In the right corner wearing the red trunks we have Q’Anon Theory. Enjoying 12 wins and 38 losses, Q’Anon is trying to make a comeback. In the left corner, wearing the black trunks, we have the opponent, the much misunderstood and maligned challenger Critical Race Theory. Critical Race Theory (CRT) comes into this match sporting a record of 25 wins and 25 losses. Both opponents have lost matches to Trickle Down Theory and the Birther Theory. The winner of this match will face the reigning champion, The Theory of the Big Steal.
This match will be judged by a panel of three judges. One from the right, one from the left and one dead center. They will use the “Rules of Scientific Procedures” to judge the match. The match will be scored on six criteria. The contestants will receive one point for a victory on each criteria. In the event of a tie, there will be a sudden death criteria to determine the winner.
The six criteria are:
The testability of the theory’s major tenets
The predictive power of the theory’s major hypothesis
The theory is empirically based
The theory is concise, coherent, systematic, and broadly applicable
The theory has the ability to explain the aspects of a specific area of inquiry
The theory has the ability to describe the causes of a particular phenomenon
Testability of Theory Tenets:
A theory may propose various tenets. That is the theory will assert specific things that belong with the theory. For instance Q’Anon Theory proposes that a group of Democratic politicians who are pedophiles meet regularly in the basement of a pizza parlor in D.C. to plot nefarious schemes for taking over the world. One of the major tenets of CRT is the notion that racism is ordinary and not aberrational. To measure the Q’Anon Theory all we would have to do is find a pizza parlor in D.C. where a number of pedophiliac Democratic politicians meet. This would be an easy tenet to test since the number of good pizza parlors in D.C. can be counted on one hand.
The tenet from CRT that racism is ordinary and not aberrational seems to me to be more difficult to prove. Indeed since most White people would say that they are not racist, I do not know how you could prove this tenet.
The judges score it 2-1 for Q’Anon Theory.
That makes it 1-0 for Q’Anon Theory.
The Predictive Power of the Major Hypothesis:
A key prediction of Q’Anon Theory is that Donald Trump would institute a series of mass arrests to break up the group of pedophiles and send them all to prison before they could destroy the world. This prediction has not come true yet, but it still remains a powerful possibility given his favored son status among many in America. No doubt if Trump gets reelected we are going to see a purge of his opponents that makes Stalin look like Mother Teresa.
A key prediction of CRT is that by confronting the beliefs and practices that enable racism to persist while simultaneously challenging these practices we will be able to eliminate systemic racism.
My opinion is that Trump will have a good possibility of getting reelected and I am certain that if he does, heads will roll, and it will be the end of democracy as we know it in the USA. They will continue to call it a democracy but with Trump knighted as President for life and most of his opponents in jail, it will not be the democracy that many people now believe in. As for the CRT hypothesis, I don’t think that we will ever eliminate personal racism and as long as we have personal racism, we will have systemic racism.
The judges again score it 2-1 for Q’Anon Theory.
That makes it 2-0 for Q’Anon Theory versus CRT.
3. The Theory is Empirically Based:
A theory that is empirically based is one that is based on facts and data rather than opinions and emotions. There is a lot of emotions on both sides here. Everyone knows how emotional the right-wing faction of white supremacists are. This side is full of hate loathing and hostility towards all things not white. Equally emotional have been the Black Lives Matter protestors who have engaged in numerous protest marches over the deaths of numerous Black males by police officers. I think the judges will find it hard to give either side a point on this criteria.
Unbelievable, the judges give both sides a point on this one.
That makes the score 3-1 for Q’Anon Theory.
The Theory is Concise, Coherent, Systematic, and Broadly Applicable:
No contest here I am afraid. CRT theory is anything but concise, coherent, or systematic. As for broadly applicable, it does apply to most white people, but the world is also full of non-white people. To illustrate what I am talking about, here is an excerpt from one of the leading textbooks on CRT.
“Our social world, with its rules, practices, and assignments of prestige and power, is not fixed; rather, we construct with it words, stories and silence. But we need not acquiesce in arrangements that are unfair and one-sided. By writing and speaking against them, we may hope to contribute to a better, fairer world” — Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic “Introduction to Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge. 3rd Edition, 2013”
I read the above several times before I could decipher what they are trying to say. This is a big problem for the Left since they are too intellectual and academic. No one can understand what they are talking about. Now you take the right-wing supporters of Q’Anon, and you have a group that is not hard to understand. Here are some writings from Q’Anon theorists.
