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

Are US Blacks An Internal Colony? Or Is That Just Analysis By Analogy?
Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor
01 Dec 2017

Since 1968 or 69, almost 50 years now I’ve been hearing the descendants of Africans in the US described as an “internal colony.” Back in the day it seemed perfectly applicable. Africa, Asia and the Americans had been colonized by Europeans who ruled over the natives, just as white Americans ruled over us. The internal colony thesis tied us to anticolonial struggles in Africa, Asia and Latin America, explaining some of what we had in common. Beginning about a decade ago I grew uncomfortable enough with the the internal colony thing to stop using it in writing of my own. I never challenged anybody else on it though, perhaps because I never thought about it long and hard enough to understand how or why I ought to.

A couple months ago I caught this interview with UIC scholar Cedric Johnson on Dead Pundits. Johnson is the author of The Panthers Can’t Save Us Now. Johnson is doing what scholars are supposed to do, unpacking and interrogating our core assumptions, refining some, affirming others and bagging a few for the trash can. He offered several useful observations on black nationalism, black power and the utility of the “internal colony” as a working description of the situation of black people in the US which have helped put sufficient flesh on the bones of my own misgivings to make them ready for prime time.

To start with, the internal colony thing is a half century old. If we were building bridges or aircraft, studying math or geology or languages we wouldn’t go a half century without questioning our analytical tools. So are we an internal colony, really?

The situation of the descendants of Africans in the US today looks a lot less like an internal colony than it might have 50 years ago. Today there are thousands of actual black people in the actual US ruling class and an entire layer of thousands more aiming, training and competing for spots on the escalator. There are black lobbyists and corporate functionaries like the black Jones Day partner who oversaw the gutting of city pensions and fire sale of Detroit’s assets, the two dozen or so black admirals and generals who surrounded Barack Obama onstage at the 2008 Democratic convention. There are black media figures and celebrity charter school crooks like Magic Johnson and Iyanla Vanzant, and black near billionaires like Junior Bridgmon whose success stories are built on low wage viciously exploited black labor.

That doesn’t happen in colonies. Samora Machel in Mozambique would have been a doctor but colonial Portugal didn’t allow blacks in medical school so he had to be a nurse. The French never dreamed of allowing an Algerian or Vietnamese to be president, any more than the Brits would have let a Jamaican or Ghanaian serve as PM. But we just had eight years of a black president. This is not the colonial model, it’s something else entirely.

Colonies have territories too… where is the black territory in the US? It doesn’t exist. The internal colony thing is not an accurate description, it’s metaphor. Johnson calls it analysis by analogy, which is comforting and convenient but not really analysis at all.

If even Africans on the continent have stopped describing their societies as “neocolonial” a decade or two ago why are so many supposedly woke analysts of the black condition in the US still stuck on the internal colony metaphor which illuminates nothing and describes nothing in the real world? We can’t change the real world if we can’t describe it accurately. It’s time to take out the trash, and the internal colony thing with it, and maybe take a closer look at the usefulness some of the other constructs which are tied to it.

For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Bruce Dixon. Find us on the web at www.blackagendareport.com.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and a member of the state committee of the GA Green party. He live sand works near Marietta GA and can be reached via email at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.

internal colony
black nationalism

Related Podcasts

Reparations Now? Maybe In Order To Get The Job Done It's Time to Call It Something Else
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Reparations Now? Maybe In Order to Get the Job Done It's Time To Call It Something Else
07 March 2019
Reparations? In order to get the job done, maybe it’s time to call it something else.

More Stories


  • Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    Whitewashed, Bleached, and Alabastardized: How white “supremacy’s” Subjective Identification of War Criminals Reveals its Deeper Psychopathology
    20 Aug 2025
    The manufactured outrage over the Alaska summit is not about holding power accountable; it's about reinforcing a global racial order. The rules-based international order has always been a hierarchy…
  • Clau O'Brien Moscoso
    US Counterinsurgency Wins in Bolivia: Intentional Factionalism Within MAS and the Capture of the Lithium Triangle
    20 Aug 2025
    Missing the enemy, or why Western leftists fail again.
  • PACA protest
    Pan-African Community Action PACA
    The Federal Takeover of D.C.: The Colonial Occupation Disguised as “Public Safety”
    20 Aug 2025
    The deployment of federal agents and National Guard troops to Washington, D.C. is a militarized occupation disguised as a public safety initiative. This move weaponizes the state's power to…
  • Black Alliance For Peace
    BAP Haiti/Americas Team Condemns US Government Attack on Venezuelan Sovereignty
    20 Aug 2025
    US Issues $50 million Bounty while Sanctioning Venezuelan People and Starving Gaza.
  • Palestine Chronicle Staff
    Responding to Mohamed Salah: Who Killed the ‘Palestinian Pelé’?
    20 Aug 2025
    Al-Obeid, 41, was killed on Wednesday, August 6, 2025, in an Israeli attack on civilians waiting for humanitarian aid in the southern Gaza Strip.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us