|
Clarence Thomas the Anti-Black'
By BAR executive
editor Glen Ford
Clarence Thomas is
a deeply troubled man—a grotesquely twisted, "Down
Home"-grown Black personality at war with the demons of
his dark-skinned, dirt poor youth. Although Thomas has
accumulated many "enemies"—earned and imagined—since his
entrance to the white world in the 10th grade in
Savannah, Georgia, his core pathology is
Black-directed—a trait so obvious it was immediately
perceived by a succession of white Republican racists
who rocketed him to the U.S. Supreme Court with obscene
haste to become a hit-man against his own people.
Thomas is a
perverse right-wing joke played on Blacks and, being of
above average intelligence despite his mental illness,
he knows it. But it is a knowledge he cannot endure, a
burden that has made him a pathological liar, who blurts
out contradictions so antithetical to each other that
they cannot possibly coexist in the same brain without a
constant roiling and crashing that puts him at flight
from himself and all those who remind him of his now
hopelessly entangled torments and tormentors.
If African
Americans had our own insane asylum, Thomas would be
welcomed in and cared for, with proper compassion for
the sorely afflicted. But there are no such facilities
available to treat a man who forgives whites for Jim
Crow and every other aspect of past and present
discrimination—indeed, embraces the most racist among
them—but can never forgive Blacks for the way they
treated him in Savannah, Georgia, and the outlying
shanty town of Pin Point.
Thomas, the
affirmative action kid, should have gone to Yale, where
he proved to be as adept at navigating the curriculum as
at least half the rest of the class. He should not have
ascended anywhere near the U.S. Supreme Court, or to any
government agency that affects the fate of the people he
despises, and has since childhood felt despised by:
African Americans, the only group that could make his
young psyche scream by calling him "ABC" - "America's
Blackest Child."
Thomas titled his
first and only book
My Grandfather's Son, in honor of grandfather Myers
Anderson, who physically rescued him from the abject
poverty of Pin Point at age seven, at his destitute
mother's request, but never let young Clarence forget
that he was born in the mud of deepest, lowest class,
Gullah-speaking (Geechie) Blackdom. "Whenever he'd get
angry at Clarence," a childhood friend of Thomas told
Washington Post reporter
Juan Williams, in 1987, "he'd say, 'Oh, you from Pin
Point.' " Grandfather Anderson, a self-made,
semi-literate businessman, alternately wielded "Pin
Point" as the most cutting insult to the boy's value as
a human being, and as the low-life nightmare to which
Clarence must return if he did not show himself worthy
of elevation above the mud.
Grandfather
Anderson was a committed member of the NAACP, a regular
contributor of money to the cause. He coerced Clarence
to read his good grades aloud in front of NAACP
meetings, an experience the shy child found painfully
intrusive. When Clarence gained entrance to an almost
lily-white Catholic seminary, with vague ideas about
becoming a priest, old man Anderson warned, "don't you
shame me and don't you shame your race.'"
Too much pressure
for the emotionally fragile kid, who had been
ceaselessly reminded that his Pin Point background was a
shame on its face, and that he must begin his climb up
from a deep hole to rise to the standards of the
upscale-dominated Savannah NAACP—a tall order for
"America's Blackest Child." In a 2002 interview with
Washington Post Reporters
Kevin Merida and Michael A. Fletcher, Thomas said he
"can't think of any" good the NAACP ever did. Civil
rights leaders, in general, just "bitch, bitch, bitch,
moan and moan, whine and whine."
The overbearing,
unrelenting Granddaddy Anderson pinned his hopes on
Clarence graduating from the Catholic seminary and using
his credentials and education to assist other Blacks.
However, Clarence quit in 1968, and Anderson put him out
of the house. Thomas' lying memory begins to dominate
the narrative at this point in his 19-year-old life,
with estrangement from his Black anchor and hate-love
object, Granddaddy Anderson. The old man and the NAACP
expected great things from young Clarence, based on
their standards, schedule, and mission. Thomas claims he
quit the seminary when, on news of the shooting of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., he overheard a white student
say "Well, that's good. I hope the SOB dies"—evidence
that the Catholic Church had failed him.
