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August 17, 2012
Encore: Confronting the Contradictions of
America's Past
BILL MOYERS: This week on Moyers & Company... Once upon a time in America.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: History is the building block of all knowledge in our society. And it is the
most important part of the most significant tradition that human beings have, which is storytelling.
BILL MOYERS: Welcome. This is once again public television's pledge time, when we remind you that
there's nowhere else on your TV dial that you can see programs like the one you're watching now.
Please take a moment to contribute to your local station.
Congress is in the midst of its summer recess, escaping the malarial heat of the Washington swampland
and the agony of legislative gridlock. Most of the members fled for home but many have run straight
into the arms of angry voters questioning whether the incumbents should be returned to office.
The clamor and dissent remind us of another hot and humid summer 236 years ago when the Second
Continental Congress approved the Declaration of Independence and riders on horseback rushed it to
the far corners of the thirteen new United States -- where it was read aloud to cheering crowds.
Perhaps, we will remember the Declaration of Independence itself, the product of what John Adams
called Thomas Jefferson's "happy talent for composition." Take some time this week to read it -- alone,
to yourself, or aloud, with others, and tell me the words aren't still capable of setting the mind ablaze.
The founders surely knew that when they let these ideas loose in the world, they could never again be
caged.
Yet from the beginning, these sentiments were also a thorn in our side, a reminder of the new nation's
divided soul. Opponents, who still sided with Britain, greeted it with sarcasm. How can you declare "All
men are created equal," without freeing your slaves?
Jefferson himself was an aristocrat whose inheritance of 5000 acres and the slaves to work it, mocked
his eloquent notion of equality. He acknowledged that slavery degraded master and slave alike, but
would not give his own slaves their freedom. Their labor kept him financially afloat. Hundreds of slaves,
forced like beasts of burden to toil from sunrise to sunset under threat of the lash, enabled him to thrive
as a privileged gentleman, to pursue his intellectual interests, and to rise in politics. Even the children
born to him by the slave Sally Hemings, remained slaves, as did their mother. Only an obscure provision
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in his will released his children after his death. All the others -- scores of slaves -- were sold to pay off his
debts.
Yes, Thomas Jefferson possessed "a happy talent for composition" -- but he employed it for cross
purposes. Whatever he was thinking when he wrote "all men are created equal," he also believed blacks
were inferior to whites. Inferior, he wrote, "to the whites in the endowments both of body and mind."
To read his argument today is to enter the pathology of white superiority that attended the birth of our
nation.
So forcefully did he state the case, and so great was his standing among the slave-holding class, that
after his death the black abolitionist David Walker would claim Jefferson's argument had "injured us
more, and has been as great a barrier to our emancipation as anything that has ever been advanced
against us," for it had "...sunk deep into the hearts of millions of the whites, and never will be removed
this side of eternity."
So, the ideal of equality Jefferson proclaimed, he also betrayed. He got it right when he wrote about
"Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." As the core of our human aspirations. But he lived it wrong,
denying to others the rights he claimed for himself. And that's how Jefferson came to embody the oldest
and longest war of all -- the war between the self and the truth, between what we know and how we
live.
Behind the eloquent words of the Declaration were human beings as flawed and conflicted as they
were inspired. If they were to look upon us today they most likely would think as they did then, how
much remains to be done.
With those contradictions of American history in mind, this seemed a good time to talk with Khalil
Gibran Muhammad. He's made them his life's work. Muhammad grew up on Chicago's South Side, a
member of the first generation of African Americans born after the victories of the civil rights
movement. He's the author of this award-winning book, The Condemnation of Blackness, which brings
the past to bear on race, crime and the making of urban America, and connects today's headlines to
their deep roots. He was teaching history at Indiana University when the New York Public Library asked
him to head the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: I desided right after college that there was nothing more important to
me than learning about African American history and culture. Really being able to learn firsthand the
experiences and contributions that African Americans have made to this country and to the world.
BILL MOYERS: The Schomburg Center is known the world over for documenting the history of all
peoples of African descent with a special emphasis on the story of African Americas. Among its ten
million items are classic works crystalizing that experience. I asked Muhammad to talk about how we tell
America's story without whitewashing the past.
Welcome to the show.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Thank you very much, Bill, for having me.
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BILL MOYERS: Why history? I ask the question because Henry Ford famously said, "History is bunk."
