Clarence Thomas is back in the news. Not only has the Supreme Court begun the fall docket, but he has released a new book, "My Grandfather's Son," for sale. Justice Thomas is doing the obligatory book tour to tout the book in hopes that millions of Americans run out to buy it. I haven't read the book, but if his interview on
60 Minutes and other articles on the matter are any indication, this book will be quite a read.
I ran across a very interesting article on
Reason Online entitled "Native Son, Why A Black Supreme Court Justice Has No Rights A White Man Need Respect." It was in 1857 during the Dred Scott case when the question was raised as to whether Blacks were or were not property and therefore if they had or had no rights as a human being. Supreme Court Chief Justice Taney is quoted as saying, "A Negro has no rights which a white man need respect." This article (dated February 1992) gives an in depth analysis as to how Clarence Thomas was the victim of a very old idea called racism:
One of the major reasons for the persistent problem is that millions of white adult Americans define "racism" as its most pathological manifestations: wearing white gowns and hoods, burning crosses, tarring and feathering blacks, hunting them down with dogs. Because those same millions of white Americans would not dream of committing such atrocities; because they vote for political representatives who pass civil-rights bills; because they applauded Martin Luther King and Thurgood Marshall; because they respect the changing nomenclature by which certain blacks wish to be addressed, they imagine themselves to be free of racism.
What they have never learned is that racism is an idea, a very old and intransigent idea. That idea exists on an unbroken continuum -- all the way from a form that is fully conscious to a form that is unconscious. Its manifestations can range from the most grossly offensive and scornful invective to a compulsive noblesse oblige that cannot permit itself to make any criticisms at all. But whatever the degree or kind of racism, it invariably contains a double standard: The racist simply does not treat black individuals the same way he treats whites.
The effect of stereotypes on blacks is a sense of being unseen, as in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. The effect on whites is the corollary: They do not perceive blacks as real or make the same fine discriminations among blacks that they habitually make among whites. In the last analysis, they do not perceive black individuals; they perceive black skins. And this remains true at every step of the continuum.
It should not, therefore, come as an insuperable shock that the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the nomination of Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court were a racist phenomenon. The "nice" kind; no Simon Legrees or fiery crosses here. But racist nonetheless. Setting aside old segregationist Strom Thurmond, who conscientiously counterfeited a dead man and may, for all I know, actually have been dead, the other senators participated, singly and collectively -- and unwittingly -- in a process that ceaselessly generated negative stereotypes about Thomas.
The author goes on to lay out the racist stereotypes that were applied Thomas from the day he was nominated by President George Bush (the first) until the day he was confirmed by the Senate:
The Nomination President Bush LIED when he told the nation that Clarence Thomas was the "best" candidate and that he was not chosen because he was Black. Everyone knew that there were other candidates as qualified as (or more qualified than) Clarence Thomas and he was only nominated because he was Black. The nomination was an affirmative action move to maintain a Black seat on the Supreme Court by a party who was against affirmative action.
The Art of Evasion Supreme Court nominees normally do not answer questions about how they will rule on specific situations that may come before them on the bench (i.e. abortion, affirmative action, death penalty, etc.). This works well for white candidates, but when a Black man is evasive, he comes off as being dumb! This label of being not as well-versed on the issues has dogged Justice Thomas since he took his seat on the bench. To this day, it has been implied (and explicitly expressed) that Thomas is a dim-witted right-wing puppet with no original ideas.
The Character Issue Thomas was held up as a clean, obedient, yes-man for the Republican party, he had a "mentor" in Senator John Danforth who had to vouch for Thomas's impeccable credentials as a lawyer and judge. Although, Thomas had a career outside his short time clerking for Danforth, it was essential that he had a white man who could stand for him and "assure" the Senate Committee that this was "a good one"!
The Abortion Issue Thomas was asked almost 100 times to explain what his legal and political opinions would be on any upcoming abortion case. Since no Supreme Court nominee would touch that question with a ten foot pole, Thomas ended up taking the Fifth over 100 times... see the Art of Evasion above!
Anita Hill The article states that Thomas's favorite book is Richard Wright's Native Son, the story of Bigger Thomas, a young Black man who is wrongly accused of the rape and murder of a white woman in the South in the 1940's. The biggest fear of any Black man during that time was to be accused of even looking a white person in the eye, much less, being accused of a sex crime and murder against a white woman! Any Black man was a dead man. Fast forward to 1991 and imagine the horror (and irony) of Clarence Thomas being accused of a sex crime (harassment), a "he said-she said" crime where he could never ever prove his innocence. As with Bigger Thomas, Clarence Thomas was subjected to a "high tech lynching."
