The murder of James Byrd, Jr.
Racial violence and the social forces in America that fuel
it
By Martin McLaughlin
13 June 1998
The sadistic murder of a middle-aged black man in Texas last
week is an indication of the savagery which lies just beneath
the surface of American life. James Byrd, Jr., 49, was beaten
unconscious, chained to the back of a pickup truck and dragged
for miles over rural roads outside the town of Jasper.
Three white men, John William King, 23, Shawn Berry 23, and
Lawrence Brewer Jr., 31, have been arrested. Berry has already
given a confession that implicates the other two as the principal
assailants. Both King and Brewer had links to white supremacist
groups while serving terms in state prison. In the course of the
killing King reportedly made a reference to the "Turner Diaries,"
a fascistic novel which was in the possession of Timothy McVeigh
when he was arrested for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing.
The official commentaries on this atrocity--from the media,
the Democratic and Republican politicians and the civil rights
establishment--have not gone beyond the horror of the killing
and its racist motives to begin a more searching examination of
its social roots.
The black mayor of Jasper said race relations in the town were
good: "Here you have a hospital administrator who is black,
the executive director of the East Texas Council of Government
is black, the president of the chamber of commerce is black, the
past president of the school board is black and the mayor and
two councilmen are black.''
Precisely! The mayor's statement quite unintentionally highlights
how limited in many respects and how fragile is the social progress
made since the days of Jim Crow. A handful of middle class blacks
may hold privileged positions, and legal segregation may be banned,
but it is still the case that a black man is in danger of being
beaten and murdered because of the color of his skin.
Today the killers are arrested and jailed, rather than being
patted on the back by the local authorities, but that will not
bring back James Byrd Jr., or prevent the next such attack.
Racism and politics
Race hatred did not spring fully-grown from the hearts and
minds of King, Brewer and Berry. It is a product of the broader
social environment. East Texas was a center of Ku Klux Klan activity
during the heyday of lynching, from 1889 to 1918. These traditions
live on, especially in the activities and attitudes of the local
police.
There have been a series of police killings and jailhouse deaths
of black men in recent years in nearby areas of east Texas. In
Hemphill, Texas, in neighboring Sabine County, on the Texas-Louisiana
border, a young father of six, Loyal Garner, was arrested on a
phony drunk driving charge, taken to the county jail and beaten
to death in 1987. Another young black man, arrested for the theft
of a fountain pen, died in a jail cell in 1988 after a police
beating. In Vidor, near Beaumont, Texas, Ku Klux Klan members
staged armed patrols in 1994 in an effort to prevent the integration
of a local housing project.
Added to this is the open encouragement given to the activities
of extreme-right groups by leading elements in the Republican
Party. Many of the freshmen Republicans elected in 1994 had significant
backing from militia groups and echoed their views. After the
Oklahoma City bombing, they pressed for congressional hearings,
not into the fascist milieu which produced Timothy McVeigh, but
into the Ruby Ridge incident, the Waco massacre, and other cause
célèbres of the militia groups.
One such congressman, Steve Stockman, represents the congressional
district just south of Jasper County. He sent a letter to Attorney
General Janet Reno on behalf of the militia groups only six weeks
before the Oklahoma City bombing. On the day of the bombing he
received a fax from a fascist radio commentator in Michigan updating
him on the investigation of the blast.
It is noteworthy that Texas Governor George W. Bush, after
a perfunctory condemnation of the murder of Byrd, declined an
invitation to come to Jasper personally to show his outrage over
the racial killing. The son of the former president does not want
to weaken his standing with the Christian Coalition and other
ultra-right groups, which he banks on to propel him to the Republican
presidential nomination in 2000.
The social roots
What are the social conditions which made this tragedy possible?
Jasper County is part of rural east Texas, one of the poorest
and most backward regions of the United States. US census figures
give the following profile:
The county's population of 31,148 is 80 percent white, 18 percent
black, 2 percent other. The number of college graduates, 1,649,
is exceeded by the number of people who dropped out of school
in the ninth grade or earlier, 2,816. Barely half the adult population
are high school graduates.
The unemployment rate is well above the state and national
average. Most of those who work are employed in low-wage jobs
in retail sales, light manufacturing, lumber and construction.
The median household income is $20,451, considerably below
the US average, while the poverty rate is 20 percent. One out
of every ten households is on welfare, and one out of three have
no wage or salary income at all. In a largely rural area, 10 percent
of households have no car and five percent have no phone.
These figures suggest the social context in which the murder
of James Byrd took place. The conditions in Jasper County are
the worst for younger sections of the working class, especially
those who are high school dropouts, sinking into a life of petty
crime, drunkenness or drug addiction.
The mounting social tensions in America are the product of
poverty, the decay of basic services like education and health
care, and the increasing polarization of society between a fabulously
wealthy elite and the vast majority who must struggle to make
ends meet. In the absence of a politically conscious workers movement,
with political life and public discourse entirely monopolized
by the privileged 10 percent at the top, these tensions do not
as yet find any progressive outlet.
Instead of being directed into a political struggle against
the economic system which is responsible for growing social misery,
the anger over deteriorating conditions festers and is subject
to be diverted into reactionary channels. It finds expression
in the outbreaks of individual violence which now take place almost
on a weekly basis in America--workplace rampages, school shootings,
murder-suicides. This increasing brutalization of American society
is the background to the murder of James Byrd.
See Also:
The shooting in Oregon
Alienation, adolescence and violence
[23 May 1998]
Thirty years since the assassination
of Martin Luther King
[4 April 1998]
The Jonesboro murders - Why?
[28 March 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |