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- <text id=90TT0177>
- <title>
- Jan. 22, 1990: Genocide Mumbo Jumbo
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 22, 1990 A Murder In Boston
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- Genocide Mumbo Jumbo
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Some blacks claim they are being victimized by a white plot
- </p>
- <p>By Jack E. White--With reporting by Priscilla Painton/New York
- </p>
- <p> One side effect of the racial hysteria that enveloped Boston
- after Carol Stuart's murder was to strengthen a fear among many
- African Americans that they are the targets of a
- white-orchestrated genocide plot. That belief has become
- endemic in recent years, as crack has invaded ghettos across
- the nation, causing so much death and destruction that many
- blacks are convinced its spread cannot be accidental. More or
- less preposterous genocide theories are being spun by black
- nationalists like Louis Farrakhan, so-called intellectuals and
- prominent clergymen. Even the National Urban League published
- this passage in its 1989 report on the state of black America:
- "There is at least one concept that must be recognized if one
- is to see the pervasive and insidious nature of the drug
- problem for the African-American community. Though difficult
- to accept, that is the concept of genocide."
- </p>
- <p> Fears of a diabolical conspiracy to exterminate blacks have
- been around for decades, but seldom have they been believed by
- so many people. The idea is catching on, though even the most
- wild-eyed conspiracy mongers concede they have no evidence to
- support their claims. When filmmaker Spike Lee appeared on
- ABC's Nightline, for example, Ted Koppel asked him to back up
- his charge that it is "no mistake that a majority of drugs in
- this country is being deposited in black and Hispanic and
- low-income neighborhoods." Lee could point only to a scene in
- the movie The Godfather, in which a Mafia don decides to push
- drugs to blacks because they are "animals."
- </p>
- <p> Genocide theorists disagree on whether whites are
- consciously plotting black extermination. Some, like the Rev.
- Cecil Williams of San Francisco's Glide United Methodist
- Memorial Church, pin the drug epidemic on "a group of whites
- somewhere" who think blacks are getting too much political
- power. Others charge that the U.S. Government developed AIDS
- to wipe out blacks, testing it on homosexuals before unleashing
- it in the ghetto. More widespread is the view, put forth by
- Joseph Lowery, head of the Southern Christian Leadership
- Conference, that genocide will inevitably occur because the
- U.S. Government is not doing enough to stanch the flow of
- drugs. Says Lowery: "If the powers that be really wanted to
- deal with this issue, they wouldn't have let it get this far."
- </p>
- <p> Given the flimsiness of the evidence, why do such theories
- flourish? One reason is that the war against drugs has been so
- ineffectual. Another is that U.S. history is replete with
- episodes that help make even fanciful theories seem plausible:
- just consider what happened to the Native Americans. On a much
- smaller scale, there is the Tuskegee syphilis experiment,
- during which the U.S. Public Health Service, working with
- black-controlled Tuskegee Institute and other agencies,
- deliberately withheld treatment from 400 Alabama blacks between
- 1932 and 1972 to study the progress of a disease whose course
- was already well known.
- </p>
- <p> Genocide theorists deploy a welter of sociological facts and
- half-facts to buttress their case. Among them:
- </p>
- <p>-- Infant mortality rates in poor black neighborhoods in
- cities like Washington are soaring in part because so many
- black children are drug addicts when they are born. The
- comparison is misleading, because poverty and a lack of access
- to prenatal care are the most important causes of high infant
- mortality. To genocide theorists, of course, keeping blacks
- poor and denying them health care are both part of the plan.
- </p>
- <p>-- AIDS is spreading faster among low-income blacks than
- among any other segment of the population, including gays.
- Again the assertion, while true, is misleading: twice as many
- whites as blacks have died from AIDS.
- </p>
- <p>-- Drug sales are largely concentrated in the ghetto, where
- they exacerbate violence so ingrained that homicide is the
- leading cause of death for young black males.
- </p>
- <p> Combined with the historical record and the undeniable
- persistence of racial discrimination, those facts make it easy
- for blacks to conclude that someone is plotting their
- extinction. But, as Harvard political scientist Martin Kilson
- points out, it is "a long way from believing some whites would
- like to exterminate blacks to believing they are capable of
- doing so." Conspiracy theories insult blacks by suggesting that
- they are hapless victims powerless to resist a racist scheme.
- They imply that the African Americans who have become mayors
- and police chiefs in dozens of cities are either willing
- participants in the plot or inept dupes.
- </p>
- <p> The rainbow coalition of white, black, Latin American,
- African, Caribbean and Asian criminals who are deluging the
- ghettos (and the rest of America) with drugs is motivated by
- greed, not genocide. They seek to extract maximum profits from
- their sordid business--and if some of their customers fatally
- overdose themselves or are gunned down in turf battles between
- dealers, so be it. Whatever the drug pushers' goal may be,
- blacks could thwart them by the simple expedient of refusing
- to use drugs. The question is whether they will be
- self-interested enough to reject deluded genocide theories and
- face up to an uncomfortable truth: if someone is trying to kill
- blacks with drugs, blacks are helping them do it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-