Wednesday, June 30, 2021

EPISODE #27: The Personal Side of Radical Political Organizing

 

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G challenges O to think less about the political theory of organizing for a moment and think more about the personal events in his life that brought him to identify with other oppressed people and organize to fight back against that oppression. G & O share stories from their experiences that helped radicalize them and the love and joy they experience in struggle.

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Episode #26: FILM REVIEW: "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" and August Wilson's Black Life


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The brothers review the film Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, directed by George C. Wolfe, written by Ruben Santiago-Hudson based on August Wilson's 1982 play, starring Viola Davis and the late Chadwick Boseman in his final (and arguably greatest) screen performance before his unfortunate death at the age of 43. The brothers meditate on August Wilson's body of work, which chronicles stories from working-class Black people and which the brothers definitely plan to come back to in future podcast episodes. They try to address the question Wilson once asked to one of his elders: How did you live to be 70 as a Black man in America? The brothers also relate some stories passed down from their own family histories, stories that some of the people in Wilson's stories might relate to, and consider how the isolation of young Black people from their elders is one way the antiblack structure works to sap the capacity of Black resistance.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Episode #25: FILM REVIEW: Black Fatherhood and the Movie "Fences"

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Today, for Father's Day, the brothers ask, how is Black fatherhood possible in an antiblack world? In other words, how do new and evolving forms of antiblackness and capitalist oppression change and strain the relationships between Black fathers and their children? And how, in this changing but still deadly context, can new forms of masculinity emerge? This review of the 2016 movie Fences, starring and directed by Denzel Washington, examines the web of relationships around Troy, a former Negro League baseball player in Black Pittsburgh of the 1950s. G & O talk about the relationships between Black parents and Black children. The brothers also explore the film's treatment of other themes, including the emotional labor of Black women, Black intergenerational trauma, and Black men's friendships. O reflects on a time he performed in a scene from this play.

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Episode #24: Organizing to Survive Capitalism in the Time of Biden, Harris, and Trump

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How do we survive capitalism while organizing its end? Thinking about violent events like the Flint water crisis, the police murder of Breonna Taylor, or the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Massacre of 1921 have many Black radical activists asking: As we organize to bring down the oppressive capitalistic structure, are we preparing ways to amass the resources and capacities we as Black people will need to survive this genocidal structure in the meantime? In this episode, G & O begin to think through these sets of questions. The brothers recorded this episode shortly after the 2020 election was called. The celebrations of November, which would soon be followed with the horrors of January, led the brothers to reflect on that moment, even before white supremacist terrorists tried to violently overturn the election and murder government officials. What the brothers saw, and still see even after the January 6 attacks on the capitol, is a moment way bigger than the election. In this moment there is an opening, a need for big ideas in critical Black thought, including Black self-sufficiency and self-defense, Black conversations about the role of government, surviving within capitalism while working to destroy it, and the importance of radical leadership from the Black  poor and working class.

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Episode #23: The Homelessness Crisis and Pandemic Capitalism

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In this episode, the brothers talk about homelessness and the looming lapse of the federal eviction moratorium. G talks about his experience being homeless with a family to take care of. The brothers originally recorded this episode before the Biden administration signed off on the one-time distribution of $1400 relief checks and extended the eviction moratorium by a few months. Most of it still applies because both of those acts of governmental largesse were temporary and did not come anywhere near solving the problem. And now, with a federal judge recently ruling the eviction moratorium unconstitutional, the problem is again being kicked down the road. But the fundamental problem is,  and has been, capitalism -- a genocidal system generated out of structural antiblackness and anti-Indigeneity. The brothers discuss alternatives to that genocidal system we live under.


Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Episode #22: Jailbreaking Black Thought from the Academy

 George Mason Murray and James Garrett, two of the founders of Black studies within the San Francisco Bay Area.


