Mark
Thompson, the host of “Make It Plain” on SiriusXM radio,
has been off the airwaves for a few weeks now, and his absence is
being felt at a time when he is needed most, as Washington melts
down. In addition to his program, Thompson - also known as Matsimela
Mapfumo - is an ordained minister and a political activist, a
reparations advocate, the emcee of the Million Man March, and so many
other things. And he is a crucial progressive black voice--a
prophetic voice - in a media landscape where such individuals are a
rarity.
Thompson’s
conspicuous hiatus from the airwaves came amid his support
for reparations -
he
is a member of the National
African American Reparations Commission
(NAARC) - and his criticism of the #ADOS
(American Descendants of Slaves) hashtag movement - which claims to
support reparations for Black people has ties to a white nationalist,
anti-immigrant, pro-Trump
hate group,
the Federation of American Immigration Reform (FAIR). Mark also
opposed a now defunct program on SiriusXM hosted by white supremacist
and former Trump White House advisor Steve
Bannon.
During an appearance on MSNBC, Thompson had expressed his criticism
of #ADOS -which attacks progressives to the benefit of Republicans,
and which white supremacists are using to sow division in the Black
community - resulting in #ADOS attacks on him on social media and
attempts to have him fired from his show. Things came to a head when
Mark had a confrontation with an apparent agent provocateur who took
issue with his opposition to #ADOS, and verbally
harassed
and provoked him at a recent event hosted by Newark Mayor Ras Baraka.
However, more importantly, the two men reconciled
and had a coming together with the assistance of Mayor Baraka.
Following
his suspension from the SiriusXM Progress channel, Mark Thompson has
received support, including a campaign
under the hashtag #IStandWithMarkThompson,
and an online petition
to return him to the air. Further, the Congressional
Black Caucus
wrote a letter to SIRIUS XM CEO James Meyer blasting the
multibillion-dollar media company for its lack of diversity, as the
NNPA reported.
“We
write to express our deep concern about the lack of African American
representation in the C-suite and on the board of Directors at SIRIUS
XM Radio. In February 2019, Sirius XM announced the finalization of
its acquisition of Pandora Media for $3.5 billion, forming the
world’s largest audio entertainment company,” said the
letter from CBC Chairwoman Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.), Rep. Barbara
Lee (D-Calif.) and Rep. G.K. Butterfield (D-NC). “We believe a
media company of this size and reach should be much further along in
ensuring diverse, equitable, and inclusive leadership and agree that
Sirius XM has a great deal of work to do,” the letter pointed
out. The lawmakers added that they find the lack of diversity at
SiriusXM “problematic” in light of 52 percent of Black
consumers and 45 percent of Latino consumers driving consumption on
streaming services.
SiriusXM
is by no means alone. Over 50 years have passed since the Kerner
Commission report following the urban rebellions of the late 1960s,
which sounded the alarm on the failure of the white news media to
report on America’s racial problems and other issues. “Our
second and fundamental criticism is that the news media have failed
to analyze and report adequately on racial problems in the United
States and, as a related matter, to meet the Negro’s legitimate
expectations in journalism. By and large, news organizations have
failed to communicate to both their black and white audiences a sense
of the problems America faces and the sources of potential
solutions,” the report said.
“The
media report and write from the standpoint of a white man’s
world. The ills of the ghetto, the difficulties of life there, the
Negro’s burning sense of grievance, are seldom conveyed.
Slights and indignities are part of the Negro’s daily life, and
many of them come from what he now calls ‘the white press’
- a press that repeatedly, if unconsciously, reflects the biases, the
paternalism, the indifference of white America. This may be
understandable, but it is not excusable in an institution that has
the mission to inform and educate the whole of our society.”
The
consequences of a homogeneous media that do not reflect the
viewpoints of Black and Brown people, poor and working people,
emerging social movements, marginalized and disenfranchised
communities are clear. As Malcolm
X once said:
“If you’re not careful, the newspapers will have you
hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who
are doing the oppressing.”
“The
controlled press inflames the white public against Negroes,”
Malcolm
noted.
“The police are able to use it to paint the Negro community as
a criminal element. The police are able to use the press to make the
white public think that 90 per cent or 99 per cent of the Negroes in
the Negro community are criminals,” he added. “Once the
police have convinced the white public that the so-called Negro
community is a criminal element, they can go in and question,
brutalize, murder unarmed, innocent Negroes and the white public is
gullible enough to back them up. This makes the Negro community a
police state.”
Even
today, America’s newsrooms are predominantly white and male,
not even reflecting the demographics of the general population, and
certainly not meeting the needs and expectations of the public. In
recent years, the already low number of Black and Latino journalists
in mainstream media has
fallen - with
many journalism school graduates of color not landing jobs - sowing
racial
bias
among news organizations. According to Pew Research, 77
percent
of newsroom employees are white. At a time of media consolidation,
where deregulation has placed more and more media in the hands of
fewer companies, diverse media ownership will allow society to better
deal with its problems of racial
and economic injustice
and allow those facing institutional racism and discrimination to
empower themselves. Only 2.6
percent of television stations and 5 percent of radio stations
are owned by broadcasters of color, in a nation that is 40 percent
nonwhite.
The
glaring racial disparities in the media could not come at a more
inconvenient time, in which Donald Trump will usher in a fascist
state if given half the chance. Trump is dismantling the
administrative state with all deliberate speed, trampling on the
rights of racial and religious minority groups and creating its own
reality, its own truth through the manipulation of propaganda,
distortions and outright lies. Today, more than ever, we need
powerful, unadulterated and unfiltered voices such as Mark Thompson,
who speak truth to power and hold the powerful accountable.
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