict. As long
as institutional racism, apartheid, and social class inequality exist, social tensions
will erupt into confrontations. Most blacks recognize that peace is the realization
of social justice and human dignity for all nations and historically oppressed
peoples. Peace more than anything else is the recognition of the oneness of
humanity. As Paul Robeson, the great black artist and activist, observed in his autobiographical work Here I
Stand, I learned that the essential character of a nation is determined not by the tipper classes, but by the
common people, and that the Common people of all nations are truly brothers in the great family of mankind.
aesthetics, scientific inquiry, and social studies are directly or indirectly linked to
the material conditions of human beings, and the existing set of power
relationships which dictates the policies of the modern state. When intellectual
artists fail to combat racial or gender inequality, or the virus of anti-Semitism,
their creative energies may indirectly contribute to the ideological justification for
prejudice and social oppression. This is equally the case for the problem of war
and peace. Through the bifurcation of our moral and social consciences against the cold abstractions of
research and value-free social science, we may console ourselves by suggesting that we play 110 role in the
escalation of the Cold War political culture. By hesitating to dedicate ourselves and our work
to the pursuit of peace and social justice, we inevitably contribute to the dynamics
of national chauvinism, Militarism, and perhaps set the ideological basis necessary
for World War III. Paul Robeson, during the Spanish Civil War, expressed the perspective of the black Peace
tradition as a passionate belie in humanity: Every artist, every scientist must decide, now, where he stands, life
has no alternative. There are no impartial observers. The commitment to contest public dogmas, the recognition
that we share with the Soviet people a Community of social, economic, and cultural interests, force the intellectual
spectactularization of black pain and racist conceptions of Negro nature as carefree, infantile, hedonistic, and
indifferent to suffering and to an interested misreading of the interdependence of labor and song common among the
enslaved.14 The constitution of blackness as an abject and degraded condition and the fascination with the others enjoyment went hand in
hand. Moreover, blacks were envisioned fundamentally as vehicles for white enjoyment, in all ol its sundry and unspeakable expressions; this was
as much the consequence of the chattel status of the captive as it was of the excess enjoyment imputed to the other, for those forced to dance on
the decks of slave ships crossing the Middle Passage, slep it up lively on the auction block, and amuse the master and his friends were seen 11s
the purveyors of pleasure. The amazing popularity of the darkies of the minstrel stage must be considered in this light.
Contending variants of racism, ranging from the proslavery plantation pastoralism to the romantic racialism of abolitionists,
similarly constituted the African as childish, primitive, contented, and endowed with great mimetic capacities. Essentially, these characteristics
defined the infamous and renowned Sambo. This history is of central importance when evaluating the politics of pleasure, the uses of slave
property, the constitution of the subject, and the tactics of resistance. Indeed, the convergence of terror and enjoyment cannot be understood
outside it. The pageantry of the coffle, stepping it up lively on the auction block, going before the master, and the
blackface mask of minstrelsy and melodrama all evidenced the entanglements of terror and enjoyment . Above all, the
simulated jollity and coerced festivity of the slave trade and the instrumental recreations of plantation management document the investment in
and obsession with black enjoyment and the significance of these orchestrated amusements as part of a larger effort to dissimulate the extreme
violence of the institution and disavow the pain of captivity. Indeed, the transubstantiation of abjection into contentment suggested that the
traumas of slavery were easily redressed and, likewise, the prevalence of black song confirmed blacks restricted sentience and immunity to
sorrow. Most important, enjoyment defined the relation of the dominant race to the enslaved. In other words, the nefarious uses of chattel
licensed by the legal and social relations of slavery articulated the nexus of pleasure and possession and bespoke the
critical role of diversion in securing the relations of bondage. In this way, enjoyment disclosed the sentiments and expectations of
the peculiar institution
Aff Answers
Perm
Perm : View the aff as a starting point for change. Radical politics best serve the needs of
black people when they start with the state
Kazin 11 (Michael, History @ Georgetown, Has the US Left Made a Difference, Dissent Spring p. 52-54)
But when political radicals
just one
