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Chomsky writes: "The America that 'black people have always known' is not an attractive one."

Noam Chomsky. (photo: Philip Jones Griffiths/Magnum)
Noam Chomsky. (photo: Philip Jones Griffiths/Magnum)


Roots of American Racism Run Deep

By Noam Chomsky and George Yancy, The New York Times

20 March 15

 

Chomsky spoke with George Yancy as part of a continuing New York Times series on race in America. Chomsky opens with the idea that when most Americans think about terrorism, they overlook the long history of racist terror against African-Americans. Chomsky also touches on the role that slavery played in creating the wealth in US, and the long tradition of racism within American politics. - PG/RSN

eorge Yancy: When I think about the title of your book “On Western Terrorism,” I’m reminded of the fact that many black people in the United States have had a long history of being terrorized by white racism, from random beatings to the lynching of more than 3,000 black people (including women) between 1882 and 1968. This is why in 2003, when I read about the dehumanizing acts committed at Abu Ghraib prison, I wasn’t surprised. I recall that after the photos appeared President George W. Bush said that “This is not the America I know.” But isn’t this the America black people have always known?

Noam Chomsky: The America that “black people have always known” is not an attractive one. The first black slaves were brought to the colonies 400 years ago. We cannot allow ourselves to forget that during this long period there have been only a few decades when African-Americans, apart from a few, had some limited possibilities for entering the mainstream of American society.

We also cannot allow ourselves to forget that the hideous slave labor camps of the new “empire of liberty” were a primary source for the wealth and privilege of American society, as well as England and the continent. The industrial revolution was based on cotton, produced primarily in the slave labor camps of the United States.


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