Inspired by Karen Hunter and Greg Carr's YouTube conversations about jailbreaking knowledge from the academy, the brothers reflect on aspects of the academy that they can do without -- including classism and antiblackness. They think through how Black people might keep the irreplaceable functions of the academy (the production, conservation, and distribution of knowledge) while discarding the other bits. They discuss the kinds of knowledge Black people need in order to get free.

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Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Episode #21: Film Review: “Don’t Quit until You Either Win or You Die”: "The Spook Who Sat By the Door"

Sometimes, you need a Black story that inspires you to struggle, but doesn't do so simply by accurately showing how fucked up things are but actually makes you feel like we can win, too -- and win not just in terms of small symbolic victories, which are important, but in actual asymmetric military conflict. That's why today, in honor of Malcolm X and Sam Greenlee, G & O talk about one of their favorite films of all time, The Spook Who Sat By the Door (1973), directed by Ivan Dixon and based on the novel of the same name by Sam Greenlee. This film is a classic of Black underground cinema that is in some ways the benchmark of how film can inspire radical, ethical actions.

And we just learned that Paul Mooney, the writer-actor-comedian and important Black thinker, passed away in Oakland, Cal. As FRELIMO used to say, "a luta continua... the struggle continues..."

Click HERE to listen to this episode

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BLACK THOUGHT: An Entry and an Exit: Continuing the Collective Black Freedom Struggle

According to his NY Times obituary, Sam Greenlee, author of The Spook Who Sat by the Door, was defiant about his success: "If I never made another film, look at the film I made.”

On certain days, we have multiple reasons to think about our elders and ancestors in struggle, and we remember the examples and tools our ancestors left behind for how we, the living, can continue our struggle.

Today, May 19, was the date in 1925 when Malcolm X was born in Omaha, Neb. And of course, one way to honor the legacy of struggle of brother Malcolm is by discussing a film that is also part of that legacy of struggle: The Spook Who Sat by the Door. The 1973 film, directed by Ivan Dixon, was based on the novel of the same name written by Sam Greenlee. As it happens, May 19, 2014, is also the day that Sam Greenlee passed away in the city of his birth, Chicago.

Today we commemorate an entry and an exit. But in doing so, i think we should also remember to honor our ancestors in struggle while they are alive.

In an interview he gave late in his life, Greenlee said he was basically broke and living on food stamps and assistance. He said that even Black studies departments wouldn't hire him after Jesse Jackson, the civil rights activist and politician, basically whitelisted him. Greenlee gave respect to Jackson for the risks he had taken in the long Black freedom struggle, while also critiquing the lasting negative impact Jackson had on his life, his family's life, and on the film Greenlee and Dixon made. As with many others who risked it all for our struggle while young, only to later sell out our freedom struggle, what Greenlee tells us about Jackson can serve as an invitation for us to consider the ethics of Black leadership and how and why so many Black leaders, especially bourgeois ones, readily succumb to forces that turn them against the more radical elements of our movements, especially those coming from Black working class and poor communities.

I also can't help but think about the fact that his novel is now being made into a mini-series by Lee Daniels, director of films like Precious and The Butler and of the TV shows Empire and Star -- one who has stood on the shoulders of previous Black filmmakers and had no shortage of financial success, and one who has made a career of risking little or nothing in telling stories of Black life. I hope all good things for Daniels' remounting of this film. But i already know that he has not paid a cost for making shows and films that help inspire radical Black struggle in anything like the way Greenlee and Dixon did with Spook

Indeed, Daniels' films have generally been negative toward Black traditions of radicalism. I doubt Daniels will be poor at the end of his life -- and there is no shame in that. But Greenlee was poor at the end of his life because he was being punished for the risks he took in making books and films like Spook. We should always believe in the possibility for people to change from what they have done previously, and so we should pay attention to see how Daniels handles this film and how he deals with the family of Sam Greenlee, who surely paid a significant cost to create what Daniels will now reap the rewards from.