Eliminate all communists
Eliminate all socialists
Eliminate all democrats
Eliminate all liberals
Eliminate all immigrants
Eliminate all non-whites
Eliminate all gays
Get all women back in the kitchen
What could be easier to understand? Nothing circuitous or incoherent about these statements. I am going to have to say that Q’Anon theory has my vote here. It looks like the judges all agree.
It is unanimous, the judges give Q’Anon a point on this one.
That makes the score 4-1 for Q’Anon Theory.
Well, that’s it folks. Even if CRT took the next two points, it would still be Q’Anon Theory 4 and CRT 3. The winner is Q’Anon Theory.
Stay tuned for our next match when we will have Senator Rand Paul face off against Dr. Fauci to decide who should get any more Covid shots and if the new Omicron Variant is real or just fake.
I want to introduce you to a very remarkable woman. Her name is Hazel Scott. Hazel was born on June 11, 1920 and died on October 2, 1981. I never heard of Ms. Scott until two nights ago. They don’t teach you about people like Hazel in American schools.
I was listening to a YouTube video featuring the pianist Dorothy Donegan. Hazel Scott popped up as someone else I might be interested in listening to. I listened to several of her videos which featured her playing both jazz and classical piano. She also accompanied some pieces with her beautiful voice. She is one of the most amazing piano players I have ever heard or not heard of. I soon found out that Hazel was much more than just a fantastic musician.
Curious as to her background, I got on my computer and found a Wikipedia which gave some of the details of her life. (See Hazel Scott)
Hazel was a singer, pianist, and actor. She was the first Black American to host her own TV show in 1950. However, I am sure that if Hazel were still alive today and writing her eulogy, she would say “Don’t tell them, I was a singer and pianist. Don’t tell them I was a Hollywood Actress. Tell them I fought for the rights of Black Americans. Tell them I refused privileges denied to my people. Tell them I refused to play in segregated venues. Tell them I refused to take roles that denigrated Black Americans. Tell them I refused costumes that stereotyped Black people. Tell them I used my money to bring lawsuits to challenge racial discrimination.”
In 1950, Hazel found out that she was on the suspicious list of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). A group that was on a notorious witch hunt against communists. Whenever, I hear of this HUAC, I think of the birthday party in Alice in Wonderland.
`I mean, what IS an un-birthday present?’
`A present given when it isn’t your birthday, of course.’
Alice considered a little. `I like birthday presents best,’ she said at last.
`You don’t know what you’re talking about!’ cried Humpty Dumpty. `How many days are there in a year?’
`Three hundred and sixty-five,’ said Alice.
`And how many birthdays have you?’
`One.’
`And if you take one from three hundred and sixty-five, what remains?’
`Three hundred and sixty-four, of course.’
Humpty Dumpty looked doubtful. `I’d rather see that done on paper,’ he said.
Alice couldn’t help smiling as she took out her memorandum-book, and worked the sum for him:
`To be sure I was!’ Humpty Dumpty said gaily, as she turned it round for him. `I thought it looked a little queer. As I was saying, that SEEMS to be done right–though I haven’t time to look it over thoroughly just now–and that shows that there are three hundred and sixty-four days when you might get un-birthday presents–‘
`Certainly,’ said Alice.
Do you see? If everyday is a possible un-birthday except your birthday, you may celebrate an un-birthday every day and get presents every day in addition to your birthday. Anything that is not “American” which I will assume includes: Mom, God, and Apple Pie, can be construed as “Un-American.” If you are out to condemn or harass people, it becomes an open-ended warrant to attack anyone who exhibits traits other than a belief in Mom, God, and Apple Pie. You have a 365-day open house to attack anyone in the USA who exhibits a philosophy contrary to what might be termed “Patriotic.” I find this rather scary since I don’ believe in God. I don’t like apple pie and I thought my mother’s cooking was terrible. My list of “Un-American” traits would take up several pages but I suppose I would be condemned simply on the basis of rejecting these wonderful characteristics of Americanism. By the way, I don’t like baseball, golf, football, basketball, or bowling.
Let us get back to Ms. Scott. She voluntarily appeared before the HUAC and defended her friends who were being targeted. She denied having anything to do with communism but defended socialism. She stood up proudly and defiantly in front of a group of fascists intending to end her career. And that is exactly what they did. One week after she appeared in front of the HUAC, her TV show was dropped from the network. She was as they like to say today “Cancelled” by this group of so-called patriots.
