The Black Book of the American Left. David Horowitz
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Mercifully, this never came to pass.
A full-spread New York Times Magazine profile of Elaine (“A Black Panther’s Long Journey”), treated her as a new feminist heroine and prompted View and Style sections of newspapers in major cities across the nation to follow suit. Elaine, who reportedly received a $450,000 advance from Pantheon Books, has been touring the book circuit, doing radio and television shows from coast to coast, including a segment of the MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, where she appeared on a panel chaired by Charlayne Hunter Gault as an authority on black America. (“I hate this country,” she later told the Los Angeles Times. “There’s a point at which you’re black in this country, poor, a woman, and you realize how powerless you are.” In contrast, Elaine once told me privately: “The poorest black in Oakland is richer than 90 percent of the world’s population.”) At Cody’s Books in Berkeley, two hundred radical nostalgists came to hear her, flanked by her “bodyguard,” Huey’s old gunman, Flores Forbes, who had served his four years on a second degree murder charge for the Richmond killing and was now prospering in his new career as an urban planner.
I read Elaine’s book. Jaded though I am, I was still amazed by its reception. The only accurate review seemed to come from the Bloods and Crips who flocked as fans to her Los Angeles appearance, recognizing that she was a gangster like them. A Taste of Power is, in its bloody prose, and despite the falsehoods designed to protect the guilty, the self-revelation of a sociopath, of the Elaine I had come to know.
“I felt justified in trying to slap the life out of her,”—this is the way Elaine introduces an incident in which she attempted to retrieve some poems from a radical lawyer named Elaine Wenders. The poems had been written by Johnny Spain, a Panther who participated in George Jackson’s murderous attempt to escape from San Quentin. Elaine describes how she entered Wenders’ office, flanked by Joan Kelley and another female lieutenant, slapped Wenders’ face and proceeded to tear the room apart, emptying desk-drawers and files onto the floor, slapping the terrified and now weeping lawyer again, and finally issuing an ultimatum: “I gave her twenty-four hours to deliver the poems to me, lest her office be blown off the map.”
Because Wenders worked in the office of Charles Garry, Huey’s personal attorney, Elaine’s thuggery produced some mild repercussions. She was called to the penthouse for a “reprimand” by Huey, who laughingly told her she was a “terrorist.” The reprimand apparently still stings and Elaine even now feels compelled to justify the violence that others seemed to consider merely impolitic: “It is impossible to summarize the biological response to an act of will in a life of submission. It would be to capture the deliciousness of chocolate, the arousing aroma of a man or a perfume, the feel of water to the dry throat. What I had begun to experience was the sensation of personal freedom, like the tremor before orgasm. The Black Panther Party had awakened that thirst in me. And it had given me the power to satisfy it.”
The thirst for violence is a prominent feature of this self-portrait: “It is a sensuous thing to know that at one’s will an enemy can be struck down,” Elaine continues. In another passage she provides one of many instances in her book of this pleasure. Here, it is a revenge exacted, after she becomes head of the Party, on a former Panther lover named Steve, who had beaten her years before. Steve is lured to a meeting where he finds himself looking down the barrel of a shotgun. While Elaine’s enforcer, Larry Henson, holds Steve at gunpoint, Elaine unleashes four members of the Squad, including the 400 pound Robert Heard, on her victim: “Four men were upon him now . . . Steve struggled for survival under the many feet stomping him. . . . Their punishment became unmerciful. When he tried to protect his body by taking the fetal position, his head became the object of their feet. The floor was rumbling, as though a platoon of pneumatic drills were breaking through its foundation. Blood was everywhere. Steve’s face disappeared.”
The taste for violence is as pervasive in Elaine’s account, as is the appetite to justify it in the name of the revolutionary cause. She describes the scene in Huey’s apartment just after he had pistol-whipped the middle-aged black tailor Preston Callins with a .357 Magnum. (Callins required brain surgery to repair the damage): “Callins’s blood now stained the penthouse ceilings and carpets and walls and plants, and [Huey’s wife’s] clothes, even the fluffy blue-and-white towels in the bathroom.” This is Elaine’s reaction to the scene: “While I noted Huey’s irreverent attitude about the whole affair, it occurred to me how little I, too, actually cared about Callins. He was neither a man nor a victim to me. I had come to believe everything would balance out in the revolutionary end. I also knew that being concerned about Callins was too costly, particularly in terms of my position in the Party. Yes, I thought, f—k Callins.”
Elaine deals with Betty’s murder in these pages, too. “I had fired Betty Van Patter shortly after hiring her. She had come to work for the Party at the behest of David Horowitz, who had been editor of Ramparts magazine and a onetime close friend of Eldridge Cleaver. He was also nominally on the board of our school. . . . She was having trouble finding work because of her arrest record. . . .” This is false on every significant count. Betty had no arrest record that Elaine or I knew about. I was one of three legal incorporators of the Learning Center and, as I have already described, the head of its Planning Committee not “nominally on the board.” Finally, I had met Eldridge Cleaver only once, in my capacity as a fledgling editor at Ramparts. (Elaine’s purpose in establishing this particular falsehood is clearly to link Betty to a possible plot: “I began wondering where Betty Van Patter might have really come from. . . . I began re-evaluating Horowitz and his old Eldridge alliance. . .”).
Elaine continues: “Immediately Betty began asking Norma, and every other Panther with whom she had contact, about the sources of our cash, or the exact nature of this or that expenditure. Her job was to order and balance our books and records, not to investigate them. I ordered her to cease her interrogations.” She continued. “I knew that I had made a mistake in hiring her. . . . Moreover, I had learned after hiring her that Betty’s arrest record was a prison record—on charges related to drug trafficking. Her prison record would weaken our position in any appearance we might have to make before a government body inquiring into our finances. Given her actions and her record, she was not, to say the least, an asset. I fired Betty without notice.”
Betty had no prison record for drug trafficking or anything else.
“While it was true that I had come to dislike Betty Van Patter,” Elaine concludes, “I had fired her, not killed her.”
Yet, the very structure of Elaine’s defense is self-incriminating. The accurate recollections that Betty, who was indeed scrupulous, had made normal bookkeeping inquiries that Elaine found suspicious and dangerous, provides a plausible motive to silence her. The assertions that Betty was a criminal, possibly involved in a Cleaver plot, are false and can only be intended to indict the victim. Why deflect guilt to the victim or anyone else, unless one is guilty oneself?
Violence was not restricted to the Panthers’ dealings with their enemies, but was an integral part of the Party’s internal life as well. In what must be one of the sickest aspects of the entire Panther story, this party of liberators enforced discipline on the black “brothers and sisters” inside the organization with bullwhips, the very symbol of the slave past. In a scene that