Thursday, December 31, 2020

Some Final Reflections on the 2020 Presidential Election and the Politics of Race, Class, and Gender within the American Electorate

by Kofi Natambu
December 31, 2020
The Panopticon Review

Eight weeks ago on November 3, 2020 the national voting public of the United States—an alltime record of over 155 million citizens!—elected Democratic Party candidate Joseph R. Biden as the 46th president of the United States in what many observers and analysts have deemed the most important and consequential national election since 1860 on the cusp of the Civil War. The deeply alarming, even terrifying rise and emergence in just the past five years of ideologically malevolent forces both here and abroad and rapidly metastasizing in the form of the wildly chaotic and authoritarian neofascist regime of Donald J. Trump had sent the entire political system and much of U.S. civil society itself into widespread turmoil, conflict, and panic. This stark reality only greatly increased deep seated anxieties and fears throughout the Republic over centuries long structural, institutional, and systemic fears, dislocations, corruption, and demagoguery regarding addressing the foundational public categories of race, class, and gender in the American body politic at the levels of both political economy and cultural identity.

As a result what ultimately distinguished the 2020 election from its historical predecessors was a tsunami of bizarre and deeply disturbing behavior and actions involving openly public confrontations, endless disinformation campaigns and venomous rhetorical assaults by President Trump on not only his Democratic Party opponent and challenger Joseph Biden but an ongoing series of unrelenting attacks on virtually any and everyone the president thought, felt, or simply imagined were opposing, slighting, or otherwise dismissing him and his bluster. This included not only many Democratic Party politicians and stalwarts like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer but also many others like progressive politician Alexandria Oscasio-Cortez and what was known as “the Squad” (fellow progressive Congressional representatives Ayanna Presley, Ilhan Omar, and Rashida Tlaib) all of whom happen to be both women and people of color, two of Trump’s favorite punching bags, but many members of his own subservient enabling Party as well on the vary rare occasions when they didn’t openly kiss his ass and sing his praises. The impact on the general election outside of these machinations and ID-fueled rages by the president and the ugly destructive fallout from it was complicated and made even more sinister and disruptive given the extensive racist police violence against African Americans throughout 2020 (e.g. George Floyd, Armaud Arbrey, Breonna Taylor, Rayshard Brooks, Jacob Blake etc.). Meanwhile a massive deadly global pandemic ravaged the entire country making it virtually impossible for the Democratic nominees (Biden and Kamala Harris) to campaign in any traditional or conventional manner which involved appealing to large crowds live in realtime. However even this clear and present danger of spreading the virus via live events which led inevitably to the direct transmission and eventual infection of thousands of supporters didn’t stop the wild antic “super-spreader”events in which thousands of Trump’s supporters endangered themselves and their family, friends, and neighbors.

Despite all the many distractions and the often patently cruel and simply braindead demonstrations of a national cult of fervent supporters of Trump’s despicable rightwing demagoguery and rank exploitation of not only the general public (most of whom were intensely opposed to the president on both a personal and political/ideological level) but of his most dedicated followers as well. Meanwhile the already very deep and persistent divisions of the country along racial. class, and gender lines and revealed once again (as they have for over 70 years now) just how dependent the two major political parties remain on the electoral and ideological domination of these divisions. Thus while Trump continued as he had in 2016 to garner a very substantial majority of white American voters (over 57% of all white voters—which collectively numbered over 100 million people this year!-- cast their ballot for Trump, with 58% of white males and an equally distressing 55% of all white female voters also voting for Trump’ despite his deeply white supremacist, corporate, and misogynist agenda. 
 
As a deeply determined counterweight to this huge national surge of white American “vote of confidence” in a clearly fascist regime and its raging sociopathic leader nearly 80% of a huge number of Black, Latino, Asian, and Native American voters voted against this same regime and leader with the national black vote as usual leading the way with 87% of its voters refusing a replay of the last four years despite widespread voter suppression. As a result, over 81 million American voters collectively voted for Biden while an astonishing 74 million still voted for Trump (a very ominous sign of just how "popular" FASCISM currently remains in American politics and culture). This gigantic turnout meant that the two candidates individually received the most votes of any two candidates in the history of the Republic. That the country is still reeling from an extremely deadly pandemic (over 350,000 Americans have died of the coronavirus as of this writing), a rapidly collapsing national economy, and a frankly maniacal and equally deadly national rightwing coalition led by the heinous Republican Party and the brazenly ruthless likes of Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell, as the rabidly criminal and fiercely antidemocratic antics of the now defeated president continues to assault the political system in general it’s clear that the 2020 election has merely delayed but is still nowhere close yet to firmly and decisively DEFEATING what is as of January 1, 2021 still a clear and present danger to not only this nation but the entire world. Stay tuned because the political, economic, cultural and ideological war that MUST be waged in this society and throughout the globe against the still gathering and rapidly expanding forces of fascism, whether we “win” an election or not and especially whether we “like it” or not is more imperative than ever …
 
HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE!