Note that Thomas
does not punch the white kid out, for which he might
have been expelled. He just quit, and in so doing quit
his grandfather and the NAACP, as well.. Although the
alleged remark is totally plausible, given the blatant,
unabashed racism that prevailed in Sixties white Georgia
campuses, parochial and public, it is equally
implausible that Thomas had not heard, and been
personally subjected to, many verbal racial assaults
during his time at the seminary—and never reacted. It is
much more likely that Thomas, having already charted his
exit from Black Savannah and a path to the Ivy league,
later invented or used the incident to cast himself as a
"radical"—the pose he (possibly after-the-fact) adopted
during his scholarship-assisted and affirmative
action-arranged stay at Yale, his next stop.
Thomas was sick and
tired of Savannah Black society and the loathsome burden
of his Pin Point origins, and the skin-curse of being
"ABC." He would exit the former and use the latter as a
swinging broadsword to flail his Black "tormentors" and
garner the assistance of racist whites in search of an
African American who harbored animosities against Blacks
as intense as their own. In his September 30, 2007,
interview with 60 Minutes, Thomas seemed still to be
repelled by the Black catechism and recitals he had been
subjected to by old man Anderson and the NAACP, back in
Savannah so many years ago. The problem is, all these
decades later, Thomas disengages Granddaddy Anderson
from the local NAACP he fervently supported, and to
which he offered his grandson as a prize catch and
future leader. Thomas told milk-toast interviewer Steve
Kroft:
"You've been down
here long enough [the interview took seven days to
complete] to see who raised me and what my
grandfather—what approach would he take?" Thomas says,
laughing. "It'd be get out there and work. The problem
for me isn't that everybody agrees with him or me. But,
that they think they have the exclusive providence of
how to approach it. That I am to be destroyed because I
won't drink that Kool-Aid or because I don't follow in
this cult-like way something that blacks are supposed to
believe. I have an opinion. It seems as though the
problem with me and other people with our opinions is
that we are veering away from the black gospel that
we're supposed to adhere to."
Clarence abandoned
the high-pressure, struggle-for-your-folks Gospel of the
Savannah NAACP and his grandfather—the people pushing
the Kool-Aid—for Yale, where he donned a beret and now
claims to have been a militant. As reported by
Kevin Merida and Michael A. Fletcher in 2002,
Thomas' memory is...faulty:
"That's garbage,
all this radical crap," says Edward P. Jones, a writer
who went to college with Thomas. "If something came
along and it didn't interfere with whatever he was doing
that day, he would do it . . . My recollection is he
wasn't the rah-rah out-front guy others are portraying
him to be."
However, Thomas may
have imagined himself to be something his brow-beaten
upbringing and disturbed mind did not prepare him to
even recognize. After all, he had a beret, and a bad
attitude. But who was he really mad at?
Time would tell,
and not that much time, either. Thomas got through Yale
Law School at the middle of his class, then claims he
put a 15-cents sticker on the diploma and shunted it off
to the basement in passive protest of the document being
devalued and "tainted" by affirmative action. If Thomas'
diploma story is true, then by graduation he had
already, in 1974, become a right-wing opponent of the
affirmative action that had benefited him right up to
the point that he shook the Law School dean's hand and
accepted the diploma. Thomas certainly had felt himself
devalued for most of his conscious existence—and was
repeatedly confirmed in that devaluation by his Black
peers and elders in Savannah until his self-image broke
from the strain, if he ever had a well-developed
self-image. But one wonders at what point he made the
switch from flirting with the Black Panthers (or, in his
case, beret-ism) to a doctrinaire reactionary position
that had not, at the time, been widely articulated in
the popular press. One strongly suspects that Thomas'
current narrative of the period is a revision—and also
that Thomas believes every word of the story.
