The following is the Radio BC script which is also available
in audio
format voiced by BC Co-Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, Glen Ford.
There are many lessons to be learned from the presidential election,
some requiring a great deal of weighing and measuring. We at BlackCommentator.com
pride ourselves on doing serious work, so you can expect a full blown
analysis on Thursday morning, our normal publication time.
However, a few things are quite clear. Black people have not been
beaten down by four years of the Confederate presidency of George Bush.
Far from it. On Tuesday we sprang to action in huge, determined numbers,
united as ever against our implacable antagonist – and the common enemy
of mankind – George Bush. Our voters were nothing less than heroic,
enduring what sometimes amounted to a kind of torture of four and five
hours in line, waiting to exercise their legal franchise. No one can
break the African American spirit.
Black America, with the help of our allies, proved that citizens can
face down the racist bullies of the Republican Party, who believed
that we could be intimidated by their brazen huffing and puffing, their
threats of massive challenges, their disinformation campaigns – all
based on the premise that Black folks are stupid and timid, and tired
of fighting the powers-that-be. Instead of rolling over, we stood firm
and in greater numbers than ever before. We are the spine – the moral
and intellectual backbone – of America, the smartest and bravest citizens
in the land. Our numbers and resolve intimidated the would-be intimidators.
In the end, their plan to bum-rush Black polling places was reduced
to a scattering of anecdotal incidents. Our lawyers – 16 thousand of
them – faced down their lawyers. And Michael Moore marshaled 1,200
amateur and professional filmmakers to record the Republicans’ antics.
Republicans apparently didn’t relish the idea of appearing in a reverse
version of the TV show “Cops” starring themselves as the perpetrators
caught in the act of violating federal law.
Most importantly, the exit polls show that a recent survey that claimed
18 percent of Blacks were ready to vote for Bush, was utter nonsense.
The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies should be hanging
its head in shame for releasing such a poll, which was false on its
face. In fact, only around one in ten Black people remain crazy enough
to vote for the head-racist-in-charge – about the same as in 2000.
But compared to white people – a majority of whom have voted for Republicans,
and against their own interests, for nearly 40 years – Black America
is a model of intelligence.
Until we are broken, the Pirates will never win total victory in the
United States. And we will not be broken.