A relevant critique of the relationship between the American presidency,
white supremacy, antiradicalism, and capitalist exploitation is
possible. During the height of McCarranism and McCarthyism, Claudia Jones
contended that Harry Truman and his anticommunist regime found her
threatening because she was a “Negro woman” that “dared to challenge the
civil rights lip-service cry of his reactionary administration which
[was] yet to lift a finger to prosecute the lynchers, the Ku Klux Klan,
or the anti-Semites.” She also argued
that Cold War immigration laws, which restricted immigration from all
Caribbean islands to a mere 100 persons per year, were not only racist,
but were also antiradical, insofar as they aimed to drive out
“progressive ideas.” Moreover, she linked U.S. governmentality to that
of Hitler’s Germany, because both repressed labor, trampled upon
democratic rights, murdered and jailed communists and other radicals,
promoted war and militarization, and of course, oppressed Black and
other racialized folk. For Jones ,
white supremacy was not a matter of attitude or morals, but rather of
property rights, access to resources, and the hierarchical organization
of American society. In fact, she rejected the idea
that racism and discrimination were acts of individual choice, and
stressed that they were forms of structural domination that needed to be
eradicated if liberation for all people was to be achieved.
While virtually all of Jones’ critiques of the Truman administration are
applicable to the current presidency—take for example the immigration
ban, the suspension of DACA, threats to invade Venezuela and North
Korea, the pardoning of Joe Arpaio, and the failure to condemn white
terrorism in Charlottesville—Coates zeros in on what he perceives to be
the moralistic failures of voters whose actions represented a
commitment to white fantasy. This is not withstanding the social and
political economic exigencies that have given rise to right populism not
only in the United States, but also in parts of Latin America and
Europe.
-- Charisse Burden-Stelly, "Why Claudia Jones Will Always Be More Relevant than Ta-Nehisi Coates" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).