After all, Thomas
claims to have assiduously avoided studying any civil
rights cases at law school, and later urged students to
do the same. With the ordeal of being a "testimony"
child of the NAACP and his grandfather still fresh in
his resentful mind, Thomas wanted nothing to do with
"civil rights" of any kind—a permanent bent that
rendered him singularly unqualified for the life-path
that would begin right after graduation, when the
enemies of civil rights took him under their wings, and
crafted him into a weapon against every vestige of the
Black Freedom Movement.
Do not believe
anything Clarence Thomas says, since his statements are
almost uniformly lies of commission or omission. It is
doubtful that he knows which. He claims not to have been
able to "get a job" after graduation from Yale, when in
fact he soon got a dream position for any young Black
man looking for a fast track into the heart of rising
Republican rightwing politics. The Black GOP list wasn't
just short, it was almost non-existent. Missouri
Attorney General John "Jack" Danforth snatched up the
boy from Pin Point in a New York minute, doubtless after
getting an earful from the Yale graduate about the
demeaning nature of Ivy League affirmative action.
The $10,000 a year
salary sounds paltry in current dollars, but in 1974 it
was quite enough for a single recent grad. More to the
point, Thomas was an Assistant Attorney General, a title
for which many graduates would intern free without
salary. Most importantly, Thomas had found a mentor and
protector in Danforth, who would stick by (or use) him
through to the 1991 Senate confirmation process. "ABC"
had found his niche. He would not return to Pin Point to
dedicate his law skills to the folks, as his grandfather
so dearly wished. The beret was gone, too.
Clarence promptly
picked up his first book on Black "conservatism" (or, he
may have read it in preparation for the Danforth
interview—the record is not clear). Thomas Sowell's
intellectually primitive Race and Economics was,
according to Thomas, his introduction to the tiny
grouplet of rightwing Black fellow-travelers hoping to
get in on the ground floor whenever a national change of
regime might occur. With Danforth as his guide, Thomas
was on the launching pad. The Missouri attorney general
became a U.S. senator in 1979, with Clarence in tow all
the way to Washington.
However, like most
deeply damaged personalities, Thomas could not face the
raw realities of his situation; he preferred to make up
an alternative persona that was the opposite of what he
had become. Juan Williams, the then-young Washington
Post reporter who would himself descend into rightist
politics in his later years, followed Thomas to a
conference of Black conservatives in San Francisco, in
early 1981, shortly after Ronald Reagan assumed the
presidency:
"His frankness in
reflecting on his own position as a black conservative
is, in retrospect, touched by irony. ‘If I ever went to
work for the EEOC or did anything directly connected
with blacks, my career would be irreparably ruined. The
monkey would be on my back to prove that I didn't have
the job because I'm black. People meeting me for the
first time would automatically dismiss my thinking as
second-rate.'"
"Monkey" is an
interesting choice of words. But then, as Juan Williams
reported:
"...in May of 1981,
despite his misgivings, he joined the Administration as
the Department of Education's assistant secretary for
civil rights.
And then:
"Eight months after
he began his job at the Department of Education, the
President nominated him to head the EEOC."
And then, in 1990,
President George H. W. Bush appointed Thomas to the U.S.
appellate court for the District of Columbia, where he
remained for barely a year before Bush nominated him to
the U.S. Supreme Court, in 1991. In 12 short years, the
man who said "civil rights" appointments were "career
suicide" had been catapulted from an aide to Sen.
Danforth to lifetime
Associate Supreme Court Justice, without ever having
tried a case as a lawyer or worked at a law firm.
Did Thomas ever
believe anything he said about the perils of being
tagged as among the "Black" and "civil rights"
categories of job seekers? The question would be
appropriate if we were speaking of a sane person, but we
are not. Thomas is capable of holding several,
antithetical realities in his head, and talking out of
all sides of his mouth on every one of them—and
believing every word. Although most African Americans
are quick to point to his affirmative action-enabled
Yale education as proof of his hypocrisy on the subject,
Thomas flips the script and treats the invaluable
experience as if it were worthless, despite the fact
that the Ivy League diploma introduced him to his
Republican mentor and champion, John Danforth. As late
as September 30, Thomas was still complaining to the
compliant and purposely incompetent 60 Minutes
correspondent Steve Kroft about his "tainted" diploma,
worth only 15 cents.
