Categories: Lifestyle

#BaltimoreRiots: Can Money Buy Freedom?

Money cannot buy happiness, we are told — a notion some find debatable — but one I am in agreement with. We are told money cannot buy love — another notion some find debatable — but one I am in agreement with too. Others say money cannot buy freedom, a notion some find debatable – myself included. Can it not? Can money really not buy freedom?

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In Baltimore, Maryland, this week, Black people — as well as non-Blacks that stand for truth — are marching and rioting to express their discontent with a system that marginalizes the Black man. In their protests, they are taking a stand against institutional racism.

Others are showing solidarity on social media because #BlackLivesMatter. But do Black lives really matter? From modern-day lynching in the form of police brutality to the prison industrial complex — what author Michelle Alexander calls the “New Jim Crow” — these realities significantly challenge the idea that Black lives matter.

I am not an economist, nor am I a mathematician. As a matter of fact, I never quite liked numbers because of the silently accepted idea that the worth placed on human lives is proportionate to a number.

The more numbers one accumulates in his or her pocket, the more valuable their lifeThus, those with the least money are controlled by those at the top of this money game, and this can be seen in the wealth gap that exists between Blacks and Whites in America.

According to research published by the Pew Research Center last year, the median White household was worth $141,900 and the Black household was worth $11,000 (nearly 13 times less). There is undoubtedly a clear disparity in wealth along racial lines.

Black people are behind economically and do not really own anything of substantial value; heck, they do not even own the hip-hop they created and are the face of.

Sad as it is, we live in a world where the more you have fiscally, the more respect you command, be it genuine or pretentious. It is then not surprising that we keep marching every year and nothing really changes.

As we desperately seek justice, we need to realize what we are doing is essentially demanding a seat at the table of a company we have no shares in.

The march from Selma to Montgomery 50 years ago cemented the way for voting rights. Through this, Blacks were able to establish a political presence. The struggle Blacks faced at that time was to change many of the written rules.

But today’s generation faces a different struggle against the unwritten rules of marginalization, so simply marching will not suffice.

We live in a capitalist world fueled by economic power, which is more or less synonymous with White supremacy.

This system of White supremacy sustains and benefits from institutional racism, hence they have no interest in changing the status quo.

The police we take our frustrations out on today are just a part of a bigger system, and equality can only be found by nipping institutional racism in the bud.

The sentencing of one cop who shoots an innocent Black man may bring justice to one Black family, but not Black people.

I do not in anyway seek to undermine the protests. In fact, I believe they have a big part to play in making our voices heard. However, as long as the status quo remains the same, so will the dispensable nature of Black life, and marching can only gain us piece-meal deals at best.

As such, while we march, we might just want to consider mobilizing through a shared vision of prosperity — as we do in shared frustration — to build our communities and establish ourselves economically.

Without economic power, we have no control.

This is what humanity has been reduced to, and while this is unfortunate, it is the reality of the power dynamics in contemporary society.

Therefore, while I cannot speak in totality and say money can buy freedom, in the case of Black people, it sure seems to be true.

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Sanna Arman

Sanna is a Columnist at Face2face Africa. Sudanese by blood (both the Sudans), and born and raised in Kenya, Sanna holds a Master of Laws degree in International Commercial Law from the University of Surrey, U.K. where she was also awarded the CARR prize for the best trade law paper on a law course. A firm believer in the reclamation of the Afrikan narrative and the telling of Afrikan stories by Afrikans, she is the Co-Founder, Creative Director and Media Manager of Artrika East Afrika, an organisation first started in Sudan with a vision of using different mediums to tell Afrikan stories, particularly those of IDPs in war torn regions and Refugees, with the chief aim to preserve, promote and save the Afrikan Culture & Heritage. When not involved in creative ventures, she uses her legal background to examine the impact of international institutions on Afrika, particularly their rules of trade, and through thought-provoking writing, explore various issues affecting Afrikans in her socio-political commentaries. She is also a spoken word artist, performing poet (former Slam Afrika Champion) and curator of “Women Like My Mother”, a project that seeks to use digital art and storytelling to tell the stories of Afrikan women who often contribute to the liberation and raising up of nations, but are left out of history.

View Comments

  • It is a whole lot of black folk with huge bank accounts. Do they have more power in every way than say working class white folk? That is debatable. Additionally globally, where do most black folk with huge fortunes stand with other black folk or with the white supremacists? In the U.S. black folk with fortunes feel more solidarity with whites of all economic position, rather than with blacks not with their bucks. I think you have to have a humanistic way of including everyone with economic empowerment. Activist tactics like marching can be applied to a range of issues, including economic empowerment. The boycott is another tactic had definitely been used for economic empowerment. In the U.S. lots of black folk with mega bucks benefited with conditions opened up by boycotts and public demonstrations. In the U.S. a whole range of black folk have become wealthy through their businesses securing government contracts, a situation impossible before activism made this possible. But wait a minute, many black folk with wealth around the world have an exclusive relationship with government, right? Situations impossible without an independence movement. But wealthy white folk definitely have exclusive relations with governments. The type of relationship to put a gun to your head to steal your resources, the type of relationship to force u into labor at a fraction of your worth as a human being.

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