These hypocrites who would label anyone who believed in social inequality as “Un-American” but never identified the KKK as Un-American. These patriots would probably include the KKK with Mom, God, and Apple Pie and therefore call their activities American. Nothing Un-American about prejudice, lynchings, racism, discrimination, and attacks on minorities.
I put on some more of Hazel’s piano videos. Mesmerized by her flashing hands and her joyous way of playing the piano, I thought of the White racists in America who feel that they are superior to Black people. In my mind, I contrasted Hazel with a White Supremacist.
Hazel: Talented pianist
White Supremacist: Can drink lots of light beer
Despite billions spent on diversity and inclusion, new research from the Center for Talent Innovation finds that black professionals face prejudice, a lack of support from managers, and a cycle of exclusion that keeps them from the C-suite – New Study Takes an Unprecedented Look at Being Black in Corporate America
Hazel: Concerned for others. Fights for the rights of others
White Supremacist: Hatred for others who are different
Who ever walked behind anyone to freedom? If we can’t go hand in hand, I don’t want to go. — Hazel Scott
Hazel: Beautiful, elegant, aristocratic, cultured
White Supremacist: Tattoos, beer belly, swastikas
Hazel Scott on the cover of ‘Round Midnight.
Hazel: Brave, Courageous, stands up for what she believes
White Supremacist: Hides behind white sheets and a pointed white mask
Hazel: Juilliard School of Music
White Supremacist: Probably dropped out of high school
Hazel: Multi-lingual
White Supremacist: Hardly speaks good English
Is there an irony here or am I missing something? The race hating, immigrant hating, neo-Nazis with little culture or education espouses a doctrine of White Supremacy because he/she thinks that they are superior to Ms. Hazel Scott. I must be living in Wonderland.
Lucy Parsons had three strikes against her. Who will remember a woman who fought for the rights of women to vote and to be equal to men in 1900? Who will remember an African American who fought against White Supremacy and lynchings of Blacks in 1900? Who will remember an Anarchist who fought for the rights of workers against the giant corporations in 1900? Now tell me how many people will remember and even admire a Black woman Anarchist who dedicated her life to fighting all three battles?
Today, you would have to look carefully to find her name in any history book. She is often little more than a footnote despite being one of the bravest Americans who ever lived. I know of no statues for Lucy. I know of no stamps ever issued with Lucy’s picture on them. I know of no coins that were ever struck with a facsimile of Lucy. You can find several books written on the life of Lucy Parsons which prove her courage and determination in the face of more adversity than most people will ever know, but you will find no streets or buildings named after her either.
Context:
Lucy Eldine Gonzalez Parsons (born Lucia Carter, 1851 – March 7, 1942) was born in Virginia. Her mother was an African American slave. Her father may have been her mother’s slave owner. Of the three strikes against Lucy in 1900, by far the most egregious was her advocacy of Anarchism. Bad enough being a former slave in Texas. Bad enough being a woman who does not know her place in society. But when you add to this mix, the fact that she was an avowed, dedicated, and passionate Anarchist, you now have a recipe for a hate that to this day has not subsided in the country.
There is still racism in America, yes. There is still sexism in America, yes. However, these are becoming increasingly unacceptable in America. The #MeToo Movement and the Black Lives Matter Movement have emerged as new armies to lead a rising tide of protests directed against these two evils. But where is the movement against giant corporations that relegates workers to second class citizens? Corporations where senior managers make 400 times what the average worker makes. Corporations where unions are denigrated and ever so much care is made to prevent workers from forming or joining a union. Corporations that on a whim will close a factory and take their plants to another country. Corporations that pay less taxes than a worker in those corporations.
“Never be deceived that the rich will allow you to vote away their wealth.” ― Lucy Parsons: Freedom, Equality & Solidarity – Writings & Speeches, 1878-1937
Lucy was a feminist and a woman who fought against white supremacy and corporate greed in a time when either position would make her an outcast. However, nothing in 1900 or in 2020 America could be a worse stigma than to be labeled as an Anarchist. Americans have been brainwashed to hate Socialists, Communists and Anarchists. Among the three, Anarchists are easily the most reviled, hated and despised in this country. When the average person thinks of an Anarchist, they conjure up a picture of a wild unkempt unshaven dirty man in a large overcoat. The man has hidden a bomb somewhere in the middle of a capitalist icon like the NY Stock Exchange or the WorldTrade Center and he has timed it to explode in the middle of a busy business day. His purpose is to kill as many capitalists as he can.
