|
|
|
In last
week's Freedom Rider, BC's own Margaret
Kimberly drew attention to the little-noticed news item that
Halliburton had landed the no-bid contract to construct detention
centers to be utilized in the event of what officials deem an
“immigration emergency.”
Reader Linda O'Brien writes
Many thanks to the Black Commentator and Margaret
Kimberley for writing more on the frighteningly under-reported
story of Halliburton KBR's contract to build "emergency
detention centers." When I first read of this in
the New York Times, I was struck particularly by the comment
that the centers would be used either for the influx of thousands
of immigrants who apparently are poised on the border just
over the ridge, or for "the rapid development of new
programs." That's the kind of ambiguity that
could fuel a whole X-Files episode.
I agree with Ms. Kimberley, this development
is justifiable cause for paranoia. Paranoia really isn't
even the right word, since common sense and self-preservation
demand that the American people sit up and take notice.
Congress should have stopped this if for no other reason than
that Halliburton's history of corruption should preclude it
from ever again getting a U.S. government contract.
Those millions it wastes eventually add up to real money.
I hear some people around New Orleans could use a little help.
Thanks again. Keep up the good work.
Yeah. We heard that about New Orleans too.
And “immigration emergency” does sound like an X-Files episode.
Former Halliburton CEO and co-president Dick Cheney and his
gang, as Ms. Kimberly points out, have given us plenty to be
paranoid about. These are sad and dangerous times indeed
when the most optimistic scenario, as she puts it, is that this
is a case of vast but straightforward no-bid corruption.
And we cannot all be optimists.
Real journalists arm citizens with the real truths
they need to stand up for their own rights. Margaret Kimberley
is a real journalist and a great commentator, and we are blessed
to have her on board.
If there were more Margaret Kimberleys and more
editors in the corporate media who allowed their stories to
reach the public, it would have been big news at the end of
January that a Zogby
poll of 897 likely Pennsylvania voters revealed that
84.9% of them would support a congressional candidate who favored
impeachment. This is one of the latest pieces of potentially
valuable and empowering news affirming that the vast majority
of Democrats, and a much narrower majority of all Americans
may favor impeaching the president and his gang. Such
news, if it became more widely known, would inevitably lead
more rank and file Democratic voters to ask why the Democratic
Party's House and Senate campaign committees,
whose function is to recruit and provide assistance to Democrats
running for the House and Senate, are not beating the bushes
for the strongest pro-impeachment candidates they can find as
the surest strategy to tip the Congressional balance in the
upcoming mid-term elections.
It is an open secret that instead of riding the
impeachment donkey to a Congressional majority in the midterm
elections, Democratic Party shot callers are threatening and
discouraging pro-impeachment candidates. For those seeking
a clue to this mysterious behavior, Jeff Blankfort's article
in last week's BC, “Why Cynthia McKinney Lost Her Seniority
and Didn't Get It Back” went to the heart of the
riddle by examining Democratic House Leader Nancy Pelosi's shameful
and inexplicable revocation of Rep. Cynthia McKinney's seniority.
Maceo Kemp was one of several readers to comment
on that article:
Thank you, Mr. Blankfort, for your informative
and insightful article about Cynthia McKinney. She is
truly a lone voice for Truth among our elected officials in
the Congress. Is there anything more that people may do
to try and persuade the House leadership to restore Ms. McKinney's
seniority?
George Wilson, another BC reader,
sent us a very brief media message detailing what he thinks
is the very simple reason behind the revocation of McKinney's
seniority. The way he tells it,
You might call it Life. The alpha female
punishes.
We respectfully disagree with Brother George.
We at BC are certain that a better world is
possible. People who believe this don't mistake the way
things are at the moment for the way things ought to and can
be. Rep. Pelosi is no “alpha female” and this is not “Life.”
Legislative majority and minority leaders in both parties and
houses of congress, and in state legislatures across the
land act as funnels for literal rivers of campaign cash from
corporations and wealthy donors which they direct to legislators
and candidates that tow the corporate line and away from those
that stray from the plantation.
Hence Rep. Pelosi as Democratic Minority Leader
is no “alpha” anything. She is the middleperson in what
her colleague Senator McCain has deemed an ongoing “sophisticated influence peddling scheme.
She is a cut-out, a bag man, or a bag lady. And when the legislative
process and the Democratic Party itself is for rent to its big
donors in big oil, big pharma, to insurance companies, media
monopolies, agribusiness, military contractors and the rest
we don't call it “Life.” We call it corruption.
This endemic corruption among the Democratic party's
leadership is what makes it punish Georgia's 4th congressional
district for having returned Cynthia McKinney to the House.
It is the same corruption that drives it to threaten or discourage
anti-war and pro-impeachment Democrats who want to run for the
House or Senate, and it now threatens to prevent Democrats from
taking control of the congress in this year's midterm elections.
Projecting today's savagely limited economic choices
as “all there is” or all there ever can or should be is often
mistaken for wisdom. Another of our readers, possibly
infected with this malady, writes us:
Just read the article on Wal-Mart and sending this
comment from a personal perspective.
