Thursday, August 10, 2023

Alabama's Black leaders, in the sway of conservative cash, stay silent, but Black targets of White violence let their actions speak volumes in Montgomery brawl

The beginnings of Alabama riverfront brawl

Alabama's Black leaders rarely speak out on significant issues because they largely are funded and controlled by conservative forces, reports longtime attorney and civil-rights advocate Donald Watkins. It's not that Alabama, home to historic moments in the civil rights movement, has a scarcity of significant issues. But the ability and willingness of Black leaders is lacking writes Watkins, under the headline "The Loud Voices of Blacks in Alabama and the Silence of Their Elected and Appointed Officials."

A significant issue made national headlines when a brawl, apparently tinged with race, broke out on the riverfront in downtown Montgomery, Alabama's capital city. AL.com reports that charges have been filed against three white boaters who allegedly attacked a Black ferry co-captain,sparking a racially charged melee at Riverfront Park  on Saturday. The Black victims did not cower or flee; they fought back.

From Carol Robinson's report at AL.com:

What would have been an otherwise peaceful Saturday evening on Montgomery’s riverfront took an ugly turn as a violent brawl erupted in Alabama’s capital city.

Police said Tuesday afternoon that three people have been charged in connection to the large fight captured on viral videos.

The videos showed a Black riverboat co-captain attacked by a group of white people as other Black people rushed to his defense.

Montgomery police Chief Darryl Albert said 13 people were taken into custody Saturday for questioning and all released pending further investigation.

As of Tuesday, warrants have been issued against three men who were on the pontoon boat: Richard Roberts, 48, two counts of third-degree assault; Allen Todd, 23, one count of third-degree assault, and Zachery “Chase” Shipman, 25, one count of third-degree assault.

All charges are misdemeanors. The three charged were white men onboard a pontoon boat that prevented the riverboat from docking for nearly an hour, police said.

Are Black leaders likely to show the kind of courage Black victims displayed at Riverfront Park? Watkins isn't counting on it, and he quotes Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the process:

"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter." -- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Have you noticed the loud silence coming from Alabama’s community of Black elected and appointed public officials on the following topics of significant public interest?

1. The recent Riverfront brawl in Montgomery. Videos of the brawl have gone viral on the Internet and in the national news media. The brawl started when a group of unruly whites viciously attacked Damien Pickett, a 56-year-old black riverboat co-captain while he was performing his job last Saturday. Yet, the state's black political leadership has been completely silent on the brawl and its ramifications in press releases and on social media platforms. The brawl clearly signals that blacks in Montgomery and across the "Old South" who are wrongfully and viciously attacked by a menacing group of whites will no longer "turn the other cheek." They will fight back in unity. Montgomery is now the birthplace of the bus boycott (December 1955 to December 1956) and the 2023 Riverfront brawl -- two defining moments in the movement for human dignity and respect for civil rights.

2. The all-white, five-member Alabama Court of Civil Appeals, which has never had a Black member.

3. The all-white, five-member Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, which has never had a Black member.

4. The all-White, nine-member Alabama Supreme Court in a state that is 26% Black. This court has not had a Black member since 2001.

5. The Confederate-flag waving conduct of Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker, who cherishes his Confederate heritage.

6. The defiant refusal of the Republican-dominated Alabama Legislature to comply with a federal court mandate to submit a redistricting plan that contains two majority Black districts.

7. The dismantlement of affirmative-action programs at historically White public colleges and universities and diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at major corporations.

8. The aggressive dismantlement of Black economic empowerment agendas and opportunities in Alabama.

9. The non-stop poisoning of the air, ground, and water in three Black neighborhoods in North Birmingham by six major industrial polluters, which requires an estimated $1 billion to clean up.

10. The skyrocketing murder rates in Mobile, Montgomery, and Birmingham, along with the state's overcrowded and filthy prison conditions.

Watkins then asks a question that should not need to be asked: What Matters are Black Elected and Appointed Officials in Alabama Allowed to Speak Out About? Here are Watkins' answers:

Here are the safe topics for Black elected and appointed officials in Alabama:

1. Securing funding for predominantly White and elitist Birmingham-Southern College, in the form of a $30-million loan from the state of Alabama and $5 million from the city of Birmingham.

