New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. People trapped amidst squalor
and chaos in the official shelters. People facing death from starvation and
disease on the streets.
Most of the people trapped in the misery and chaos of post-Katrina New Orleans
and along the Gulf Coast were Black. When people took what they needed to
survive, they were condemned as animals and dangerous criminal gangs by the
authorities. What were they supposed to do—just die quietly?
This is what the authorities must have thought. In a hundred thousand ways
Katrina laid bare the unequal and oppressive relations Black people are forced
to endure under this system.
Why are the two major oil pipelines running out of the New Orleans Gulf area
called the Plantation line and the Colonial line? This underscores the reality
confronting Black people in this country. Black people remain concentrated
on the bottom rungs of this society. This is the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow
segregation and continuing oppression of Black people as a people. The sight
of thousands of Black people packed into sports arenas brought back haunting
visions of the holds of the slave ships which forcibly dragged millions of
Africans to the shores of the New World in chains.
But the masses weren’t going out like that. They defiantly went into the
streets to see to their survival. Some organized efforts to meet not just
their own needs but the needs of groups of people trapped in the mass shelters
like the New Orleans Convention Center.
The New York Times reported that: “On Friday morning, some young men broke
into the kitchen of the Marriott Hotel, across the street from the center,
fixed a gigantic batch of scrambled eggs, grits and bacon and served it to
storm victims.” A retired teacher at the Convention Center praised these
youth as “Robin Hoods”—bringing food to the people.
It is especially outrageous to watch federal and state officials threaten
people who were put in this desperate situation by government inaction with
imprisonment and even death. The Governor of Louisiana said, “I have one
message for these hoodlums. These troops (being sent into New Orleans) know
how to shoot and kill, and they are more than willing to do so if necessary.”
The Mississippi State Police Chief promised to deal ruthlessly with any looters.
This is Mississippi, where the police used to arrest people and hold them
for the KKK to lynch—where sheriffs and judges and preachers would often
join lynch mobs in carrying out murderous deeds. And this is New Orleans,
where a person’s racial ancestry was calculated down to great-great-great
grandparents. Being found to be even 1/32nd Black would subject someone to
a life as a second class citizen.
George Bush said there should be zero tolerance for any lawbreaking. What
about zero tolerance for a system that has not and cannot end the oppression
of Black people? Or a system that now threatens people facing starvation
and disease with official violence for trying to feed themselves and others?
These rulers have shown what they and their system are capable of in how
they dealt with this hurricane. As long as power is left in the hands of
these capitalist exploiters, we’ll continue to see the kind of suffering
seen in New Orleans and the Mississippi Delta area in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina.
It’s Way Past Time To Throw Off the Chains of Oppression and Get With the
Emancipators of Humanity!
Carl Dix, National Spokesperson, Revolutionary
Communist Party, P.O. Box 941, Knickerbocker Station, New York, NY 10002-0900,
866-841-9139 x2670, comradecarl@hotmail.com This article is posted
in English and Spanish on Revolution Online http://revcom.us
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654 Phone: 773-227-4066
Fax: 773-227-4497