So when someone talks to me about white supremacy, imperialist expansion and capitalists manufacturing the political landscape for profits, I don't know how to respond. — Judaka
Fair enough. I'll give you something of a worked example of how I see it. After emphasising common ground, I've tried to start somewhere concrete and domestic, and the end of the post is more abstract and international.
Some common ground we already have; systemic discrimination against non-whites. I think we imagine the same kind of thing by that. That's also a form of white supremacy; an interlocking series of incentives and disadvantages that simultaneously affords most whites
relative advantages and some whites
gigantic relative advantages. Prosaically,
the chances of being in a position of economic, social and political opportunity depend heavily on whether one is white or not. That's a systemic effect; in this aspect white supremacy is a name for systemic racism that works against non-whites. It's well named, as it engenders
socioeconomic power for whites relative to non-whites. In this sense, if you believe that an economy and a state discriminate against non-whites, then you believe that the state and economy are white supremacist; white supremacy as a practice rather than as a political opinion.
White supremacy as a political opinion was used to justify the continual deprivation of slaves and their descendants. It was also used against the Irish and the Greeks and the Italians, who were later welcomed into the white race when it became politically convenient. Who is and is not white was a matter of great political significance; non-whites who are most palatable to those so empowered were and are more likely to be more included.
That sense of palatability relates to the political issue of which crimes are pursued, which are punished, and how they are punished. A black kid selling weed on the streets to eat gets fucked up by the police, a white kid in a private school gets a slap on the wrist for the same. And even if they were both convicted of the crime, the sentences would be worse for the black kid. You may disagree with the specifics; but we both know this is a thing.
Notice; the crimes that police
police are crimes that poor people do; like selling drugs to eat in a community with few legal job prospects. They are supposed to keep "neighbourhoods safe", but they don't
prevent crimes in those neighbourhoods which are heavily policed (poor non-white) nor do they address the conditions that lead to those crimes being a thing there. Most of what they do is
disproportionately imprison or brutalise people of colour for minor offences or nothing at all; a kind of forced eviction into prison labour.
The crimes which effect those communities every day are like wage theft, discriminatory housing policies, discriminating based on race for business start up loans. But that's not what the police do, if they "keep neighbourhoods safe"; they must do so in a way that disproportionately leads to brutality and conviction for minor offenses while doing nothing about the crimes that their denizens are subject to every day.
The power filter above being what it is, that's also a form of white supremacy; the crimes that prosecutors and investigators could work on to help those communities are not the crimes which are punished, and that's even before we start talking about the ludicrous police violence against POC's and that it's not punished, and that institutional reform was so distant it's taken a giganting uprising to force politicians into even
considering it.
So then we gotta go to those politicians; they're not dumb, they know the majority of people live in a way more similar to the subordinate poor than their wealthy and educated fellow politicians. Why is it that it takes a gigantic uprising for institutional reform of the police to be on the bargaining table? But all it takes is someone to fact check the president on Twitter for his administration to force through an unconstitutional executive order. Why is it that politicians don't seem to care about the issues that effect most of their potential voters, but they intimately care about bullshit like that?
Why do they make it easier for vigilante debt collectors to intimidate and traumatise already struggling families of their own accord, but it takes an uprising to consider the obvious condition of oppression POCs find their way in?
So what decides what policies can be brought to the table? Well, "vote with your dollar", thing is a tiny minority of interests has the vast majority of the money; and they leverage it to buy influence - it's a threat. The same flavour of threat that most workers and unemployed face every day;
behave adequately or lose what little livelihood you have. People respond to that on a gut level;
don't do this or BIG else, "big else" for recipients of large corporate donation is "you lose loads of fucking money". There's another pressure put on; corporate doners will only fund those who are close to their interests; vote with your dollar. So it
pays to be an advocate on political issues in favour of the corporate interests that have "voted" for you. Those with the money to fund politicians can shape the policy-advocacy landscape, and they do; a representative politics functioning as it should - those who are represented shape policy with their votes.
That institutionally cultivated indifference of politicians to the concerns of their voter base; that falls along race lines too, just like poverty. The issues that
can practically be brought to the negotiating tables of policy are not the issues that need to be addressed for a more functional democracy and a more equal society.
That's all domestic though; and policy isn't just domestic, it's international. When a policy is adopted, it's going to be in a
truly represented party's interests. Whose interests did the UK and US trained and sponsored coup of the democratically elected Mossadegh represent? Those who previously owned the oil or relevant company shares, which Mossadegh nationalised. Whose interests did the UK and US trained and sponsored coup of Allende serve? Those who owned the mines and agriculture and their company shares, which he nationalised. What of Lumumba, democratically elected to free Congo of the remnants of colonialism? US and Belgium sponsored the coup. Notice that the same adage about white supremacy being the flavour of our countries' systemic racism applies; the effected people are mostly POCs from the political south. The old power imbalances between colonial countries and colonised countries are still there; but the benefits are accrued through
business, and the suppression of their national interest by our agents of corporate interest we call democracies.
If you look at locuses of power; who is truly represented in our "democracies" with their dollar voting regimes; it's corporate interest that shapes policy, both domestic and foreign, and it takes people burning shit down to get
domestic reform out of those people.
People look at this stuff, like race separate from class, domestic separate from foreign, when the institutions that drive policy are international agents who use states as international vectors of subjugation and extraction; to the negligible benefit of those in the home territory, but mostly to the benefit of the interests they're payed to represent. If you're a member of the colonial power or its race in a business network of colonised countries; the difference between you and the subjugated is payed in interest on blood money.
And if you say "what about China", the CCP can go fuck itself too.