The truly obscene
"affirmative action" from which Thomas has benefited is
Republican-made—a cascade of rewards for being the
"Anti-Black" who can be counted on to bludgeon and
bad-mouth his own people at every opportunity, while his
benefactors snicker at the joke. That's why Thomas so
richly deserved Emerge magazine's 1994 depiction of him
as a lawn jockey, a cartoonish figure placed on lawns by
whites to remind everyone of Black subservience.
Thomas has written
over 300 High Court opinions, about par for the course.
He has been a minority-of-one more often than any other
Justice, simply because, despite being surrounded by
clerks educated in the chapter-and-verse of precedent
and statute, Thomas repeatedly casts the fundamentals of
judgeship aside to vent his venom, hostility, pent-up
pain, and desire for vengeance—against his fellow
African Americans.
Thomas imagines
himself a man of the people. "Man, quotas are for the
black middle class. But look at what's happening to the
masses. Those are my people. They are just where they
were before any of these policies," Thomas told a
reporter. But Clarence from Pin Point certainly isn't
where he used to be. And the almost exclusively poor and
disproportionately Black prison population would be in
even worse shape if Thomas' 1992 dissent in a "cruel and
unusual treatment" case had been joined by the majority
of the High Court. Angola, Louisiana, prisoner Keith
Hudson was left "with loosened teeth, facial bruises and
a cracked dental plate" after being shackled and taken
to a secluded place to be beaten by guards. "In my
view," wrote Clarence The Man of the People, "a use of
force that causes only insignificant harm to a prisoner
may be immoral, it may be tortuous, it may be
criminal...but it is not 'cruel and unusual punishment.'
"
One wonders how
much harm would satiate Thomas' lust for revenge against
those Blacks who make his life difficult by breathing.
Other Justices, including his fellow "conservatives,"
could not conceal their astonishment at the baldness and
legal vacuity of Thomas' opinion. And there were many
more such opinions, too many for this essay, which is
about the sick mind of the man and how it has been
employed by Black folks' enemies as both a pit bull and
a pet.
Thomas, the
ultimate fast-tracked Black, voted against so-called
"quotas" in awarding federal highway contracts, citing
"paternalism" as a mortal sin. "There can be no doubt
that racial paternalism and its unintended consequences
can be as poisonous and pernicious as any other form of
discrimination."
Then you, Clarence,
should be dead, many times over, fatally poisoned. But,
Thomas may have a point. Grandpa Anderson's grooming of
young Clarence as a champion of the race did, indeed,
have "unintended consequences."
Again, this essay
is about the American pathology that creates a freak
like Clarence Thomas, from which tragedy a host of
judicial abominations has flowed. He is only 59. The
stream of bile may continue another 30 or more years, if
he does not blow a brain vein from sheer maliciousness.
Thomas is most fond
of talking about the concept of racial
"assimilation"—he's against it, which is quite strange
for an "ABC" from Pin Point who has succeeded in
thoroughly insinuating himself into rich, white company
that arranged for him to secure possibly the most
coveted job in the land.
To win racist white
favor and praise, Thomas has signaled that he does not
recognize the legitimacy of the 1954 Brown school
desegregation decision. "'Racial isolation' itself is
not a harm; only state-enforced segregation is. After
all, if separation itself is a harm, and if integration
therefore is the only way that blacks can receive a
proper education, then there must be something inferior
about blacks."
If there were ever
an example of how 13 years of racial isolation can
damage a dirt-poor young Black boy from Pin Point,
Georgia, Clarence Thomas is it. He was beaten down
before he had his first meaningful conversation with a
white person— before he could establish an identity that
could carry him forward as a proud Black man in a
white-dominated world—and soon would begin a career as
an attack dog for the worst elements of the ruling
class.