period of about four decadesfrom the late 1870s to the end of the First World War could radicals authentically claim
to represent more than a tiny number of Americans who belonged to what was, and remains, the
majority of the population: white Christians from the working and lower-middle class. At the time, this group included Americans
from various trades and regions who condemned growing corporations for controlling the marketplace, corrupting politicians, and degrading civic
morality. But this period ended after the First World Wardue partly to the epochal split in the international socialist movement. Radicals lost
most of the constituency they had gained among ordinary white Christians and have never been able to regain it. Thus, the wageearning masses
who voted for Socialist, Communist, and Labor parties elsewhere in the industrial world were almost entirely lost to the American Leftand
deeply skeptical about the vision of solidarity that inspired the great welfare states of Europe. Both before and after this period, the public
face and voice of the Left emanated from an uneasy alliance: between men and women from
elite backgrounds and those from such groups as Jewish immigrant workers and plebeian blacks whom most
Americans viewed as dangerous outsiders. This was true in the abolitionist movementwhen such New England
brahmins as Wendell Phillips and Maria Weston Chapman fought alongside Frederick Douglass and Sojourner
Truth. And it was also the case in the New Left of the 1960s, an unsustainable alliance of white
students from elite colleges and black people like Fannie Lou Hamer and Huey Newton from the ranks of the working
poor. It has always been difficult for these top and- bottom insurgencies to present themselves as plausible alternatives to the major parties, to
convince more than a small minority of voters to embrace their program for sweeping change. Radicals did help to catalyze mass movements. But
furious internal conflicts, a
penchant for dogmatism, and hostility toward both nationalism and organized religion helped
make the political Left a taste few Americans cared to acquire. However, some of the same qualities that alienated
leftists from the electorate made them pioneers in generating an alluringly rebellious culture. Talented orators, writers, artists, and academics
associated with the Left put forth new ideas and lifestyles that stirred the imagination of many Americans, particularly young ones, who felt
stifled by orthodox values and social hierarchies. These ideological pioneers also influenced forces around the world that adapted the culture of
the U.S. Left to their own purposesfrom the early sprouts of socialism and feminism in the1830s to the subcultures of black power, radical
feminism, and gay liberation in the 1960s and 1970s. Radical ideas about race, gender, sexuality, and social justice did not need to win votes to
become popular. They just required an audience. And leftists who were able to articulate or represent their views in creative ways often found
one. Arts created to serve political ends are always vulnerable to criticism. Indeed, some radicals deliberately gave up their search for the sublime
to concentrate on the merely persuasive. But as George Orwell, no aesthetic slouch, observed, the opinion that art should have nothing to do
with politics is itself a political attitude. In a sense, the radicals
its counterparts around the worldstruggled to establish a new order animated by a desire for social fraternity. The labor motto An injury to one is an injury to all rippled far beyond picket
lines and marches of the unemployed. But American leftists who articulated this credo successfully did so in a patriotic and often religious key, rather than by preaching the grim inevitability of
class struggle. Such radical social gospelers as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Edward Bellamy, and Martin Luther King, Jr., gained more influence than did those organizers who espoused secular,
Marxian views. Particularly during times of economic hardship and war, radicals promoted collectivist ends by appealing to the wisdom of the people at large. To gain a sympathetic hearing,
the Left always had to demand that the national faith apply equally to everyone and oppose those who wanted to reserve its use for privileged groups and undemocratic causes. But it was not
always possible to wrap a movements destiny in the flag. America is a trap, writes the critic Greil Marcus, its promises and dreamsare too much to live up to and too much to escape.
Dialogue
They cant solve our affirmative--The language games of the alternative are bad for
dialogue and makes collective politics impossible
Bankey 13
Brendon Bankey, MA in Communication @Wake Forest.The Fact Of Blackness Does Not
Exist: An Evocative Criticism Of Resistance Rhetoric In Academic Policy Debate And Its
(Mis)Use Of Frantz Fanons Black Skin, White Masks. August 2013
https://wakespace.lib.wfu.edu/bitstream/handle/10339/39020/Bankey_wfu_0248M_10473.pdf
The Afro-American literary tradition contains in it the character Esu, who is represented as the Signifying Monkey.