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's right.
BILL MOYERS: And you clearly disagree.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: I clearly disagree. And I think this is a moment with questions about what
the founding fathers intended, when they established our system of government. How large it should
be. The debate between Jefferson and Hamilton, about whether there should be central government or
small country of farmer republics. This question of what our original history is has shaped almost every
aspect of the American experience.
In other words, history is all around us. Whether or not it is an accurate description of what happened in
1776, for example, or what happened in 1865 is secondary to the point that people's ideas about the
past, people's sense of memory about the past, shape their own sense of identity and shape how they
imagine the world should be. And therefore, in my opinion, history is the building block of all knowledge
in our society. And it is the most important part of the most significant tradition that human beings
have, which is storytelling.
BILL MOYERS: But how do we know to trust the past or which part of the past to trust? Because as you
say, history is storytelling. And we all tend to reach for the facts that confirm our story, confirm our
narrative, our interpretation of the past. So how do we learn to trust which part of the past?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Historians, professional historians will be the first to admit that history is
about interpretation. It's about taking a fragmentary record and crafting an argument and defending
that argument based on evidence. It's very little different than what lawyers do or Supreme Court
justices do when they try to argue the merits of a case.
BILL MOYERS: But when you hear someone invoke Thomas Jefferson, what image comes to mind?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: I tend to think of Jefferson's ideas that gave birth to this republic with a
whole lot of contradiction. And in that regard, I don't think of Thomas Jefferson as exceptional. The
fundamental conundrum that was established in this country in spite of Thomas Jefferson's ideas about
independence was that they resolved that slavery would exist after the revolution.
BILL MOYERS: And I, well, I ask that question, because it raises the argument, the story -- which story do
you believe of whether this reflected their hypocrisy or their humanity? And therefore is an eternal
reality that we want to do good things and we believe certain ideas and ideals, but we also act
otherwise.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: So it does. Contradiction is part of the human experience. We wrestle
with it every single day, whether we admit it or not. Thomas Jefferson and half of the other slaveholders
who were presidents, all lived daily contradictions.
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They could literally look out their windows and see enslaved people in the land of the free and the
home of the brave, so on and so forth. But the fact of the matter is that they had a great responsibility
for building what would become American democracy. And in that regard, they failed miserably.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah, it took me a long time, long past college and even graduate school, to figure out
that eight of the first ten of our presidents were enriched by their ownership of capital, land or slaves.
We were never taught that these men actually created a government, a constitution designed to protect
the further acquisition of property for the privileged classes. Which that just didn't get discussed.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Well, it's also the difference between an individual living a contradiction
in terms of enslaving another as a proponent of freedom. And the ways in which those same individuals
helped to build philosophical and ideological justifications for enslavement. And again, that's where
things get a little trickier. So of course Thomas Jefferson penned "Notes on the State of Virginia" in 1787,
which was effectively one of the first scientific arguments for why black people should be treated
differently from whites, by virtue of their racial inferiority.
In other words, the scientific notion that black people were fundamentally different, whether it was in
hair texture or in body odor, which is all part of Thomas Jefferson's analysis, gave birth to the enduring
justification that even in America, even in a place that represented a tradition of republicanism in the
world, the first modern democracy, that you could actually reconcile freedom and slavery, as long as the
people who were enslaved were not equal citizens, were not made of the stuff of equal humanity.
BILL MOYERS: Well, then you had to construct a system that made sure they could never be seen to be
equal members of society?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Correct. Well, that system was already self-reinforcing by the economic
imperatives of enslavement. So you had the system that provided a modus operandi for reproducing
inferiority. But you had to explain it still. And it was to that task that theologians, philosophers,
scientists, eventually social scientists, journalists and politicians eventually weighed in and said, "This all
makes sense. It makes sense because these people-- I mean, from a religious standpoint, these people
are not of the same God even. That they represent a different species created by God to serve White
men."
BILL MOYERS: If you can remember, when you first heard the words "all men are created equal," do you
remember how you reacted to them?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: When I was old enough, and particularly in college, when these kinds of
documents, you have time to critically engaged. You're being inspired to pay attention. I can remember
having visible, a palpable sense that this wasn't true. That the framers had lied. That the words didn't
match the reality.
