Zimmerman Verdict—21st Century Dred Scott Decision-There Is No Justice in the Capitalist Courts!
Workers Vanguard No. 1028 |
9 August 2013
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Zimmerman Verdict—21st Century Dred Scott Decision-There Is No Justice in the Capitalist Courts!
We reprint below a leaflet issued by the Spartacist League on July
17 and distributed at some of the protests that broke out around the country in
the week after George Zimmerman walked. At all levels—municipal, state and
federal—the courts are an integral part of the bourgeois state apparatus,
dishing out plenty of justice for the capitalist ruling class at one end while
workers, minorities and the poor get less than none at the other. The exploited
and the oppressed will get due justice only once the capitalist state machinery
is swept away through socialist revolution. The reprint incorporates a factual
correction.
* * *
George Zimmerman got away with the coldblooded killing of Trayvon
Martin. Not even a slap on the wrist, nothing. The verdict is the 21st-century
echo of Chief Justice Taney’s infamous declaration in the Supreme Court’s 1857
Dred Scott decision that black people “had no rights which the white man was
bound to respect.” Dred Scott was a slave, Trayvon Martin a black teenager
walking home from a 7-Eleven store with a bag of candy and an iced tea. But for
wannabe cop and racist vigilante George Zimmerman, the 17-year-old Martin was on
the “white” side of the tracks in Sanford, Florida, one of the “punks” who
“always get away.” So he stalked Trayvon like a fugitive slave and shot him
dead. This is what they call post-racial America, where a black man sits in the
Oval Office and black life on the streets is as cheap as ever.
The acquittal of Zimmerman—by a jury without a single black person
on it—was no aberration in the American justice system. On the contrary, that
system worked according to script. Here was a case study in the machinery of
courts, cops and prosecutors whose job is to maintain and defend a system rooted
in the brutal exploitation of the many by the few—a system built on a bedrock of
racial oppression, from chattel slavery to wage slavery.
The only unusual thing was that Trayvon wasn’t gunned down by a
cop, the fate of so many young black men in this country. The Zimmerman verdict
coincided with the release of the movie Fruitvale Station, based on the
last day of Oscar Grant’s life. A 22-year-old black man, Grant was shot in the
back by a Bay Area Rapid Transit cop on New Year’s Day, 2009, as he lay
handcuffed and prone on the floor of the Oakland station. The movie stands out
for depicting Oscar Grant as a human being with all the strengths and frailties
of a young black man in capitalist America. This cuts against the grain of this
society, where black youth are written off as violent predators, as suspects who
are guilty until proven innocent.
It wasn’t George Zimmerman on trial in that Florida courtroom, it
was Trayvon Martin. His “crime” was being black in America. After killing
Martin, Zimmerman was released without charges by the cops. Only six weeks later
did a state prosecutor file an indictment. The same prosecutor had just won a
case against a 31-year-old black mother, Marissa Alexander, who was given 20
years for firing a warning shot into a wall when threatened with violent attack
by her husband. There was no such zeal when it came to prosecuting Zimmerman. It
wasn’t that the prosecution didn’t have a case. The truth is that this wasn’t
their field of expertise, which is railroading black people to prison.
The judge ruled that race, the central issue in the case, could not
be raised in court. But racist fear and loathing of black people was at the core
of the defense case. By repeatedly pounding a dummy into the courtroom floor as
“evidence” that it was the lanky teenager who assaulted the far heftier
Zimmerman, they turned “the victim into the predator and the predator into the
victim,” in the words of black academic Robin Kelley. Contempt and derision for
the testimony of Rachel Jeantel, the young black woman who was talking to Martin
on his cell phone while he was stalked by the “creepy-ass cracker” Zimmerman,
oozed from the courtroom to the media.
When the verdict was announced, black preachers and Democratic
Party politicians scrambled to contain the outrage, appealing for peace.
Replying to the call for calm, Gary Younge wrote in his London Guardian
(14 July) column: “Those who now fear violent social disorder must ask
themselves whose interests are served by a violent social order in which young
black men can be thus slain and discarded.” The role of the preachers and
bourgeois politicians is to serve the interests of the rulers of
this society by maintaining people’s illusions in the “justice” system. This is
what’s behind Al Sharpton’s call for protests at federal courthouses on July 20
to pressure the Justice Department to bring a civil rights case against
Zimmerman.
