Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Freedom Rider: No Tears for the FBI
Margaret Kimberley, BAR editor and senior columnist
17 May 2017

by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley

Pity the poor FBI agents. Reportedly, the morale of the secret police has suffered since their former director, James Comey, was cashiered by President Trump. If the FBI has, indeed, been rendered ineffectual, that’s a blessing. “We can only hope that their condition is so serious that they no longer want to target individuals and groups for surveillance, arrest and imprisonment.”

Freedom Rider: No Tears for the FBI

by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley

“The FBI will always be in the business of crushing dissent.”

“Everywhere I look, Lord

I see FB Eyes

Said every place I look, Lord

I find FB Eyes

I’m getting sick and tired of

gover’ment spies”

-- Richard Wright, The FB Eye Blues, 1949

President Trump’s dismissal of FBI director James Comey is certainly a topic worthy of discussion and debate. In typical Trump fashion, his amateurish administration has given a variety of contradictory rationales for the action. While there may be confusion about what precipitated the decision, there should be no confusion about the FBI’s long history of persecuting black people in this country.

No one should forget the FBI played a major role in prosecuting Marcus Garvey. A young agent named J. Edgar Hoover led the investigation during the Wilson and Harding administrations. Hoover destroyed the Garveyite movement by arranging a trumped up charge of mail fraud. Garvey was convicted, imprisoned and deported from the United States.

The FBI never relented in this strategy of actively opposing the black struggle for human rights. In fact every FBI agent was responsible for managing at least one informer to report on activities in black communities. Political action was not the only target of attack. Writers such as Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, W.E.B. DuBois, and James Baldwin were all under FBI surveillance. The works of Lorraine Hansberry, Ralph Ellison and others were submitted to the FBI by a network of informers.

“Every FBI agent was responsible for managing at least one informer to report on activities in black communities.”

All of these activities fell under the umbrella of the Counter Intelligence Program, COINTELPRO. COINTELPRO used murder, disinformation, character assassination, and double agents to crush the liberation movement. Of course Martin Luther King was a focal target of surveillance. The FBI even wrote an anonymous letter which urged him to commit suicide. Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were murdered by FBI agents acting in concert with the Chicago police department in 1969.

In the aftermath of September 11, 2001 the FBI used informants to entrap innocent people into planning nonexistent terror attacks and then sentencing them to long prison terms. The Liberty City Seven and Newburgh Four are amongst those victims.

James Comey has his own history of eroding civil liberties and maintaining the police state apparatus against every black person in the country. When mass protest arose against police killings Comey was among those who peddled the lie of a “Ferguson effect.” He made the spurious case that the police were suddenly afraid to kill black people. If only that were true. The Obama administration was in the business of pretending to undo mass incarceration and Comey exposed their fraud by claiming that it didn’t even exist.

The FBI will always be in the business of crushing dissent. The agency coordinates its work with police departments across the country with Joint Terrorism Task Force operations that target black people, Muslims of all races and anyone else who may fit a profile rife with racism and xenophobia.

“COINTELPRO used murder, disinformation, character assassination, and double agents to crush the liberation movement.”

This is the FBI that many people now lionize in the wake of the Comey firing. Trump’s dispute with Comey has created a dangerous cognitive dissonance on the part of people suffering from selective amnesia. If black people can’t be depended upon to remember the FBI’s history of evil doing we are in very serious trouble.

Former National Intelligence director James Clapper laments that FBI agents are now suffering from “low morale” after their boss was told to clean out his desk. We can only hope that their condition is so serious that they no longer want to target individuals and groups for surveillance, arrest and imprisonment. We would be fortunate indeed to have an ineffectual FBI.

The term “deep state” has become popular of late but it is something of a misnomer. The deep state is nothing new or extraordinary. It was and is ever present in the lives of black people. That dynamic is unchanged, regardless of who sits in the corner office of the J. Edgar Hoover building in Washington DC.

The fact that Hoover’s infamous name has not been removed is significant. It is further proof that the fate of a particular FBI director should be of no concern to black people. There are many legitimate reasons to oppose Donald Trump. However the emphasis on him rather than on the system has created a sad spectacle of foolishness and further proof of the sorry state of black political understanding.

Margaret Kimberley's Freedom Rider column appears weekly in BAR, and is widely reprinted elsewhere. She maintains a frequently updated blog as well as at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com. Ms. Kimberley lives in New York City, and can be reached via e-Mail at Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgendaReport.com.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • COP26: Greenwashing and Plutocratic Misadventures
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
    COP26: Greenwashing and Plutocratic Misadventures
    17 Nov 2021
    For all the policy failures of COP26 it may actually be an inflection point in history -- a point where social and political conditions force a transformation of consciousness and politics that
  • Credit: AFP
    Jemima Pierre, BAR Editor and Columnist
    A Dirty Occupation: The UN’s Criminal Enterprise and Ecological Catastrophe in Haiti
    17 Nov 2021
    What are the environmental and ecological impacts of large-scale military occupations by the United Nations “peacekeeping” missions?
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    EXCERPT: Genocide: The Social Lynching of Africans and their descendants in Brazil, Abdias do Nascimento
    17 Nov 2021
    The late Brazilian intellectual, artist, and activist Abdias do Nascimento argues that racial democracy is premised on an idea of racial mixing that not only valorizes whiteness, but is predica
  • BAR Book Forum: Camisha Russell’s “The Assisted Reproduction of Race”
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Camisha Russell’s “The Assisted Reproduction of Race”
    17 Nov 2021
    In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book.
  • It is the liberal class which is determined to censor as much of public discourse as possible. They work with big technology social media companies to determine what will and will not be seen and heard in the media. In so doing they narrow the issues and positions which the public are able to consider for themselves.
    Danny Haiphong, BAR Contributing Editor
    Censorship is the Last Gasp of the Liberal Class
    17 Nov 2021
    It is the liberal class which is determined to censor as much of public discourse as possible.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us