“Strike not for a few cents more an hour, because the price of living will be raised faster still, but strike for all you earn, be content with nothing less.” — Lucy Parsons
Do you know what Anarchists want? Do you know what Anarchists Believe? Wikipedia gives the following summary for the theory of Anarchism:
“Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that rejects all involuntary, coercive forms of hierarchy. It calls for the abolition of the state which it holds to be undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful. It is usually described alongside libertarian Marxism as the libertarian wing (libertarian socialism) of the socialist movement and as having a historical association with anti-capitalism and socialism.” — Wikipedia
I will not deny that there have been examples of extremism among Anarchists. There have certainly been bombings and attacks against symbols of capitalism. Lucy herself at one time said:
“Let every dirty, lousy tramp arm himself with a revolver or a knife and lay in wait on the steps of the palaces of the rich and stab or shoot the owners as they come out. Let us kill them without mercy, and let it be a war of extermination.” — Lucy Parsons
But when you measure the violence perpetrated by the rich against the poor in this country, the scales would surely tip against the “dirty lousy tramps.” Measure the instances of violence by Anarchists versus the instances of violence by Corporations trying to prevent workers from organizing. Measure the instances of violence by Corporations against workers speaking out against racism and sexism in those same companies. Measure the number of times, Corporation leaders have gone to jail for white collar crimes versus the number of people who have gone to jail for trying to rob a bank. Without listing each of these, I can assure you the scales tip well in the favor of large Corporations against the average citizen. Is it any wonder, that activists sometimes lose their cool and resort to violence when violence is continually directed against them?
In 1886, Lucy’s husband, who had been heavily involved in campaigning for the eight-hour workday, was arrested, tried, and sentenced to death. He was hung on November 11, 1887, by the state of Illinois. He was found guilty of conspiracy in the Haymarket Affair, sometimes called the Haymarket Riot.
“It began as a peaceful rally in support of workers striking for an eight-hour work day, the day after police killed one and injured several workers. An unknown person threw a dynamite bomb at the police as they acted to disperse the meeting, and the bomb blast and ensuing gunfire resulted in the deaths of seven police officers and at least four civilians; dozens of others were wounded.” — Wikipedia
Mark the words above. It began as a peaceful really EVEN after the day before police had killed one and injured several other workers. These words should resonate today as not unusual behavior on the part of police everywhere in this country. Even today, we see peaceful protesters dispersed by police using violent tactics which are uncalled for. The police are called to “protect and serve” but many Americans today want to know who it is they protect and who it is that they serve. It certainly does not seem that they serve the poor or even the middle class. With few exceptions, it would seem that they exist to “protect and serve” the assets of the rich and wealthy.
I am an Anarchist Speech:
This particular speech was given by Lucy to help raise funds for her husband’s defense. Albert R. Parsons was a white Republican who had once served as a Confederate soldier but was now an organizer and labor leader.
“I am an anarchist. I suppose you came here, the most of you, to see what I a real, live anarchist looked like. I suppose some of you expected to see me with a bomb in one hand and a flaming torch in the other but are disappointed in seeing neither. If such has been your ideas regarding an anarchist, you deserved to be disappointed. Anarchists are peaceable, law abiding people.”
Lucy went directly to the issue. Haymarket had created an image of radical bomb throwing fanatics bent on destroying democracy. She started her speech by attacking this image and challenging assumptions regarding what an Anarchist was. She noted they were peaceful law-abiding citizens. Not an easy concept to accept when you understand that every force in a capitalistic society is aimed at protecting the greed and avarice that the government allows to reign in the marketplace.
“Do you wonder why there are Anarchists in this country, in this great land of liberty, as you love to call it? Go to New York. Go through the byways and alleys of that great city. Count the myriads starving; count the multiplied thousands who are homeless; number those who work harder than slaves and live on less and have fewer comforts than the meanest slaves. You will be dumbfounded by your discoveries, you who have paid no attention to these poor, save as objects of charity and commiseration.”
Lucy succinctly but powerfully lays out the reason that she and so many others are Anarchists. Look at the poverty that exists in our country today.