Black-on-Black Blacks were turned against Clarence Thomas on Day One and he was NEVER given the opportunity of redemption. He was introduced as a conservative, Black Republican, a devotee of Ronald Reagan and everything liberal, Black Democrats were against... so he has carried that House Nigger title without ever being given the benefit of the doubt. To my way of thinking, this is probably the most damning and most egregious form of racism... turning one Black man against another because of politics. This has divided us and conquered us at every turn since our shackled ancestors walked off that very first slave ship.
Another article of note is from the
Washington Post. As a result of a hard life, Justice Thomas lashes out at just about everyone in his new book. The
article states that "Justice Clarence Thomas settles scores in an angry and vivid forthcoming memoir, scathingly condemning the media, the Democratic senators who opposed his nomination to the Supreme Court, and the "mob" of liberal elites and activist groups that he says desecrated his life." The article (and
60 Minutes interview) shed some light on why he is so bitter:
Family Life Abandoned by his parents and raised by a stern and authoritarian grandfather, it appears that Thomas never felt loved or wanted by anyone. When he dropped out of seminary school, his grandfather kicked him out.
The Segregated South The blatant racism with which he was raised always looms over his relationships with Blacks and whites.
Religion Thomas had plans on becoming a priest, but disparaging remarks by priests concerning the MLK assassination made him question his religion and was the impetus of him dropping out of the seminary.
Law Degree Although, he received a law degree from Yale, he credits affirmative action for diminishing the value of the degree thus making it difficult for him to find a job after graduation, more than anything, this appears to be the reason why he is against affirmative action and quotas. To this day, people talk about how he was the benefactor of affirmative action, but his counter is the double edged sword that casts doubts on the value or worth of those who benefit from it.
Senate Confirmation Hearings Everyone is familiar with him lashing out at the Senators with his "high tech lynching" comment. The process left such a bad taste in his mouth that he credits that process with ruining his life and he frankly hoped that he did not get confirmed.
Self Hate It appears that he doesn't understand why every Black person does not get up and work like HELL to uplift the race like the grandfather who raised him. I think he looks out at Black America and sees (by and large) a group of lazy and shiftless niggers! It seems to me that he is ashamed to be a member of this race.
View and read the transcript of the
60 Minutes interview
here.
plez sez:I watched
60 Minutes on Sunday evening and discussed the Clarence Thomas interview with my wife. We both agreed that he has to be the most bitter man alive. He is so filled with disgust about his life and how that shred of a life that he had was utterly destroyed during his Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings.
As a moderate,
plezWorld has taken a vastly different approach to Clarence Thomas as evidenced in my
Clarence Thomas: American Hero post. For some reason, I've been able to muster up some empathy for the misunderstood and sad man who is Clarence Thomas, only the second Black Supreme Court Justice.
In his book, Thomas writes of his Senate Confirmation Hearings, "The mob I now faced carried no ropes or guns. Its weapons were smooth-tongued lies spoken into microphones and printed on the front pages of America's newspapers. But it was a mob all the same, and its purpose -- to keep the black man in his place -- was unchanged." It is obvious that he understands that he was a victim of racism, I don't think he understands that the Republicans who propped him up where as racist as the Democrats who attacked him.
Clarence Thomas is a sad and bitter man who appears to find no joy in being a member of the highest court in the land. In the television interview, he had a difficult time even referring to himself as a Black man. To me that was the saddest revelation of all: he hates life, he hates what life has done to him, and above all, he hates himself. That is sad...
plez...I have absolutely no sympathy for ol boy. i can't stand with you on that note. he has many axes to grind and this book is his tool to "get back" at a system that he perpetuated which has proven to be corrupt and shameless usage of gov't money and legislation.
ReplyDeleteHe gets no love from me!
good post though
Black-on-Black Blacks were turned against Clarence Thomas on Day One and he was NEVER given the opportunity of redemption. He was introduced as a conservative, Black Republican, a devotee of Ronald Reagan and everything liberal, Black Democrats were against... so he has carried that House Nigger title without ever being given the benefit of the doubt. To my way of thinking, this is probably the most damning and most egregious form of racism... turning one Black man against another because of politics.
ReplyDeleteYou want me to be honest. I was originally against Clarence Thomas because of politics - he had way too many ' friends' that were outright enemies of The Community.
But, when I found out how he had disrespected and demeaned his sister, in front of White Conservatives, to curry their favor, I knew I'd never give him an ounce of slack - EVER.
How you treat FAMILY tells me a lot about your total character. That he did what he did to his SISTER, in order to kiss ass to White folk?
Oh Hell no.