But this is not to pick on Daniels and Jackson. There is also a larger point that the risks our elders and ancestors have taken required great daring. We do not take the same risks in simply recreating what they did. This does not mean that we are free of the constraints that bound previous generations. It means those constraints have shifted in how they are being applied. Spook was and is powerful because of its capacity to inspire struggle -- and its history of doing so -- in very concrete ways. This is not easy to do. It requires an intimate understanding of the shape of our oppression and the tools we can use for resisting that oppression right now. In doing justice to Spook and Greenlee's legacy, we have to find new ways to threaten the racist structure that are at least as effective today as Spook was in 1973. Since our movement is different today than it was in 1973 -- and so is our oppression -- we must keep learning and keep trying.

Finally, when we're considering the meaning of May 19 we can think about ancestors and elders in general and how they're constantly coming into and going out of the world -- sometimes known, sometimes unknown, sometimes on different days, sometimes on the very same day. We know only a fraction of those who have left the world, and we hope to learn of even more ancestors' stories because stories can inspire. But we also need to be attentive that new ancestors for our struggle are constantly being made. Who are they? We don't yet know. And so maybe the real lesson of May 19 is to live as though all Black youths, adults, and elders -- like a young man born today in 1925 or an old man who passed away today in 2014 -- might help lead and inspire our struggles.

Please check out The Spook Who Sat by the Door HERE.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Podcast Episode #20: The 1776 Commission Is Part of an Ongoing Attack on Black Studies



Remember the so-called "1776 Commission"? Started in September 2020, during the final throes of trump's ill-fated re-election campaign, it was a group of largely Black conservative writers who convened to counter the 1619 Project, a series of articles put together by new york times writer Nikole Hannah-Jones. In this episode, the brothers discuss the foolishness and the ongoing danger of the 1776 Commission. They point out that the Black intellectuals selected by trump to make up the 1776 Commission exemplify a kind of bourgeois Black misleadership that has long sought to serve the antiblack structure by suppressing Black resistance and trying to lead Black people to obey the slaveholding empire of amerikkka.

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BLACK THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Not Enough for Freedom: The 1619 Project Helps Liberals, the 1776 Commission Serves Fascists, and Black Folk Still Ain't Free

In 2019, Nikole Hannah-Jones curated a powerful series of articles and school curriculum called the 1619 Project. The main argument of the series was that, from the first moment when enslaved Africans were imported to the u.s. colony of Virginia in 1619, "No aspect of the country that would be formed here has been untouched by the years of slavery that followed." In other words, the u.s. is built on a foundation of slavery that continues to influence everything about the u.s.a. to this very day.

Taken together, these writings counter the standard story that amerikkka was built by Great white Men who, regardless of their faults, are to be held up as heroes because they put forward the ideals of liberty and justice for all. Some of the titles of the essays from the 1619 Project can give you a sense of how different this counter-narrative is from the way most schools teach u.s. history:

  • "Our democracy’s founding ideals were false when they were written. Black Americans have fought to make them true."
  • "For centuries, black music has been the sound of artistic freedom. No wonder everybody’s always stealing it."
  • "Slavery gave America a fear of black people and a taste for violent punishment. Both still define our prison system."
  • "A vast wealth gap, driven by segregation, redlining, evictions and exclusion, separates black and white America"

The 1619 Project, earned Jones a Pulitzer prize and a lot of followers, particularly in the wake of the police murders of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery and the still-unpunished police murder of Breonna Taylor. 

Overall, the 1619 Project is pointing in a helpful direction. As we Black folks fight to even imagine a world in which Black lives matter and cannot be taken wantonly without severe repercussions, it is imperative that we build from an acknowledgement of this basic fact: The u.s. as we know it would not exist without the enslavement of Black people. The more conscious among us know that this isn't just a thing of the past: The u.s. continues to find alternate ways of enslaving Black people in order to keep itself going. This is the most basic of facts. And our work as Black activists isn't just based on wanting to help people who just randomly happen to be in need and happen to be Black, but specifically on the fact that the condition of us Black people is a direct result of historic and ongoing injustice. In serving our Black communities, we fight against that injustice because it was wrong to us and our ancestors from the very beginning. We love each other, and we hate our oppression.