Attorney General Eric Holder may be a black man, but he is the top
cop in the vast state apparatus—the police, courts and prisons—whose purpose is
to enforce the subjugation of the working class and the oppressed to the
capitalist exploiters. As Richard Pryor so incisively put it, “You go down there
looking for justice; that’s what you find: just us”—that is, prisons overflowing
with black people. As for the kind of investigations the Obama/Holder Justice
Department are fervently pursuing, these are mainly aimed at silencing
“whistle-blowers” like Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden for exposing U.S.
imperialism’s dirty wars, drone attacks and torture chambers targeting
brown-skinned peoples around the globe as well as their domestic spying
apparatus. The savagery perpetrated against Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib and
detainees at Guantánamo is but a concentrated expression of the systematic
brutality of the cops and prisons on U.S. soil.
Obama, the Commander-in-Chief of U.S. imperialism who keeps a list
of people for targeted assassinations abroad, used the Zimmerman verdict to
piously ask “if we’re doing all we can to stem the tide of gun violence.”
Actually, if Trayvon Martin had been armed he might be alive today, although he
would also most likely be behind bars. Zimmerman invoked Florida’s “Stand Your
Ground” law, which, like similar laws in other states, allows for the use of
deadly force by anyone claiming “reasonable belief” that such force is
necessary. In this country, any black kid in a hoodie is enough for someone to
claim “reasonable belief” of danger. By eliminating retreat as a criterion for
self-defense, these laws are a license to kill. And as shown in the case of
Marissa Alexander, black people are not allowed such ground to stand on.
At the same time, defending the right to bear arms is vital for the
self-defense of working people, black people and the poor. Gun control is a
means of enforcing a monopoly of violence for the capitalist state, leaving guns
in the hands of cops, criminals and racist vigilantes while the rest of the
population is defenseless. Gun control kills, and as the whole history of this
country shows, it kills black people in particular.
It took a bloody Civil War, the Second American Revolution, with
200,000 black troops, guns in hand, to smash the chains of black chattel
slavery. But the promise of black freedom was soon betrayed by the Northern
bourgeoisie, which allied with the Southern propertied classes against the
aspirations of the black freedmen. It will take a third American Revolution—a
proletarian socialist revolution that breaks the chains of capitalist wage
slavery—to finish the Civil War.
Many of those protesting Zimmerman’s acquittal have spoken out
against “the system.” But this has little meaning absent the understanding that
the working class is the only force with the social power and class interest to
get rid of a system rooted in the exploitation of labor and the forcible
subjugation of black people at the bottom. No doubt many view the notion of the
workers fighting in their own interests and in the interests of black people and
all the oppressed as wishful thinking. Responsibility for this can be laid at
the doorstep of the trade-union misleaders, who for decades have allowed the
unions to be hacked to pieces while turning a blind eye to the plight of the
ghetto and barrio poor. The labor bureaucrats’ accommodation to the rulers’
onslaught flows from their allegiance to the capitalist profit system and to the
“lesser evil” Democrats, whose job, no less than the Republicans, is to maintain
that system.
But there are real battalions of organized labor, like the
overwhelmingly black longshore unions in the Florida ports of Jacksonville,
Miami and Tampa. Their labor is essential to the profitability of U.S.
imperialism. In this lies their social power to take on the capitalist rulers.
In turn, such workers provide a critical link to the defense of the black poor.
The key to unlocking this power is the fight for a class-struggle
leadership of labor based on independence from and opposition to the capitalist
state and its political parties. The Spartacist League/U.S. is dedicated to
forging a multiracial revolutionary workers party that will lead the exploited
in wresting the wealth of this country out of the hands of the greedy and
corrupt capitalist owners. When the power of the ruling class and its state
apparatus is shattered, this wealth will be deployed for the benefit of those
who produced it—not least the descendants of the black slaves whose labor was a
cornerstone on which American capitalism was built. In an egalitarian socialist
America, Justice Taney’s racist decree will be buried once and for all and the
cause of black freedom will finally be realized.
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