The day after Independence Day in 1852, Frederick Douglass offered a timeless speech in Rochester, New York to the The Ladies Anti-Slavery Society. It represented a resounding refutation of national myths that persist to this day. Chief among them is the myth that slavery ended in the United States after the Civil War, when in fact the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution explicitly invites it “as a condition of punishment.” Today, in 2023, more Americans remain legally enslaved than were held in bondage at the height of the Antebellum South. As our nation celebrates Independence Day, it would behoove each of us to consider the reality that too many Americans either never learn, or instead remain too afraid to acknowledge. “There is not a nation on the Earth guilty of practices, more shocking and bloody, than are the people of these United States, at this very hour.” — Frederick Douglass What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?Douglass’ speech was titled “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” While he delivered his oration roughly a decade before the Civil War, his analysis remains painfully appropriate today, as millions of Americans celebrate the “independence” of a country built on genocide and forced labor that is the only one in human history to ever deploy nuclear weapons—against civilian populations, at that. He began by observing the bravery of the revolutionaries who rejected colonial rule, and the timeless vision expressed by our nation’s founding documents.
It bears noting that the Vietnamese Declaration of Independence authored by Ho Chi Minh in 1945 began by quoting its American precursor that helped inspire it. In response, America invaded, killing millions and dropping more bombs on the neighboring countries of Laos and Cambodia (with whom Washington claimed not to be at war) than were deployed during the entire period of the Second World War. Unexploded ordnance continued to kill and main for decades, and the ecocidal deployment of defoliant Agent Orange led to birth deformities and preventable illnesses not only among Vietnamese several generations later, but also the children of U.S. servicemembers treated like cannon fodder to serve the whims of Wall Street. That was far from the last time that our country would betray our founding principles. Douglass then turned from observing the bravery of revolutionaries and the value of our nation’s founding documents to the unfortunate reality of his era—and our’s today. He continued:
[A brief digression here I would simply add: “or, perhaps, to kneel on their necks”?]
It is difficult to muster respect for a country wielding exorbitant resources, an implacable dominance of weapons, and a self-marginalizing ignorance of its own stated principles. Across the world—from 1852 and still to this day—no country embodies that combination better than does the United States. Bipartisan imperialism continues under BidenSome might imagine that Douglass’ observations were historically accurate, but have been superseded by intervening events. They would unfortunately be wrong. In the years since Frederick Douglass observed the casual brutality with which our country once enslaved millions of Black Americans, the United States has:
Every one of those decisions was an object of thoroughly bipartisan support. Power concedes nothing without a demand5 years after his historic speech addressing the Fourth of July and reality of American despotism, Frederick Douglass again made history by observing the pattern of deference that enables it. in some respects, his prescience anticipated the much later wisdom of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., whose canonical Letter from Birmingham Jail paraphrased much of Douglass’ analysis. Speaking on August 3, 1857 in Canandaigua, New York, he said:
Having myself made public demands of an unjust system and discovered its continuing and bipartisan racist corruption the hard way, I recognize the blatant inadequacy of whatever passes for the so-called “left” in the United States. From public interest organizations that settle for advocating before ultimately co-opted courts to constituent groups pleading for reforms from career and dynasty politicians who ignore and co-opt them, even most voices critical of American despotism sadly continue to enable it. In that context, actual demands—of the sort that force power to consider concessions—are few and far between. That’s one reason to embrace them on the rare occasion that they do appear, and to recognize the profundity of those opportunities when they emerge. Beyond my work in the courts and non-profit policy advocacy, I’m most proud of my projects that created those kinds of opportunities, from organizing direct action to shut down the facilities of weapons manufacturers to a campaign that offered San Francisco its first contested congressional election in 35 years. I’m even more proud of an intellectually magnificent mentor, muse, and voice of moral conscience who stands in the proud steps of Frederick Douglass today: Dr. Cornel West. Dr. West’s candidacy for the White House represents far more than a presidential campaign. It embodies precisely the kind of demand that Frederick Douglass invited. Dr. West exposes the fraud on which corporate Democrats and President Joe Biden have long relied, and is uniquely poised to force the public reckoning that they have done everything possible to pre-empt. In his speech observing the vacuous meaning of July Fourth, Frederick Douglass began by praising democracy and the revolution that aimed to secure it. Nearly 170 years later, America has an unprecedented chance to act on the knowledge and insight that he shared. Or instead, the Sheeple of the United States could continue to sit on their hands and bleat as democracy continues to recede around the world, the climate catastrophe continues to race their grandchildren off a cliff, and weapons manufacturers continue to laugh all the way to the bank. In another era, a successor to Frederick Douglas and precursor to Dr. West, Malcolm X, observed that the choice before America is ultimately one between “the ballot” and “the bullet.” Having embraced entirely too many bullets—from a seemingly neverending series of mass shootings to an equally neverending string of wars and pretexts to sell weapons—America might dedicate this Independence Day to a demand at the ballot box that could spare us worse yet to come. Taking action inspired by Douglass, X, and WestPaid subscribers can watch a speech I gave in San Francisco on July 4, 2020 during the height of the protests challenging the contemporary slavery regime embedded in mass incarceration. It reflects on some of the same themes as Frederick Douglass, whose voice and legacy—from his speech 168 years ago to his public observation that “power concedes nothing without a demand”—have crucially informed my perspective, as well as my actions. Beyond standing with a liberatory social movement seeking human rights that have only further degraded in the time since I spoke in 2020, I remain especially proud to have connected the dots between domestic and international examples of American authoritarianism. To the extent my efforts as a public advocate have offered anything unique to my community and country, it is the recognition of global intersections—and opportunities for solidarity—that sadly elude most observers. ... Listen to this episode with a 7-day free trialSubscribe to Shahid’s Newsletter to listen to this episode and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives. A subscription gets you:
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