The following is an essay written in 2004 by Mumia Abu-Jamal, a former Black Panther who was convicted in 1982 of the murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. He was sentenced to death, and sat on Death Row for 26 years, until a new capital sentencing hearing was called, which eventually resulted in his death sentence being changed to life imprisonment without parole in 2012. He has written six books during his incarceration.
WHY POLITICS SUCK
By Mumia Abu-Jamal
When I think of
politics, I think of a politician -- an odd one, I'll admit -- and not even an
American. I think of Charles De
Gaulle -- the tall, big-nosed French general who became the first president of
France's Fifth Republic. Why him? Well, in truth, he barely nudges out the
great political scientist, Machiavelli; but both gave us deep insights into the
world of politics.
De Gaulle though,
gave what seems like the best definition of a politician when he said: "In
order to become the master, the politician poses as a servant." (He also
wrote in a letter, the great line: "Politics are too serious a matter to be
left to the politicians").
In those two, brief
lines, De Gaulle provides both the problem and the solution; the problems are
the politicians; the solution -- not the politicians.
I think, for millions
of folks, there's the very deep feeling, maybe even the knowledge, that
politicians will say virtually anything to get elected, and, once in, proceed
to betray those who voted for them. I'm convinced that it is precisely that
inner knowledge -- that gut knowledge -- that keeps millions -- perhaps 50+
million Americans -- from voting at all. They know better.
They know that
politicians are the tools of the wealthy -- and that they spit on the poor and
impoverished.
Remember those
so-called 'debates?' (OK -- I use the term loosely). But wasn't it interesting
that the poor, or working people, were never mentioned? How their concerns
didn't even merit a mere moment during a 2-hour debate? That's because they
are invisible to the rich guys who run, or are run in, the political system. It
really doesn't matter if we discuss Republicans or Democrats. It's the same.
Do you know how many
folks contribute to election campaigns?Just 4%. 4%!
Most political dough comes from corporate coffers. So, who do you think they
serve? That's where the $4 billion bucks came from to pay for the U.S.
presidential campaign in 2004.
So -- the political
system sucks. But, guess what? It was designed to suck (at least for people
like us).
The rich men who
wrote the Constitution hated and feared the common people, whom they called
'the Mob'; and, not surprisingly, the common folks hated them back. Consider
the words of New Jersey's Governor, who, in 1765, lamented: "The Mob had
set down no less than fifteen Houses... the houses of some of the most
responsible persons in the Government. It has now become a War of Plunder, of
general leveling and taking away the Distinction of Rich and poor" [From
Jerry Fresia's Toward an American Revolution: Exposing the Constitution
& Other Illusions (Boston: South End Press, 1988), at p. 28].
And this
wasn't simply New Jersey -- such attacks took place in Boston, in Pennsylvania,
in New Hampshire and beyond. They hated the rich snobs who lorded over them
then -- and I'd guess it's not very different now -- it's just far less
visible. We now see a government dedicated to the proposition that all rich
folks matter -- and no one else. The recent election
crystallized that truth.
Politics sucks today
because it is, for most folks, a burden -- and a lie. It promises, every few
years, to change things for the better, yet the only 'change' one gets, if from
bad to worse. Thus, millions of people no longer play the game.
It sucks because
people learn, even when they participate, that it's not a fair game. Votes are
'lost'; votes are stolen; voters are intimidated, and the politicians are
bought and sold like stocks on Wall Street.
It sucks because
people feel trapped, and want to be free.
©
copyright 2004 by Mumia Abu-Jamal.