According to Gates, Esu is the Yoruba figure of the meta-level of formal language use, of the ontological and epistemological
status of figurative language and its interpretation. In The Signifying Monkey, he explains, the Signifying Monkey serves as
the figure-of-figures, as the trope in which are encoded several other peculiarly black rhetorical tropes. Accordingly, the
Monkeys language of 135 Signifyin(g) functions as a metaphor for formal revision, intertextuality, within the
AfroAmerican literary tradition. The Signifying Monkey views texts as having an indeterminate relationship between
truth on one hand and understanding on the other. The relevance of this interpretive principle for this discussion is that the
signifyin(g) takes place at Esus crossroads, where black and white semantic fields collide. Through black vernacular
structure, it exploits homonymic tension between common white cultural understandings of terms.37 Affectively,
signifyin(g) resonates in perpendicular universes to common white interpretations of terms to achieve the obscuring of
apparent meaning. To understand the true relationship of signifyin(g) to policy debate, it is necessary to reflect on an important myth that corresponds to the Signifying Monkeys
extended tradition. Gates explains: The action represented in Monkey tales turns upon the action of three stock charactersthe Monkey, the Lion, and the Elephantwho are bound together in a
trinary relationship.
The Monkeya rhetorical trickster figure, like Esu, who is full of guile, who tells lies, and who is a
rhetorical geniusis intent on demystifying the Lions self-imposed status as King of the Jungle. The Monkey, clearly, is no match for
the Lions physical prowess; the Elephant is, however. The Monkeys task, then, is to trick the Lion into tangling with the Elephant, who is the true King of the Jungle for everyone else in the
animal kingdom. This the Monkey does with a rhetorical trick, a play on language use.38 This tale corresponds well to the participants of policy debate. One can read the Monkey as the team
signifyin(g) on the Lion, who represents the traditional team. The judge 136 corresponds to the Elephant .
demonstrates the success of signifyin(g) as a strategy for winning individual debate rounds. Recognizing its viability as a successful debate strategy does not however guarantee its success at fostering resistance. At its core,
signifyin(g) is the black trope of tropes, the figure for black rhetorical figures that seeks to disguise the black vernacular from white audiences. While this serves West Georgias purpose of a survival tactic, it calls into question its
viability at fostering disalienation and acknowledgment.43 Instead of arguing openly, signifyin(g) disguises advocacy in tropes. For Tell, undoing the synthetic work of rhetoric and its tropes is a requirement for achieving the first
and final point of resistance. Similarly, Moten argues that the signifyin(g) tradition as forwarded by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Houston A. Baker is anathema to resistance because it arrest[s] black folks ability to challenge their
objectivity by cloaking that challenge in language. Rather than seek out genuine argument, signifyin(g) as public argument is infected by what Ruth Shively describes as a parasitic need for an order to subvert. In this sense,
signifyin(g) is more concerned with demonstrating rhetorical prowess than generating successful resistance.44 As a model of argument to foster black public voice and resistance, signifyin(g) is particularly suspect. Resistance requires
a mutual understanding to challenge opposing forces, especially in settings of debate. Shively writes: 139 At the very least, we must agree about what it is that is being debated before we can debate it. Nor can one demonstrate
resistance to a policy if no one knows that it is a policy. In other words, contest is meaningless if there is a lack of agreement or communication about what is being contested. Resisters, demonstrators, and debaters must have some
shared ideas about the subject and/or the terms of their disagreements. And a demonstrators audience must know what is being resisted. In short, the contesting of an idea presumes some agreement about what that idea is and how
Signifyin(g) presents a problem for resistance spaces of debate because it creates confusion about
the necessity of challenging normative structures. An observer of this form of performance is left without an
understanding of the necessity of an institutional challenge. Joyce Ann Joyce argues that, by avoiding direct contestation
in favor of playing the indeterminancy of language, signifyin(g) only exacerbates the Black critics estrangement from
the important social, political, economic, and psychological forces that shape Black culture. Instead of taking a discursive scalpel to
one might go about intelligibly contesting it.45
the abstractions that suppress black humanity, signifyin(g) leaves negative essentialisms in place as it is content to trope the trope. As a survival tactic, moreover, it fails the task of recovering
from social death because it is reliant on masking itself in the presence of white bodies. Returning to the original tales of the Signifying Monkey, Joyce explains: Relying on the power of words,
the monkey in the tale of The Signifying Monkey uses the power of words to manipulate the lion and the elephant so as to secure his 140 own survival. The monkey's survival depends on a
common understanding of language that he shares with the lion and the elephant. It is this commonality that the monkey exploits and destabilizes. Moreover, the monkey has to stay in the tree
until the lion leavesthat is, until the monkey's environment is safe. This need for safety, in this case the political and social safety of black lives, is the essential point that Gates's
poststructuralist ideology will not allow him to explore.46 Signifyin(g)s
tricked into believing that no challenge to their authority accompanies such public performances. Du Bois understands that an overt form of public acknowledgment is required for the cultivation
of a black public voice. And so he asks black citizen singers to reflect on the rhetorical potentialities of speaking 141 unmasked and in the open. White Americans must note the stresses placed
on public speech. Thus, in the space of this public acknowledgment on the ethics and emotions of African American speech, voice occurs.47 In the context of the debate between West Georgia
and Harvard, it is difficult to separate their victory from the new advocacy text they provided at the beginning of their affirmative. For the four individuals who determined West Georgia won the
debate, myself included, it was clear that the plan they provided met Harvards initial Framework interpretation. Despite the power of their advocacy which challenged traditional forms of
debate requiring plan action, they won largely in part because of the signifyin(g) act that began the affirmative. This raises the question of whether the remaining judges voted in acknowledgment
West Georgias ethical critique of normative debate or simply because they successfully tricked Harvard .