2. Building a new downtown football stadium for the University of Alabama at Birmingham, which will receive $90 million in funding from cash-strapped Birmingham taxpayers in the amount of $3 million over a 30-year period.

3. Building a new amphitheater in downtown Birmingham, which cost cash-strapped Birmingham residents $5 million.

4. Engaging in symbolic legislative opposition against moving the Rocket Monument out of Huntsville.

5. Praising the courage of dead civil rights leaders from the 1950s and 60s during commemorative events.

Why such timidity in a state that gave birth to the modern civil-rights movement, sparked by the Rosa Parks bus boycott -- in Montgomery? Watkins provides a stark answer by asking, and answering more questions, including: Who Funds the Political Campaigns of Black Elected Officials in Alabama?

Approximately 96% of the campaign money raised by Black elected officials in Alabama comes from Republican-leaning PACs, major Republican-oriented businesses, “dark money” entities, out-of-state corporate interests, and Republican mega donors. For all practical purposes, the state's Democratic Party is dead. It cannot fund any political campaign. Furthermore, one-third of the state's Black population lives in poverty and cannot contribute money to anyone's political campaign.

Who Do Black Elected and Appointed Officials in Alabama Truly Represent?

Black elected and appointed officials in Alabama typically represent the political interests of Republican-leaning businesses, GOP mega-donors, out-of-state corporate interests, and traditional power-players in the state. When they do speak out about something involving their Black constituents, it is usually just a "feel good" speech at an awards ceremony or annual civil rights commemorative event.

Are Black Elected and Appointed Public Officials in Alabama Basically Useless?

For the most part, “Yes.” With the exceptions of 2 or 3 officeholders in the entire state, Black elected and appointed public officials in Alabama will only do what their Republican and corporate handlers allow them to do. These officials are often treated like "bastard children" by their GOP handlers. They are afraid to speak out about the things that matter.

This is a sad state of affairs in "the birthplace of the civil rights movement," but Watkins is not optimistic about changes in the near term:

Of course, no White elected official in the state has condemned the violent attack on Damien Pickett.

Republican Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall, who wages aggressive fights to protect unborn children, has not said a word about the violence that threatened Damien Pickett's life.

Steve Marshall is always missing in action when it comes to protection of the health, safety, welfare, lives, and civil rights of Blacks in Alabama.

Today, Blacks in Alabama are basically unrepresented in the state's political dialogue, political processes, and political apparatuses. They must speak for themselves, via their words and actions.

This is the cold, hard, truth!

3 comments:

  1. Donald Watkins has a number of insightful comments Alabama's riverfront brawl at his Facebook page:

    Donald V. Watkins
    We have finally arrived at the day when all blacks in Alabama can see and hear the loud silence of our black elected and appointed officials on the things that matter in life. They have fancy government titles, but they lack the courage to speak out about the violent attack on Damien Pickett.








    https://www.facebook.com/donald.v.watkins

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  2. Donald V. Watkins
    The mother of one of the victims in the altercation alleged in a sworn statement to Montgomery police that “you could hear men yelling ‘fu-k that nigger’” as Damien Pickett, the black co-captain of a riverboat, tried to move the pontoon boat occupying the riverboat’s docking location. https://www.cnn.com/.../montgomery-boat-dock.../index.html

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  3. Donald V. Watkins
    In 1979, I became the youngest person ever elected to the Montgomery City Council. I served as a council member from 1979 to 1983. My departure from the Council was hailed by then-Mayor Emory Folmar, a staunch conservative Republican, as "one of the greatest blessings since the Yankee troops went home in 1870.” I served and protected the political interests of my constituents, without hesitation, reservation, or fear. I made the majority political establishment respect my constituents. I do not see that level of respect, commitment, or service in today's black elected and appointed officials.




    Author
    Donald V. Watkins
    These are the mugshots of the men who attacked Harriott II Riverboat Captain Damien Pickett on the Riverfront in Montgomery, Alabama last Saturday. From left to right, they are: Richard Roberts, 48; Allen Todd, 23; and Zachary Shipman, 25. The mother of one of the victims in the altercation alleged in a sworn statement to Montgomery police that “you could hear the men yelling ‘fu-k that nigger’,” as Damien Pickett, tried to move the men's pontoon boat that was occupying the Harriott’s docking location.

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10231094912018352&set=p.10231094912018352&type=3



    ReplyDelete