It was a full scale beggarâs banquet, the return of the repressed, a surprise party. The city people, young and old, black and white, went through the pawnshop windows like meteorites. Nervous exorcists, trembling before a mortal turned evil and massive and enigmatic, the politicians asked, âWho are you?â And like demons unleashed from an inferno, they answered, âMany.â How it burned! Ferocious and manificient, in the conjured-up, premature, arsonist dawn. It was a small moment of truth: the plundered became the plunderers. Booze ran in the streets from the shattered liquor stores. Then the blood ran. The cops and the troops began their grim retaking of the city. Fifty caliber wasps swarmed against the apartment buildings, cutting through the brick effortlessly. Tanya Blanding, four years old, was dragged away in the bulletsâ undertow, a touch of Vietnam for the folks at home. John Leroy, gunned down at a roadblock, lay on a pavement in a spreading tarpaulin of his own blood. There was a shortage of snipers. Today Detroit, feeble, decaying, sinks deeper into the vortex. More black politicians, now, and more black cops. Counterinsurgency has done its job. But the burden is heavier, the air thicker, the despair more giddy. The âriots,â we are told, were a âtragedy.â And they certainly were for the people murdered and maimed by the state. But the real tragedy is that the riots didnât spread, that they didnât deepen into full scale, conscious revolt. The tragedy is that since then, the real theftâof bread and dreamsâhas continued. The tragedy is that so few looters ever learned the meaning of their festival and started buying into the new program on time. The tragedy is that so many have turned fatalistic and have turned their backs on their potential allies and their faces to the wall. The tragedy is that there is now a surplus of snipers, and theyâve got no aim. It was a binge, a saturnalia, a world turned momentarily upside down. It was a tremor, coming from deep recesses that some would prefer to wish away, to buy away, to machine-gun away. But itâs still there, a shifting tectonic magma, rumbling, creaking, pressure building, and it wonât go away.
âJuly 1967âł by T. Fulano, Fifth Estate 326, Summer 1987