Visibility Good
Fugitivity is a bad strategy--- only public visibility and pressure on the government can improve
black lives
Blow 15
Charles M. BlowBeyond Black Lives Matter New York Times Online FEB. 9, 2015
The Black Lives Matter protesters took some criticism for what others viewed as a lack of clear
focus and detailed agenda. But in truth, raising an issue to the point where it can no longer
be ignored is the grist for the policy mill. Visibility and vocalization have value. In the same
way that Occupy Wall Street forever elevated that concept of income inequality, the Black
Lives Matter protesters have elevated the idea of inequity in policing as it relates to
minority communities. Protests following the grand jury decisions in the police killings of
Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner on Staten Island have largely died
down. Those stories no longer command front page placement or lead the news. The news
machine, hungry for newness, as is its wont, has moved on to measles and back to the Islamic States medieval murder tactics. But, as is often the
case, there was no full resolution or reconciliation. The issue of police-community relations was raised but not solved. The memory of mistrust
still wafts through the air like the smell of rot being carried by the breeze. What was it all for? What came of it? Where do we go from here ?
range. The Huffington Post reported in November that in 2013, 27 law enforcement officers were killed as a result of felonious acts the lowest such figure in
more than 50 years of F.B.I. reporting. That month, The Chicago Tribune reported that U.S. violent crimes including murders fell 4.4 percent in 2013 to their lowest
number since the 1970s, continuing a decades-long downturn, the F.B.I. said. Now the discouraging news. According to a November USA Today report, The
number of felony suspects fatally shot by police last year 461 was the most in two decades, according to a new F.B.I. report. Something about these numbers
doesnt add up, and it will be interesting to see whether the protests and the heightened sensibilities they brought to the surface will affect these numbers in next years
reporting. In New York, after Mayor Bill de Blasio and the police union came to loggerheads, the mayor skipped an opportunity to address the issue of the police and
minorities communities, and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton seems to be going out of his way to reassure the department at the expense of future protests. The
worry is that rapprochement may come to resemble appeasement. In this months State of the City speech, as The Village Voice put it, de Blasio hardly mentioned
policing, offering anodyne praise for the citys officers. This raised the hackles of many reform advocates, even among his supporters. Bratton has announced the
creation of a separate police unit of roughly 500 patrol officers to handle temporary issues like large protests. He has resisted Gov. Andrew Cuomos proposal for an
independent monitor in cases where grand juries fail to indict officers in the death of a civilian. And he proposed raising resisting arrest from a misdemeanor a
and legitimation posits: Rights have been important. They may have legitimated racial
inequality, but they have also been the means by which oppressed groups have secured . . .
the survival of their movement in the face of private and state repression . . . . [Critical legal scholars] are
correct in observing that engaging in rights discourse has helped to de-radicalize and co-opt the challenge. Yet they fail to acknowledge the limited range of options presented
to Blacks in a context where they were deemed "other," and the unlikelihood that specific demands for inclusion and equality would be heard if articulated in other terms. n86 In this passage,
Professor Crenshaw highlights the dilemma for black reformers posed by the dual, limiting/redemptive role that rights play for subordinated communities, and the
difficulty that CLS has had posing an alternative to rights that is viable for subordinated communities. [*293] While I share many of the concerns both explicitly and
implicitly present in this passage, my own dissatisfaction with CLS arguments regarding the disutility of rights does not replicate the Crenshaw or Delgado positions.