This was a great post, but I loathe this Self-hating Sambo, and always will. If he wasn't on The Court, then I could just pity him and move on. But, because his Self-hatred has a direct impact on The Community by his decisions....we can't give him any slack, because he cuts The Community's throat every chance he gets, by being a willing tool of White Supremacy.
bravo rikyrah....BRAVO!!!!
ReplyDeleteDC & Rikyrah,
ReplyDeletethanks for coming by and leaving your wisdom... i appreciate it more than you know. this was a very difficult post for me to write, because like you, i have always found something distasteful about Clarence Thomas: his demeanor, his lack of definition, his far-right-wing ideology, his being an Uncle Tom, etc.
but for some reason, i just felt that there had to be a reason why he seemed so distasteful and so guarded. after learning more about his background, i still abhor his politics, but i just feel plain sorry for him: he is the most maligned Black man in America. some of the viotrol is just, but a good bit was thrust upon him. like i said in my post, he is a sad and bitter man. it is kind of scary that someone with his disposition is sitting on the highest court making decisions that affect ALL of us.
i feel where you guys are coming from... believe me, i do!
plez:
ReplyDeleteHow do you infer all of these things about Clarence Thomas' "bitterness" from this 60 Minutes piece?
Yes the confirmation process was one of the most difficult times of his life. It is interesting that many who criticize him accuse him of "white washing" the RACISM that stood in the way of his life but they paint him as "bitter" with regard to the period in which people pulled out the "long knives" to stop him from reaching the Supreme Court.
Did you watch the Sean Hannity interview with him? He talks about how some of the RACISTS he was taught to fear in life because of their potential harmful actions directed at him actually came to life in the form of various LIBERAL groups who were gunning after him, trying to take him down because he was Black and, as the White racist who said to the Black man before lynching him "thought that he was beyond his PLACE".
[quote]i have always found something distasteful about Clarence Thomas: his demeanor, his lack of definition, his far-right-wing ideology, his being an Uncle Tom, etc[/quote]
Plez - why is it that we don't talk about the FAR LEFT WING ideology that now controls the cities where there is 80% Democratic control and yet near 100% misery by the Black folks who are unable to escape these enclaves?
You call him an "Uncle Tom". What say you about the various BLACK MURDERERS who are having a field day this year as the NON-JUSTICE of the high unsolved murder rates increase? It is interesting that there is almost uniform distaste for Clarence Thomas. He, as a part of the due process system in this country has not stopped the execution of several Black people and thus HE IS SHAMED. Daily on our streets, however, there are DEATH PENALTIES being doled out with no such chance for appeal or overruling. Too frequently, however the KILLER is excused because the GUN DEALER gave him the tool to do his deed and the protest march congregates around the dealer.
Tavis Smiley Convenes his "All White Jury" In Judgment of Clarence Thomas:
http://withintheblackcommunity.blogspot.com/2007/10/tavis-smileys-all-white-jury.html
constructive feedback,
ReplyDeletethanks for your constructive feedback, i really appreciate you taking the time help us see your viewpoint.
you ask: How do you infer all of these things about Clarence Thomas' "bitterness" from this 60 Minutes piece?
plez sez: easily... by watching his 60 Minutes interview 3 times! he spoke at length at how the Confirmation Hearings sullied his reputation and "ruined" his life. he was so upset with the hearings that he found no joy in getting confirmed. i guess you would've liked my post better if i had just piled on and continued to berate a man who i admit is a troubled & misunderstood individual.
do you think he is happy?!?
you ask: why is it that we don't talk about the FAR LEFT WING ideology that now controls the cities where there is 80% Democratic control and yet near 100% misery by the Black folks who are unable to escape these enclaves?
plez sez: i didn't mention it in this piece because it has NOTHING to do with Clarence Thomas. i have touched on that subject in earlier posts... and i tend to agree with you!
you said: You call him an "Uncle Tom".
plez sez: prior to the 60 Minutes interview, that was MY perception of him. i must admit that some of my views of him have changed.
lastly, i'm not a big fan of Tavis Smiley, nor his hyperbole... so i put as little credence in his "all white jury" as i did in his "covenant with black america"!
Plez, this is a very informative and well written article, I enjoyed it immensely.
ReplyDeleteDJ Black Adam,
ReplyDeletethanks for the compliment. it was fun to read and learn more about someone who doesn't necessarily think the same way that i do... thanks again.
i agree w/ dj black adam - but i am a huge plezworld fan anyway, so this article is no different:-). it was very Big of U to attempt to humanize the very sad figure that is T. Clarence. Self hatred is a terrible thing & no level of "success" will erase it as he is living proof!
ReplyDelete