Fannie Lou Hamer, a folk philosopher of the civil rights movement in the Mississippi Delta, knew what she was up against in a state and region where an entrenched hard-right oligarchy ruled at the expense of the majority.
“With the people, for the people, by the people--I crack up
when I hear it,” said the former field hand, a woman wise far beyond her sixth
grade education. “I say, with the handful, for the handful, by the handful,
‘cause that’s what really happens.”
Hamer spoke those words decades ago, but they’re just as
true today as hard-right political leaders in Mississippi and across the South
once again circle the wagons to make sure they stay in power even if it means
suffering across the land.
Witness the spectacle of Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and
the Republican bosses in the state Legislature opposing an expansion of
Medicaid that would help 300,000 needy Mississippians even though the federal
government will largely fund it. They’re not going to threaten their party or
their own political necks by giving Obamacare a chance succeed.
Even the pleas of some 200 doctors and other health
advocates who recently gathered in Jackson, Miss., fell on deaf ears as Bryant
and Co. stood in the door to block any expansion, much like segregationist Mississippi Gov.
Ross Barnett tried to block integration at Ole Miss back in 1962.
The comparison is fitting.
In Mississippi you have the poorest state in the nation, where
one in five nonelderly residents lacks health insurance, a state that recorded
the nation’s largest growth in the gap between the rich and poor between the
late 1990s and mid-2000s. This is a state that in the last two decades enjoyed
a net gain (over what it paid in taxes) of $240 billion in federal aid to the
poor and needy.
It’s the same story across the South, a region that will
forever be the nation’s poorest so long as it continues to be ruled by
oligarchies of self-interested pols and the business and corporate interests they
serve. That has been the South through much of its sad history.
From Virginia to Texas, what Robert E. Lee and Stonewall
Jackson called the Confederacy, Republican governors have led the charge to
oppose the Affordable Health Care Act and the Medicaid expansion that is a key
part of it. Florida’s governor is the only exception. “Many of the citizens who would benefit the
most from this live in the reddest of states with the most intense opposition,”
Kaiser Family Foundation President Drew Altman told the Associated Press.
The assault on the needy takes many forms. The Republican
governor and legislature in North Carolina recently agreed to slash weekly
benefits to the unemployed from $535 to $350. North Carolina has a 9.2 percent
unemployment rate, fifth highest in the nation. It joins five other Southern
and border states—Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, and South Carolina—that
have slashed benefits to the unemployed.
Back in Fannie Lou Hamer’s day, white Delta planters and
their pet pols fought racial integration with every fiber of their being. Their
minions killed and maimed activists. They burned churches and homes. They threw
blacks like Hamer into jails and tried to beat them into submission.
The same federal government that finally forced Mississippi
and the Delta planters to accept the black vote and black civil rights also
allowed that same leadership to control federal aid to the poor. Planters grew
rich on federal farm subsidies but were misers when it came to doling out food
stamps or other poverty assistance. They
had no compunction about withholding assistance to any black upstart who
challenged the system.
Read historian James C. Cobb’s The Most Southern Place on Earth about those times. It’s painful
but an education. Mississippi was “a kind of prison in which live a great group
of uneducated, semi-starving people from whom all but token public support has
been withdrawn,” said one observer, a physician from North Carolina who refused
to believe how bad things were until he saw them in person.
The same hypocrisy exists today. State leaders in
Mississippi managed to find $356 million in incentives to lure Toyota at a time
when they wouldn’t even fund a burn center, forcing burn victims to leave the
state for treatment.
“Nothing could be a greater threat to the Southern
cheap-labor economic strategy than universal, standardized federal social insurance,”
author Michael Lind of the New America Foundation has written. “In order to
maximize the dependence of Southern workers on Southern employers in the great
low-wage labor pool of the former Confederacy, it would be better to have no
welfare at all, only local charity (funded and controlled, naturally, by the
local wealthy families).”
In other words, government “with the handful, for the
handful, by the handful.”
Jeeeeesus Christ. Yes: this corporatist wet dream of a "healthcare bill," is the next step to working class emancipation. If I'd have known all we had to do was force everyone to sign their lives over to corporate insurance providers, I'd have argued for it long ago.
ReplyDeleteGreat reading your blogg
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