Most often, like
most crazy people, Clarence's utterances have no
connection to his own circumstances. He doesn't know
where he is, or what he has done. "There is nothing you
can do to get past black skin," Thomas told reporter
Juan Williams, back in 1987. "I don't care how educated
you are, how good you are at what you do - you'll never
have the same contacts or opportunities, you'll never be
seen as equal to whites."
Unless, of course,
you serve the interests of those whites you believe are
in charge of your destiny. But that's too rational a
thought to put in Thomas' head; he just glides along on
pure hatred of himself and his own. Thomas has been
enabled in his crazed leap to the pinnacles of power by
forces that are arrayed against the masses of all
people, but especially African Americans. Clearly, this
includes CBS Television, as evidenced by the recent 60
Minutes charade.
Journalistic eunuch
Steve Kroft absolved Thomas of all the lies and
insanities he has spouted over the years, and his clear
unfitness for the job—almost any job—at the start of the
broadcast:
"He is often
dismissed as a man of little accomplishment, an
opportunistic black conservative who sold out his race,
joined the Republican Party and was ultimately rewarded
with an affirmative action appointment to the nation's
highest court, a sullen, intellectual lightweight so
insecure he rarely opens his mouth in oral arguments.
The problem with the characterization is that it's
unfair and untrue."
Untrue and unfair,
says he. Yet Kroft never delved into any of those
important questions, preferring to focus on the 1991
Anita Hill confirmation hearings charges. Thomas slickly
slimed Hill, and 60 Minutes did not permit the other
side to speak. Even the most casual news programming
observer must conclude that either Thomas' publishers
(or His Judgeship, himself) imposed a prohibition on
substantive questioning, or that CBS liked what they
heard, and left it at that. We at Black Agenda Report
have received confidential information that the latter
is the case; that the white powers-that-be at 60 Minutes
and corporate management felt poor Clarence, who is
undeniably the most hated Black Man in Black America,
should get to have his say, unmolested by the truth.
There goes the journalistic neighborhood, bulldozed by
white comfort-zone preference.
Karen J. Bond, of
the National Black Coalition for Media Justice, (karenbond@nbcmj.org
This email address is being protected from spam bots,
you need Javascript enabled to view it ) offered a detailed questionnaire to the producers of the 60 Minutes
farce, including:
"Do you feel an
interview excluding...critical pieces of information
about the content of Justice Thomas' book would leave
the viewer with an accurate perspective? Why was there
little or no attention given to the opinions of these
critics who come from the ranks of his peers, his former
classmates, highly esteemed literary figures or the poor
and working class citizens that he claims he represents?
With so much contradictory evidence available, why was
there no substantial challenge made as to the veracity
of the claims Thomas presents in his book?"
No remotely
satisfactory answer was forthcoming. We must conclude
that Clarence Thomas is crazy like a fox, having somehow
sensed through the fog of near-lifelong mental illness
that powerful "white folks" will take care of him as
long as he exhibits a visceral contempt for other
Blacks. The crybaby—demented and consumed by a huge
reservoir of perceived assaults that make him appear
like a Black, stocky, middle-aged version of the
pitiful-but-pathological character Gollum, in J.R.R.
Tolkien's Lord of the Rings—is incapable of a coherent
narrative of his own experiences or political views. He
gets away with it because significant numbers of whites
want to hear a "dissident" Black voice railing against
the rest of Black America—no matter how crazed that
voice might be.
60 Minutes dubbed
its book promotion masquerading as journalism, "Clarence
Thomas: The Justice Nobody Knows." They then proceeded
to make sure nobody would really know him, if they
didn't already.
Possibly the most
pathologically illuminating portion of the network PR
job came at the end of the interview. Thomas, asked
where he feels he is in life, responds: "I'm Home."
Home is what
Clarence has been running from all along—although he
can't escape the formative environment in which he
sickened so early in life. He's really in Purgatory, and
trying to put the rest of us in Hell.
Glen Ford can be contacted at
Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com* *
* * *
posted 10 October 2007 / updated 5
February 2008 |