I grew up in a small town not far from where
I am now employed as a university professor. I remember when
Wal-Mart first moved to the area and faced a lot of anti chain
store, anti Wal-Mart resistance. I was skeptical my self,
until I saw what happened to the community after they were
established. Prior to Wal-Mart the small city was ruled by
the controlling fathers and any economic activity was in the
hands of a few citizens, including control of the school system.
Employment of Blacks was controlled as well as where their
money was spent. There were very few jobs given to Blacks,
or I should say prestigious jobs that would build a future
and self esteem. After Wal-Mart, things started to change.
Blacks obtained decent paying jobs, and were allowed to become
managers and hold responsible positions. There was no employment
of college students in the city before Wal-Mart, but students
were able to obtain jobs to pay their way through college
while working at the local Wal-Mart. After Wal-Mart, other
chain grocery stores were established and continued the hiring
of Black citizens. Although the chain stores made a difference,
the control factor continues to exist in the school system,
enforcement authorities, and governing agencies.
I am not one to be an advocate of the existence
of an entity that has its number one priority of making a
profit, but the chain stores have provided goods at a reasonable
price that low income persons can purchase, without having
to endure the controlled system of buy on credit, and your
check and life belongs to someone else.
Keep up the good work, but be careful of what
someone else wishes.
BC's co-publisher Glen Ford,
who spent a good deal of his childhood in rural Georgia, replies:
Dear "Doc" Fuller:
Sounds like you grew up in one of the many little
places that most people who have any ambition leave as soon
as possible - where pygmy potentates rule, and local white
folks have nothing to be proud of except the fact that they
aren't Black.
There are a lot of such places, and I suppose
that - given the overarching pettiness and boredom that prevails
- anything would seem like an improvement,
even a Wal-Mart.
University students and other young transients
would be happy, of course. They don't plan to remain at Wal-Mart
after earning their degree; they're young and healthy, and
probably won't need to have health insurance (which they won't
get from Wal-Mart on part-time hours); and they don't have
families to feed.
It's hard to empathize with the local white
merchants that you describe as being so dreadful. Having lived
in such places, I'm sure they were terrible people, especially
when it came to hiring African Americans. At a gut level,
I can't help but take pleasure at the thought of them being
driven out of business. Or being run down by a truck.
And I'm glad that the locals don't have to bear
the indignity of having to buy things on credit (not that
Wal-Mart will give them credit, without a credit card). The
town you describe seems to have been a relic of an almost
semi-feudal past. Welcome to the United States of Wal-Mart,
a modern corporation that provides almost no mobility for
the vast majority of its workers, and forces other retailers
to do the same. But at least, it's not the old town you
remember. Right?
Let's spread the word to Black folks in Los
Angeles, Chicago and New York. They didn't have to leave Bumville,
generations ago, to escape the petty oppressions of small
town white elites and bored peckerwoods looking to mess
with somebody below even their own lowly status.
Had the Black families just stayed in Bumville a few more
generations, they would have been saved by Wal-Mart. And now,
Wal-Mart is coming to rescue their descendants from the
perils of big city life. The Promised Land on the cheap.
Please excuse my sarcasm, Doc. We're glad you became
a university professor, and were not locked into
either Bumville's old racial stratification or Wal-Mart's
new regime. At this rate, Bumville will achieve a civilized
level of existence in about a thousand years. If Wal-Mart's
national "model" prevails, the rest of us will one
day join Bumville - sliding downward from the other end
of the scale.
Sincerely,
Glen Ford, Editor and Co-Publisher
Most young people are taught that history is
driven by great people called “leaders” that do great things,
the effects of which trickle down to current and future generations
of ordinary folks. We suppose this is the historical view
that prompted the following comment from reader Wadiya Ali upon
reading BC's February 9, 2006 cover story, “ Failures of the Black Misleadership Class.”
After reading your article I have to agree there
has been no one on the scene that can galvanize the Black
communities of America into a unified group.
Do you have any suggestions or is it we are
waiting for God to send him/her?
We humbly suggest that looking for leaders to
“galvanize the black communities of America into a unified group”
is a dead-end.
Leaders don't make history. Mass movements make history.
Mass movements throw up leaders, they throw down governments
and established orders. Mass movements drag judges, politicians
and the law itself in their wake. The Freedom movement
of more than a generation ago was such a mass movement.
We have plenty of leaders and wannabes unwilling and unable
to galvanize a blessed thing. That will not change until
we find the wherewithal to build another broad mass movement.
Finally, the February 9 “Misleadership”
article sparked the following email from the honorable Keith
Ellison, a state representative in Minneapolis MN.
I read your piece on failure of the black leadership
class and I was left with a few thoughts. My first thought was
that any kid who wanted to be a leader might think twice if
she knew that Mr. Dixon was going to brand him as a "misleader"
from the start. Your piece gives generalization a whole new
meaning. I know of at least two progressive Black politicians
in the Atlanta area who are progressive and doing the best they
can.