And that was just a response. I didn't have a sense of history enough then to sort of unpack all of that.
Because there was so much rhetoric of equality of opportunity. I mean, I can't overemphasize the point
enough. I grew up in the 1980s, right? I mean, so this is, you know, John Wayne is the president as
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Ronald Reagan. And in all of that rhetoric of opportunity, all of the sanitization of what King's legacy had
meant was part of the Zeitgeist of that moment.
And so to all of a sudden encounter those words in a moment of reflection and then to know growing
up on the South Side of Chicago that everything wasn't all perfect and equal meant that there was work
to be done. There was a reconciliation, a reckoning so to speak, that needed to take place. And for me,
that was exciting. It was exciting to have the space and the opportunity when I got to graduate school to
study it.
BILL MOYERS: Again, it took me a long time to learn that the man who wrote "all men are created
equal," also wrote the words, "money, not morality is the principle of commercial nations." And so I ask
you, the historian, is one more true than the other? Is it more true that all men are created equal? Or is
it more true that money, not morality, governs our polity?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Well, if we use the benefit of hindsight, I think it's certainly, history has
borne out that money not morality is the principle of commercialized nations. At the very moment of
course when this country was building its political infrastructure, the set of ideas that would animate
three systems of government, with checks and balances, with defined citizenship -- of course property
was crucial to who would participate.
And so it took us another 100 years to enfranchise Black male voters. And then another 50 years after
that to enfranchise women. So in that regard, history teaches us something about what the relationship
between citizenship and property was, which was a contradiction. It wasn't about all men. And in that
regard, even the gendered notion of equality--
BILL MOYERS: "We the people" did not include--
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Women.
BILL MOYERS: --blacks, women, Native Americans, right?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's right. Which is, even in this conversation, and let me say this very
clearly, the fact of what happened to Native Americans in this country in the 17th century, the fact that
it's still not part of the lingua franca of our conversations about this nation's earliest history is evidence
of how little it is part of our secondary educational experiences and our colleges.
In other words, I am obviously a proponent of historical literacy that focuses in particular on African
Americans. But even as I talk to you, even as we have this conversation about the Declaration of
Independence, it's almost an afterthought to think about Native Americans.
It's almost an afterthought to think about how the 19th century the moment of the expansion of the
frontiers of this nation, which really was an escape valve for European immigrants, who came here,
whether it was from Ireland or whether they came here from Australia as English indentures, was built
on the backs of land owned in the Indian sense by many tribes indigenous to this country.
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I mean, it's just a moment to reflect upon how just starting with the question of "What happened to
black people?" is not sufficient to understanding that at the end of the day, the very notion of
settlement in this country was about procuring resources for the purposes of wealth accumulation. That
was true for most who came to this country, maybe not true for a small band of Puritans who landed in
Massachusetts, who imagined the recreation of a very special, religious community. But even that vision
of American society didn't last very long. So it's certainly true, as far as I'm concerned, that over the last
225 years, Thomas Jefferson's second point about money-- has far outlasted and triumphed over the
notion of freedom.
BILL MOYERS: The Declaration refers to Native Americans as savages. They were written out, as you say,
of the story very early. Do you think it had something to do with the unconscious or even conscious
understanding on the part of the white slave-holding property-seeking race that we were practicing
genocide, we, the white race, were practicing genocide against these people? Maybe the word wasn't in
currency at that time. But they were removed. They were taken to a reservation. They were enclosed.
And that's where they spent the last 200 and some-odd years. Why did we write the Native American
out of the story?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: So first of all, our experience in the United States was already learning
from the experience in South America, where indigenous populations, Taino Indians in various parts of
the Caribbean Islands and in South America were first resistant to the encroachments of Europeans,
eventually fought against them, and showed such valor in their fighting against European encroachment
that there was no sense of incorporation or assimilation.
So their fighting spirit created a kind of contradiction of nobility, which was what eventually gave birth
to the notion of the noble savage. That these were a people who were willing to die to protect their way
of life. It was disease that wiped them out at the end of the day. That's what got the better of the
indigenous populations.
So in that regard, the pure devastation that attended to the original settlement of Europeans in the
Americas eventually gave birth to population loss that was akin to genocide by today's standards, but it
was done by way of germ warfare. And really in an unintended way.