My concern with standard CLS disutility arguments, as well as critiques of those arguments, is that they conflate concepts of rights, individualism and self-interest. Those concepts can and
should be evaluated separately. What, then, is the "right" view of the rights dilemma? The arguments on both sides are compelling, especially to women of color who, in
jurisprudence that includes subordinated communities in the conversation on justice and still maintain a viable concept of rights? B.
Intersectionality, Multiple Consciousness and Outlaw Culture I argue for a reconceptualization of the rights/relationship discourse: clubwomen's practices
suggest that rights are not necessarily premised on individualistic self-absorption or even self-interest as such. Clubwomen have constructed
theories of rights in combination with, not opposed to, communitarian concepts. To respect and creatively respond to the complexities of these issues, we
from the model of binary opposites. The either/or paradigm does not serve the ultimate
goal of creating a legal scheme that speaks from the experiences of all. Characterizing the rights question as a dilemma reinforces the relationship to law and legal
n87 Appreciation of the complex relationship of rights and voice suggests that a but/and rather than an either/or approach would better serve. Professor Matsuda suggests "[t]hat those who
have experienced discrimination speak with a special voice to which we should listen. Looking to the bottom -- adopting the perspective of those [*294] who have seen and felt the falsity of the
liberal promise -- can assist . . . in defining the elements of justice." n88 Looking to the communal activity of the clubwomen and their outlaw culture provides valuable insights into strategies for
bringing an ethic of care and interconnectedness into political and legal discourse. Patricia Hill Collins notes that, although African-American women's experiences in communities have not been
recognized as representing an alternate ethic of interconnectedness, black women's day-to-day actions in fact construct a community based on a care ethic. n89 Looking to black women and outlaw
scholarship as being win/lose.
prove quite useful as a means of informing our understanding of rights and relationships. Rather than
adopting an ethic of care and relationships to replace rights as an organizing principle of jurisprudence, I propose
that scholars turn to those women and communities of women who embody an outlaw culture as a source of
guidance for constructing lives at the margins of rights. Outlaw culture involves the practice of shifting in
culture would
and out of identities. n90 Outlaw culture is an extraordinarily complex but/and intersection of
life outside the purview of law that still holds law to its promises. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said: We've come here today to cash a check. When the
architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution . . . they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir . . . .
Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check . . . . [But] we refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great
vaults of opportunity of this nation. n91 He was urging the nation to honor its broken promise of constitutional rights to people of color. He was saying that a promise
[*295] broken is still a promise. Like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., outlaw culture does not abandon the concept of rights: outlaws still have a claim upon the legal system to
the extent that the system is centered on the discourse of rights. Women in outlaw culture have also built a rich life in the absence of rights. Therefore, outlaws are an appropriate and
particularly helpful model of how to simultaneously hold on to rights and hold the nation to its promise of rights while using other, non-rights epistemologies for self-definition.
Affairs. The gap, the study shows, has been closing over time, but Midwestern states, and Wisconsin in
particular, are lagging in comparison to other states. In 1990, the first year of data the scientists studied, white men in the U.S. lived on average
8.1 years longer than black men, and white women lived 5.5 years longer than black women. Twenty years later, this gap had shrunk to 5.4 years
for men and 3.8 years for women. But the scientists wanted to know how these trends played out when separated by states .
"We've
known for the past couple of years that the nationwide gap in life expectancy between
blacks and whites has been going down, which is a good thing. But we didn't know at all how specific states had been
doing," said Sam Harper of McGill University in Montreal, the study's lead author. Although overall life expectancies for
both blacks and whites increased in all states, the scientists found that different states were
performing differently in reducing the discrepancy between white and black life
expectancies. New York, in particular, outperformed the other states, shaving 5.6 years off their life expectancy gap
for men, and 3.1 years for women. Wisconsin was the only state in which the gap showed a statistically significant increase,
meaning that the discrepancy between life expectancies of whites and blacks actually got worse. For women, the gap increased
by 1.6 years. In men, the data was consistent with no change in the gap.