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5. World War I1 and ' 'Americanization"<br />

World War I1 marks a definite point at which national<br />

movements of the oppressed within the U.S. Empire<br />

were thrown back, and the growing hegemony of neocolonial<br />

politics firmly established. At home this neocolonialism<br />

took the well-prepared form of "Ammericanization"<br />

- of offering and forcing the colonially<br />

oppressed to assume supposed "citizenship" in the U.S.<br />

Empire in place of national liberation. Of course, while the<br />

"Americanization" of the European immigrants during<br />

the World War I period meant that they voluntarily<br />

became settlers and Euro-Amerikans, the "Americanization"<br />

of the colonially oppressed meant involuntary confinement<br />

as supposed "minorities" camped on the edges<br />

of settler society. This was the ultimate in Civil Rights.<br />

The global war and the U.S. Empire's expansion<br />

moved in a new stage in colonial relations. On the one<br />

hand, the liberal Roosevelt Administration had gone out<br />

of its way to try to convince Third-World peoples that the<br />

New Deal was their "friend" and protector. This was done<br />

in a manner by now very familiar to us.<br />

New Deal Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes<br />

was an aggressive patron of Civil Rights. Ickes was, in<br />

fact, the former President of the Chicago NAACP<br />

chapter. He and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, the President's<br />

wife, arranged for Afrikan intellectuals and professionals<br />

to get Federal appointments. The practices of the "lynchbelt<br />

South" were sympathetically deplored. In the urban<br />

North welfare programs were opened up for Afrikans, and<br />

by 1934 some 52% - a majority - of the Afrikan refugee<br />

population in the North were on relief. (52) This act was<br />

smoothly performed. Pollster Samuel Lube11 described<br />

how it looked to many petit-bourgeois Afrikans who supported<br />

the New Deal:<br />

"To the younger Negroes the WPA and relief<br />

mean not only material aid but a guaranty that no longer<br />

must they work at any salary given them, that they are entitled<br />

- they emphasize the word - to a living wage.<br />

Through the WPA, Harlem's Negroes have had opened to<br />

them white-collar opportunities which before had been<br />

shut, such as the music and art and writers' projects.<br />

Negroes, too, remember that Mrs. Roosevelt visited<br />

Harlem personally, that President Roosevelt has appointed<br />

more Negroes to administrative positions.. .than any President<br />

before him. Each time Roosevelt makes such an appointment,<br />

the Amsterdam News, Harlem's leading<br />

newspaper, headlines it in 72-point type. Every young<br />

Negro gets a vicarious thrill thinking, 'There may be a<br />

chance up there for me.' " (53)<br />

While the liberal Roosevelt Administration kept<br />

up a steady propaganda campaign throughout the 1930s<br />

and early 1940s, claiming to be "the best friend Negroes<br />

ever had," the period was a time of savage attacks to destabilize<br />

the Afrikan Nation. There was a conspicuous deindustrialization<br />

of Afrikan employment, as they were<br />

pushed out of the main imperialist economy.<br />

For awhile it appeared on the surface as though<br />

Two vigorous ladies acted as<br />

F.D. R.'s deputies in Negro affairs-<br />

Mary McLeod Bethune, a forthright<br />

educator who served in the "Black<br />

Cabinet," and Elcanor Roosevelt<br />

Afrikans were simply victims of the Depression, suffering<br />

a heightened version of the commonly-shared joblessness.<br />

But by 1940 the voices of DuBois and others who pointed<br />

out a genocidal pattern were proven right. In 1940 and<br />

1941 the Depression finally broke. The war in Europe in<br />

1939 had brought new orders for steel, munitions, ships,<br />

trucks and other industrial products. Factories were adding<br />

shifts for the first time in years, and Euro-Amerikan<br />

unemployment was going down rapidly throughout the last<br />

half of 1940 and in 1941.<br />

Afrikans were barred from the new production,<br />

however. Their industrial employment was going down as<br />

more and more new jobs opened up. Corporation after<br />

corporation issued public statements that their new plants<br />

would be 100% Euro-Amerikan. Led by Colt Firearms,<br />

Consolidated Aircraft, Chrysler Corporation, North<br />

American Aviation and similar industrial giants, Corporate<br />

Amerika openly was saying that patriotism required<br />

keeping Afrikans out. Imperialism itself well recognized<br />

the boundary between oppressor and oppressed nations.<br />

After the war began the Anaconda Company's wire and<br />

steel division in New York ordered a bar on hiring laborers<br />

from enemy countries - "'No Italians, Germans, or<br />

Negros. "(54) Colonial Afrikans were untrustworthy from<br />

the viewpoint of imperialism.<br />

The U.S. Government itself reflected this<br />

genocidal program once we go past the White House's propaganda<br />

campaign. Between October 1940 and April 1941,<br />

the Afrikan percentage of those placed in factory jobs by<br />

the U.S. Employment Service dropped by over half, from<br />

a mere 5.4% down to only 2.5%. (55) The U.S. Navy in-<br />

119 stituted a new policy in its shipyards wherein all "Negro"

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