Surviving Kilwaukee
This article was orginally posted at:
http://www.wiretapmag.org/activism/43223/
and at
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20071001/kilwaukee
September 7, 2007
"Imagine us in that bottom on that PCP.
Walkin' to school wit a tool,
who gon' beef wit me.
Got addicted to sellin' drugs,
marijuana and coke.
Momma, she washed
her hands, and let me go.
The rest you know.
I aint gotta explain,
I been a man, since I went got my own."
Lil Boosie, "My Struggle"
The roots of despair
When
16-year-old Preston J. Blackmer was murdered outside of his foster
mother's home in Milwaukee in April of 2005 most people living in the
midsized Midwestern city barely noticed. After all, death is almost an
every-other-day occurrence in "Kilwaukee." Especially in Blackmer's
neighborhood where teenage drug dealers often sell dimes, sacks of
crack and weed to their extended family members to keep the fridge full.
The
fear of death is a fact of life for many young African-Americans living
here. There have been nearly 1,500 murders in this city of 650,000
people since George W. Bush took over the oval office. Most of the
victims have been Black folks living in a small concentration of census
tracts on the city's segregated North Side.
But violence is
nothing new to Milwaukee. African-Americans have been dying at the
hands of their peers at alarming rates for the last 25 years. It's just
that today both the victims and perpetrators are getting younger.
Born
at a time when their parents and grandparents were facing
Depression-era joblessness and underemployment, Blackmer's Milwaukee is
not the same attractive industrial boomtown that once pulled tens of
thousands of former sharecroppers out of the South in the 1950s. Not
only have many of the social safety networks -- that once protected
youth like Blackmer from the harsh realities of poverty -- have
disappeared, but also the rapid disappearance of work has weakened the
bonds of black kinship networks.
Few politicians and community
leaders want to admit it publicly, but children and young adults
currently living in many of Milwaukee's inner city neighborhoods are
now more likely to go to prison than graduate from high school. Forget
about college.
But Blackmer's story is not unique to Milwaukee.
All across the country, former industrialized metropolises like
Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh have been hit by a wave of
violence. But what's causing the increasing death toll? Has the Hip-Hop
Generation finally hit the self-destruction button?
Rethinking 'Murder Was the Case'
Of
course, there is not just one source of urban America's social woes.
There are many issues at play including hypermasculinity. In his recent
WireTap article "Murder Was the Case," author Matthew Birkhold
highlighted that there's "a link between the construction of
masculinity and the emergence of murder." Birkhold argues that in an
attempt to act 'hard,' "many men spend entire lives trying to prove
their manhood, hurting others in the process."
But while
Birkhold's analysis raises some important points about how
institutional racism has historically worked to exclude
African-Americans from fully participating in society, he never truly
gives a voice to the institutionalized powerlessness that is running
rampant among today's youth. Because unlike their parents or
grandparents, who once shouted that they were "black and proud," many
young folks have never had a vision of self-empowerment.
Nothing for us
"Man,
you can have all the rallies you want, but you are never going to stop
violence. I mean, not unless you are stopping poverty, racism and all
that other stuff. You can't stop that, so mufuckas is going to keep
dying," says 21-year-old Jeffery Cannady aka DJ Willie Shakes, a
popular DJ and youth organizer in Milwaukee. "It's like you just got to
live your life man, because I mean these times are written in the
Bible. We only got so much time left."
This sense of
hopelessness isn't unique to DJ Willies Shakes. In fact over the last
three and a half years since moving back to Milwaukee, I've talked to
thousands of young people like DJ Willie Shakes who just don't believe
that life is going to get better.
"There is nothing out here for
us," said 19-year-old Lanisha Martin, an aspiring rapper who is also an
organizer with a group called the Campaign Against Violence. (Editor's
note: The author is also an organizer with the Campaign Against
Violence). "Of course people are going to get killed. I mean I've lost
a lot of friends. And it's sort of crazy to realize that I will never
see them again."