In 2018, the highest earning 20% of families made more than half of all U.S. Income
S. has the highest level of income inequality among the G7 countries
The income gap between Blacks and Whites has not changed since 1970
The richest U.S. families are the only group to have gained wealth since the Great Recession
If it is still bad today, can you imagine what it was like in the early 1900’s when there was no social security, no unemployment benefits, no pensions or retirement programs, no welfare programs and no workmen’s compensation. People were little more than wage slaves to an industrial system that had displaced small family farms and was hell bent on creating the greatest profits they could for the owners. It did not matter who was hurt on the job or who had a family to support. The early 20th Century production system was well depicted by Charlie Chaplin in his famous movie “Modern Times.”
“Well, the bomb exploded, the arrests were made and then came that great judicial farce, beginning on June 21. The jury was impaneled. Is there a Knight of Labor here? Then know that a Knight of Labor was not considered competent enough to serve on that jury. ‘Are you a Knight of Labor?’ ‘Have you any sympathy with labor organizations?’ were the questions asked each talisman. If an affirmative answer was given, the talisman was bounced.”
The jury to try the men accused of conspiracy in the Haymarket bombing was not impartially selected. The judge at the time intervened to ensure that a jury prejudicial to the defendants would be selected. Ms. Parsons destroyed the alleged fairness and impartiality of the jury process in her speech, but it would do little good. More than one hundred years have passed since this trial and I would bet that it would be almost impossible today to find a jury that would not convict an avowed anarchist even before his/her trial had started.
“Liberty has been named anarchy. If this verdict is carried out it will be the death knell of America’s liberty. You and your children will be slaves. You will have liberty if you can pay for it. If this verdict is carried out, place the flag of our country at half-mast and write on every fold ‘shame.’”
The thought that “you will have liberty if you can pay for it” rings true 100 years after Lucy spoke these sad and forlorn words. Today we say “politics and courts are ruled by the Golden Rule. He who has the money makes the rules.” We all know that it takes money to get a law passed or else why are there so many lobbyists in the halls of congress. We also know that rich people get a better break in court because their money buys them better lawyers. We also know that poor people fare less well with our law enforcement agencies than do rich people. When was the last time you heard of a police officer stopping someone in Palms Springs or La Jolla for a broken taillight?
“People who enter the criminal justice system are overwhelmingly poor. Two-thirds detained in jails report annual incomes under $12,000 prior to arrest. Incarceration contributes to poverty by creating employment barriers; reducing earnings and decreasing economic security through criminal debt, fees and fines; making access to public benefits difficult or impossible; and disrupting communities where formerly incarcerated people reside.” — The Relationship between Poverty & Mass Incarceration
The last line in Lucy Parson’s speech was “Bread is freedom and freedom is bread.” This line was taken from a poem called “Freedom” written by her husband Albert Parsons. The last four lines in his poem speak to the thought underlying this phrase:
When thou speak’st: Enough is done!
Break this two-fold yoke in twain;
Break thy want’s enslaving chain;
Break thy slavery’s want and dread;
Bread is freedom, freedom bread.
Those who work for others have no freedom. The wage earner depends for his bread on the beneficence of his capitalistic benefactor. To toil for himself and to earn his own bread is to achieve freedom for the wage earner. The attitude of an Anarchist is that all goods produced belong to the man or woman who produces them. In a corporation, all the work and labor are divided equally and thus the profits and outputs should be divided equally. The manager works forty hours per week. The secretary works forty hours per week. The production employee works forty hours per week. The Anarchist believes that since each works the same amount of time, each should get nearly the same amount of pay. An Anarchist would be horrified at the fact than in the USA, CEO compensation has grown 940% since 1978 while typical worker compensation has risen only 12% during that time. (See Report by Mishel and Wolfe, 2019)
It is not a case of “treat everyone the same.” No one wants a system where everyone is treated the same. It is a case of treating everyone to equal measures of equity and equality. We have a long way to go in this country before we understand how applying these ideas would make for a happier and more just society. We are still a country that believes in the idea that the more money and wealth a person has, the better that person is and the happier their lives are. Nothing could be further from the truth.
“Happiness comes from spiritual wealth, not material wealth… Happiness comes from giving, not getting. If we try hard to bring happiness to others, we cannot stop it from coming to us also. To get joy, we must give it, and to keep joy, we must scatter it.” — John Templeton
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