So, while the 1619 Project is to be praised for getting this counter-narrative out there, it does so at a certain cost to Black freedom struggle. That's because it frames this basic counter-narrative in particular ways that get even moderate liberals to agree with Black radicals that the united states was founded on slavery. And that's just not enough.

One shortcoming of the 1619 Project's narrative is that it should have started earlier, at least in 1492, even if it was talking only about slavery, but especially if it was also acknowledging the constant companion of racial slavery: genocide. The genocide of Indigenous peoples in Africa and the americas is connected to the enslavement of Black people in a whole lot of ways: 

  1. Indigenous americans were genocided for embracing us when we escaped plantations and resisting oppression with  us, 
  2. Black americans were recruited to the military and paramilitaries that stole land from Indigenous americans, 
  3. The decline in enslavement of Indigenous americans was accompanied by the rise in enslavement of Black americans, 
  4. Indigenous Africans stolen from the continent became Black americans and many Indigenous Africans were genocided on the continent in the process of capturing us for the slave trade, and 
  5. The forces of enslavement and genocide at the heart of the 1619 Project's narrative were all at work long before 1619, even in what we today call the united states.

In other words, enslaved and genocided have a common interest in resisting amerikkka, and the 1619 Project missed an opportunity to emphasize that fact.

Another thing is, of course, the 1619 Project's narrative is not even a new narrative. The idea that amerikkka is founded on genocide and slavery comes straight out of Black thought, at least as old as David Walker's 1829 Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World. Black thought is the collective understanding that Black people have developed based on our radically marginalized experiences over the last 500 years. It is the constantly evolving body of knowledge that we've had to gain just in order to survive, and it is how we teach our children and grandchildren to survive and resist being duped, re-enslaved, genocided, and crushed in an antiblack world. And one of the basic facts it grows from is what Frantz Fanon would have called "the fact of blackness." The reality of our lived experience as Black people teaches anyone who isn't in denial a common set of facts that we acknowledge, or die from not acknowledging -- and we often die whether we acknowledge it or not.

The bigger critique of the 1619 Project, however, concerns how it opens the Black thought narrative to those who would affirm amerikkka. In the hands of liberal-progressives like Jones and the new york times, this central narrative gets watered down into a quasi-patriotic narrative that says, in so many words, "america is basically a good idea but has a long way to go to fulfill its ideals." Through the 1619 Project's narrative, liberals are shortchanging the Black thought narrative of the danger it poses to oppressors, enslavers, and genociders. There is, after all, a danger in just allowing Black thought to speak freely, because if it were ever truly listened to, it would tell a narrative of amerikkka that might result in a fundamental transformation not merely of the united states or the amerikkkas but the entire world system we have come to know over the last 500 years. 

Liberal-progressives have basically co-opted this central element of Black thought and contorted it to serve a u.s. patriotic narrative that positions the Black oppressed of amerikkka as the long-suffering saviors of amerikkka. A narrative that should cut across the borders of nation-states set up by european enslavers and unite oppressed people instead becomes a U.S.-centric narrative that says that slavery is "at the heart" of u.s. history and must in some way be atoned for like an "original sin" of this nation. 

In 1975, u.s. historian Edmund Morgan helped nudge this version of the narrative into the mainstream of u.s. historians when he referred to "the American paradox, the marriage of slavery and freedom." In his book American Slavery, American Freedom, he argued that the founders of the United States fought for their own freedom from european colonial powers AND for their right to enslave and genocide Black and Indigenous peoples. In other words, they wrote "all men are created equal" while raping and torturing enslaved people. And if they felt any sense of contradicting themselves -- well, eventually, somebody could just write an HBO drama or a Broadway musical to meditate on how these "founding fathers" were basically good people but were just so vexed that they couldn't see their way to not raping us, not torturing and enslaving us, and not murdering us.