My story vs. the game
Either way you
look at it, the odds of Blackmer making it out of his stomping grounds
were more than stacked against him. Born at the height of the federal
government's War on Drugs, Blackmer was a product of the crack
epidemic. Not only had he never met his drug-dealing father, but also
Blackmer's mother was addicted to the street life and all its fatal
trappings. For most of his short years on earth, this invisible
man-child had to fend for himself.
And survival meant bouncing
from couch to couch and occasionally getting off dime packs of crack
and weed to keep food in his stomach and clothes on his back. Without a
"wicked jump shot" or the extra support needed to succeed in the public
school system, Blackmer spent many a school day locked up in the county
juvenile detention facility. By the time he passed away the young man
was just another statistic; just another black boy lost.
Sadly,
Blackmer's story is no different than his killer's. Murdered in what
appeared to be a crime of passion, Blackmer's killer was a small-time
hustler who was jealous that the handsome boy was spending time with
his girlfriend. Like his victim, it is obvious that this young man had
very few reasons to believe that his life was going to get any better.
While
conservative talking heads would have you believe that young
African-Americans are the source of their own woes, the truth is that
the game of life is fixed against many young people. Living in cities
where vast bureaucratic infrastructures are dedicated to maintaining
the prison industrial complex, millions of well-meaning Americans
throughout the country make their living off the warehousing and
storage of black youth. And like the big-box retail stores that seem to
be popping everywhere, youth incarceration is big business. This year
it will cost Milwaukee County nearly $95,000 a year to lock up a
juvenile offender.
"The biggest hustle on earth is you," says
nationalized recognized spoken word artist Muhibb Dyer to a group of
young African Americans at SEIU Local 150's sponsored conflict
resolution training in Milwaukee in late July. "Everybody is making
money off you. Doctors who stitch up bullet wounds make money off of
you. Funeral homes make money off you, and lawyers and judges make
money off you. So my question to you is, do you think people really
want this to stop?"
It's at that moment that the many of the kids realize that the prison industrial complex is working exactly as planned.
It's on you!
If
we are going to truly come up with proactive solutions to inner city
violence, we must first understand that the issues that young
African-Americans are facing in black America are not new. Since the
early 20th century, black folks living in urban areas have suffered
from extreme levels of poverty and drug use.
Pick up Claude
Brown's Man Child in the Promise Land, Nathan McCall's Make's Me Wanna
Holler, or even Malcolm X's autobiography, and you'll see that young
African-Americans living in urban areas have been facing many of the
same issues for nearly a half century. Sure, poverty, the "gangsta
aesthetic" and the drug trade may indeed be influential factors in
pushing many young people to embrace violent behavior, but these
variables do not alone explain the increase in violence in urban
America.
Of course today the consequences of these social woes
are becoming more drastic. Prior to an influx of heavy narcotics in the
1970s, the black family protected young folks like Blackmer. Never as
formal as the monolithic nuclear families seen on television, extended
kinship networks consisting of friends, neighbors and family members
have always ensured that children could survive the often-harsh
realities that African-Americans have faced throughout history. Yet in
the 21st century, after a generation of systematic attacks on the black
community, these kinship networks have grown weak and inefficient.
And
it doesn't look like they will be revitalized anytime soon. Not only is
the political climate becoming more tolerant of the criminalization of
youth, but the generational rift between the Hip-Hop Generation and
Civil Rights Generation that Bakari Kitwana first wrote about in his
influential text Hip-Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the Crisis in
Black America is having a drastic effect on the quality of life of post
Hip-Hop millennials.
That's why it's up to us to have rich and
diverse discussions around the issues of urban violence. In my opinion,
the issue highlights how truly broken urban America has become. Not
only was the War on Drugs a quick-fix solution to deindustrialization
but it has also had a tremendously negative impact on all aspects of
American life. At the end of the day the rising trends of urban
violence all across America highlight that the failed campaign has
neither ended drug use nor made life safer for urban Americans.
If
we are going to truly impact urban violence we must give voice to those
that are living and dying on the streets. We must be able to hear their
stories and be empathetic to their perspectives. Otherwise, we will
never be able to empower young people to come up with creative
solutions to their communities' problems. Because there have been
enough Preston J. Blackmers. It's time for us to start stepping up.