NOTE:  This post can also be found here at the Panopticon Review On Facebook page.

Monday, December 28, 2020

THE PANOPTICON REVIEW PRESENTS TWENTY OUTSTANDING BOOKS OF 2020

Please Note: The following list of books is not organized according to any personal hierarchy of the relative value of each individual book. Rather it is a list that seriously considers ALL of the books listed here to be of equal intellectual and cultural value and interest, albeit for different reasons. The bottomline on this list is that each one of these books is extraordinary and invaluable in their own right and represents some of the very best writing published in the United States in 2020.

--Kofi Natambu, Editor

 

Brick City Vanguard:   

Amiri Baraka, Black Music, Black Modernity  

by James Smethurst  

University Of Massachusetts Press, 2020 


A People's History of Detroit

by Mark Jay and Phillip Conklin

Duke University Press,  2020

 

The Essential Clarence Major

The Essential Clarence Major: Prose & Poetry

by Clarence Major

The University of North Carolina Press,  2020

 

From Here To Equality:  

Reparations For Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century

by William A. Darity, Jr. & A. Kirsten Mullen

The University of North Carolina Press,  2020


https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41sG897sl1L._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Odetta:  A Life in Music and Protest

by Ian Zack

Beacon Press, 2020

Surviving Autocracy

by Masha Gessen

Riverhead Books,  2020

Strongmen:  Mussolini To The Present

by Ruth Ben-Ghiat

W.W. Norton & Company,  2020

 

Race Man: Selected Works, 1960-2015

by Julian Bond

(Edited by Michael G. Long)

City Lights Books,  2020

 

Ornette Coleman:  The Territory and the Adventure

by Maria Golia

Reaktion Books,  2020 

 

Afropessimism

by Frank B. Wilderson III

Liveright, 2020

The Fascism This Time 


Bland Fanatics:  Liberals, Race, and Empire

by Pankaj Mishra

Farrar,  Straus and Giroux

 

 

This is What America Looks Like:  

My Journey From Refugee To

Congresswoman

by Ilhan Omar 

Dey Street Books,  2020


 

Caste:  The Origins Of Our Discontents

by Isabel Wilkerson

Random House,  2020 

 

 

Begin Again:  

James Baldwin's America And Its Urgent Lessons For 

Our Own

by Eddie Glaude, Jr.

Crown Books,  2020

 

 Set The Night On Fire:  L.A. In The Sixties

by Mike Davis & Jon wiener

Verso,  2020

 

We Are Not Here To Be Bystanders 

by Linda Sarsour

37 INK  (an imprint of Simon and Schuster), 2020

 

 Separated:  Inside An American Tragedy

by Jacob Soboroff

Custom House,  2020

 

ReaganLand:  America's Right Turn:  1976-1980

by Rick Pearlstein

Simon and Schuster,  2020

Full Dissidence:  

Notes From An Uneven Playing Field

by Howard Bryant

Beacon Press,  2020

  

African American Poetry:  

250 Years of Struggle and Song

Edited by Kevin Young 

The Library of America,  2020



HONORABLE MENTIONS:

 

The Fascism This Time and the Global Future of 

Democracy

by Theo Horesh

Cosmopolis Press,  2020

 

Hiding in Plain Sight:  

The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion 

of America

by Sarah Kendzior

Flatiron Books,  2020

 

 The Purpose of Power:  

How We Come Together When We Fall Apart

by Alicia Garza

One World,  2020

 

Hatemonger:  

Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the 

White Nationalist Agenda

by Jean Guerrero

William Morrow,  2020

 

Black Power Afterlives:  

The Enduring Significance of the 

Black Panther Party

Edited by Diane C. Fujino and Matef Harmachis

Haymarket Books,  2020

 

American Oligarchs:  

The Kushners, the Trumps, and the Marriage of 

Money and Power

by Andrea Bernstein

W.W. Norton and Company,  2020

  

The Last Negroes At Harvard:  

The Class of 1963 and the 18 Young Men Who 

Changed Harvard Forever

by Kent Garrett and Jeanne Ellsworth

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,  2020


Donald Trump v. The United States:  

Inside the Struggle To Stop A President

by Michael S. Schmidt

Random House,  2020


Dorothy Day: 

Dissenting Voice of the 20th Century 

by John Loughery and Blythe Randolph

Simone and Schuster,  2020

 

Those Who Know Don't Say:  

The Nation of Islam, the Black Freedom 

Movement, and the Carceral State

by  Garrett Felber

The University of North Carolina Press,  2020