Of course, Morgan's narrative was an advance over the mainstream white narratives of the u.s.a. that preceded it, but its shortcoming is also that of the 1619 Project: the u.s.a. professes freedom but relies on slavery because, at a deep psychic level, the white people comprising its ruling class simply don't recognize the people they enslave as human beings. 

As Raoul Peck's recent documentary film series Exterminate All the Brutes reports, this is the case everywhere in the world that european settler-colonizers have stolen land and bodies over the last 500 years. The playbook of enslavers and genociders is remarkably similar the world over. And everywhere it is antiblack. 

Moreover, at some level, genociders aren't even conscious of how similar they are. To some extent, they just do and say the same shit because they have a similar relationship to Black bodies wherever and whenever they are in the world. For instance, both white South Afrikan colonizers of the 17th century and white amerikkkan gentrifiers of the 21st century say shit like "Nobody was here when we arrived" and "Black and Indigenous people haven't contributed much to our culture" (see u.s. politician Rick Santorum's comments for a recent example of this). Using military, paramilitary, and police force, white people reserve a place for themselves in which they can keep up the illusion that they haven't done anything massively, murderously wrong in order to have all that they enjoy.

If Jones and Morgan used the psychoanalytic tools of Black thought, they could go further to gain clarity on why you cannot love Black freedom and love amerikkka. They refer to a so-called "paradox" of a supposedly "free" society based on Black slavery. But, to white people, it's not as a paradox or a contradiction that needs to be fixed at all. It is precisely all they ever wanted it to be. whiteness, everywhere in the world. is grounded in a kind of unaccountable psychic structure -- known  in psychoanalytic discourse as a perverse sadistic structure -- that allows those positioned as white to physically harm and terrorize those positioned as Black and Indigenous without ever themselves being available to being harmed and terrorized. That's what happens when you have all these guns. The vast asymmetries of power between european genocider-slaveholders and the Indigenous and Black populations of the amerikkkas are what allow this space for genocider-slaverholders to imagine themselves as basically good people. This space, propped up by raw force and terror, is known as whiteness, and the white people who have embraced it flourish within this contradiction, within this massive sadistic psychic structure. And it has bound together europeans of vastly different cultures and worldviews for the better part of the last millennium -- and counting.

That's a long time. This suggests that the liberal effort of things like the 1619 Project to change amerikkka by telling white people that they are hypocrites will always face the most severe and violently antiblack backlash. Creating a world in which Black lives matter won't come about by merely acknowledging this contradiction as though people will see the error of their ways and allow us to change what they have built their family legacies and senses of self on. Fundamental change will require something that breaks through the walls built to protect the perverse sadistic psychic structure that is whiteness. Decisively resolving that contradiction identified by the 1619 Project and Morgan requires acknowledging amerikkka itself as the greatest enemy of freedom in the world. Hence, trying to make amerikkka "live up to its ideals" won't get us free because amerikkka's ideal IS freedom for white people, enslavement for Black people.

However excellent and exceptional Jones' 1619 Project and Morgan's American Slavery, American Freedom are, neither will go all the way there. They will almost, but not quite say, what any ethical student of Black thought knows: Resolving this "american paradox" will require ending that which we recognize as amerikkka.

The Black thought narrative is a critique that cuts to the roots of what amerikkka is and means. In other words, the narrative as Black thought articulates it is radical -- meaning, it literally goes to the root. (Remember, the word "radical" comes from the Latin word "radix" meaning "root.")