BILL MOYERS: Did anybody ever teach you, tell you that Chief Justice John Jay said, "Those who own the
country should govern it"?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: No, I mean, it reminds me of a quote that George Walker Bush used,
which was that this is an ownership society and if you don't own anything, you don't have any say. He
didn't actually say the second part. But he did describe America as an ownership society. Effectively
meaning that people need to be empowered through the privatization of formerly public services for the
purposes of having a stake in it.
And this, of course, was evidenced by his attempt to privatize Social Security, right? But the bottom line
is that because of the significance of money in politics, because of the increasing wealth inequality in
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this country people who don't own anything are often at the whim and caprice of political and business
elites.
BILL MOYERS: Why do politicians whitewash history?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Because it helps them get elected. Why else do politicians do what they
do?
BILL MOYERS: This is pledge time for public television. Some stations will briefly step away from us to
ask for your support. For the rest of you, Moyers & Company will resume in just a moment.
[Pledge Break]
BILL MOYERS: I read just the other day that 76 percent, three quarters of college graduates are
unfamiliar with the Bill of Rights. And almost that many could not say who was America's arch-rival
during the 40 years of the Cold War. So pretend I'm a freshman in your class at Indiana University, which
you left to come to Schomburg. How do you plan to rescue me from my ignorance of the past?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Well, if I get to meet you, then I'm going to encourage you to take a U.S.
history course for starters. The problem is that our colleges and our sense of the public sphere are
shrinking. Colleges and universities are giving increasing weight to the STEM fields. Science, Technology,
Engineering, and Mathematics.
They haven't cut out the humanities. I don't want to overstate or say that there's a crisis, necessarily.
But there is a sense that university presidents, particularly in state university systems, have to be
responsive to state legislatures. And if those state legislatures happen to be Republican, there's a lot at
stake when it comes to what is the appropriate history lesson to be taught to our children.
And I want to point out that in Texas, for example, a couple of years ago, there was a move by the then
state regents to remove or to lessen-- the state's own history of civil rights activism, both statewide and
nationally.
They simply removed certain individuals. So Cesar Chavez got less attention in the textbook. And Ronald
Reagan and others got more. I mean, that, for practical purposes, in terms of number of words on page,
for certain acts of history--
BILL MOYERS: And they wanted to diminish Martin Luther King's role and increase, enhance Newt
Gingrich's role, right?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Right. So that in my opinion is of a piece. It's of a piece that both looks at
the college as a place where history is less important to the fact of making money.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics produced a report just two years ago, in late 2009, where it identified the
top ten growing fields for all Americans. Six of them were low-wage, entry-level service work, the
preponderance of which were all in health care. Basically taking care of an aging baby boomer
population. So what are we going to do about that? And--
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BILL MOYERS: You're not going to study history, though, are you?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Well, you are going to study history. Because if you don't recognize
what's at stake for wealth distribution and the fact that money has been a motivating principle for
shaping our society. Then people don't have a sense of personal responsibility for changing the reality
that they live.
They simply accept it that inequality is a naturalized part of the society. And they will imbibe or accept
anything that a silver-tongued politician will sell them. I mean, history is sufficient to making the point
that you actually have to protect gains that have been made on behalf of something called justice and
equality.
BILL MOYERS: Is that why--
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: The challenge is if they are historically illiterate then they cannot have,
they don't have access to those -- that store of ideas. And that evidence of experience that will help
them shape whatever they need to shape for this particular moment.
BILL MOYERS: So is that what you meant when you said recently that black history for young people is
quote "life saving"?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Yes, that's exactly what I meant.
BILL MOYERS: But that black history begins with slavery, with irons, with lynchings, with auctions, with
decades after decades of oppression and repression. How can you say it's life saving?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's interesting. Because it doesn't begin with all of that. And we could
debate the finer points of the character of what black history is, right? 'Cause that's what we're really
talking about. What is it that most people conceive of when they hear black history? Well, there is that
history of oppression. It is a unifying experience in the United States, in the American context.
But many people will argue that the cultures of Africa, many cultures, many tribes, many nations
celebrated tremendous achievements by the standards of the world, of the 15th, 16th, and 17th, even
into the 18th century before colonization. So depending on what it is you are trying to convey to a child,
you can tell them that before the white man came, if you go to Timbuktu, you will see a thriving
civilization.
