Rwandan Radio

If this country doesn’t give us what we want, then we will burn the system down and replace it, alright?  –Hank Newsome, BLM New York chapter, on FoxNews…just in case you were hoping for ambiguities.

So I picked up a guy in Glendale last year, from a Spanish revival house up in the hills that easily could have been Barbara Stanwyck’s in Double Indemnity.  He was en route to a graduate program in Literature at Columbia University, and I asked him what he thought of James M. Cain.

Who?
You know, the author of Mildred Pierce. The Postman Always Rings Twice.
Never heard of those.
Really? You never saw the films?
Nope. Are they any good?

Glendale is James M. Cain-land. My rider had grown up in one of its historical neighborhoods, with literary ambitions, and had no knowledge of the man or his work. Now he was bound for the Ivy League, a certifiable cultural illiterate.  This amused me at the time, but no longer.  He was a harbinger of our frenzied anti-historical present.

Silence is not enough.

Last week I helped a friend in WeHo move his bed into storage. Driving up Melrose past miles of boarded-up storefronts he asked me what I thought about the Troubles. He’s a couch-surfing millennial and I figured I’d keep it friendly and meet him on safe ground. I told him I didn’t approve of looting. On that point at least we could agree, you’d think. My friend was having none of it.  The looting, the rioting, the assaults on police could not be separated from peaceful protesting.  They were on a continuum, merely left-handed and right-handed expressions of the same virtue, equally valid. It was not for us to question. He had contempt for the police:  “They were C students in high school.”

As we were talking we passed several dozen white people, mostly women, laying face down on the ground for 8 minutes, 46 seconds, under the instruction of black women. A month ago this tableau would have been shocking, but it already felt like just another afternoon in WeHo.

Now there’s this:

Raleigh News-Observer
Tony Webster, Flickr

Is there a limiting principle to statue-cide?  We went from toppling Robert E. Lee to Any Dead President Will Do in a matter of days. From there twas but a small step to Any White Man Will Do. Hans Christian Heg, who fought on the Union side and fell at Chickamauga.    Miguel de Cervantes, enslaved by Barbary pirates. Ulysses S. Grant, bulldozer of the Confederacy.  Inevitably, they now wish to topple Lincoln.

How the decapitators mimic the lynch mobs of yore! The chain around the neck, the sailor-like tugging, the great cheer as the bronze hits the concrete like a felled tree, the dragging and defiling of the corpse…this is the pleasure principle at work, an end unto itself.

Then, because it’s a day ending in Y, the Mayors thank the mob for its thirsts of anger.  White women in D.C. verbally degrade black police officers lined up to protect monuments. In Seattle, white volunteers unironically enforce a “Blacks Only” segregation zone in a public park.  America is now a perpetual Onion story but without the wry chuckle.  Nothing is funny anymore, especially the absurd.  Well, it is, but we are living in the time of You’re Not Allowed To Say So™.

How do we put the brakes on this thing?

Beneath the performative grief and the masochistic religious scenes of white contrition, a dark new normal is upon us: urban police are no longer handcuffing lawbreakers.  Gun crimes? Sure.  But anything short of that is an open question if you are proclaiming fealty to Team BLM. This is not intended to be a passing phase. This is a structural alteration.

What comes after statues?  Take a guess. Think of it as a dress rehearsal.

What is my Los Angeles breaking point?  What would drive me from my city? I don’t yet know.  Well, I sort of do. Kneeling, obviously, would be a red line. Self-denunciation I have pre-decided will not leave my lips.  But those things are easy to resist.  No, the tripwire will arrive sooner, and in a way I will not be prepared for.   What form will it take? This is something I wonder about.

I am blessed not to rely on the good political opinion of others for my income. Mrs. UpintheValley, on the other hand, can be fired at a moment’s notice merely at the insistence of someone tweeting.  I predict she will be asked in this coming school year to affirm the present madness.  One way or another, it will be demanded of her to assent to something she does not believe during a workplace struggle session designed for precisely that purpose. When she demurs, the clock will begin ticking on her employment and a chapter will close in a great teaching career.

The American media is now Radio Rwanda circa 1994: go forth and kill the Tutsis!  We are left with a question: am I a Hutu or a Tutsi?  To which BLM replies, choose wisely. To which social media adds, we can answer that for you.

6 thoughts on “Rwandan Radio”

  1. Half the US population has no savings, is marginally employed, deep in debt, and functionally destitute with no real prospects for the future. The majority of these people across the country are white. They feel like the bottom fell out from under them – because it did. They’re aggrieved that they did nothing wrong yet society has disposed of them.

    A lesser percentage of the population is various shades of black and brown. Many of them have been scraping by on fumes for generations while no one cared. They are The Undeserving. And things have gotten noticeably worse lately.

    You’d think these two demographics might join forces and direct their displeasure at the institutions and policies that were instrumental in the dismantling of the former middle class and immiseration of the working class. But no. Humans are myopic creatures. The Proud Boys and BLM folks are busy fighting each other. That’s a feature, not a bug.

    How does an individual or small group attack a regressive tax code? An international trade agreement? An exclusionary zoning regulation? A corporate subsidy? It’s all so abstract. But a statue is right there… Get the rope.

    1. Urban POC + Rural Whites = Unbeatable electoral coalition, and natural allies re: open borders, global trade, Medicare-for-all. You can see why Fortune 500 companies are happy to endorse maximal identity politics.

  2. As to the statutecide……Yes, the problem is most people are ahistorical. (By design of the Frankfurt School and Critical Theory and the rest of the garbage that has infected education for the past 50 years.) They know only of THE HERE AND NOW, and they judge everything from THE HERE AND NOW’s perspective. An English novelist by the name of LP Hartley used this phrase his “The Go Between” in 1953: “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.”

    One of the finest quotes I’ve run across. People lived differently, thought differently, behaved differently, saw the world around them differently….whether 50, 100, or 500 years ago. But good luck trying to convince anyone of that.

    As to your culturally ignorant grad student…..I must admit I have never read Cain, though I have watched both movies a number of times. I wonder if he’d heard of Wolff’s “Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak-Catchers (1970) either? That would seem a rather timely read about now.

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