Here's what else you do not acknowledge. Politicians are basically
good at messaging and pulling people together. If
Black politicians are not offering good ideas on how to deal
with declining real wages, unemployment, etc., then why offer
them something? You have a stunning diagnosis of
what is wrong. When are the Black scholars, like you, going
to give the Black politicians some good policy ideas? What
can you offer a Black politician on poverty elimination,
the explosion of Black incarceration, or epidemic of asthma
among Black kids? I'd love to know.
What are your ideas for economic development? We've
got 40 years of deindustrialization and globalization. Did
it ever occur to you that the market forces that, say, Detroit
was up against might be a little more than a mayor could handle? We
live in a time in which Governors beg and promise corporations
all kinds of things to locate in their state, not leave their
state, or do more in their state, etc. Tax bases
are being bartered away. We live in the age of Wal-Mart. And
yet you mercilessly attack all black people who offer
some leadership because some have made decisions as bad as their
white counterparts.
BC hopes that a young person
reading our Misleadership article will be reintroduced to the
idea that black elected officials ought to serve the interests
of their human constituents rather than those of greedy real
estate speculators and big campaign contributors.
Rather than branding anyone a “misleader from
the start,” the article gave specific examples of misleadership
behavior citing examples from Atlanta's thirty-year string of
African American mayors. Breaking promises to city workers
and responding to strike threats with mass firings under the
reign of Maynard Jackson. Spatial deconcentration and
gentrification for the Olympics
under Andy Young and a third Jackson term. More of the
same and water privatization under Bill Campbell, and the BeltLine
under Shirley Franklin. There are those whose duty seems
to consist of heaping uncritical praise on black politicians,
black business people, black celebrities, anyone black who has
“made it.” That's not what BC does. We
are about evaluating black elected officials on their performance,
and whether that performance makes life better for their constituents.
By this yardstick, there are indeed a lot of misleaders.
BC is careful not to be all things
to all people. But we have and we do offer advice to black
policy makers.
Anyone seeking some of our policy advice on mass
incarceration, for instance might look to two articles from
the summer of 2005, “It's Time To Build a Mass Movement”
and "Mass
Incarceration: A Political Abomination.” The first
article points out many of the defining characteristics of mass
movements. The second states our belief that the issue
of mass incarceration is, in the African American community,
the organizing opportunity of this generation, and suggests
a strategy for placing the issue of America's unjust and illegitimate
policy of mass incarceration on the center stage as a political
issue. A third article from last summer, titled Ten
Worst Places to be Black is an example of the messaging
around the issue of mass incarceration which Mr. Ellison opines
that “politicians” are really good at, which encourages
people to think the issue of mass imprisonment in new ways.
BC has also offered solid and
sound advice on what urban economic development might look like
if it was to benefit the people actually living in the cities
now, as opposed to the economic development model currently
in favor, which consists of moving poorer people off the land
and richer ones in, and giving well-connected developers giant
subsidies and tax breaks to make it happen. The five
part series, “Wanted: A Plan For the Cities to Save Themselves”
ran in BC issues throughout 2003 and 2004.
Far from being all problem statement and no solution,
the series highlighted the efforts of community groups and others
engaged in exemplary and pioneering work in the field of community
economic development.
BC also showcased the very useful
work of Greg Leroy of Good Jobs First, reprinting the abridged
introduction to his book The
Great American Jobs Scam in our September 15, 2005 edition.
In this seminal work, Mr. Leroy outlines a decades-long campaign
on the part of corporate America that has all but abolished
the corporate income tax, which allows companies that operate
in multiple states to not report income in any of them, and
much more. His book reveals an entire industry devoted
to producing fraudulent and misleading job creation and economic
growth forecasts in order to wring unjustified subsidies out
of local and state governments. We recommend it most highly
to politicians and to ordinary citizens trying to get a grip
on what “economic development” is.
Far from meekly acquiescing to life in “the age
of Wal-Mart-Mart,” as Rep. Ellison puts it, Greg Leroy
was the first to put an accurate figure on how much government subsides
Wal-Mart gets.
An astute and careful BC reader
will have no trouble picking out lots of specific advice on
public policy. Living wage legislation to boost family
income? Anti-usury laws to keep more families out of bankruptcy?
Single payer health care? Shrinking the crime control
and prison industry that has disproportionately victimized our
communities? We can only conclude that Rep. Ellison is
new to BC, and has not yet familiarized himself
with some of our useful offerings. We welcome the opportunity
to engage him and other progressive black elected officials
in discussions about how to address the urgent matters that
affect our people.
BC welcomes dialogue with all
its esteemed readers. We try to answer most of our email,
and we print some of it in this space each week. Send
us your best, and we promise to keep sending you ours.
Contact Bruce Dixon at [email protected]
|
Home |
|
|
|
Your comments are always welcome.
Visit the Contact
Us page to send e-Mail or Feedback
or Click
here to send e-Mail to [email protected]
If you send us an e-Mail message
we may publish all or part of it, unless you tell us it
is not for publication. You may also request that we withhold
your name.
Thank you very much for your readership.
|
|
|