You will see the invention of languages that preceded the lingua franca of the world today, which of
course is English. That's one way of inspiring people. And that's one way of defining black history. But
alongside that very trajectory that you just described, the one of struggle, of pain, of repression, is one
of survival, of triumph, of creativity. And so part of telling the story of black history is to celebrate that
ability to exist in a society that is working against you, is attempting to demonize you, and still be able to
triumph over it, still be able to produce original forms of art, such as jazz music.
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That's powerful. And that's empowering. But it's because of black people's political tradition, starting
with political activism in the context of slavery to this day, that America actually is a more democratic
society, is a society that has more equality than it did 200 years ago.
And that is also a powerfully inspiring history. Because were it not for black people, for example, in the
immediate aftermath of the Civil War, the South might have taken another 50 years to have public
education. It was because of black political representatives in state congresses in the late 1860s and
1870s that they passed legislation to establish the first public education systems in the South. That's a
major contribution. And it demonstrates how important making real democracy is. And this country has,
including many minority groups, including women, have to thank for that tradition of black activism.
BILL MOYERS: So I'm sitting there in the front row of your lecture at Indiana University, where you were
teaching before you came to the Schomburg. And I just heard you say there's a thin line separating the
past from the present. And I raise my hand. And I say, "All right, Professor Muhammad, if that's the case,
what does history have to tell me about stop and frisk?"
I ask that question, because our brethren at WNYC, the public radio station here in New York, recently
ran a series in which they reported that one in five people stopped last year by New York City police
were teenagers 14 to 18 years old. Eighty-six percent of those teenagers stopped were either black or
Latino, most of them boys. Last year, more than 120,000 stops of black and Latino; the total number of
black and Latino boys that age in New York City isn't much more than that. 177,000 or so, which
suggests that every teenage boy who's black and Latino in this City of New York is likely before he
graduates to have been stopped and frisked by the police. So you're a historian. What does history have
to tell me about stop and frisk?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: It tells us that it's an old and enduring form of surveillance and racial
control. So if we think about the moment immediately following the Civil War, there was the invention
of something called the Black Codes in every southern state. And those codes were intended to use the
criminal justice system to restrict the freedom and mobility of black people.
And if you crossed any line that they prescribed, you could be sold back to your former slave owner, not
as a slave, but as a prisoner to work off your fine after an auction where you were resold to the highest
bidder. It tells you something about the invention of the criminal justice system as a repressive tool to
keep Black people in their place, from the very moment where 95 percent of the Black population
became free. And it's still with us. It's still with us, because ultimately, as a social problem, crime has
become like it was in the Jim Crow South, a mechanism to control black people's movement in cities.
Just as Douglas Blackmon described in "Slavery By Another Name"--
BILL MOYERS: A great book, by the way.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: A great book--
BILL MOYERS: What happened to blacks after the Civil War, how they were freed.
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KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Right. The invention of convict leasing as a mechanism to-- I mean, they
had many sources, but one was an economic project to rebuild the South on the backs of imprisoned,
leased African Americans sold to private industry. And the net simply widened, because there was a lot
of money to be made in doing that kind of work.
In Douglas Blackmon's work, we learn how elastic were laws like vagrancy laws, intended effectively to
empower any citizen and/or law enforcement official to check the papers of a black person moving
freely along the world. And if you couldn't prove that you were currently employed, bound to a tenant
farming contract or a sharecropping agreement, then you were by definition a vagrant, by definition a
criminal, and subject to, in this case, convict leasing. So if you're a sharecropper and you're being
cheated by the white landowner. And you tell him to go to hell and you step away. He can call the police
and say, "This person left my property. And they don't have a job. They're a vagrant."
You get picked up, you're done. You're off to a convict lease. The point is that that elasticity, that ability
to use the law as an instrument of control, the ability to use discretion is exactly what operates in the
context of stop and frisk. It operated in New York. Stop and frisk as a explicit policy is not that old, but as
an informal practice, "Condemnation" describes numerous instances.
It's happening in Brooklyn, in Harlem, in the 1910s and '20s and '30s. But here's the point. Today's stop
and frisk, if you look at the form that a police officer fills out, the boxes create tremendous opportunity
for discretion. So "furtive movements," "suspicious behavior." But probably the one that's most
indicative of this is one box that says, "Wears clothes-- wearing clothing known to be associated with
criminals."