That is why, in this moment, liberal-progressives like Jones are called up from the bullpen to helm a narrative that would otherwise be a radical narrative, and would otherwise radicalize those who have nothing to lose. Liberal-progressives, many of them from the non-profit industrial complex, are NOT using co-opted narratives like the 1619 Project to steer the oppressed toward a revolution led by the Black poor from below that could end the world we have come to know over the last 500 years. Liberal-progressives gain the trust of radicals by articulating a similar-sounding narrative, and then they quickly adjust the narrative just enough with ideas about making amerikkka "live up to its ideals" to keep the Black thought narrative from taking over. In such ways, street radicals are converted into people who seek to make amerikkka "better." Problem is, genocide cannot be made "better." It has to be ended.

Look, it's great to acknowledge how the 1619 Project is more helpful than the dominant narrative of the u.s.a., but we should be very careful about it. The case of the 1619 Project shows that, before our very eyes, Black thought in the hands of liberal-progressives can quickly go from being a radical threat to the ongoing genocide that amerikkka is to a helpmate to the lofty amerikkkan ideals of freedom for "all" -- even as the genocide of Black, Indigenous, and poor people continues.

There are many good things about the 1619 Project's narrative, but overall, it signifies a repackaging and watering down of Black thought as old as the first maroons who revolted against their enslavement and fought alongside Indigenous people. The present historical moment has forced many people who have previously ignored or rejected Black thought to answer to it. And in such a moment, a narrative like the 1619 Project's narrative provides something that progressives like Jones can line up promote. To not get in on the Black thought narrative of amerikkka would be to risk irrelevance. That's the kind of political moment we are in right now. Make no mistake, however. The 1619 Project's narrative still seeks to preserve amerikkka as an ideal that just hasn't gone far enough. The idea that we should really be fighting to carry amerikkkan ideals further should make Black people and those who love our freedom struggle very uneasy.

But even the 1619 Project does some labor toward centering the perspectives of the least powerful instead of the genociders and enslavers whose narratives are almost always taught in schools. That is better than what we have, and it is certainly better than the 1776 Report.

Some might dismiss the creation of the 1776 Commission as Trump's (failed) last-ditch effort to win re-election. But the report didn't fall flat just because Trump lost re-election. It landed safely in a power structure that has long attempted to bludgeon Black people into silence in order to maintain control over how the amerikkkan story is told. Trump and his fascist and conservative allies sought to empower right-wing Black intellectuals -- like John McWhorter and Glenn Loury, who are largely marginal and irrelevant in Black conversations -- in their ongoing project to tell us that we need to speak nicer about a society that dehumanizes us in just about every way that it can. These servile intellectuals have been given a mission to commandeer Black history in service of a "patriotic education" that serves white supremacy. In other words, in trump's effort to save the white supremacist narrative of u.s. history, he had to make an intervention in Black studies, a field which, like Black cities and Black countries, he ordinarily looks down his nose at. That's why he needed Black intellectual proxies to be his handmaids.

It should go without saying that trump cannot make such an intervention through publication of well-researched texts. (He barely reads.) The only way he can intervene in Black thought is by using force to batter down the contradictions, or at least those who would expose those contradictions. And even without Trump in office, the foot soldiers and shock troops of the antiblack structure have already received their marching orders and are still very much at the work of silencing Black and Indigenous voices -- trying to de-fund Black studies and ethnic studies and attack those who study and apply it. It all goes to prove, once again, that whiteness, and the right wing tendency that forms its vanguard, has long seen Black thought as so great a threat to amerikkka that they are not above recruiting Black helpers to shut down Black thought.

In this episode, recorded shortly after Trump announced the 1776 Commission, the brothers discuss the larger effort to suppress Black knowledge and Black thought and how the 1776 Report fits into that effort. Even though the commission became largely irrelevant once Trump lost the presidency, the 1776 Report is still floating around down there as an archived presidential commission report, ready to be revived by thirsty white supremacists who don't mind sadistically forcing a "patriotic history" on Black and Indigenous people in order to silence our righteous resistance to genocide and slavery. The Black intellectuals on the 1776 Commission represent an ongoing problem internal to our communities: the problem of Black intellectual misleadership appointed by white people and white interests to force Black people to conform our understanding of our own history to that which will allow our enslavers and genociders to keep doing what they want.