What does that mean for an 18 year old black or Latino boy in New York City? He has sagging pants? Is
that sufficient grounds for investigating whether or not he's a criminal or not, or carrying contraband?
Does he have a white t-shirt? Is he wearing a backpack that could contain drugs? In other words, it's
incredibly elastic. And it--
BILL MOYERS: Does that include a hoody in Florida?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: It could include a hoody in Florida. In other words, it allows law
enforcement, in this city, just like it did in the 1870s in Alabama, to have the widest berth of discretion
to challenge a person, a black male on the streets, to ask them, "Where are you going? And do you
belong here?" And as it turns out, if you don't have I.D., you can be subject to arrest in this city.
There's a hallways monitoring program that the N.Y.P.D. uses to go into private buildings for the
purposes of making sure that there's no drug dealing happening in those buildings. But as "The Village
Voice" reported just a few months ago, a young man walked out in his pajamas to empty his trash.
He happened to come across an N.Y.P.D. officer. The officer asked him for his I.D., to prove that he lived
in the building and wasn't a drug dealer. He didn't have one. He was fined. That's discretion. That's
abuse of authority. That is the racial context. Because -- and here's where race really matters today. And
I want everybody to be clear about this.
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Why race matters today and defies the logic of Bloomberg, that this is really about saving black people.
And this is a colorblind public safety agenda is because no white community in America would tolerate
this kind of treatment in the name of public safety in its communities, period. You couldn't go into any
East Side apartment or any West Side co-op anywhere in New York City, and start asking 17-year-old
white boys for I.D., when they were out in their pajamas.
Why? Because their political power in this city and in other parts of this country is sufficient to get a
politician to question whether or not that's the America that we want to live in. But when it comes to
black and brown people, today as was true 100 years ago, they are subject to certain criminal justice
policies. Those policies in Alabama lasted way into the civil rights era. And stop, question, and frisk, as
informal practices, have been going on for over a hundred years.
BILL MOYERS: You have written a biography of an idea here. And the idea you're writing about is how
blacks came to be singled out, nationally, as an exceptionally dangerous people.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Sure. Well, think about it this way, Bill. There's no moment in time, no
moment in time exists where race is not a primary factor in the treatment of black people.
And so the crime issue, if we just equate crime or criminalization and racial stigma, there is no moment
where race is not an organizing principle for how black people's behavior is defined in American society.
That's the problem. And so policies like stop, question, and frisk evolved not because they were
invented in that moment, but because they continued in that moment. And immigrant communities got
police reform. And black people got police repression.
BILL MOYERS: The South I understand, but in the North, a hundred years ago, in your home city of
Chicago, blacks were only about two percent of the population, maybe four percent of the population.
And yet, stop and frisk became very popular there.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's right. And unfortunately, in the aftermath of Reconstruction, there
was a meeting of the minds between progressives and white supremacists. And the meeting of the
minds wasn't as we might think it was, because this was also the same moment where people like Jane
Addams and William Walling--
BILL MOYERS: Great progressive leaders.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Great progressive leaders started the NAACP. They were deeply
concerned about political disenfranchisement and civil rights. But crime was the great exception. And in
this one space, Southerners were far more influential in terms of telling Northerners that black people
were not ready for citizenship, that they were not responsible for following the rules of society.
And Northerners took note and essentially developed policies and practices primarily policing of urban
space. Policies like stop, question, and frisk helped to create the ghettos of Harlem, of Chicago, of West
Philadelphia that were in their infancy at the turn of the 20th century. And it was only on the basis of
criminality that progressives and other liberals said to those black communities that, "We're going to let
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you work out your own salvation. We're going to let you stay in these isolated communities until you
exhibit the bourgeois behaviors of respectability and law abidingness."
And all of this may sound appropriate to viewers listening today, except that the same didn't hold true
for European immigrants, who gave so much trouble to civic reformers. They didn't speak the language.
They brought old world cultural traits. They were loud. They wanted to peddle their wares all over the
streets. There were too many of them. They lived in really dense places. They were brewing wine and
other liquors in their bathtubs. Some were extortionists going around collecting taxes and duties from
small businesses. Well, they didn't say, "We're going to let you work out your own salvation." They said,
"We've got to get in here and Americanize these people."
BILL MOYERS: That's what the progressive--
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's what the progressive movement was about.
BILL MOYERS: -movement was about. Social welfare, public parks, job opportunities, social mobility, but
not, you say, for blacks. They were penned off?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: They were penned off. And they were penned off in a way that crime
became the legitimate reason and rationale for that segregation. In other words, crime among
immigrants and even native-born working class whites was understood to be a consequence not of their
moral character or of their cultural framework, but in fact of economics and class.
So even Europe's peasants, even Europe's marginalized and dispossessed, who came here in search of
opportunity, benefited from a civilizationist discourse, from a way of ranking the world's people that
said, "Any European, no matter how dastardly or despicable has the stuff of Europe, has the stuff of
civilization, with just a little bit of help, will be on their way to greener pastures." But black people were
still understood, even in places like New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia as being fundamentally flawed
in their nature.
BILL MOYERS: But you go on to say in the book that blackness was refashioned through statistics. That
statistics about black crime were ubiquitous. But statistics about white crime were invisible. Was that
deliberate?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: It was over time. So it wasn't that way from the very beginning. The
problem is that black people were enslaved. There was no point in tracking them statistically, because
they weren't a population problem. They were enslaved. Well, once they were free, the demographers
now turned immediately to statistics and said, "We've got to figure out how many babies, how many
black babies are born each year? How many black babies die? What are the diseases that they die
from?"
And eventually they turned to crime statistics. Their initial point in using statistics was not to celebrate
the presence of black people, but to determine how much of a presence, physically, black people would
have in the nation. And as it turns out, because enslaved people don't go to prison, they're dealt with
summarily as plantation justice. Now as free people they're going to prison.
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And in 1890, for the first time, a statistician looked up and said, "Wow, there's a disproportionate prison
population of black people. They're 30 percent of the nation's prisoners. And they're only 12 percent of
the nation's population. Well, as it turns out, if we just let them be, they will commit enough crimes and
go to prison and we won't have to worry about the economic resources that have to be distributed
amongst the Italians, amongst the Irish, amongst the Polish Catholic and now amongst the black
people."
And so the very notion of refashioning their identity as a criminal identity was intended to be a
mechanism to limit social resources on behalf of black communities. To effectively say, "Because they
are criminals, they don't deserve even education."
BILL MOYERS: You're not denying that there were crimes.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: I'm not denying that there were crimes.
BILL MOYERS: Black violence on violence. I mean, the book doesn't deny that. I want to make that clear
to the audience. But that somehow the black criminal became a representative of his race.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Correct.
BILL MOYERS: Right. "To think and talk about African Americans as criminal," you write, "is encoded
deeply in our DNA."
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Correct, but the question became, "Are we going to help black people
like we help the immigrants?"
BILL MOYERS: And the answer was?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: The answer was, "Because they are criminals, no." And that was a
rationale rooted in racial logic. It was a rationale tied to sets of ideas that privileged Europeans as people
who could benefit from the help of native white reformers, elites like Jane Addams, and black people
could not. It effectively created the circumstances that gave birth to modern segregation in our biggest
cities. So as those populations grew, the basic infrastructure remained the same.
BILL MOYERS: It was -- it's amazing to me, astonishing to go through here and find so much of the
evidence you've collected. You have even President Roosevelt telling black college graduates in 1904
that, quote, "Criminality is in the ultimate analysis a greater danger to your race than any other thing
can be." And one sociologist after another saying, "You blacks are your own worst enemies, because of
your criminal--"
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's right.
BILL MOYERS: "--nature." And that took hold in the ideology of dominant America, did it not?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: And that's the same dominant ideology that we have today. I mean, it's
not packaged in the same explicit rhetoric. But it has given birth to policies like stop, question, and frisk
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that Mayor Bloomberg has --consistently defends, Ray Kelly consistently defends. Policies such as mass
incarceration.
We are still living with the same basic ideas and arguments about the relationship between black
criminality and social responsibility, between segregation and public safety today as we were in the
1890s in this country.
BILL MOYERS: Here's the testimony of one of the most influential scholars of the time, Nathanial
Southgate Shaler, a Harvard scientist and prolific writer on race relations. Here's what he wrote in 1884,
quote, "There can be no sort of doubt that judged by the light of all experience, these people," — blacks
— "are a danger to America, greater and more insuperable than any of those that menace the other
great civilized states of the world."