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Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Episode #19: REVIEW: "Judas and the Black Messiah" and the Education of Black Leadership

Akua Njeri (Deborah Johnson), widow of Fred Hampton

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The brothers recorded this review of Shaka King's 2021 film Judas and the Black Messiah a few months before Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield were up for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor (which Kaluuya won, but Stanfield should also have gotten an award). The brothers briefly discuss the actors' performances, casting, and writing, but mostly they focus on the film's contribution to Hollywood's long history of depicting Black love and Black radicalism, as well as the Black Panthers' historical role in politically organizing Black street organizations, the force of Black resistance to police murder, and the police infiltration of and war on the Black liberation movement. The brothers also talk about the building of Black leadership capacity through political education and the importance of preparing for self-defense, intelligence, and counter-intelligence capacities in Black movements.

NOTE: The brothers urge people to read Native American Studies scholar Ward Churchill and writer Jim Vander Wall's book Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement and check out episode #12 of this podcast, in which the brothers discussed that book.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE EPISODE

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Episode #18: REVIEW: "Exterminate All the Brutes" and the Language of Genocide [PART 2 of 2]

In the last episode, G & O began discussion of Exterminate All the Brutes, Raoul Peck’s 2021 film now streaming on HBO Max. The brothers focused on the repeated symbol of white people’s “heart of darkness” echoed from the book that title is taken from: Joseph Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness, written about Belgium’s rape and genocide of Africans in Congo. The brothers also brought in some of the tools of psychoanalysis. They paid close attention to language and images to read the unconscious intentions that drive and direct an action, even if people are unaware of those drives. Seen in this way, this film’s topic is the genocidal drive at the core of whiteness, and it is articulated so that whiteness can be understood and ended. 

In this episode, the brothers continue their discussion of Exterminate All the Brutes, by homing in on the film’s connection between images that shape how we think about genocide, such as John Wayne movies, monuments, and histories of genocide, and the structural conditions of modern u.s. society which are designed to result in genocidal effects on Indigenous and Black people. In the present moment, whiteness is engaging in a collective refusal to see itself in the mirror image of other sadistic figures, like Jeffrey Dahmer. The psychic structure of whiteness, stretching across many generations and geographies, is sadistic — meaning, it gets juiced from harming those it sees as “others” — even if that harm is concealed while it occurs and is later denied completely. The brothers analyze the tech industry term “artisanal miner,” for example, which sounds pretty but conceals the slave-like conditions under which Black people in Congo today are forced to produce coltan, a mineral that makes our smartphones work. The brothers conclude with their score of the revolutionizing potential of Exterminate All the Brutes

NOTE: The brothers apologize for the moments of crosstalk, which are really bad in this episode. This is an ongoing problem with the Anchor software, which the brothers have brought to Anchor’s attention. They will work on fixing it in future episodes and might end up moving to a different recording system and platform.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE EPISODE 


Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Episode #17: REVIEW: "Exterminate All the Brutes" Exposes the white Heart of Darkness [PART 1 of 2]

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The brothers are back with part 1 of a 2-part discussion of Raoul Peck's new HBO documentary, "Exterminate All the Brutes" (2021). The first thing G & O examine is how the film explodes the standard story that documentary tells about America. Documentary, O says, is related to ethnographic writing, a form of media innovated by the very same genocidal colonizers this film depicts. This film will guide you through a Frantz Fanon-style reading of the murder whiteness carries in its heart. it excavates the murderous events of the last 500 years so you can glimpse the sadistic drive in the collective unconscious of global whiteness. Be ready to go there. This film is made to take you there.