He wrote that in the "Atlantic" magazine. Here's Hinton Rowan Helper, arguing that America would self-
destruct if it gave blacks the right to vote. He said "Negroes with their crime-stained blackness could not
rise to a plane higher than that of base and beastlike savagery. Seeing then that the negro does, indeed,
belong to a lower and inferior order of things, why in the name of Heaven, why should we forever
degrade and disgrace both ourselves and our posterity by entering of our own volition into more
intimate relations with him? May God, in his restraining mercy, forbid that we should ever do this most
foul and wicked thing." Now this is not talk radio back in the 1884 or 1904. These are prominent
scholars, Harvard, "Atlantic" magazine writing this. And you're saying that in some interior structural
way, these sentiments still affect how we deal with each other today?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Absolutely. We've got the biggest prison system the world has ever
known, a prison system, by the way, that came of age in this moment right after the end of the Civil
Rights Movement. So at precisely the moment that black people have their second shot at equality in
America, legally, legislatively, right? I mean, we could -- you know as well as anyone that we didn't need
the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the '65 Voting Act if the 13th and 14th and 15th Amendment had really
been sufficient to creating equality.
So right after that moment, even under Lyndon Baines Johnson, there is an expansion of federal support
for local law enforcement on the basis that black people's crime is a danger to civil society. And again, all
of this may make sense to a viewer and to a listener, if they didn't know that those same threats to civil
society, posed by European immigrants weren't treated in a fundamentally different way. That's the
point. Crime in and of itself was not sufficient to justify a punitive, law and order political response or a
set of ideas that exist today as they did then that saw black people's crime as evidence of some moral
inferiority, some natural propensity to want to hurt people or to steal things.
For the European immigrant in the hands of a eugenicist, that was all true. "These people can't help
themselves. They're a threat to society." But the progressives said, "No." And what's more telling about
the progressives is they actually got rid of statistics. They stopped using the language of statistics, "15
percent of all crimes in this city are committed by the Irish, another 45 percent by the Italians."
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They stopped talking that way. And saying that "These are the children of immigrants, who are
becoming Americans. And we must help them. We must put them on the path to success." That's how
they started talking to them. So much so, and this is an important point. By the 1930s, the federal
government started collecting arrest data across the nation. And this information is produced quarterly
and annually, it's called The Uniform Crime Reports.
So soon you will see in "The New York Times" the latest data, which tells us whether crime is rising or
falling overall in our nation's cities. That was invented in 1930.
But here's the point. This is a really important one. Prior to that Uniform Crime Report, which
nationalized and standardized arrest statistics, local arrest data was collected in Philadelphia, in New
York, et cetera. And if you pull out an annual report, the page would look like this, tracking offenses by
category.
Because it would say, "Italian, Irish, German, Scandinavian, Mexican," so on and so forth, all the way
across. It'd look like an Excel spreadsheet today. By the 1930s with the federal government
systematizing national arrest data and really becoming the most authoritative basis for understanding
crime at the local level and national level, guess what it was? "Whites, Blacks, Foreign Born, Other." That
was the for the first three years.
But 1933, it was, "White, Black, Other." So effectively, what it did was erase, it simply erased the
category of the white ethnic criminal. Black became the single defining measure of deviance from a
white norm.
So as long as blacks in that accounting showed disproportionate levels of any activity across those
categories, white was always normalized. And in effect, it made invisible white criminality. We don't talk
about white criminality. We don't talk about the white prison population. Nobody, no average person on
the street can tell you how many white men are in prison or white men between the ages of 18 and 35,
who are likely to spend time in prison.
Actually, the truth is the number is greater now today than it was 30 years ago, because the size of the
prison system has also increased the number of white men.
BILL MOYERS: So this is how black criminality emerges along with disease and intelligence, the size of
the brain?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Correct.
BILL MOYERS: As a fundamental measure of black inferiority?
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: Correct.
BILL MOYERS: With consequences down to the moment.
KHALIL GIBRAN MUHAMMAD: That's right.
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BILL MOYERS: Khalil Muhammad, thanks for joining us.
KHALIL GI BRAN MUHAMMAD: It's been great.
BILL MOYERS: That's it for this week. See you next time.
*****
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